Hooper v. Southern Pulpwood Insurance

140 So. 2d 785, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1907
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1962
DocketNo. 9692
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 So. 2d 785 (Hooper v. Southern Pulpwood Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooper v. Southern Pulpwood Insurance, 140 So. 2d 785, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1907 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

This suit was brought to recover benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The death of Pink Hooper, Jr., on October 5, 1960, occurred in the course of his employment with Larry Jones, a subcontractor of T. F. Bedsole, who was engaged in the business of procuring pulpwood and insured by the Southern Pulpwood Insurance Company. Suit was instituted by [786]*786Pink Hooper, Sr. and Mary Hooper, the father and mother of the deceased employee, alleging that they were dependent upon their son for support. By supplemental petition Margaret I-Iooper Youngblood Joyner, as tutrix of the minor, Louis Youngblood, Jr., and Fred Joyner, as administrator of the estate of his minor daughter, Doretha Joyner, likewise claimed benefits under the statute, alleging the minors wholly dependent upon Pink Hooper, Jr., who was their uncle. Bed-sole and his compensation insurer are named as parties defendant. After trial on the merits, judgment was rendered rejecting the demands of Pink Hooper, Sr. and Mary Hooper, but awarding minimum compensation of $10.00 weekly in favor of the two minor children, during the period of statutory dependency. Suspensive and devolutive appeals were perfected on behalf of the defendants and devolutive appeals were taken by Pink Hooper, Sr. and Mary Hooper. The appellees have answered the appeal, asking that the award in favor of each minor be increased to weekly payments of $13.75 per week.

Through stipulation of counsel some of the issues were eliminated and at the time of trial there remained for judicial determination only questions relating to: whether or not the parents of the deceased were either wholly or partially dependent upon the deceased employee; whether or not the nephew and niece of the deceased employee were wholly or partially dependent; the amount of compensation, if any, to which each claimant is entitled; and what were the average earnings of the decedent?

Pink Hooper, Jr. was twenty-five years of age at the time of his death. He had never married and had lived with his father and mother all of his life, and was living with them at the time of his death. Pink Plooper, Sr., eighty-two years old at the time of trial, and his wife, Mary Hooper, seventy-two, lived in a seven-room house on forty acres of land, an interest in wnich Mary Hooper had inherited from her father. In addition to Pink Hooper, Jr., five children, three of a deceased son, Elton Hooper, and the two children of Margaret Hooper Youngblood Joyner, represented in this suit, lived in the family home. When Pink Hooper, Sr. reached the age of sixty-five he received welfare aid and Mary Hooper likewise received this aid when she became eligible. Accordingly, for some years prior to the death of Pink Hooper, Jr. his parents received from the welfare a total of $144.00 per month. Additionally, they received $8.00 per month for the rent of a house of the forty-acre tract, and they received also a social security check of $96.30 for the children of Elton Hooper, deceased.

Margaret Hooper was first married to Louis Youngblood, Sr., but this marriage was of short duration and shortly after Louis Youngblood, Jr. was born, she divorced her husband and left the child with Mary Hooper while she worked in Leesville. She then married Fred Joyner and the first-born of this marriage, Doretha Joyner, was also left with her mother. Fred and Margaret Joyner moved to New Orleans where they have since resided together and at the time this suit was instituted they were the parents of five children. Fred Joyner was gainfully employed, earning approximately $50.00 per week. Neither he nor Margaret made any contributions toward the maintenance of Louis Youngblood, Jr. or Doretha Joyner. Louis Youngblood, Sr. never made any contributions to the support of his child.

The household appeared to exist rather comfortably. There were no tax, rent or utility bills to pay, with the exception of electricity. The family owned some livestock, a Frigidaire, and deep freeze. The record indicates Pink Hooper, Jr. was more dependent than depended upon. He received his board and lodging and Mary Hooper attended to his washing and other needs. The earnings of the decedent were not established with certainty. Apparently, he obtained some jobs at public works until about four months prior to his death when he began cutting pulpwood for Larry Jones. [787]*787His cutting' partner was his brother, Ike Hooper, who customarily used the power saw. Shortly before Pink Hooper’s death Ike owned a power saw, but at the time of the accident he had borrowed one from his employer. Jones testified the amount of pulpwood he was allowed to cut depended upon a quota, which was ordinarily consumed in three or four days and that due to this restriction, Pink and Ike Hooper usually worked but three or four days per week, and Pink’s weekly earnings would vary from $20.00 to $25.00. The two workers were paid 85^ per pen of wood cut, which is a stack of pulpwood five or six feet high. Jones said that when the Hoopers worked full days the two would cut from seventeen to twenty pens per day. Ike Hooper testified that they cut thirty to thirty-five pens per day, but this was denied by Jones, who stated that payments by him were made to Ike ranging from $40.00 to $60.00 per week, which payments would be divided three ways and Pink would receive for his part one-third of this amount. Ike Hooper also testified he divided the compensation equally between himself and Pink Hooper, Jr. This procedure is contrary to custom and practice which permits the owner and operator of the chain saw to receive one-third of the wages, after payment of expenses, solely for the use and operation of the power saw. It is our finding that Pink Hooper, Jr. was earning on an average, not more than $30.00 per week. Since he earned this in four days, his daily wage should be fixed to be $7.50, which would result in a compensation rate of $29.25, this amount being sixty-five per cent of $45.00.

Proof as to the contribution of Pink Hooper, Jr. to the support of any of the claimants is most unsatisfactory. Out of his earnings of $30.00 per week he attempted to maintain an automobile, courted, and partially sustained himself, and remained in debt. On one occasion he was sued and forced to return an automobile he had bought. He owed Fred Chamberlin, the operator of a grocery store near the Hooper home, where his mother traded, a bill of $88.20, incurred between January 25, 1957, and March 16, 1958. These items were plainly for his own personal use. He made no effort to pay any part of the bill. With these demands for his income, serious doubt is cast upon his ability and disposition to set aside any of this income for the support of others. Pink Hooper, Sr. and Mary Hooper conceded they were not individually dependent for support upon their son and when questioned as to how much money Pink Hooper, Jr. had contributed to his support in 1960, Pink Hooper, Sr. testified that he did give him “maybe four bits or two dollars, maybe five dollars every once and a while.” Occasionally, he gave his father a shirt or some article of clothing, but there was no fixed or regular practice of contributing either to his father or mother. Mary Hooper testified that her son at one time gave her $250.00 when he got a compensation settlement and at another time $100.00 as a result of an additional compensation settlement. Neither of these donations could have occurred within the last two or three years of his life, and certainly not within the twelve months period prior to the death of Pink Hooper, Jr. Mary Hooper consistently declined to give in any degree of approximation the amount contributed by her son toward the family support.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 2d 785, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-southern-pulpwood-insurance-lactapp-1962.