Jenkins v. &198tna Casualty Surety Co.

158 So. 217
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 14966.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 158 So. 217 (Jenkins v. &198tna Casualty Surety Co.) 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
Jenkins v. &198tna Casualty Surety Co., 158 So. 217 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a proceeding under the State Workmen’s Compensation Laws (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended). The claimants, Amelia, Alberta, Henry, and Lucy Jenkins, alleging that Willie Jenkins, Jr., was their brother, assert that the death of their said brother resulted from an accidental injury sustain *218 ed in the course of employment and which arose out of his work as an employee of defendant Crescent City lee Manufacturing Company, Inc. The three first named claimants were minors at the time of the filing of this suit, and they are represented by their major sister, Lucy, who, as both parents are dead, has qualified as tutrix. The said Lucy Jenkins, after filing the petition as tutrix of the three minors, intervened in her own behalf and claimed compensation as a dependent sister.

Defendants are Crescent City Ice Manufacturing Company, Inc., the employer, and .¿Etna Life Insurance Company, the carrier of the employer’s insurance. In the original petition, ¿Etna Casualty & Surety Company was also made defendant, but it is conceded that that corporation did not issue the policy and is in no way involved.

Defendants deny that the alleged accident occurred, and they .contend that there is no proof thereof in the record. They also assert and seek to prove that, although all of the claimants and the deceased, Willie Jenkins, Jr., are children of one mother, Charlotte Evans Jenkins, the wife of Willie Jenkins, Sr., the three minor children are her illegitimate children, and that Willie Jenkins, Sr., was not their father. As to Lucy, the major claimant who is admittedly the full and legitimate sister of the deceased, Willie Jenkins, Jr., they maintain that she is neither mentally nor physically incapacitated; that she is over the age of eighteen and was not actually dependent upon the deceased and, therefore, cannot claim compensation.

The amount of the weekly payment to which each claimant is entitled, if there is liability, appears not to be in dispute.

In the district court there was judgment in favor of Lucy Jenkins, as tutrix of the minors Alberta and Henry, in the sum of $3.27 per week each, for three hundred weeks and in favor of Lucy Jenkins, as tutrix of the minor Amelia, for $3.27 per week for twenty-five weeks. This award was limited to twenty-five weeks, since it was shown that Amelia reached the age of eighteen on October 7, 1933. The clairfi of Lucy Jenkins in her own behalf was rejected except to the extent of $9.80, that being the amount she was shown to have expended on the funeral of the deceased over and above the sum of $100 paid by defendants.

Defendants have appealed and Lucy Jenkins has also appealed from that part of the judgment which rejects her claim for compensation. As tutrix of the minor Amelia she has answered the appeal taken by defendants, contending that the said judgment in favor of Amelia should be amended, and' that the period during which compensation should be paid should be extended from twenty-five weeks to three hundred weeks.

Unless the death resulted from the accident and the accident occurred during the-course of and grew out of the .employment,, there can be no recovery by any one. Therefore, those questions of fact must first be investigated.

Willie Jenkins, Jr., was required by his employer, a retailer of ice, to deliver ice, and was furnished with an ice pick which is a sharp -instrument used in breaking up large blocks of ice. It is contended that, while carrying on his shoulder a large block of ice, weighing one hundred pounds, and while walking across certain railroad tracks to make a delivery at the establishment of a customer, he permitted the block to slip, and that, as he attempted to catch it with the other "hand to prevent its falling to the ground, he plunged into the muscle below the shoulder, on which the ice was carried the pick, which was in his other hand, and that later the wound thus caused became infected, his death subsequently resulting from blood poisoning.

That there was a wound which might have been so sustained and that blood poisoning which resulted from this wound was the cause of the death is testified to by a reputable and experienced physician and is not strenuously denied. Defendants declare, however, that there is no proof that the wound was sustained in the course of employment and was incidental thereto, as the claimahts assert that it was. Only one person, Lawrence Oarriere, claims to have seen the actual occurrence. He states that, though not employed by the defendant ice company, he helped Jenkins in delivering ice, and that Jenkins would sometimes give him cigarettes and would at other times pay him a few dollars.

He testified further that he saw Jenkins carrying the block of ice, and that he saw it slip, and also saw Jenkins accidentally plunge the ice pick into his arm in his attempt to catch the block of ice, and that he later saw blood coming from the wound which was thus caused.

Defendants attempt to cast doubt upon the truthfulness of Carriere and point to a written statement, -which is said to have been made by him shortly after the alleged occurrence and to which statement he, being un *219 able to read or write, had admittedly affixed his mark. This statement on which defendants rely to overcome the effect of Carriere’s testimony suggests that he (Carriere) did not actually witness the accident, but obtained his information with regard to it from Jenkins after the occurrence.

In view of the fact that the said statement was not prepared by Carriere and because of his positive statement on the witness stand that he, himself,. actually saw the accident, we feel that possibly his declarations made when the accident was being investigated may have been misunderstood by the investigator.

There are corroborating circumstances which tend to prove that the wound was sustained in the course of duty and, in the absence of any proof to the contrary, we feel that the safest course to pursue is to adopt as correct the finding of fact made by the trial court, since that finding is not manifestly erroneous.

We next consider the contention of defendants that the three minors are illegitimáte children of the mother, Charlotte Evans Jenkins, and are not the children of Willie Jenkins, Sr., the father of Willie Jenkins, Jr., and are thus not entitled to compensation for the death of the said Willie Jenkins, Jr. This question arose when objection was made to evidence tendered by defendants for the purpose of showing this alleged illegitimacy. The objection was sustained and the evidence excluded.

In the original petition, on behalf of the three minors, appears the allegation that they are the legitimate children of Willie Jenkins, Sr„ and of Charlotte Evans Jenkins, and there can be no doubt that, in order to recover, the claimants must show that they are the legitimate sisters and brother of the deceased employee.

The evidence shows that the said Willie Jenkins, Sr., and the said Charlotte Evans Jenkins were legally married, and that the marriage was never annulled, and that no divorce or legal separation was decreed, and that thus all three of the said children were born to the said mother during the existence of her marriage to Willie Jenkins, Sr.

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158 So. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-198tna-casualty-surety-co-lactapp-1935.