Joseph v. Board of Commissioners

5 La. App. 678, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 122
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1927
DocketNo. 10,809
StatusPublished

This text of 5 La. App. 678 (Joseph v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Joseph v. Board of Commissioners, 5 La. App. 678, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 122 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

JONES, J.

On May 2, 1914, Louis Bell, while working for the Board of Port Commissioners, was killed by an electric wire.

[679]*679He left no widow, no dependent children and no parents. This suit for compensation was brought by his sister, Mary Joseph, for her minor child, Adele Joseph, a niece of the deceased, and by his niece, Elvera Honoré, for her minor child, Leonard Honoré, a grand nephew of the deceased.

The allegation is made in the petition and the proof shows that Louis was living at the time of his death at the home of Mary Joseph, with all of the above named parties, and that he, for several months, had been contributing regularly to the two minors, who were actually being provided by him at the time of his death with food and clothing.

Defendant, after admitting the other allegations, denies dependency.

The case was tried twice in the lower court, because the official stenographer died before he transcribed his notes. On the first trial judgment was given for defendant upon the ground that plaintiff had failed to prove dependency, and a like judgment was given after the second trial, although in his reasons for the second judgment the judge found that the evidence was at variance with that given at the first trial, because it showed that the minors were “dependent, upon the deceased”.

Dependency is the sole question before us.

Pour witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the deceased had lived for several months prior to his death at the home of his sister with .the two minors and that he bought both food and clothes for them regularly.

One of the plaintiffs, Mary Joseph, testified that she did washing and ironing for a living, employing extra help when, the work .justified; that sometimes, she had threei dollars and sometimes five dollars after paying the hands; that her brother, who came to live with her seven or eight months before his death, gave the children shoes and clothes, bought groceries, and on the first and fifteenth of each month gave her nine dollars to pay the rent, which was twenty dollars per month; -that her daughter, Adele, was then eighteen, and her grandson, Leonard Honoré, was eight; that both husbands were still alive when last heard from, but had deserted their wives and contributed nothing to their support.

Defendant, who produced no witnesses, argues as follows:

1st. That plaintiff’s testimony is unworthy of belief, because four of the witnesses did not testify on the first trial.

2nd. Because the eighteen dollars paid monthly by the deceased was for board and was not a contribution to the support of the minors.

3rd. That the household in which the deceased lived wás not his household and that the “dependency”, if any, is not “within the meaning of the statute”. To sustain this argument he quotes the case of Haag vs. E. Z. Opener Bag Co., 7620, Court of Appeal, where this court held:

"Employers’ Liability Act No. 20 of 1914, amended by Act 243 of 1916, uses the term ‘family of the deceased employee’ not in the sense of,blood relationship, but in the sense of membership in his household or subject to his authority.”

In answer to the first argument we say that we must take the record as we find it and that we cannof refuse to consider the unimpeached and uncontroverted testimony of these four witnesses simply because they did not testify at the first trial, [680]*680and, even if we did, the testimony of Mary Joseph would still be controlling, as her' statements are uncontradicted.

In answer to the second argument, we say that there is not proof that the money was paid for board. Mary Joseph says: “He didn’t pay no board. He ttayed there like he was their father and he did for them.”

Albertine Lyons testifies that she saw the deceased buy shoes and clothing for the children and the other three witnesses testify that Louis Bell had told them he was supporting the minors.

Furthermore, this court, in the case of Rosenblath vs. Pierce, No. 7856, Court of Appeal (Orleans), held as follows:

“It is immaterial whether the amount paid by each one is called a contribution or board, or whether it is more or less than the value of the board. The fact is that each paid in a part and that the whole was used to pay the expenses. * * * If the weekly payment by both sons had been cut off, the father would have been left with only forty dollarc, an amount insufficient to support himself, his daughter and her two children. If the amount contributed by any one of the two sons had been withdrawn, the ability of the father to provide for himself and family would have been reduced that much. When Bernard’s twenty dollars ceased to come in, the dependency of plaintiff upon that amount was affected to that extent.”

Here the evidence shows that Mary Joseph’s greatest earning after paying all expenses was five dollars per week; that the rent was twenty dollars per month; that she had no property and had been given fifteen cents carfare.

In answer to the, third argument we quote Par. (h), Subsection 2 of Section S, Act 247 of 1920, which reads in part as follows:

“Compensation to the brothers and sisters and other members of the family of the deceased employee not hereinabove specifically provided for, if such brother or sister or other members of the family not otherwise specifically provided for was. actually dependent on the deceased employee for support to any extent at the time of the injury or death thirty per cent of wages for the brother or sister i.r other dependent member of the family and ten per cent additional for each additional such brother or • sister or other dependent.”

In construing this paragraph the Supreme Court said, in the case of Heinzelman vs. Board of Commissioners of Port of New Orleans, 149 La. 215, 88 South. 798:

“ ‘Dependent to any extent’ is a very broad term, and seems to us to include necessary aid furnished for the discharge of any legal obligation, as well as aid required merely in supplying the personal wants of the recipients.”

In Gregory vs. Standard Oil Co., 151 La. 228, 91 South. 717, the Supreme Court allowed compensation to the dependent parents, although the minor son was living away from home with his married sister and had not contributed to his parents out of his first month’s salary.

It is true that this court in the case of Haag vs. E. Z. Opener Bag Company held that the nephew and niece were not. entitled to compensation, although they were dependent upon their uncle to some extent, because they were not living with him in his household at the time of his death and were not subject to his authority, but were residing elsewhere. Although that case was decided in 1919 after the original compensation act, namely, Act 20 of 1914, had been amended by Act 243 (f 1916, the court quotes approvingly this provision from the original act which had been omitted in the amended statute:

[681]*681“No person shall be considered dependent unless a member of the family of or bearing to him the relation of husband or wife or descendant or ascendant or brother or sister or legally adopted child,” and then concludes that “the word family is used not in the sense of blood relationship but in the sense of membership in his household or subjection to his authority.”

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Related

Heinzelman v. Board of Com'rs
88 So. 798 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1921)
Gregory v. Standard Oil Co.
91 So. 717 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922)
Dick v. Gravel Logging Co.
95 So. 99 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922)
Lemieux v. Cousins
98 So. 255 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1923)
Dyer v. Rapides Lumber Co.
98 So. 677 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1923)
Jones v. Powell Lumber Co.
101 So. 135 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
5 La. App. 678, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-v-board-of-commissioners-lactapp-1927.