Milkovich v. Industrial Commission

64 P.2d 1290, 91 Utah 498, 1937 Utah LEXIS 20
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1937
DocketNo. 5811.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 P.2d 1290 (Milkovich v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milkovich v. Industrial Commission, 64 P.2d 1290, 91 Utah 498, 1937 Utah LEXIS 20 (Utah 1937).

Opinion

WOLFE, Justice.

Certiorari to the Industrial Commission which denied an award to applicant on the ground that she had not sustained the burden of proof that she was partially dependent on her *500 son Joso. He was fatally injured in the course of his employment with the Standard Coal Company on November 3, 1932. The Standard Coal Company employed more than three men and is a self-insurer. Joe’s average weekly wage was, at the time of his death, $19.67 per week.

Testimony was entirely by depositions, except for affidavits by the deponents which were earlier filed. The applicant, Joe’s mother, living at the village of Smiljan Yugoslavia, wrote a racy and appealing letter received by the commission on January 16, 1933, in which she requested the commission to send her compensation. When we say she wrote a letter, we mean one was evidently written at her behest for her deposition later taken revealed she affixed a cross as her signature. On November 17,1933, more than one year after Joe’s death, another letter of the same nature as the first, with applicant’s name affixed, was received by the commission. The Royal Yugoslav Consul General, through his attorneys in Portland, Ore., interested himself in the case and later the said attorneys had local representation by an attorney before the commission, but this was not until after the year after the death had elapsed. This local attorney must be considered as representing the applicant. He caused the Industrial Commission to issue its commission to the judge of the Royal District Court at Gospic, Yugoslavia, to take depositions, and four depositions on submitted interrogatories and cross-interrogatories were taken and properly returned. Outside of the affidavits earlier made by the same four witnesses, which evidently were not stricken but remained in the case, they constitute the only evidence. The affidavits, being in narrative form, vitalize the depositions and contain nothing in contradiction.

The defendant objected to the consideration of the case on the ground that no application had been filed within the year. The commission rightly held that the letter from the applicant received January 16, 1933, was sufficient application to toll the statute. It takes not much to legally awaken *501 the commission to the fact that a person is applying for compensation. An informal letter is sufficient.

Passing this point, the only remaining question is: Was there sufficient evidence of partial dependency of the mother to permit us to say as a matter of law that proof of partial dependency was sustained?

Summation of the evidence contained in the depositions and given virility by the affidavits is as follows: Manda, the mother, seventy-six years of age, had twelve children, of whom five were then living. Joso (Joe) was the oldest child. In order to help support the large family, he went to America in 1901 to seek livelihood there. Her husband, Mate Milko-vich, died in 1911. The husband’s earnings were very small, so Joe sent them regularly “all his earnings that were left over from his personal needs.” When her husband died, her need became all the greater, so Joe tried even more to support her and his younger brothers. She received different sums, twenty, fifty, and more dollars at a time several times a year, except years of the war, by means of people returning from America to the native country and by letter. It amounted on an average of $150 a year from the time of departure until his death. She lived with her son Luka, who also has four minor children, on the property of the village known as family community or “zadruga,” but she could not live on that. Seldom did he send money by check “because our people are not used to remitting money by checks” (this by the affidavit). ' The affidavit states also that the $150 represents only an approximate average of what he sent her as the yearly contribution depended on his earnings. “When his earnings were better he used to send more than given average, and when they were poorer, naturally I would receive less.”

Further, by affidavit but not by deposition, she states that during the last few years before his death, Joe sent her in July, 1930, by Mikola Pezelj, $50, which converted was 2,600 dinars. By Ivan Bunjcevic, the sum of $65 in 1931, delivered to her through her son-in-law Ivan Novacic. In January, *502 1932, she received in letters $30. The sum of $150 a year, “considering the high rate of exchange on dollar currency, is a considerable amount for our conditions here.” She has two daughters and they are both married.

Ivan Novacic, her son-in-law, states through deposition, further amplified in detail by the earlier affidavit, that in 1931 he received from Joe a check in a letter for Manda in the sum of $30; also in the same year from Ivan Bunjcevic of Podlapac the sum of $65 for his mother, which he sent to her. Marija Uzelac, not related, by deposition testifies that in 1921, when she traveled from America, the deceased son sent $140 to his mother through her. And before she left, while he boarded with her (affidavit), he sent by letters, thirty, fifty, or more dollars. Her affidavit, or ex parte statement, goes into more detail. She kept his money in an envelope with the money of other boarders in a trunk and Joe came and asked her to open the trunk and give him money to send to his mother. And he would “often mention to me his mother and brother Luka, and when he had drank a little more wine he would cry for his mother. When my husband and I returned home from America and before we left for the old country, Joso asked me to take some money to his mother and that from this money I deposit 19,000 dinars in savings bank and deliver to her the bank book so she could draw sums as she needed them, and the balance I should deliver to her in cash which was $140.00 and I followed his instructions accordingly.”

Mikola Pezelj, a farmer residing at Smiljan, testified by deposition that Joe gave him at Racine, Wis., $50 for delivery to his mother in the year 1930. He exchanged this into 2,600 dinars at Zagreb and delivered the same to Manda Milkovich. His affidavit is the same but fuller and more narrative and informal.

All these affidavits and depositions are uncontradicted and from the little unsolicited details, such as the names of *503 places where money was exchanged, and the simplicity of their narration, they have to us the stamp of truth. But we are not the judges. The commission is the judge. In Norris v. Industrial Comm., 90 Utah 256, 61 P. (2d) 413, 415, we said:

“The Legislature has, in effect, said: ‘The Commission is the final arbiter of the facts. If there is error in judgment or conclusions of or from facts, it must be the Commission’s error and remain there. We give the Supreme Court the right to speak only by warrant of law in compensation cases when it speaks in reference to errors of law alleged to have been made by the Commission.’ ”

In that case we also laid down the following conditions which would at least have to pertain in the case of uncontradicted testimony before we would say the commission had acted arbitrarily in coming to a conclusion different from that which the uncontradicted evidence would seem to dictate, to wit:

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Bluebook (online)
64 P.2d 1290, 91 Utah 498, 1937 Utah LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milkovich-v-industrial-commission-utah-1937.