Miller v. Bohn Refrigerator Co.

256 N.W. 835, 192 Minn. 242, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 886
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 6, 1934
DocketNo. 29,657.
StatusPublished

This text of 256 N.W. 835 (Miller v. Bohn Refrigerator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Bohn Refrigerator Co., 256 N.W. 835, 192 Minn. 242, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 886 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

*243 I. M. OLSEN, Justice.

The petitioner, Hazel Laursen Miller, brought this proceeding before the industrial commission against the Bohn Refrigerator Company, employer, and the Employers Reinsurance Corporation, insurer, to recover compensation under the workmen’s compensation law for the death of her husband, Henry Miller. The referee found the facts necessary to entitle the petitioner to compensation and found that the husband’s wages, on which to base compensation, amounted to $26.13 per week, and that he left him surviving the petitioner, his widow, wholly dependent, and his aged father, also wholly dependent. There were no children. The referee awarded compensation to the widow at the rate of $10.45 per week, during dependency, the total of such compensation not to exceed $7,500, and awarded to the father compensation at the rate of $6.97 per week, during dependency, such payments to continue for not more than 300 weeks. The award to the widow was at the rate of 40 per cent of the weekly wage of decedent, as provided by 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 4275(6), and to the father 26 2/3 per cent of such weekly wage, making the total rate of compensation 66 2/3 per cent of the weekly wage. The result of the awards so made, if both dependents lived and remained dependent long enough to draw the full amount awarded, would be that the widow would receive $7,500 and the father $2,091, or a total of $9,591. The employer and the insurer appealed to the industrial commission. On appeal the commission adopted the findings of fact of the referee as its findings of fact, but vacated and set aside the referee’s order awarding compensation and in lieu thereof ordered and determined that the widow is entitled to and is awarded compensation at the rate of $10.45 per week during dependency, and, in addition thereto, the father is entitled to and awarded compensation at the rate of $6.97 per week, during dependency, not to exceed 300 weeks, and that the total compensation paid to both dependents shall not exceed $7,500.

The widow brings the matter here for review on certiorari, claiming that she should receive compensation up to the limit of $7,500 *244 and that if any compensation is to be awarded to the father it must be in-addition to the $7,500 that she is entitled to receive.

The two important questions of law presented for review are: (1) Whether the total compensation to all dependents in death cases is limited to $7,500; (2) if so limited, can dependents, other than the widow or the widow and one or two children, come in and take a part of the $7,500 so as to reduce the total award to the widow or widow and one or two children provided for in 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 4275(6, 7, 8), below the $7,500 limit.

Under our statute, in case of recovery for wrongful death, in negligence cases, the damages are limited to $7,500, 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9657. This limitation applies to all cases where the parties have not brought themselves within part 2 of the compensation law so as to be governed thereby. 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 4265. It was the recognized purpose of the legislature to encourage employers and employes to elect to become subject to part 2 of the compensation law. In other words, the legislature holds out to both parties this part of the compensation law as providing a more economical, speedy, and fair method of fixing compensation for employes injured or killed in industrial accidents and invites the parties to come within that law. It cannot reasonably be presumed that in death cases the legislature intended to impose a greater burden upon industry than that imposed by law in cases where the parties do not come within the compensation law. If so intended, it would have been easy expressly to provide that in death cases the compensation awarded should not be limited by the long established law as to the amount of recovery for wrongful .death. It may be noted also that under the compensation law, in every case where there is no wife, child, children, or orphans to receive compensation, no matter how many other dependents there may be, the total compensation for death cannot exceed $20 per week for 300 weeks, or a total of $6,000. The limitation of $7,500 to wife, child, children, or orphans may well be construed as intended only for the purpose of mairing a more liberal compensation to them, and not as intended to allow other dependents to come in and take away part of the compensation provided for them, or to increase the total compensation to all dependents to more than $7,500. Section 4275(20).

*245 The original compensation laAV Avas enacted in 1913. There Avere amendments passed in 1915,1917, and 1919. The laAV, prior to 1921, was in many situations indefinite arid difficult to administer. So in 1921 the legislature reAvrote the entire law covering the whole subject, not as an amending statute, but as a new law. L. 1921, c. 82. The act expressly, repealed the original law of 1913 and all other acts or .parts of acts inconsistent with the new law, except L. 1919, c. 359, in so far as the same applies to employers not under part 2 of the neAv compensation law. L. 1919, c. 359, relates only to accident and settlement reports and the punishment for failure to file the reports therein provided for. There is nothing in the laAV prior to 1921, repealed by the 1921 act, Avhich furnishes much of any guidance upon the construction to be placed on the present compensation law relative to the questions here presented. Nor have Ave been referred to any decisions, either under the old law or the neAv, Avhich Avould be specially helpful.

1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 4275(6,7,8,9), provides the rates of weekly compensation to be paid to the Avidow, to the widow and one, two, three, or more dependent children, based on the wage of the deceased workman. To the widow, if there are no dependent children, 40 per cent of the daily wage shall be paid; to the widow and one child, 50 per cent of such wage; to the widow and two children, 60 per cent; and to the AvidoAV and three or more children, 66 2/3 per cent thereof. The $7,500 limitation as to total payments to these dependents is found in subsections 19 and 20.

In cases of a surviAdng husband and one, two, three, or more dependent children (subsections 7, 8, and 9), the compensation is the same as where there is a simdving wife and one, two, three, or more dependent children. Where the deceased leaves no surviving wife or husband, but leaves one or more surviving orphans, the rate of compensation is fixed by subsection 12. In the case of the death of a married woman wage-earner, leaving a surviAdng dependent husband and no surviAdng dependent children, the compensation is fixed by subsection 13 at 30 per cent of the decedent’s daily wage.

Section 4275(3) of the statute proAddes the order in which compensation to dependents shall be paid. This is also referred to in *246 subsection 20, providing: “Actual dependents shall be entitled to take compensation in the order named in subsection (3) above, during dependency, until sixty-six and two-thirds per centum of the daily wage of the deceased at the time of injury shall have been exhausted.”

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Bluebook (online)
256 N.W. 835, 192 Minn. 242, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-bohn-refrigerator-co-minn-1934.