State v. Sharp
This text of 103 S.E.2d 792 (State v. Sharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE ex rel. Maria K. MAGUN
v.
George S. SHARP, State Compensation Commissioner.
Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
*793 Arthur T. Ciccarello, Samuel D. Lopinsky, Charleston, for relator.
John Sterrett Holy, Theodore H. Ghiz, Charleston, for respondent.
GIVEN, Judge.
In this original proceeding in mandamus, petitioner, Maria Magun, prays a peremptory writ commanding defendant, the State Compensation Commissioner, to pay unto her a "certain sum of money due to her by virtue of the award of said Commission dated July 3, 1926". Defendant filed his demurrer to the petition and made answer thereto. The proceeding is disposed of on the pleadings, exhibits filed therewith, briefs and oral arguments.
The husband of petitioner, Mike Magun, was fatally injured on January 26, 1926, in the course of and as a result of his employment, in this State, his employer then being a subscriber to the workmen's compensation fund. Petitioner, as dependent widow of the employee, on July 3, 1926, was granted compensation in the amount of thirty dollars per month "until her death or remarriage". Payment of the monthly allowances was made by the commissioner to the first day of June, 1939. At the time compensation *794 was allowed, petitioner was a citizen of Poland. The petition herein alleges that "the marriage between the parties has never been dissolved, other than by the death" of the husband; that the "petitioner never remarried after the death of her husband", and that, on January 4, 1957, the date of the power of attorney later mentioned herein, she was "a resident and citizen of Zhovten Village, Zhovten District, Province of Stanislovov".
The power of attorney, mentioned above, purports to appoint certain persons, who apparently comprise a law firm, with offices in the City of New York, as attorneys in fact, "to be my true and lawful attorney for me and in my name, place and stead, to make claim for, collect, receive and receipt for any and all moneys due me from the Compensation Department of the State of West Virginia, as a result of the death of my husband * * *." The instrument is not signed or acknowledged by petitioner in person, but a certificate, apparently properly executed and authenticated, shows that the instrument was executed by a third person at the request of petitioner and that "The legal capacity and capability of Maria Konstantinovna Mogun as well as the identity of the grantor and the signer were ascertained by me". The "Chief of the Notarial Department of the Ministry for Justice of the UkSSR" certified to the "authenticity" of the signature and of the impression affixed to such certificate, and the Consul of the United States of America certified that the person who executed the last mentioned certificate was, on the date thereof, "Assistant Chief of the Consular Administration of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, duly commissioned and qualified, to whose official acts faith and credit are due".
Numerous contentions of defendant are posed, but we think that the controlling questions relate to (1) The sufficiency of the power of attorney; (2) the nature of proof required as a prerequisite to the payment of such compensation benefits; and (3) the application of any statute of limitations.
This Court has held that when an attorney appears at the bar of a court in a matter being litigated, there is a presumption of his authority to represent his client and, though the presumption may be rebutted, evidence to do so must clearly preponderate. McKnight v. Pettigrew, 141 W.Va. 506, 91 S.E.2d 324. In the instant case, that authority is questioned only because of the manner of the execution and acknowledgment of the instrument involved, in that it was signed by a third person at the request of petitioner, and that the signature was not acknowledged or proved. But a written or proved instrument is not necessary to create the relationship of attorney and client. In Keenan v. Scott, 64 W.Va. 137, 61 S.E. 806, we held: "1. As soon as a client has expressed a desire to employ an attorney, and there has been a corresponding consent on the part of the attorney to act for him in a professional capacity, the relation of attorney and client has been established; and all dealings thereafter between them relating to the subject of the employment will be governed by the rules applicable to such relation." In the opinion in that case it is said: "These authorities, and many others which might be cited, are conclusive of the proposition that, as soon as the client has expressed a desire to employ an attorney, and there has been a corresponding consent on the part of the attorney to act for him in a professional capacity, the relation of attorney and client has been established, and that all dealings thereafter between them relating to the subject of the employment will be governed by the rules applicable to such relation * * *". See Bennett v. Bennett, 137 W.Va. 179, 70 S.E.2d 894; Lawrence v. Montgomery Gas Co., 88 W.Va. 352, 106 S.E. 890; City of Charleston v. Littlepage, 73 W.Va. 156, 80 S.E. 131, 51 L.R.A.,N.S., 353; State v. Fraley, 71 W.Va. 100, 103, 76 S.E. 134, 42 L.R.A.,N.S., 498; Cecil v. Clark, 69 W.Va. 641, 72 S.E. 737.
*795 The contention of defendant to the effect that it is not sufficiently alleged or proved that petitioner is still living, and that she has not remarried, cannot be sustained. As pointed out above, the petition alleges that petitioner, at the time of the execution of the power of attorney, was a "resident and citizen of Zhovten Village", and that she "never remarried after the death of her husband". Also, the statement of the two citizens of Zhovten Village, certified and authenticated, shows that petitioner "resides at Zhovten Village"; and that the marriage "has never been dissolved and she never remarried and she remains his widow". It may be true, as further contended by defendant, that petitioner failed or neglected to furnish proof of certain facts, as required by statute or by rules promulgated by the commissioner, but such fact would merely justify the commissioner in delaying payment until the necessary proof was made available to him. The delay, of course, would not have the effect of canceling payment of the monthly benefit payments which had accrued. See Lancaster v. State Compensation Commissioner, 125 W.Va. 190, 192, 23 S.E.2d 601; Poccardi v. Ott, State Compensation Commissioner, 86 W.Va. 565, 104 S.E. 54. Since the necessary proof has been furnished in this proceeding, and the allowance of compensation to petitioner was made in accordance with the applicable statute, and the accruing of the monthly benefits not being denied, but satisfactorily established, we find no reason to deny petitioner relief herein.
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103 S.E.2d 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sharp-wva-1958.