Tsoukalas v. Bolton Manufacturing Co.

37 A.2d 357, 130 Conn. 658, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 6, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 357 (Tsoukalas v. Bolton Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tsoukalas v. Bolton Manufacturing Co., 37 A.2d 357, 130 Conn. 658, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 213 (Colo. 1944).

Opinions

Brown, J.

The plaintiffs are the parents of George Tsoukalas, who was eighteen years of age and in the employ of the named defendant when on January 4, 1943, he sustained injuries arising out of and in the course of his employment which resulted in his death. In addition to George the plaintiffs had a son Alexander, twenty-seven years of age, serving in the United States Army and a daughter Amelia, aged twenty-three, living at home. On January 4 and for a substantial period before that the plaintiff Victoria was earning *660 $75 per month, her husband, the plaintiff Harry, $40 per week plus meals, and Amelia, $75 per month. George, who began working for the defendant December 31, 1942, at $31.20 per week, had been earning from $18 to $20 per week since his graduation from high school the preceding June. Harry, who had been giving his wife about half of his wages each week and more when necessary, at the decedent’s death was giving her $23 a week. Amelia gave her mother $40 each month. Up to December 31 George had turned over to his mother his total earnings, of which she had returned to him two or three dollars a week for spending money. He had actually received no wages from the defendant, but his mother knew of his going to work for it and expected him to turn over his entire earnings to her as he had in the past. The mother kept all of the money she so received from the family in a common fund out of which she took care of the living expenses of herself and her family. These facts, which appear from the commissioner’s finding, are not questioned. The commissioner also found that it was the right of the decedent’s parents to receive his entire earnings since he was a minor, that it was their duty to support him and that the earnings given by him to his mother were turned into a common fund. The court ■sustained the commissioner in his refusal to strike these facts from the finding.

The defendant claimed before the commissioner that neither parent of the decedent was either partially or wholly dependent upon him for support within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, or entitled to compensation because of his death. The commissioner overruled this claim and awarded compensation to the plaintiffs at the rate of $15.60 per week. The court, sustaining the appeal, struck out further findings that the decedent’s mother relied upon the *661 money she received and expected to receive from his wages, in so far as this finding implied that she relied upon them for the reasonable needs of the household, that the plaintiffs were dependent upon the decedent and that they were entitled to compensation, substituted a finding that the mother neither relied upon nor expected to receive all of his wages and that the plaintiffs were neither partially nor wholly dependent upon the decedent within the meaning of the act, and set aside the award. The plaintiffs made a motion that the court reopen the judgment and return the case to the commissioner for a further finding of facts concerning the issue of dependency. This was denied. Upon the present appeal the plaintiffs by their assignments of error attack the court’s judgment and its denial of the motion.

General Statutes, Cumulative Supplement, 1939, § 1326e, provides for compensation “to those partially dependent upon the deceased employee at the time of his injury.” “ ‘Dependent’ shall mean members of the injured employee’s family or next of kin who were wholly or partly dependent upon the earnings of the employee at the time of the injury.” General Statutes, § 5223. Except as to those presumed dependent under provisions of the statute inapplicable in the present case, “dependency is to be determined ... in accordance with the fact as the fact may be at the time of the injury [General Statutes, § 5235].” Mahoney v. Gamble-Desmond Co., 90 Conn. 255, 257, 96 Atl. 1025; Powers v. Hotel Bond Co., 89 Conn. 143, 152, 93 Atl. 245. A dependent is one who has relied upon the decedent for support and who has a reasonable expectation that such support will continue. In the absence of such reliance, that the employee was an unemancipated minor son of the plaintiffs would not be a material factor. Driscoll v. Jewell Belting Co., 96 *662 Conn. 295, 302, 114 Atl. 109. The test is reliance by a plaintiff upon “contributions for her living expenses, wholly or partially, judging these by those which would be reasonable for one.in her class and position in life.” Blanton v. Wheeler & Howes Co., 91 Conn. 226, 232, 99 Atl. 494. This means, as was explained in that opinion, that “Each case is governed by ascertaining what, in the given circumstances, would be necessaries, having •.due regard for the class and position in life of thé claimant. As the application of this principle excludes the case where support has been given those who have at hand the present means of supplying their living expenses in their class and station in life, so it excludes the restriction of support to provision for the bare wants of existence.” Under this rule, as this court has suggested, if the earnings were actually used in the •family support, the fact that at the same time a reasonable amount from the family income was set aside as savings or devoted to life insurance, or to making moderate payments toward the purchase of a home, would not necessarily preclude a finding that the plaintiff was, a dependent. Atwood v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., 95 Conn. 669, 677, 112 Atl. 269. This is because under the test stated whether such payments are necessaries, having due regard for the class and position in life of the plaintiff, depends upon the existing circumstances.

Upon the record before it the trial court was warranted in making the material corrections which it did in the finding and so in setting aside the award. The question decisive of this appeal, therefore, is whether, as determined by the above principles, the plaintiffs were entitled to have the case remanded to the commissioner, “Cases under the Workmen’s Compensation Act are upon a different basis from actions between ordinary litigants. No case under this Act should be *663 finally determined when the trial court, or this court, is of the opinion that, through inadvertence, or otherwise, the facts have not been sufficiently found to render a just judgment. When this appears, the case must be returned to the commissioner for a finding in accordance with the suggestions made by the trial court or this court, and for an award to be made upon the corrected finding.” Cormican v. McMahon, 102 Conn. 234, 238, 128 Atl. 709; Kenyon v. Swift Service Corporation, 121 Conn. 274, 280, 184 Atl. 643; Jones v. Hamden, 129 Conn. 532, 535, 29 Atl. (2d) 772; Herbst v. Hat Corporation of America, 130 Conn. 1, 4, 31 Atl. (2d) 329. Under this rule, whether a case shall be remanded presents a question for the determination of the trial court in the exercise of a sound discretion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 357, 130 Conn. 658, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tsoukalas-v-bolton-manufacturing-co-conn-1944.