47 Ga. App. 345 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1933
An employee received an injury by accident on May 18, 1931, at which time he had an eight-year-old daughter. \ He died from the injury on March 5, 1932. He had been paid compensation under the workmen’s compensation act from May 25, 1931, until August 3, 1931, when he returned to his work. Compensation was resumed on January 29, 1932, and continued until February 26, 1932. On September 20, 1931, four months and two days after the accident, and after he had resumed his work, he remarried. Upon the conflicting claims of the daughter, through her guardian, and the wife, based upon opposite constructions of sections 38 and 39 of the act, the full board of the Department of Industrial Kelations affirmed the previous award of Director Whitaker, excluding the wife, and allowing the entire compensation to the daughter of $12.75 a week, beginning February 26, 1932, and continuing for not over 300 weeks from May 18, 1931. The superior court on appeal reversed this award in part, so as to allow the wife to share equally with the daughter. The facts are not in dispute.
1. Under the workmen’s compensation act, unmarried minor children under the age of eighteen (including a stepchild, legally adopted child, posthumous, or acknowledged illegitimate child) “shall be conclusively presumed to be . . wholly dependent for support upon the deceased employee.” Ga. L. 1920, p. 188, secs. 39, 39(c); Michie’s Code, § 3154-(39e); Travelers Ins. Co. v. Will
2. While it has been held'that the compensation act and its amendments, “though in derogation of the common law, being highly remedial in character, should be liberally and broadly construed to effect their beneficent purposes” (New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Sumrell, 30 Ga. App. 682, 118 S. E. 786; Van Treeck v. Travelers Ins. Co., 157 Ga. 204, 121 S. E. 215), at least “as between the master and the servant,” if not as “to the scope of the act with respect to others” (Hotel Equipment Co. v. Liddell, 32 Ga. App. 590, 124 S. E. 92), yet this act embodies within itself a complete code of laws upon the subject.” Porter v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 46 Ga. App. 86 (166 S. E. 675). Thus complete within itself as to its own subject-matter, it excludes from consideration other statutes of the State with regard to the inheritance of a wife from her deceased husband, in determining whether or not the wife is entitled to share as a dependent in the award of compensation for his death as provided under the act.
3. The fact that section 39 and its subdivision (a) of the act provide that a wife who had not voluntarily deserted or abandoned her husband at the time of the accident is conclusively presumed wholly dependent upon the husband for support does not ipso facto confer upon one who became, after the accident, the wife of the person injured the right to the compensation provided by other sections of the act, upon the theory that she, not having “ deserted or abandoned” him prior to his accident (although not then his
4. Section 38(b), as to total dependency, provides that “the employer shall pay the dependents of the deceased employee, wholly dependent on his earnings for support at the time of the injury, a weekly compensation” in the amount and for the period stated. Subsection (c), as to partial dependency, fixes the question of their dependency on the employee as "at the time of his injury.” Subsection (d) provides that the maximum of 300 weeks compensation to all dependents is to continue "from the date of the injury.” Subsection (e), relating to any alien dependents, provides that the question of their alienage is to be determined by whether they were “ citizens of or residing at the time of the accident in the United States or Dominion of Canada.” The Department of Industrial Relations therefore properly construed the act, in awarding the entire compensation to the eight-year-old daughter of the deceased employee and in excluding the wife, who did not marry him until after the accident, although her marriage appears to have been in good faith while he was at work following a suspension of the compensation which he had been receiving after his injury. Nearly all of the decisions of other jurisdictions that have similar statutes accord with this conclusion. Gleason’s case, 269 Mass. 583 (169 N. E. 409); Bott’s case, 250 Mass. 152 (119 N. E. 755); Kuetbach v. Industrial Com., 166 Wis. 378 (165 N. W. 302, L. R. A. 1918F, 476, 492, notes); Foster v. Dept. of Labor, 151 Wash. 54 (296 Pac. 148, 73 A. L. R. 1012); Casady v. State Ind. Com., 116 Or. 656 (242 Pac. 598); Dahlquist v. Nevada Industrial Com., 46 Nev. 107 (206 Pac. 197, 207 Pac. 1104).
5. Defendant in error relies upon the language of this court in Georgia Power &c. Co. v. Patterson, 46 Ga. App. 5 (166 S. E. 256), as follows: ‘“The question of dependency arises, under the act, on the death of the employee,” and contends that this announces and decides as the law that the question of dependency must be determined "as of the time of the death of the employee ” and not as of the time of the injury. No such question, however, was before the court in that case. The only matter dealt with in
Judgment reversed.