22 S.E.2d 359 | W. Va. | 1942
On June 17, 1940, Percy G. Bowdler was awarded compensation under Chapter 79, Acts West Virginia Legislature, 1935, for third stage silicosis. The date of his last exposure to silicon dioxide dust in harmful quantities was November 27, 1939, and more than one year thereafter (August 9, 1941,) he died. Decedent's widow, Eleanor *630 Bowdler, on September 3, 1941, filed application on behalf of herself and two infant children for benefits, and the Appeal Board having reversed an order of the Compensation Commissioner, which denied compensation thereon, and having awarded monthly benefits to the widow and infant children, the employer, The Homer Laughlin China Company, obtained an appeal from such order.
Denial of compensation by the Commissioner was predicated upon Section 9 of said act, which provides, in part, as follows:
"(a) To entitle any employee to compensation for silicosis under the provisions hereof, the application therefor must be made on a form or forms prescribed by the commissioner and filed in the office of the commissioner within one year from and after the date of the last injurious exposure to silicon dioxide dust, or in case of death, the application shall be filed as aforesaid by the dependent of such employee within one year from and after the date of the last injurious exposure to silicon dioxide dust."
The position of the employer is that the quoted provision is jurisdictional and that no widow or dependent is entitled to compensation in a fatal case unless death ensues within one year from the date of the last exposure. The contention of claimant is that there is no requirement that both the claimant and the widow (and dependents) should file a claim within the one-year period but that the statute requires only alternative action and, when the deceased employee filed application for benefits within the one-year period, it was unnecessary for the widow to file her application within such time.
This is the initial consideration by this Court of the issue here presented.
In Jones v. Rinehart Dennis Co.,
"Where an employee suffers from the disease of silicosis as hereinafter defined, or dies as the result of such disease, and the disease is due to the nature of an occupation or process in which he was employed at any time within one year previous to such disease, and claim therefor has been made within one year after the last exposure of said employee to silicon dioxide dust in harmful quantities, the employee, or in case of death his dependents, shall be entitled to compensation for silicosis as provided herein: * * *."
What then are the "provisions hereinafter made" and the "compensation for silicosis as provided herein"?
Section 7 of the silicosis statute deals with the various stages of silicosis, as defined by the act, and fixes benefits for each stage; and subsection (d) thereof provides:
"If the employee dies from silicosis within one year from the date of the last exposure of the employee to silicon dioxide dust in harmful quantities, the benefits shall be in the amounts and to the persons provided for in section 1, article four of this chapter * * *."
The last cited statutory reference treats of disbursement of the workmen's compensation fund and provides for *632 payment to the dependents where death has ensued to the employee. Hence, we find that under subsection (d), benefits are payable to dependents if death to the diseased employee occurs within the one-year period.
It is asserted by claimant that Section 5, requiring that "claim therefor has been made within one year," compels only that a claim be filed and not one by both employee and the widow, or other dependents. This contention is not persuasive when considered in the light of Section 7(d) from which a dependent's right to benefits emanates; nor is claimant's position tenable that no provision is made for compensation benefits where the employee's death ensues after the one-year period, and, therefore, under Code,
Code,
Having concluded that a dependent's right to benefits is circumscribed by a limitation in which death shall occur if such dependent is to participate in the fund, we must say that the language of Section 9 that a dependent must file application within one year from and after the date *633
of the last injurious exposure to silicon dioxide dust is clear in its requirement which, in compensation cases other than silicosis, we have held to be jurisdictional. Young v.Compensation Commissioner,
For the foregoing reasons the ruling of the Appeal Board is reversed and the claim remanded with direction that the order of the Compensation Commissioner be affirmed.
Reversed and remanded.