Eugene Demaray died August 10, 1961, as the result of injuries accidentally sustained in the course of his employment with defendant Mannerud Construction Company. Claiming to be decedent's depеndent widow Alberta O. Demaray petitioned for an award of compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Law. After hearing, the industrial commissioner disallowed the claim. From judgment of the circuit court affirming decision of the commissoner claimant has appealed to this court.
Appellant and decedent were married in Decеmber 1945 in St. Louis, Missouri. No children were born of this relationship. Claimant's three children from a previous marriage were over the age of 18 at the time of the death of Eugene M. Dеmaray. The testimony was that prior to March 20, 1961, the parties had been living in Madison, South Dakota. At about that time they moved *556 to a highway construction site near Midland, South Dakota, and decedent was employed by defendant Mannerud Construction Company as a truck driver. Claimant provided workmen on the project with board for which they compensated her, but she was at no time an employee of the company. June 2, 1961, she returned to her home in Madison. She immediately commenced an action, which was pending in the circuit court of Lake County at the time of the death of her husband, for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. She therein renounced any claim for support or alimony, but did demand that defendant "be specifically required to pay all charges and liens against him and any other bills against the the couple now outstanding."
The pertinent provisions of SDC 1960 Supp. 64.0402 in effect at the time of the accidental injury and death were as follows:
"(1) If the employee leaves any widow, * * * whom he was under legal obligation to support at the time of his injury, a sum equal to five times the annual earnings of the employee, but not less in any event than three thousand dollars, and not more in any event than nine thousand dollars, * * *.
"(7) No compensation shall be payable under this section to a widow unless she was living with her deceased husband at the time of his death, or was then dependent upon him for support."
The commissioner found "that claimant, Alberta O. Demaray, had not lived with her husband, the said Eugene M. Demaray, since on or about June 2, 1961 and had commenced a divorce action against the said Eugene M. Demaray on June 9, 1961; that claimant, Alberta O. Demaray, was not living with the said Eugene M. Demaray at the time of his death on August 10, 1961" and that "claimant, Alberta O. Demaray, was employed during mоst of the years of her marriage to the said Eugene M. Demaray including the year preceding the death of said Eugene M. Demaray; that prior to March 20, 1961 she supported hеrself with little, if any, assistance from the said Eugene M. Demaray; that from about March 20, 1961 until about June 2, 1961 claimant provided all of her support from her earnings, and in addition thereto, she *557 provided room and board for said Eugene M. Demaray; that about June 2, 1961 said Alberta O. Demaray and the said Eugene M. Demaray separated and thereafter said Alberta O. Dеmaray supported herself without assistance of said Eugene M. Demaray; that the said Eugene M. Demaray drank intoxicating liquors to excess and, with infrequent exceptions, spent the money he earned for liquor; that such money as Eugene M. Demaray gave claimant prior to June 9, 1961 was applied on debts that he had accumulated due to his drinking problem; that after June 9, 1961 claimant received no money or support from the said Eugene M. Demaray; that in the divorce action commenced by claimant, all claims for support or alimony from the said Eugene M. Demaray were waived; that claimant was not dependent upon the said Eugene M. Demaray for support at the time of his deаth on August 10, 1961."
The sole question is whether the evidence sustains the findings of the commissioner to the effect that appellant was not living with her deceased husband at the time of his deаth and was not then dependent upon him for 'support. Where workman and wife did not live together, dependency in a legal sense is not sufficient, but it must be affirmatively shown as a faсt. In Peterson v. John Morrell
&
Co.,
As early as 1920, this court in Day v. Sioux Falls Fruit Co.,
Appellant contends that since there was no legal severance of the marriage relation and there was still the possibility of a dismissal of the divorce action she was within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Law still living with her husband and therefore conclusively presumed to be dependent upon him for support. "Living with" does not always import a physically dwelling together. Peterson v. John Morrell & Cо., supra. If it is found that the wife was temporarily absent from the home or that the parties were living apart at the time of death for their mutual .convenience without estrangement or repudiation of their marital obligations, the wife would be deemed to have been living with her husband and entitled to the benefit of the presumption of dependency. 99 C.J.S. Wоrkmen's Compensation § 140(3); cf. Creasy v. Phoenix Utilities Co.,
It follows that appellant living apart from her husband was required in order to establish her right to recover to show actual dependency. As declared in Chittenden v. Jarvis,
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
