190 P. 934 | Utah | 1920
On the 27th day of December, 1919, George W. Eames, of Harrisville, Utah, met his death by reason of an accident arising out of and in the course of'his employment with the plaintiff Geo. A. Lowe Company. The plaintiff Ætna Life Insurance Company was the insurance carrier of Geo. A. Lowe Company.
The record shows that claimants are the parents of the decedent. They owned and lived upon a farm heavily incumbered by a mortgage. Their family included two daughters, under age, the decedent and his grandparents, all of whom reside together and were dependent upon the income from the farm for the necessaries of life. The decedent, age twenty years and ten months, had assisted his parents in doing the general farm work, except when occasionally employed elsewhere, at which times he would contribute his earnings to the family support, including apparel for himself and at times for other, members of the family. At the time of the accident in which decedent was killed he was an employé of the plaintiff Geo. A. Lowe Company and had been earning under said employment three dollars and twenty-five cents per day six days in a week, for a period of about three months. During the time he was thus engaged with the Geo. A. Lowe Company he had obtained his lodging and meals without charge at claimant’s home. On account of his absence from work on the farm it was arranged between him
Under the facts and circumstances of this case as disclosed by the record, we think partial dependency of the claimants was fully established within the purview and meaning of our statute. Further, the decision of the commission was final and conclusive on this Question as well as all
The next question presented by the plaintiff is whether or not the failure of the commission to make a finding as to the daily wage of decedent at the time of the accident invalidates the award.
Having established partial dependency upon the decedent, under the provisions of section 3140, subd. 3, as amended by chapter 63, Laws of Utah 1919, claimants were entitled to
The evidence shows beyond any dispute that decedent was earning at the time of the accident three dollars and twenty-five cents per day. The commission failed to make any such finding. Had the commission made a finding, no other finding than one to that effect could have been made under the evidence before it. There appears in the record, however, a purported copy of an unsigned stipulation certified under seal by the clerk of the commission “that the wage earned by decedent at the time of the accident was three dollars and twenty-five cents per day, working six days per week.” By permission of the court an affidavit made by the referee was. filed, stating in substance that the said stipulation with respect to wages earned by decedent was a clerical error, and that no such stipulation was made by the interested parties. Be that. as it may, we find no express requirement
Notwithstanding the liberal provisions of our statute with respect to proceedings held by the commission, we think it would be better, although not legally essential, if the commission would in all cases make findings upon which they predicate an award.
Under the provisions of the act our review is confined in this class of cases to certain defined and fixed subjects and can be extended no further than to determine whether or not:
“(1) The commission acted without or in excess of its powers; (2) if findings of fact are made, whether or not such findings of fact support the award under review.”
We think the jurisdictional facts entitling the commission to exercise its powers in the present case were fully and completely established by the proceedings as shown by the record before us. There can be no doubt about that. If there had been full and complete findings instead of only partial findings made by the commission, such findings of fact would have amply supported the award. Failure in that regard, therefore, should not defeat the purposes of the act to secure for employés and their dependents the prompt payment of coompensation under its provisions. A substantial compliance with its provisions is all that is legally required. The act itself provides:
“A substantial compliance with the requirements of this act shall he sufficient to give effect to the orders of the commission, and they shall .not be declared inoperative, illegal or void for any omission of a technical nature in respect thereto.”
In this case we think the record conclusively shows that the
It is so ordered.