Affirming.
A special demurrer having been sustained to the petition, as amended, of the plaintiffs below (here appellants), and they having declined to plead further, their petition was dismissed, and they have appealed. The petition, as amended, in substance avers that Pierce Jett, now deceased, in his lifetime intermarried with Lucille Jett, and that there was born to them a son, the appellant Leo Jett, who is now about 17 years of age; that, when Leo Jett was about six months old, Pierce Jett and Lucille Jett were divorced; that Lucille Jett thereafter married a man by the name of Smith. As Lucille Smith, guardian for her infant son Leo Jett, she, too, is a party appellant to this suit. The petition, as amended, then avers that Pierce Jett after he had been divorced from his first wife married Grace Jett, and that there was born to them a son Samuel Jett, who is now about 8 years of age. He is a party appellee herein, as is also his guardian, J.H. Johnson. The petition, as amended, then goes on to state that Pierce Jett thereafter and while working for the Marion Coal Company was killed in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. His widow, Grace Jett, thereafter married a man by the name of Spicer, and, as Grace Spicer, she is also a party appellee herein. The petition, as amended, then avers that, after the death of Pierce Jett, proceedings were instituted *Page 346 before the Workmen's Compensation Board, in which Grace Spicer, Samuel Jett, his guardian, J.H. Johnson, and Leo Jett, through Grace Spicer, as his next friend, appeared; that the purpose of such proceedings was to have adjudged to whom the compensation due under the Workmen's Compensation Act (Ky. Stats., sec. 4880 et seq.) should be paid, and that through fraud and misrepresentation Grace Spicer, although acting as the next friend for Leo Jett, her stepson, procured the Workmen's Compensation Board to make an award adjudging that her own son, Samuel Jett, was the sole dependent of Pierce Jett, and that the compensation of $12 a week for 335 weeks allowed by the statute should be paid to the guardian of said Samuel Jett for him as the sole dependent of Pierce Jett, as indeed it was. The petition, as amended, then alleges that prior to his death Pierce Jett had not only had the custody of his infant son Leo Jett alternately with the mother of said Leo since their divorce, but that also he had in fact supported and maintained his said infant son Leo with all the necessities of life and had provided for his rearing and education, and that in truth and in fact Leo Jett was as much dependent on his father, Pierce Jett, for his sustenance and support as was Samuel Jett, and that, instead of Samuel Jett being the sole dependent of Pierce Jett, both he and Leo Jett were together the total dependents of such Pierce Jett, but that, through fraud and misrepresentation of Grace Spicer, the award had been made as stated. It was then averred that the guardian of Samuel Jett still had in his possession all of the compensation that had been awarded and paid as aforesaid, and it was sought to have it adjudged in this suit that Leo Jett was entitled to one-half of such sum. The First National Bank of Jackson was joined as a party defendant on the allegation that it was the depository of the funds of the guardian of Samuel Jett. The lower court sustained the special demurrer to the petition on the theory that the finding of the Compensation Board as to the sole dependency of Samuel Jett was conclusive as between the parties to that proceeding until in some manner allowed by law it was set aside by the Compensation Board, which, being true, the circuit court had no jurisdiction of this original suit.
We are of opinion that the trial court was correct in its ruling. The petition, as amended, discloses that *Page 347
Leo Jett was a party to the proceedings before the Compensation Board in which it was adjudged that he was not dependent on Pierce Jett, and that Samuel Jett was the latter's sole dependent. The Compensation Act in terms declares that the findings of fact by the board shall be conclusive (Kentucky Statutes, sec. 4935), and the constitutionality of this provision has been upheld in the cases of Greene v. Caldwell,
Its judgment dismissing the petition, as amended, is affirmed.
