25 N.W.2d 308 | Minn. | 1946
On February 3, 1945, the employe met with an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment which caused her death on March 8, 1945. At the time of the accidental, injury, employe was earning $32 per week and her husband $52 per week. Their earnings were put into a common fund or pool, out of which all family and household expenses were paid. Among such expenses was a ten-dollar-per-week wage paid to a housekeeper. Employe and her husband had two children, Gloria Ann and Monte Thomas, of the ages of almost nine years and approximately 16 years and five months, respectively, who lived with them as members of the family and were supported out of the common fund. Gloria Ann had no income of her own, but Monte Thomas did. He attended high school and worked part time, earning at the time of employe's death and for six months afterward four dollars per week and thereafter eight dollars per week. The record does not show what disposition he made of his earnings. The commission found that both children were wholly dependent upon the employe, and it made an award of compensation accordingly.
The employer contends that the award is not justified as a matter of law, for the reasons (1) that, while the workmen's compensation act declares that a child under the age of 16 years shall be conclusively presumed to be wholly dependent and that a child between 16 and 18 years of age shall prima facie be considered dependent, the act does not include the children of a deceased female employe, because "it does not designate the person they are presumed *542 to be dependent upon"; and (2) that, because the children were supported out of a common fund contributed to by both their father and mother, they were in fact partial dependents of their mother to the extent of the net proportional contribution made by her for their support. Except to call our attention to the fact that the boy, Monte Thomas, through his own efforts earned the amounts mentioned, the employer has made no point here as to the significance, if any, of that fact, and for that reason we shall not consider it as a factor in the case, notwithstanding the fact that the commission considered it as a factor and disposed of it upon the theory that the boy was in fact wholly dependent, even though he had some income of his own.
1. It is claimed by respondent that the status of deceased's children as her dependents is created by the following provisions of Minn. St. 1945, §
"Subdivision 1. For the purpose of this chapter, the following described persons shall be conclusively presumed to be wholly dependent: * * * (b) minor children under the age of 16 years;
"Subd. 2. Children between 16 and 18 years of age, * * * shall, prima facie, be considered dependent."
We have no difficulty in holding that the dependents referred to in the workmen's compensation act include those of a deceased female employe. A child for the purposes of the act is defined as one entitled to inherit as a child of the deceased.4 There are provisions that a "wife" shall be conclusively presumed to be wholly dependent,5 and that compensation in amounts specified shall be paid to a widow or widower and dependent children "if the deceased employee leave" such.6 In subd. 3, a child and certain other relatives wholly supported by a deceased employe are referred to *543
as "his actual dependents." In §
"* * * The law does not in terms exclude the children of the female employee, and no good reason occurs to us why they should be excluded by construction." *544
The authorities generally sustain this view. Reynolds Metal Co. v. Glass,
2. Gloria Ann was as a matter of law wholly dependent upon her mother. This conclusion follows from the provision of §
3. The right of Monte Thomas rests on a wholly different basis. Under §
Reversed in part, award set aside, and case remanded to the commission to make a new award in accordance with the opinion.
"Subd. 4. Any member of a class named in subdivision 3, who regularly derived part of his support from the wages of the deceased workman at the time of his death * * * shall be considered his partial dependents, * * *." See, M.S.A. §
"Subd. 17. Partial dependents shall be entitled to receive only that portion of the benefits provided for actual dependents which the average amount of wages regularly contributed by the deceased to such partial dependents * * * bore to the total income of the dependent during the same time." See, M.S.A. §