This case is before the Court on an appeal by the employer, United States Steel Corporation, from an order of the workmen’s compensation appeal board dated May 10, 1965, which affirmed a ruling of the workmen’s compensation director dated December 15, 1964, by which Kiter Maxwell was awarded benefits as a dependent widow at the rate of $75.00 a month.
The pertinent facts are undisputed. The primary question presented for decision is whether the widow is entitled to benefits at the rate of $75.00 a month under the statute which was in effect when her husband died on May 22, 1963, as a result of third stage silicosis, or whether she is entitled to benefits at the rate of $65.00 a month under the statute in effect when the deceased husband terminated his employment in the employer’s coal mine on November 22, 1960, because of ill health. The husband did not file a claim for workmen’s compensation benefits during his lifetime, but an autopsy disclosed that his death resulted from third stage silicosis.
Counsel for the respective parties agree that at the time the employee ceased work on November 22, 1960, Code, 1931, 23-4-10, as amended in 1957, provided for benefits to a dependent widow at the rate of $65.00 a month; and that at the time of the employee’s death on May 22, 1963, Code, 1931, 23-4-10, as a consequence of the 1961 amendment, provided for benefits to a dependent widow at the rate of $75.00 a month. The sole question presented for decision is, therefore, one of law.
In
Hardin
v.
Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board et al.,
The general legal principle relating to prospective operation of workmen’s compensation statutes was apparently adhered to without deviation in decisions of this Court until the decision was made in
Webb
v.
State Compensation Commissioner,
In
Peak
v.
State Compensation Commissioner et al.,
The holdings of the
Webb
and
Peak
cases were considered and limited in
Acree
v.
State Compensation Commissioner et al.,
Terry
v.
State Compensation Commissioner et al.,
Workmen’s compensation statutes, including amendments thereof, which affect the procedure only, and which in no way interfere with the substantial rights of the parties, are retroactive in their operation and apply to cases which arose prior to the effective date of the enactment. But where such a statute or such an amendment affects the substantive rights of the parties or alters their contractual rights or obligations, it can have no retroactive effect. Schneider, The 'Law of Workmen’s Compensation (2d Ed.), Volume II, Section 577, pages 2139-40; Schneider’s Workmen’s Compensation Text (3d or Permanent Ed.), Volume 12, Section 2552, pages 389-91; 58 Am. Jur., Workmen’s Compensation, Section 33, page 599, Section 73, page 627,
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and Section 404, page 844;
Consentina
v.
State Compensation Commissioner et al.,
It is a well established legal principle that workmen’s compensation statutes become a part of and are read into the contract created by the employment.
State ex rel. Conley
v.
Pennybacker,
“We are first met with the question as to the relations existing between the decedent and his employer. We are of the opinion that these relations were contractual in their nature. This results from the provisions of the statute requiring election of the employer to contribute to the compensation fund, and the requirement of notice to employees of such election, thereby, on the one hand, creating *130 an agreement on the part of employer to contribute to the fund, and on the other, an agreement on the part of the employee to accept the benefits of the fund, 'and the consequent waiver of his right to assert claims against the employer, growing out of his employment, outside of the funds created for his benefit. The case of Gooding v. Ott,77 W. Va. 487 ,87 S. E. 862 ,L.R.A. 1916D, 637 , holds that where a statute makes acceptance optional, and the parties freely and voluntarily enter into a contract of employment with reference to the statute, the statute should be read into the contract as an integral part thereof, binding the parties, and enforceable in any jurisdiction the same as any other contract. Under the holding of this Court, such contractual relation was created as between the employer and employee, and was in existence at the date of the injury out of which claimant’s rights, if any, arise, and it follows that the rights of the claimant must be determined as of the date of the injury to Preston Hardin.”
See also an annotation in 82 A. L. R. 1244. In the
Hardin
case the Court (
We are of the opinion that the rights and obligations of the employer and the employee under the workmen’s compensation statutes became fixed and determined when the employee in this case terminated his employment on November 22, 1960. That was the last possible date of his exposure to silicon dioxide dust in harmful quantities arising from his employment. We believe that this must be regarded as the equivalent of the date of the workman’s “injury,” as that term is used in the workmen’s compensation statutes and in the court decisions relating to such statutes. The amendment of the workmen’s compensation statute which increased the amount of dependent widow benefits and Which became effective after the date of the termination of the employment cannot be regarded as an integral part of the employment contract.
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The statutory amendment which increased the amount of dependent widow benefits from $65.00 to $75.00 cannot be regarded as relating merely to procedure or to the remedy. If retroactive operation could be given to a statutory amendment increasing the amount of dependent benefits, it would seem to follow that the amount of benefits could be reduced in a similar manner. A statutory change in the amount of dependent widow benefits affects the substantial rights of the dependent. An increase in the amount of dependent benefits alters and increases the obligation of the employer to contribute to the compensation fund.
In Riggs
v.
Lehigh Portland Cement Company,
For reasons stated in this opinion, we are of the opinion that the director and the appeal board made an unwarranted retroactive application of the statutory amendment which increased dependent widow benefits from $65.00 to $75.00; and that the proper award to the widow in this case should be $65.00 a month. The ruling of the appeal board dated May 10, 1965, which affirmed a ruling of the director dated December 15, 1964, is, therefore, reversed, and the Court’s decision embodied in this opinion will be certified to the workmen’s compensation appeal board and to the workmen’s compensation commissioner.
To the extent that the holdings of the Court in
Webb
v.
State Compensation Commissioner,
Reversed.
