Opinion
I
Graciela Messina (decedent) while employed as a medical secretary by the County of Los Angeles (County) from July 1, 1969, to and including September 3, 1976, sustained an injury arising out of and occurring in the course of her employment to her internal organs, in the form of hepatitis, which injury resulted in her death on March 26, 1977. At the time of said injury, decedent’s husband, petitioner Joseph Messina (husband) was partially dependent upon her for support and her children, petitioners Joseph Messina, Jr. (a minor at the time of injury) and Alfonso Messina, were totally dependent upon her.
The only issue herein is the amount of the workers’ compensation death benefit to be awarded.
As applies herein, Labor Code section 4702 specifies: “the death benefit in cases of total dependency. . . shall be the sum of forty thousand dollars ($40,000) except in the case of a surviving widow and one or more dependent minor children, in which case the death benefit shall be forty-five thousand dollars ($45,000). . .. ” 1 (Italics added.)
Since petitioners Joseph Messina, Jr., and Alfonso Messina were totally dependent upon decedent at the time of injury any death benefit is divided between them and decedent’s husband, as only a partial dependent, receives no part thereof. (Lab. Code, § 4703. 2 )
*967 Respondent Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board, in a closely divided en banc opinion (Messina v. County of Los Angeles (1979) 44 Cal.Comp.Cases 10), has awarded the children a death benefit of $40,000. The children claim entitlement to the augmented death benefit of $45,000, which is awarded to “a surviving widow and one or more dependent minor children.”
II
The claim to the augmented death benefit of $45,000 is grounded on the contentions such benefit (1) only requires one or more dependent minor children, and no surviving spouse is needed and (2) limitation of the augmented death benefit to where there is a widow and one or more dependent minor children is an unconstitutional denial of equal protection and the statute should be extended by judicial decision to encompass a “widower” and one or more dependent minor children.
III
At the outset we reject the contention that the mere existence of “one or more dependent minor children” without a surviving spouse triggers entitlement to the augmented death benefits. In order to be entitled to the augmented death benefit there must be
both
“a surviving widow
and
one or more dependent minor children.” That is, if there is no surviving widow, the dependent minor children are not entitled to the augmented death benefit under Labor Code section 4702 as applicable herein.
(Beauchamp
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1969) 34 Cal.Comp.Cases 194.
3
) It is not necessary, however, that the surviving widow be even a partial dependent.
(State Comp. Ins. Fund
v.
Ind. Acc. Com. (Hudson)
(1950)
*968 IV
It is urged the limitation of the augmented death benefits to surviving widows is unconstitutional as a denial of equal protection and the court should remedy this defect by extending the augmented death benefit to surviving widowers and one or more dependent minor children.
The limitation of augmented death benefits to widows is not only basically unfair under the facts and situation present in the instant case but is clearly unconstitutional under the equal protection clauses of both the United States and California Constitutions.
(Arp
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1977)
In Arp our Supreme Court declared unconstitutional the then in effect conclusive presumption of Labor Code section 3501, subdivision (a) that a wife was totally dependent upon her husband. The court invalidated this presumption of dependency and declined to extend the presumption of dependency to the husband upon a wife. The court thus left to widows and widowers alike to prove the extent of their dependency and be compensated in accordance with the facts and circumstances shown. (Arp, supra, 19 Cal.3d at pp. 409-410.) The Legislature has by Statutes 1979, chapter 749, page 2599 deleted this offending provision. Also by Statutes 1979, chapter 749, page 2599 the Legislature has remedied the problem with respect to Labor Code section 4702 by deleting *969 “widow” and in lieu thereof adding “spouse.” Accordingly, for injuries on or after January 1, 1980, Labor Code section 4702 has been expressly clarified to comply with equal protection requirements. 4
The issue here is then whether this court should judicially extend Labor Code section 4702 as in effect prior to January 1, 1980, to widows and widowers alike or merely, as the court did in Arp, entirely nullify the provision for an augmented death benefit.
In
Arp,
We conclude that, rather than outright invalidation, the statute should be extended to encompass a surviving widower and one or more dependent minor children as such action is more consistent with the legislative intent of the augmented death benefit and would avoid total elimination of the augmented death benefit. In support of this conclusion we regard the dissenting opinion of Commissioner Glow (in which Board Chairman Witt and Commissioner Gaines concurred) persuasive.
*970
Commissioner Glow’s analysis pointed out: “The issue in this case is whether the dependent children are entitled to the augmented death benefit provided for in Labor Code Section 4702. This augmentation was provided in an amendment to that section [by Statutes 1947, chapter 1031, section 1, p. 2302.] An early indication of the statutory purpose was revealed in
[State Comp. Ins. Fund
v.
Ind. Acc. Com. (Hudson), supra,
“The argument was made in Hudson that ‘surviving widow’ as used in Section 4702 required a surviving dependent widow. In-extending the coverage of Section 4702 to include this fact situation, the court stated: ‘The liability which fell upon the surviving widow not only to support the two children but to devote to them the care of a mother and guardian not only reduces the ability of the “surviving widow” to support herself but accordingly reduces her ability to supplement the $6,000 [(the death benefit at that time, with $7,500 being the augmented benefit)] and thereby lengthens the readjustment period. Hence the commission deemed that a necessity had arisen to award the children not the mother, the additional amount that may be awarded under section 4702.’ [(Italics by court.) (Hudson, supra, 95 Cal.App.2d at pp. 673-674.)]
“In this case, the burden for the care of the dependent children was previously on decedent and is now on the surviving widower. The court’s reasoning in Hudson, supra, may be paraphrased to apply to the facts in this case. Here a liability fell upon the surviving widower not only to support two children [(one of whom was a minor at the time of injury)], but to devote to them the care of a father and guardian. This not only reduces the ability of the surviving widower to support himself, but accordingly reduces his ability to supplement the $40,000.00 and thereby lengthens the readjustment period. This is no less valid because we are talking about a surviving male (father) rather than a surviving woman (mother).
“This situation is clearly distinguishable from that of Arp where it was unnecessary for the court to take any more affirmative action than declaring the statute unconstitutional. Here, the only way that the legislative intent of the statute can be given effect, consistent with the *971 requirements of equal protection under the law, is by [construing] the statute to include widowers as well as ‘widows.’
“The Supreme Court of this state in dicta seemed to accept this in the
Arp
case when they stated [(
V
Accordingly, we hold Labor Code section 4702 must be read to also provide the augmented death benefit to a surviving widower and one or more dependent minor children.
Finally, we must consider the extent to which our opinion shall have retroactive application.
(Arp, supra,
The decision of the board is annulled and the matter remanded to the board for such further proceedings as are consistent with our opinion herein.
Jefferson (Bernard), P. J., and Hanson (Thaxton), J., concurred.
Notes
By Statutes 1976, chapter 1017, section 6, page 4595, the death benefit was increased to $50,000 with $55,000 for a “surviving widow and one or more dependent minor children.” The parties agree that this increased death benefit does not apply here and that the amount of death benefit is set at the time of injury not the time of death.
Labor Code section 4703 provides: “Subject to the provisions of section 4704, this section shall determine the right to a death benefit. *967 “If there is any person wholly dependent for support upon a deceased employee, such person shall receive the entire death benefit, and any person partially dependent shall receive no part thereof. “If there is more than one person wholly dependent for support upon a deceased employee, the death benefit shall be divided equally among them. “If there is more than one person partially dependent for support upon a deceased employee, and no person wholly dependent for support, the amount allowed as a death benefit shall be divided among the persons so partially dependent in proportion to the relative extent of their dependency.”
The decision of the board in
Beauchamp
is, of course, not binding upon this court even though we denied a writ of review thereof.
(Thrifty Drug Stores, Inc.
v.
Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1979)
Labor Code section 4702 as amended effective January 1, 1980, provides: “Except as provided in the next paragraph, the death benefit in cases of total dependency, when added to all accrued disability indemnity, shall be the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) except in the case of a surviving spouse and one or more dependent minor children or in the case of two or more surviving dependent minor children, in either of which cases, the death benefit shall be fifty-five thousand dollars ($55,000) and except as otherwise provided in Sections 4553 and 4554. In cases of partial dependency the death benefit shall be a sum equal to four times the amount annually devoted to the support of the dependents by the employee, not to exceed the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). The death benefit in all cases shall be paid in installments in the same manner and amounts as temporary disability indemnity, payments to be made at least twice each calendar month, unless the appeals board otherwise orders. “Disability indemnity shall not be deducted from the death benefit and shall be paid in addition to the death benefit when the original injury resulting in death occurs after the effective date of the amendment to this section adopted at the 1949 Regular Session of the Legislature. “Every computation made pursuant to this section shall be made only with reference to death resulting from an original injury sustained after this section as amended in 1979 during the 1979-80 Regular Session of the Legislature becomes effective; provided, however, that all rights presently existing under this section shall be continued in force.”
