Caridad OCASIO, Appellant, v. BUREAU OF CRIMES COMPENSATION DIVISION OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, Appellee.
No. 81-693.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
January 12, 1982.
408 So.2d 751
Before SCHWARTZ, BASKIN and DANIEL S. PEARSON, JJ.
Jon W. Burke and Linda Dakis, Miami, for appellant.
Robert Mack, Tallahassee, for appellee.
SCHWARTZ, Judge.
Mrs. Caridad Ocasio had filed a dissolution proceeding and was living apart from her husband when he attacked her and repeatedly slashed her face with a razor.1 She filed a claim under the Florida Crimes Compensation Act to recover the resulting lost earnings and medical expenses. Following a hearing held pursuant to
960.04 Eligibility for awards. — (1) Except as provided in subsection (2), the following persons shall be eligible for awards pursuant to this section:
(a) A victim.
(b) An intervenor.
(c) A surviving spouse, parent, or child of a deceased victim or intervenor.
(d) Any other person who is dependent for his principal support upon a deceased victim or intervenor.
(e) A dependent child of a deceased victim of a crime who is related to or residing in the same household as the person who committed the crime.
(2) Any person who:
(a) Committed or aided in the commission of the crime upon which the claim was based;
(b) Was engaged in an unlawful activity at the time of the crime upon which the claim is based;
(c) Is related within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity to the person who committed the crime, except as provided in paragraph (1)(e);
(d) Is maintaining a sexual relationship with the person who committed the crime; or
(e) Resides in the same household as the person who committed the crime, except as provided in paragraph (1)(e),
shall not be eligible to receive an award with respect to such claim.
We think it very clear that the present claim is not barred by this statutory provision.
The question on which the case turns boils down to whether the term “affinity” in
We do not think it can be maintained that a husband is related to his wife by affinity. They are embraced in the definition of neither affinity nor consanguinity, but are regarded in law ... as one person.
Accord, Ex parte Harris, 26 Fla. 77, 7 So. 1 (1890); State v. Hooper, 140 Kan. 481, 37 P.2d 52 (1934). The appellee points out, however, that, as Wall states, this view was based on the notion that husband and wife were, in legal contemplation, the same person who therefore could not be “related” to each other by affinity or otherwise. Since this attitude is no longer a viable part of the law, it is argued — and the deputy, in a thoughtful order, agreed below — that the term must be given a correspondingly new and modern interpretation.3 In our view, this approach misses the mark entirely. The issue is not whether spouses are any longer correctly regarded as a single individual; obviously, they are not.4 Rather, it is what the legislature meant and intended when it employed the particular expression in the present statutory context. State v. Gale Distributors, Inc., 349 So.2d 150 (Fla. 1977). On this point, the controlling principle is that technical legal words, such as “affinity,” are deemed to have been statutorily used as they are legally defined. Davis v. Strople, 39 So.2d 468 (Fla. 1949); see Variety Children‘s Hospital, Inc. v. Perkins, 382 So.2d 331, 337-38 (Fla. 3d DCA 1980). As is said in 30 Fla.Jur. Statutes § 98 (1974):
Technical words and phrases that have acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law cannot be presumed to have been used by the legislature in a loose popular sense. To the contrary, they have been presumed to have been used according to their legal meaning. They will ordinarily be interpreted not in their popular, but in their fixed legal, sense and with regard to the limitations the law attaches to them. Where legal terms are used in a statute, unless a plainly contrary intention is shown they must receive their technical meaning.
This principle is clearly applicable here.
Furthermore, two additional factors make it even clearer that the accepted definition of affinity, which excludes spouses, must be applied to
The Bureau of Crimes Compensation also argues that the deputy‘s interpretation is consistent with what it discerns from
Reversed.
