278 S.W. 540 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Affirming
O.C. Collins, a colored man, was an employee of the appellant, Rockhouse Coal Company, in its mine in Letcher county. Both he and the company were operating under our Workmen's Compensation Act and he sustained an accident compensable thereunder from the effects of which he died, leaving as his sole dependent his widow, the appellee, Eliza Ella Collins. She agreed with appellant and its insurance company that she was only fifty per cent dependent upon her deceased husband, and an application to the board for an award in her favor was made pursuant to that agreement. The board declined to approve it and awarded the widow full compensation under the act. The employer carried the case to the circuit court for review of the award pursuant to the right to do so conferred by the act, and that court affirmed the award, and complaining of it appellants have brought the case here.
We have this day decided in the case of Workmen's Compensation Board v. Abbott, et al.,
It is insisted, however, that the agreement here involved was not such as the board had the right to disapprove; but we can not give our assent thereto. Section 13 of the act, now sec. 4894 of our present statutes, prescribes who are dependents under it and creates three classes who "shall be presumed to be wholly dependent upon a deceased employee," the first of which is "A wife upon a husband whom she had not voluntarily abandoned at the time of the accident," The stipulation filed in this case brings the widow completely within that provision. In the very recent cases of Jones v. Louisville Gas Electric Company,
But it is said that subsection 4 of section 12 of the act, now 4893 of our statutes, reading: "All relations of dependency herein referred to shall be construed to mean dependency existing at the time of the accident to the employe," allows proof to be heard upon the question as to the extent of dependency sustained by all of the classes of dependents enumerated in the statute. But we do not so interpret that language, since it deals with "relations of dependency" sustained at the time of the injury, and not to the extent of the dependency, and its purpose was to give compensation to only those who were dependents at the time of the accident to the employee, and not to those who were theretofore dependents but who had ceased to be such. *140
Since the statute itself makes a surviving wife "wholly dependent" upon her deceased husband, and its construction, as made in the cases, supra, furnishes a conclusive presumption that she is such if she had not voluntarily abandoned him at the time of the accident, no proof could be introduced to show otherwise, and the agreement to the contrary, and which is sought to be upheld by appellant, is not enforceable, especially without the approval or consent of the board.
It not having done so in this case, the court correctly sustained its award, and the judgment is affirmed.