By sub. (3), sеc. 102.11, of the workmen’s compensation act, it is provided that among those conclusively prеsumed to be solely and wholly dependent for support upon a deceased employee shall be: A child under the age of eighteen years . . . upon the parent with whom such child is living at the time of the death of such parent, there being no surviving dependent parent; and in case of divorce, “the charging of the full support and maintenance of a child upon one of the divorced рarents shall he held to constitute a living with the parent so charged.”
The statute further provides that in all other cases the question of entire or1 partial dependency shall be determined in accordance with the fact as it may be at the time of the accident to the employee.
The only question here between the parties is whether the circuit court was right in determining that the- situatiоn presented one of partial dependency of the child, Harold,
The appellants contend that there was here a question of fact and the determination of the Commission was conclusive, the respondents that it presented a question of law upon which the court below and this court may properly arrive at a different result.
There was presented here for solution a problem with three elements, viz.: undisputed facts; thе language of a divorce judgment; the language of the statute. Generally such a problem prеsents a question of law within the sole province of the court to determine, rather than -a questiоn of fact which may be left to the determination of a jury or some officer or tribunal as a trier оf facts. As stated in 1 Jones on Evidence (3d ed.) § 175a: "It is firmly established and universally recognized that the judge is to construe and interpret the contracts and other written instruments of every description that are оffered in evidence. Their' construction and interpretation are governed by the established rulеs of law.” 5 Wigmore, Evidence (2d ed.) § 2556, says: “The construction of all written instruments belongs to the court.”
Were the same situation presented in a trial in the circuit court before a jury, evidently there would be_.no question for the jury and the determination would be for the court alone.
A question of considerable difficulty, however, has been raised under the broad effect given by the workmen’s compensation act to the findings of fact by the Industrial Commission, sec. 2394 — 19 (now sec. 102.23) providing: “The findings of fact made by the commission acting within its powers shall, in the absence of fraud, be conclusive.”
Under this statute, where, as here, there wаs no dispute in the evidence, it has been held that where different conclusions could be reasonably drawn from such evidence, the
Again, in Carey v. Industrial Comm.
We think that under these decisions the question here, requiring as it does a construction to be given to the provisions of the divorce judgment, offered in evidence by the claimant, in connection with the language of' the statute, makes a result reached 'from the consideration of the language of the
Cases from California (Federal Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Comm. (Cal.)
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
