STATE COMPENSATION INSURANCE FUND et al., Petitioners, v. INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT COMMISSION, MARIE HUDSON et al., Respondents.
Civ. No. 14254
First Dist., Div. One.
Jan. 20, 1950.
95 Cal.App.2d 671
The judgment is reversed.
Peters, P. J., and Ward, J., concurred.
T. Groezinger and Robert Ball for Respondents.
WARD, J.—This petition for a writ of review was filed by the State Compensation Insurance Fund and Pickering Lumber Company, a corporation, for the purpose of having this court examine and determine the legality of the findings and award of the Industrial Accident Commission in favor of two minors, Joyce Cecilee Hudson and Carol Marie Hudson, in the sum of $7,500 (maximum death benefit under the Workmen‘s Compensation Act) and payable to their mother, Marie Hudson Bellah, as guardian ad litem and trustee.
On November 17, 1948, John C. Hudson sustained a fatal injury arising out of and occurring in the course of his employment as a timber faller with the Pickering Lumber Company, which resulted in his death the following day. The insurance carrier for the lumber company was the State Compensation Insurance Fund, and both the employer and employee were subject to the provisions of the workmen‘s compensation laws of the state. The deceased was the sole support of his two minor daughters who lived with him and they were his only dependents, though he lived with a woman not his wife, who was the mother of three children. He and his wife had been living apart for four years and by mutual oral agreement he was not contributing anything to her support. She married her present husband, Mr. Bellah, a month after the death of Hudson.
On May 5, 1949, the commission issued its findings and made a death award in the amount of $7,500, payable at the rate of $30 a week to the mother of the two minors, as guardian ad litem and trustee, for the support of the minors and not the “surviving widow.” The award was based upon maximum wages within the meaning of the Workmen‘s Compensation Act, as provided in
The real question presented on this petition is the amount of the award. It is contended that the award should have been $6,000 instead of $7,500, and that by reason of the award of the additional sum of $1,500 the insurance carrier and the employer to that extent were deprived of property without due process of law. (
Under the Workmen‘s Compensation Act awards are made only for the benefit of surviving dependents. Where there are no dependents no benefit should be awarded. The award here is made for the dependent children and there is no award for the “surviving widow.” In the present case the wife is not a dependent. She could not be classified as such in view of an oral agreement that she should live separate from her husband, with no reservation as to support (
At the time of Hudson‘s death the wife was the surviving widow. That is all that the statute refers to, namely, “a surviving widow.” Prior to Hudson‘s death the minors were in fact solely dependent upon the father. Upon his death the minors became dependent upon the “surviving widow,” who had previously worked to support herself. 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 and thereby lengthens the readjustment period. Hence the commission deemed that a necessity had arisen to
The writ is discharged and the award of the Industrial Accident Commission is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., concurred.
BRAY, J.—I dissent. I cannot agree to an interpretation of the Workmen‘s Compensation Act and of
The majority opinion concedes that the surviving widow here is not dependent, and hence no award could be made to her; yet it intimates that because support of the children may reduce her ability to support herself, the Legislature intended that the award to the children should be increased. But how about children who are motherless at the time of their father‘s death? More should be awarded them than to children who have a mother to contribute to their care. It is unrealistic to hold that the Legislature intended to award a larger death benefit to children with a mother, than to motherless children. The “readjustment period,” say the majority, in effect, is longer for children with a mother than for motherless children. Patently this is not so. A common sense construction of the act should be adopted by the courts rather than to read into the act a legislative intent that results in the anomalous result here. Such a construction results, in fact, although not in words, in making the widow here a
