This is an action of tort, reported to this court without decision upon a case stated in substance as follows. The Independent Chair Company was a corporation and an insured subscriber under the workmen’s compensation act. Harry M. Brenner, the plaintiffs’ testator, and the defendant Liner, were employees of said company. On March 18, 1949, both were riding in the defendant’s automobile, operated by the defendant, on the business of said company and in the course of their employment. Brenner was in the exercise of due care and was killed by the negligence of the defendant Liner. Brenner had not reserved his common law rights against the company.
Brenner left a widow and two children. By St. 1947, c. 506, § 1A, revising G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 229, § 2, a person *153 who negligently “causes the death of a person in the exercise of due care who is not in his or its employment or service . . . shall be liable in damages, in an amount not less than two thousand nor more than fifteen thousand dollars, to be assessed with reference to the pecuniary loss sustained by the parties entitled to benefit hereunder and recovered by the executor or administrator of the deceased person in an action of tort . . . and distributed one half to the surviving wife or husband and one half to the children of the deceased dependent upon him for support . . ..” The case stated declares that the children were not dependents under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 1, but were dependents under the death act, St. 1947, c. 506, § 1A.
The widow has claimed and received the benefits due her as a dependent under the workmen’s compensation act, but the children have received nothing under that act.
The defendant, as an employee of the insured company, was not “some person other than the insured,” within G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 15,- as it appears in St. 1943, c. 432.
Caira
v.
Caira,
The plaintiff relies upon
Reidy
v.
Old Colony Gas Co.
It follows from what has been said that in the present case the entry must be
T ,7 , , ± Judgment for the defendant.
