Court Opinion

ID: 6434365
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:11:09.276667+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:19.573905
License: Public Domain

De Courcy, J.
It is agreed that the employee died from an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment. The committee of arbitration found that the claimants Santa Pagnoni and Giuseppe Pagnoni, the mother and father of the deceased, were partly dependent upon his earnings for support at the *10date of his injury and death and awarded compensation at the rate of $2.56 per week for five hundred weeks. The Industrial Accident Board on review affirmed the findings and decision of the committee.
The only issue tried was that of the dependency of the claimants. Although the insurer filed more than fifty requests for rulings, we deem it necessary to consider only the three questions argued on its brief.
1. The claim for compensation filed by the attorney for the dependents on July 21, 1915, is the one relied on; and it complies with all the requirements of the statute. It states the time, place, cause and nature of the injury; it is signed on behalf of the dependents by the attorney who represented them at the hearing; and it was filed within six months after the death of the employee. St. 1911, c. 751, Part II, (as amended by St. 1912, c. 571, § 5,) §§ 23, 15.
2. The contention, that alien non-resident dependents are not entitled to compensation under our workmen’s compensation act, is disposed of by Derinza’s Case, 229 Mass. 435.
3. The award was made to the mother and father jointly. The statute (Part II, § 7) provides that: “... if there is no one wholly dependent and more than one person partly dependent, the death benefit shall be divided among them according to the relative extent of their dependency.” In this case the board made no finding as to the relative extent of the dependency; and the difficulty of doing so is apparent where the contributions may have been made for the joint benefit of both parents. The claimants, however, are willing to have the entire amount awarded to the father, who was the head of the family; and to rely upon having the case reopened for further hearing if the father should die during the period of compensation, leaving the mother surviving. Bartoni’s Case, 225 Mass. 349. In our opinion the present award is not in compliance with the statute. If it is to be made to both parents, the relative extent of their dependency individually must be found. See Osterbrink’s Case, 229 Mass. 407.
The decree must be reversed, and "the case remanded to the board to make an award in accordance with the terms of this opinion.

Ordered accordingly.