Court Opinion

ID: 5250807
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 18:12:52.507692+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:56.786243
License: Public Domain

Lyon, J.:
The question presented by this appeal is whether the mother and youngest brother of the deceased were dependent upon him for support at the time of his death on April 2, 1917.
James Wilkes was in the employ of the Rome Wire Company and met an accidental death. He was receiving an average of $15.80 per week with ten per cent bonus.-. Of this sum he paid his mother $10 per week “ $5.00 for his board, and $5.00 toward the home, and to help send the little brother to school, and buy things.” The father was employed in the Rome Iron Mills, Inc. He had received in wages for the week immediately preceding the son’s death $39.96. He received the week preceding, $44.96. His wages for the year were $1,611.81, or an average of $31.60 per week. He gave his wife $20 per week for the support of his family which consisted of himself, his wife, their children, James, Arthur, Joseph, Howard and Florence. None of them excepting James, Howard and Florence boarded at home. The mother received from Arthur, Joseph and Florence $3 each per week, making her weekly income with the $10 received from James *628and $20 received from the husband, $39 per week. The husband spent his remaining $11.60 for clothes, filling or grading about the house, and anything the family needed. The wife testified that it cost to support the family during April, the month of the death of the son, $15 to $20. They bought the house in July, 1916, and during the nine months between that date and April second, when James was killed, paid $275 thereon, an average of about $30 per month. Furthermore, during the previous years of idleness of the father, debts had accumulated to a large amount. These had been paid off. The son’s life insurance of $600 was applied, $400 evidently in the purchase of the adjoining lot, and $200 in payment on the house. This made the aggregate payments on the house $500, with one payment of $25. The wife stated over her own signature that the husband was paying her but $10 per week, and the husband that he was earning but $20 per week. In fact he was paying her $20 per week, and his earnings for six weeks immediately preceding the death of James were upwards of $40 per week, excepting for two weeks when they were $39.96 and $39.09 per week. He also testified that in the winter he could not work, while the payroll shows no lessening of his earning power for the winter months. We think this is not a family for whose benefit the Workmen’s Compensation Law was enacted.
The award must be reversed and the claim dismissed.
All concurred.
Award reversed and claim dismissed.