Aboud v. Aluminum Seal Co.

57 A.2d 706, 162 Pa. Super. 482, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 486
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 1947
DocketAppeal, 92
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 A.2d 706 (Aboud v. Aluminum Seal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aboud v. Aluminum Seal Co., 57 A.2d 706, 162 Pa. Super. 482, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 486 (Pa. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Fine, J.,

On December 7, 1945, Mroud Aboud, claimant, was employed by the Aluminum Seal Company and while engaged in shoveling sweepings from the floor of his employer’s plant, slipped and fell. As he fell his groin struck the edge of .a machine and he immediately felt sharp pains in the abdominal area. He ceased work at once and was then removed to the plant infirmary where he was later examined by the company physician. The referee found claimant totally disabled as a result of *484 hernia and awarded compensation at the rate of $20.00 per week pursuant to section 306(a) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, as last amended by the Act of 1945, P. L. 671, section 1, 77 PS §511, in effect on the date of the accident. 1 The board affirmed the referee and the employer appealed to the court below. That court, one judge dissenting, modified the award by reducing it to $18.00 per week, concluding that “. . . the injury was not a new injury, but a ‘recurrence’ of the original injury,” and, therefore, compensation should be awarded in accordance with the statute in effect on July 23, 1938, the date of the claimant’s first injury. 2 The claimant has appealed.

The testimony before the referee reveals that on July 23, 1938, the claimant suffered a ventral hernia in the course of his employment and was paid compensation at the rate of $18.00 per week until April 4,1939. On March 18, 1940 and later on January 11, 1941, claimant again suffered like hernial ailments and during those respective periods of physical incapacity was unable to pursue his employment and was paid compensation at the same rate. He has undergone three operations for the correction or remedy of the hernial ailments and, when requested by his employer to submit to operative treatment for the fourth time, he refused on the advice of his personal physicians.

The controlling issue is whether the present total disability resulted from the accident on December 7, 1945, or from a recurrence of the earlier injury. 3 Both *485 the referee and the board found disability was caused when claimant struck his groin on the edge of a machine as he fell to the floor following his foot-slip. The Compensation Board correctly concluded that: “The record discloses and clearly establishes that claimant’s present disability, which is total in character, is of accidental origin.” The court below erred in modifying the board’s award. :

The court below in reducing the award did find,- however, that claimant “again suffered an accident on December 7, 1945”, and epitomized its conclusions, as follows : “We are of the opinion that this award . . . cannot be sustained. It will be noted that the injury was not a new injury, but a ‘recurrence’ of the original injury. We believe the case is governed by the case of Roberts v. Hillman Coal and Coke Co., 131 Pa. Superior Ct. 570-573, 200 A. 128. See also the case of Huha v. Frick Coke Co., 149 Pa. Superior Ct. 108, 27 A. 2d 739.” The dissenting opinion discussed at length claimant’s refusal to undergo a fourth operation and concluded the refusal was justified. The pattern of the.board’s opinion is similar. The board observed that, “The main question involved in this appeal is whether the claimant’s refusal to submit to a fourth operation is justifiable”, and after finding without discussion that the claimant’s present total disability was of accidental origin, proceeded to discuss the “main question”, as stated by it, and concluded with an affirmance of the referee’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and award.

Summarizing the third, fourth, fifth and sixth findings, the referee found that “As a result* bf this accident, *486 (December 7, 1945) the claimant has been unable to perform any work whatsoever because of a recurrent ventral herniathat “. . . Following the accident of December 7, 1945, which brought about another recurrence of the ventral hernia, the defendant tendered claimant an operation for the correction of his condition, but same was refused by the claimant”; and, “. . . we believe the claimant’s refusal to submit to said operation is reasonable and justifiable.” (Italics ours.)

If the employer stressed, as is indicated, claimant’s refusal to undergo a fourth operation as a bar to compensation in the lower court, it abandoned that position on appeal and now concedes that the “claimant should receive the compensation to which he is entitled for recurrence by reinstating the original agreement.” (Italics ours.) The appellee (employer) here and the court below base the reduction in the amount of the award on the sole ground that, the compensation authorities having found as fact that the claimant suffered a “recurrence of the ventral hernia,” and “there being ample evidence to sustain this finding, it is binding upon the parties . . .” Appellee emphasizes too strongly the word, “recurrence”, as used by the compensation authorities, and ignores other considerations. The referee and the board found that the “recurrence” was the result of the fall — the accident, and not, as appellee would have us believe, the normal progression of hernia or the result of a prior injury. There is not a scintilla of evidence that the recurrence happened from any cause, other than the fall. In the referee’s second conclusion of law, affirmed by the board, it is said that “. . . the claimant is entitled to recover . . . for total disability by reason of his accident suffered while in the course of his employment . . .” We do not agree this case is governed by Roberts v. Hillman Coal and Coke Co., supra, and Huha v. Frick Coke Co., supra, relied on by the court below and the-appellee. The cases are easily *487 differentiated on the facts. In the Roberts case 4 the issue was whether the precipitation of the hernia constituted a “recurrence” within the intendment of the second paragraph of section 413, 5 of the disabling condition upon which the original agreement has been based, or amounted to a “new injury.” The Roberts case is clearly inapposite in that Roberts there sought reinstatement of compensation upon a showing that his disability had “recurred”, i.e., the descent of the hernia was due to his weakened abdominal wall following an operation necessitated by a compensable accident, and was not a “new injury”. Aboud, however, seeks to prove the converse, namely, that his hernial condition was a new and independent injury caused by an accident, to wit, the fall. The present claimant could not successfully challenge the lower court’s reduction in the award had he established (as did Roberts) that his injury was “recurrent”. What was said in the Roberts case pertaining to the claimant’s burden of proof therefore does not militate against the present claimant for there, Roberts secured reinstatement of compensation (section 413) by showing a present injury referable to a prior accident whereas

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 A.2d 706, 162 Pa. Super. 482, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aboud-v-aluminum-seal-co-pasuperct-1947.