Barbaryka v. Henderson Coal Co.

36 A.2d 341, 154 Pa. Super. 402, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 28, 1943
DocketAppeals, 68 and 69
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 341 (Barbaryka v. Henderson Coal 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
Barbaryka v. Henderson Coal Co., 36 A.2d 341, 154 Pa. Super. 402, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397 (Pa. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This appeal is chiefly concerned with the sufficiency of the evidence to support certain findings of fact of the Workmen’s Compensation Board, namely: (1) That claimant sustained an accident in the course of his employment resulting in a compensable injury. (2) That the claimant’s present total disability is the result of that accident.

If these findings are upheld then the following related questions arise:

(3) Does the record show that due notice of the accident was given the employer?

(4) What amount of compensation is the claimant entitled to?

This last question may be subdivided into: (a) Claimant’s weekly rate of compensation, (b) His total compensation — which involves the constitutionality of section 306(a) of the Act of June 4,1937, P. L. 1552.

(1) There is ample evidence to sustain the board’s finding of a compensable accident.

Claimant was employed by defendant as a coal *404 loader. On May 25, 1939, lie and his father were working at their job of loading the coal. After the coal was all loaded, they started to remove the roc7c, which had fallen with the coal and had to be taken out. Claimant came upon a piece of rock, three or four feet long, weighing 75 to 100 pounds and too big to be shoveled out. He put down his shovel and crouching over started to lift the rock with his hands and arms. While lifting, his right foot slipped, and the weight of the rock pulled him off balance, and he went down, falling on his chest upon the rock, and a burning pain “just like an electric shock” went through him, followed by a hot pain, “just like a knife”, in his spine, causing him to cry out, and say, “I think I hurt my back”. He has not been able to work since. He was corroborated by his father. His present total disability is not questioned.

'The slipping of his foot, followed by his fall on his chest when the weight of the rock pulled him over, was an accident, and as it immediately disabled him, it was compensable. We do not have to know just how and why it happened. It is enough to know that it did happen and that it was in the course of his employment.

(2) Claimant, while a young child, had tuberculosis, resulting in a deformed spine, in the nature of a hump. However, he was able to work in the mines and had done so for four years prior to the accident. Two physicians called as witnesses by the claimant testified, in substance, that he had a latent tubercular condition which was activated by the accident and progressed rapidly into total disability. Three physicians were called by the employer or its insurance carrier. One testified that the disability was due to Pott’s disease— a tuberculous infection of the spine. Another diagnosed the trouble as pachymeningitis, inflammation of the outer membrane covering the brain and spinal cord; *405 but he admitted that the condition could have resulted from activation of a latent process. The third, basing his opinion on the hypothesis that no accident had occurred, gave it as his opinion that claimant’s disability was caused by a gradual process of long development and was not due to an accident. The referee denied compensation on the ground that claimant’s condition was not connected with the alleged accident.

On appeal to the board, that body felt that the conflict of medical testimony could best be resolved by remanding the record to the referee for the purpose of taking the testimony of an impartial medical expert or experts.

This was done and the testimony of Doctor C. C. Yount and Doctor H. L. Mitchell, physicians appointed by the board, was taken. They had examined him on April 28, 1941. Dr. Yount testified that if the evidence regarding the injury was true and the occurrence was as stated by the claimant and his father, the accident was “a definite factor in stirring up the latent pathology in the tubercular area which manifested itself in acute symptoms, namely pain and later paralysis”.

Dr. Mitchell testified “It is my opinion that the old tuberculous process could have been and probably was activated and turned into a state of increased activity by this trauma”. To the claimant’s attorney’s cross-question: “In view of the fact that there is no other history, is it reasonable to assume that the accident of May 25, 1939 was a precipitating factor of this tuberculous condition?”, he answered “I believe so”.

The testimony of these impartial experts, taken in connection with that of claimant’s medical witnesses, was sufficient to support a finding that the claimant’s present total disability was caused by the accident, within the intendment of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. The referee, after hearing the evidence of *406 the impartial witnesses made, inter alia, the following finding of fact:

“Third: From the foregoing and all the testimony introduced in this case, your referee believes and so finds as a fact that the claimant suffered an injury by accident on May 25, 1939 in the nature of an aggravation of a former latent tubercular condition, and that the claimant has been totally disabled from May 25, 1939 up to the present time and shall continue to be totally disabled for an indefinite period.” He awarded compensation under section 306(a). On appeal by defendants the board affirmed the referee’s findings of fact, conclusions of law and award. As the board found that the accident had occurred, as testified to by claimant and his father, the medical testimony supported the finding of causal relation between the accident and the disability.

(3) The referee made no finding as to notice of the accident, but the board did, as follows: “Defendant also argues that proper notice was not given by the claimant as to the happening of an accident. The testimony given by claimant on this question is as follows: [pp. 12a-13a] ‘......And then, Mr. Jans came over, that’s the mine boss, and I started telling him about this. I said, “I was lifting rock and I hurt my back”.’ 1 In our opinion this language is sufficient to constitute notice of an accident. It is not necessary for a claimant to specifically describe exactly what happened. All that is necessary is that defendant have notice of the occurrence of an accident. The above quoted testimony constitutes sufficient notice as required by the Act.” This finding, supported by claimant’s further testimony (pp. 16a, 17a), that the next day he went to see the company doctor, Doctor McKee, (now deceased), satisfies the legal requirement as to notice.

*407 (4) The accident happened on May 25, 1939, when the Act of 1937 was in force and effect. Under section 306(a) of that Act the injured employee, if totally disabled, was entitled to receive by way of compensation during the first 500 weeks after the seventh day of total disability 65 per centum of his average weekly wages not exceeding $18 per week. If the disability became permanent, then, under that act, in addition to that compensation, he would receive, beginning at the expiration of said 500 weeks, the sum of $30 per month as long as he lives.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 341, 154 Pa. Super. 402, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbaryka-v-henderson-coal-co-pasuperct-1943.