Bauman v. Spokas

23 A.2d 211, 146 Pa. Super. 530, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 260
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 9, 1941
DocketAppeal, 302
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 211 (Bauman v. Spokas) 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
Bauman v. Spokas, 23 A.2d 211, 146 Pa. Super. 530, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 260 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The judgment from which the employer in this workmen’s compensation case has appealed cannot be sustained as entered. The main difficulty is that no one seems to have paid any attention to the important fact that the legislature expressly provided in Section 306(c) of the reenacting ,and amending Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 4, 1937, P. L. 1552, 77 PS §513, that permanent “loss of the function” of a joint or joints of a finger of an employee, caused by an accident sustained in the course of his employment, should be considered a “permanent injury” within the meaning of that .section and be compensated by an award of *532 sixty-five percentum of wages during the definite number of weeks specified therein.

In addition to adding toes, as members of the body for the accidental loss of which compensation shall be paid under Section 306(c), and providing that the loss of one phalange or more of a toe, thumb or finger, shall be considered equivalent to the loss of the entire member, the following new provision was inserted in the section:

“The loss of the function of the distal joint shall be considered compensable for the period of one-half the number of weeks set forth for the loss of the toe or finger involved. The loss of the function of the proximal joint shall be considered to be the loss of the use of the toe or finger, and shall be compensable as set forth above for the loss of the toe or finger involved.”

It is not questioned that the claimant on December 2, 1938, (while the above amendments were in force) sustained an injury by an accident in the course of his employment; Avhile repairing an electric coal conveyor he slipped on ice and his left hand was caught in the gears of the machine with the result that the first, or index finger, the second finger and the fourth, or little finger, were injured. He was taken to a hospital and came under the care of Dr. Albert Macintosh Morton, who testified in his behalf. This witness described the injuries as a “compound comminuted fracture of the terminal phalange of the middle (second) finger”; and “macerations of the terminal soft tissue of the index (first) and ring fingers.” The first phalange and a part of the second phalange of the second finger were amputated. Under the provision that “the loss of one phalange or more of a...... finger shall be considered equivalent to the loss of the entire......finger,” claimant clearly became entitled to an award of compensation at" the rate of sixty-five percentum of his wages— $22 per week — for a period of forty weeks for the loss of his second finger.

*533 With relation to the injuries to claimant’s first and fourth fingers, Dr. Morton at the time of the first hearing before a referee, April 18, 1939, testified the dead tissue had been cut away and the ends of these fingers had healed “with a certain amount of deformity of the nails and with certain areas of tenderness over the tips of the fingers,” and said he believed these fingers would “come around in their entirety as far as function is concerned.”

Upon the record as it then -stood the referee properly made an award at the rate of $14.30 (65% of $22) for a period of 40 weeks, or $572 for the loss of claimant’s second finger.

Thereupon, the claimant appealed to the board upon the ground that the referee had erred in failing to award any compensation for the injuries to his first and fourth fingers. The board, citing Lente v. Luci, 275 Pa. 217, 119 A. 132; Sustar v. Penn Smokeless Coal Company, 85 Pa. Superior Ct. 531; and Olinski v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co., 93 Pa. Superior Ct. 221, remanded the record to a referee to take additional testimony and “determine whether, claimant suffered any disability beyond the forty-week period of compensation provided for in Section 306(c), and, if so, the extent of such disability.” (Italics supplied.)

It was at this point that the difficulties in this case began. Manifestly, the above amendments of 1937 to Section 306(c) were intended to widen its scope by including therein certain indicated permanent injuries to the thumbs, fingers or toes of an employee. The medical testimony showed clearly that as respects any actual loss of any portions of claimant’s first and fourth fingers such loss was less than the first phalange of each, but it also indicated that no part of the bone of that phalange of either finger was injured. These injuries, therefore, did not come within the paragraph reading: “The loss of less than the first phalange of the toe, thumb, or of any finger, shall be considered equivalent to the loss *534 of one-half of such toe, thumb or finger, and shall be compensated at the same rate as for the loss of a toe, thumb or finger, but for one-half of the period provided for the loss of a toe, thumb or finger: Provided, however, That the accident involves injury to part of the bone of the phalange.” See also Matkosky v. Midvale Co., 143 Pa. Superior Ct. 197, 18 A. 2d 102.

Another possible permanent consequence of claimant’s accident which would entitle him to compensation under Section 306(c) would be “loss of the function” of one or more joints of either or both fingers. But the referee made no findings upon this subject, nor did the board direct him to do so. Its action seems to have been based upon a misunderstanding of the cases relied upon.

In the Sustar case the employee had suffered the loss of an eye and also a serious and permanent disfigurement. Here the claimant sustained the loss of one finger and possibly a permanent loss of function in certain joints of two other fingers. Here, as there, all these injuries are expressly mentioned, and compensation therefor fixed, in Section 306(c) as amended.

We held in that case that where an employee “receives in the same accident two or more injuries compensable under 306(c), as neither of them is based on actual loss of earnings or incapacity to labor, but is fixed on the theory that each such injury is valued by a specific or determined number of weeks’ compensation, the claimant is entitled to the aggregate periods allowed for the several injuries.” It was added that the “rule applies to all injuries embraced within clause 306(c), to permanent disfigurement [or, as here, permanent loss of function] as well as the loss of a member; for they are classed together under the same clause and section because the injuries are alike permanent and are alike difficult of just determination on any other basis.”

In the Olinski case the employee’s right foot was so crushed as to require amputation and his left leg was broken. His total disability ended eight months after *535 the accident; at the end of the 150-week period fixed by Section 306(c) for the loss of his foot, he claimed, but was denied, additional compensation under Section 306(a).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 211, 146 Pa. Super. 530, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauman-v-spokas-pasuperct-1941.