Burrell v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund

193 A. 439, 127 Pa. Super. 510, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 251
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1937
DocketAppeal, 240
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 A. 439 (Burrell v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund) 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
Burrell v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund, 193 A. 439, 127 Pa. Super. 510, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 251 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The appeal in this workmen’s compensation case is by the employer and its insurance carrier from a judgment entered by the court below upon an award of *512 compensation to the claimant and her dependent daughter.

It is not questioned that Dominic Burrell, claimant’s husband, while in the course of his employment as a hoisting engineer with Inland Collieries Company, died suddenly about nine o’clock on the forenoon of January 11, 1935. The issue was whether his death resulted from the natural and normal progress of the chronic arteriosclerosis, accompanied by high blood pressure, for which he had been under treatment for several years, or whether it was the result of an “accident,” within the meaning of the Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, occurring during the performance of his duties.

A portion of the fifth finding of the referee reads: “The exact nature of the accident is undetermined, but your referee is of the opinion from all of the evidence that he did sustain an accident which resulted in his death.” The question of law with which we are now concerned is whether there is legally competent evidence upon this record to sustain that finding. The court below was of opinion that the referee and board were justified in inferring that death was due to an accidental cause and therefore held that it could not interfere, regardless of whether it would have so found had it been the fact-finding body. A careful examination of the evidence has led us to a different conclusion.

No autopsy was performed and the exact cause of death was therefore not determined. However, the testimony of Dr. Mock, the only physician who examined decedent’s body, reads: “Q. Did you make a diagnosis, doctor? A. I was asked to state the cause of death and, not knowing the actual cause of death, short of an autopsy, I took the most probable cause, knowing his physical condition and from the repeated examinations that I previously made, I diagnosed it as probably one of cerebral hemorrhage. Q. Due to what in your opinion, doctor? A. To a natural cause. Q. What *513 natural cause? A. Would be a bursting of a blood vessel, as far as that was concerned, no one knows the actual cause of the man’s death. It could have been any case of sudden death.”

In the performance of his duties, raising and lowering cages from the bottom of the shaft to the tipple, the decedent stood, and sometimes sat in a chair, upon a raised and railed off platform in the engine room. The hoisting machinery was operated by electricity. At his left was the control box and upon his right a lever, about four feet in length, by which he operated the brake. When Burrell had this brake lever “in the back position,” i. e., pulled toward him, and the “control on neutral,” one cage would be at the bottom of the shaft and the other up in the tipple, and the brake would be “off.” In order to apply the brake the lever had to be pushed forward and away from the operator. Decedent went to work on the morning of January 11th at his usual time and the hoisting operations continued without any unusual incident until about nine o’clock. A signal was then given to hoist a loaded cage from the bottom of the shaft. When the machinery did not start, James P. Gaines and John R. Douglas, fellow employees of decedent, went to the engine room to ascertain the reason. They found decedent lying on his right side “on his platform that he stood on when hoisting” and unconscious. When found, he was lying between the control box and the left railing, facing away from the lever; the lever was pushed forward and the chair pinned between it and the right railing. They testified they “worked him out from behind” and turned him over on his face in order to start artificial respiration. Gaines, when asked whether he saw any blood, replied: “I noticed in pulling his tongue from his mouth before starting giving him treatment a little blood at the edge of his mouth.” Dr. Mock Avas summoned, pronounced decedent dead and had his body *514 removed to the mine hospital, where he made a careful examination of the body but “found no laceration, contusion, bruise or mark of any kind.”

The whole case for the claimant was built upon the theory that the brake lever “flew back” and struck decedent, causing a sudden increase in his already abnormally high blood pressure and resulting in the rupture of “some vessel or vessels about his brain or about some other parts of his body.” It was not controverted that decedent, when examined by Dr. Mock in August of 1933, had arteriosclerosis, with high blood pressure, and a hernia. The hernia was corrected by an operation, but the patient was required to have his blood pressure checked frequently. Although somewhat reduced it was still abnormally high at the last examination, approximately two weeks before his death. Claimant called two physicians, Doctors Snyder and Fleegler. Neither of them saw decedent’s body, but Dr. Snyder had operated upon him on February 17, 1934, for the hernia. His testimony agrees with that of Dr. Mock with respect to the high blood pressure.

In the hypothetical questions submitted to the physicians over the objections of counsel for appellants, they were in every instance asked to assume that decedent had sustained a blow upon his face of sufficient severity to cause a bruise. For example, one of the questions asked Dr. Snyder reads: “Doctor, if you had this bruise and if you had the fact of high blood pressure plus the fact that the brake occasionally kicked back, if there was evidence of trauma on the left side of the face, extending from the eye down to the mouth about an inch and a half wide, what, in your professional opinion, would be the probable cause of his death?” The witness replied, “Well, in answering that question, taking these facts as stated into consideration, it would be my opinion that in some way he received a blow to the left side of his face which resulted in a rupture *515 of — a possible rupture of a blood vessel or blood vessels somewhere in Ms body.” (Italics supplied). An excerpt from his testimony on cross-examination reads: “Q. Well, as far as you know, doctor, this decedent might have died there at his work as a result of cerebral hemorrhage without having sustained an accident, is that true? A. He could have, by having a large or a massive cerebral hemorrhage.”

The testimony of Dr. Fleegler, who also saw Burrell while he was in the hospital, was substantially to the same effect, one question and answer reading: “Q. So that you really don’t know what the cause of death was in this case? A. It is supposition, based on the facts that have been given to me.”

Whether Burrell when found had any bruise upon his face was in controversy; the only testimony that he had was that of his widow and daughter. Claimant testified that when she saw his body shortly after his death she noticed a blue mark, about one and a half inches wide, on the left side of his face and running from the corner of the left eye to the left corner of the mouth. She was contradicted positively by Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
193 A. 439, 127 Pa. Super. 510, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrell-v-state-workmens-insurance-fund-pasuperct-1937.