Burton v. Commonwealth, Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board

431 A.2d 1164, 60 Pa. Commw. 476, 1981 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1646
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 10, 1981
DocketAppeals, Nos. 2942 C.D. 1978 and 582 C.D. 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 431 A.2d 1164 (Burton v. Commonwealth, Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton v. Commonwealth, Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 431 A.2d 1164, 60 Pa. Commw. 476, 1981 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1646 (Pa. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Williams, Jr.,

Before us for review in this matter are two successive orders of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Board) concerning the award of total-disability benefits to James J. Burton (claimant). Each of the Board’s orders brought a separate appeal to this Court, and we have consolidated those appeals for disposition. This combined matter had its genesis in two distinct petitions filed by claimant Burton to determine which of his two successive employers was liable for workmen’s compensation because of a second adverse incident concerning the claimant’s back. In the wake of that second incident, the claimant filed a petition to set aside a final receipt he had given his first employer, Frohmander & Smith (F & S), in whose service claimant had originally injured his back. The claimant also filed á claim petition against his succeeding employer, the Grambone Organization (Gram-bone), in whose service the second adverse incident occurred.

The first of the two appeals before us (No. 2942 C.D. 1978) was taken by claimant Burton from an order of the Board which reversed a referee’s entry of an award on the claim petition against Grambone. In so ordering, the Board also remanded the case to. the referee to reconsider the evidence as to the petition to set aside the final receipt given to F & S, which [479]*479petition the referee had dismissed in the course of imposing total liability on Gambone.

When the referee, on remand from the Board, reconsidered the evidence already of record, he entered a decision setting aside the final receipt that had been given to F & S, the first employer. When the Board affirmed that decision, F & S appealed further to this Court; and that appeal (No. 582 C.D. 1980) is the second of the two instantly before us.

As might appear from the above synopsis, the posture of this matter is slightly complex; thus it is important to detail the stages through which the matter passed en route to this Court.

In January 1974 claimant James J. Burton was employed by F & S as a carpenter, working in the erection of a three story, apartment building. While so engaged, the claimant was required to pull loads of “two-by-sixes” from the ground up onto a balcony, using a hoist. On January 31, 1974, as he was pulling one of the loads, the claimant experienced severe and immediate low back pain. As a result he was unable to complete his work that day and left the job site. That same evening claimant consulted an orthopedist, Dr. Elliot Menkowitz; and, shortly thereafter, the claimant was admitted to a hospital where he underwent low-back surgery. That operation entailed removal of a disc at the L-4 level.

After the operation the claimant and F & S, through its insurance carrier, entered into a compensation agreement under which benefits were paid by the carrier from February 7, 1974. The claimant returned to work on May 20, 1974; and on May 30 he executed a final receipt relative to the January 1974 injury.

The claimant continued to work for F & S until November 1974, when he began employment with Gambone. On November 17, 1974, while working for Gam[480]*480bone nailing boards on a porch, claimant experienced severe back pain; and he so advised his foreman on that occasion. Between November 17, 1974 and about January 23, 1975 he continued to work for Gambone, despite a worsening back problem. However, during this interval he again consulted with Dr. Menkowitz. On January 25, 1975 the claimant was readmitted to the hospital, under Dr. Menkowitz’s care.

While in the hospital the second time, the claimant again underwent low-back surgery, which included a repeat laminectomy; removal of scar tissue, resulting from the first surgery, on the L-3 to L-5 nerve roots; removal of a disc at the L-5 level; and a repeat removal of a disc at the L-4 level. Following this second operation the claimant continued to experience back pain; as a consequence he had to be hospitalized on several more occasions.

There is no dispute by any party that as of January 25,1975 the claimant was totally disabled.

In February 1975, the claimant petitioned to set aside the final receipt he had executed in favor of F & S. In April 1975, the claim petition against Gambone was filed. After initial joint hearings a referee entered an interlocutory order directing each employer’s insurance carrier to pay one-half the compensation due, pending a final decision. As a result of further hearings the referee entered a decision granting the claim petition against Gambone and dismissed the petition to set aside filed against F & S. Both Gambone and the claimant appealed that decision to the Board: Gambone sought reversal of the imposition of liability; and the claimant sought reversal of the referee ’s decision dismissing the petition to set aside the final receipt.

In December 1978, the Board sustained Gambone’s appeal, concluding that the record did not contain such competent, unequivocal medical testimony as would [481]*481support an award against Gambone. Tbe Board also concluded that the referee erred in his determination that the claimant had given Gambone the statutorily required notice of injury. The Board’s order additionally remanded the case for the referee to reconsider the evidence relative to the petition to set aside F & S’s final receipt. From this, the first of the Board’s orders, F & S took an appeal to this Court; but that petition for review was quashed as being interlocutory. It was also from this initial order that claimant Burton filed a protective appeal in this Court (No. 2942 C.D. 1978); but that was stayed pending disposition of the remand proceedings directed by the Board. It was the second of the Board’s orders, that affirming the referee’s post-remand decision, which brought F & S’s instant appeal (No. 582 C.D. 1980).

The crux of this combined matter is the nature of the medical evidence that faced the referee’s initial decision imposing liability on Gambone and dismissing the petition to set aside the final receipt. That medical evidence consisted of the' testimony of three board-certified orthopedic surgeons: claimant’s witness, Dr. Menkowitz; Gambone’s witness, Dr. William Simon; and F & S’s witness, Dr. J. David Hoffman. Most significant for purposes of our present review is the testimony of Dr. Menkowitz and that of Dr. Hoffman.1

Dr. Menkowitz testified that the claimant’s initial injury and surgery predisposed claimant to recurrence of the back injury. With respect to the connection between the claimant’s employ with Gambone and the present disability, Dr. Menkowitz stated that the latter occupation “could cause” a recurrence of the back problem. However, it was the opinion of this medical [482]*482witness that the claimant’s condition, adhesive arachnoiditis, was not caused by any incident occurring in November 1974, but rather was caused by the original injury and the original surgery that followed.

Dr. Hoffman, the medical witness for F & S, pointed out that the claimant was not disabled until after experiencing sudden stress during the November 1974 incident in the employ of Gambone. According to Dr. Hoffman, the incident precipitated the disability.

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Bluebook (online)
431 A.2d 1164, 60 Pa. Commw. 476, 1981 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-commonwealth-workmens-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-1981.