City of DuBois v. Beers

547 A.2d 887, 120 Pa. Commw. 103, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 769
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 27, 1988
DocketAppeal 1487 C.D. 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 547 A.2d 887 (City of DuBois v. Beers) 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
City of DuBois v. Beers, 547 A.2d 887, 120 Pa. Commw. 103, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 769 (Pa. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion by

Senior Judge Narick,

Appellee James R. Beers (Beers) was employed as the Chief of Police by the City of DuBois (City), Appellant herein, a position he had held since 1978. While on duty on January 2, 1985, Beers responded to a report that a gunman was holding hostages at a local business college and that shots had been fired. Armed with a shotgun, Beers entered the building alone, confronted and disarmed the gunman. Some three weeks later, on January 20, 1985, Beers suffered a stroke and was hospitalized. He was unable to return to work until July 11, 1986 and sought full salary and medical benefits under the so-called Heart and Lung Act. 1

The City refused to pay these benefits on the grounds that it did not consider Beers’ injury to be work-related. Instead, Beers was paid for all accrued sick leave, exhausting those benefits. Beers sued the City in the Court of Common Pleas of Clearfield County to recover Heart and Lung Act benefits on the grounds that his stroke was brought on by the stress of his job generally and by the encounter with the gunman specifically.

*105 Beers’ suit included an additional count involving his salary. In January 1984, the City and its police bargaining unit submitted wage and fringe benefit issues to an arbitration panel under the provisions of Act 111. 2 The arbitrators awarded certain salary increases to the bargaining unit members. Because neither Beers’ name nor the chief of police position was specifically mentioned in the contract, the arbitrators’ award was silent as to whether Beers was included, and the City took the position that he was not, despite the fact that he had been covered in prior years. Beers sought a declaration by the trial court that he was a member of the police bargaining unit and therefore entitled to the benefits of the arbitration award.

The trial court determined that Beers was entitled to Heart and Lung Act benefits and that he was a member of the police bargaining unit, entitling him to the benefits of the arbitration award. Timely motions for post-trial relief 3 were filed by the City. The trial court modified its order to provide for a credit to the City for sick leave benefits it had paid to Beers against the compensation awarded and reinstated Beers’ accrued sick leave. The City has appealed from this order, presenting four issues for our review.

The City first argues that the trial court erred in dismissing three of the issues it raised in its motion for post-trial relief for failure to preserve the issues by moving for a compulsory non-suit at the conclusion of Beers’ case. These three issues were:

*106 4. That in finding that the Plaintiff sustained a work-related injury, the Court went against the provisions of the Heart and Lung Act of 1935, as amended;
5. That the Court erred in concluding that the Plaintiff suffered a heart attack as a work-related injury when said heart attack was sustained when Plaintiff was not on duty and all evidence put forth at trial supported a conclusion that the heart attack was not suffered by the Plaintiff while he was at his job for the City of DuBois;
6. The findings of the Court were contra to the case law in this area and, in particular to the findings of the Supreme Court in Kurtz v. City of Erie, 389 Pa. 557, 133 A.2d 172 (1957). . . .

The trial court did not find the third issue raised by the City in its post-trial motions to have been waived. The City stated this issue as follows: “The Court erred in finding that the Plaintiff was disabled due to a work-related injury as such a finding was contrary to the weight of the evidence presented at trial. . . .” Because all four of these issues raise essentially the same question, i.e. whether Beers’ stroke was work-related, we view the alleged error as necessarily harmless.

The second and third issues raised by the City are closely related. It argues that the trial court erred in concluding that Beers’ stroke was a work-related injury for purposes of both the full-salary benefits and reimbursement of medical expenses under the Heart and Lung Act. We will treat these issues as one in that both will be resolved by our determination of whether the trial court properly found a work-related injury.

In reviewing the trial court’s order here, we are guided by the following summary of our scope of review:

Questions as to the sufficiency of proof are ordinarily within the discretion of the Trial *107 Court and will not be reviewed by an appellate court unless there is a clear absence of proof to support the ruling. . . . Pennsylvania courts have long recognized the broad discretion given to the fact-finding Trial Court, that is a judge sitting without a jury. ...

Brady v. Borough of Dunmore, 84 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 331, 336, 479 A.2d 59, 62 (1984) (citations omitted).

The thrust of the City’s argument is that the court erred in accepting the medical testimony of Dr. Bradley, Beers’ treating physician, because the doctor’s testimony was equivocal and, therefore, legally insufficient to establish a causal connection between Beers’ employment and his stroke.

Preliminarily, we note that Beers objects to this standard of proof, which is routinely applied in workmen’s compensation cases. See, e.g., Lewis v. Workmens Compensation Appeal Board, 508 Pa. 360, 498 A.2d 800 (1985). Our research has disclosed, however, that this standard of proof is not limited to the area of workers’ compensation law. For example, our Supreme Court held long ago in Florig v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 388 Pa. 419, 423-24, 130 A.2d 445, 447 (1957), a trespass action for personal injuries, that “[w]here there is no obvious causal relationship, unequivocal medical testimony is necessary to establish the causal connection . . .” (Emphasis, footnote and citation deleted.) See also Smith v. German, 434 Pa. 47, 253 A.2d 107 (1969). We are satisfied, especially given the close relationship in subject matter between the Heart and Lung Act and The Pennsylvania Workmen’s Compensation Act, 4 that the refinements and clarifications of that standard of proof which have been developed through workers’ compensation cases should apply to Heart and Lung Act cases where the issue of whether a disability is work-related is involved.

*108 The statutory language which governs the instant matter reads, in part,. as follows:

(a) ... [A]ny policeman, ... of any county, city, borough, town or township, who is injured in the performance of his duties . . .

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Bluebook (online)
547 A.2d 887, 120 Pa. Commw. 103, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-dubois-v-beers-pacommwct-1988.