Cubit v. Philadelphia

10 A.2d 853, 138 Pa. Super. 325, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 357
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 13, 1939
DocketAppeal, 367
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 853 (Cubit v. Philadelphia) 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
Cubit v. Philadelphia, 10 A.2d 853, 138 Pa. Super. 325, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 357 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The City of Philadelphia is the employer in this workmen’s compensation case. It has appealed from a judgment entered against it in the court below upon an award of compensation to the widow and minor children of William Cubit for his death on May 30, 1937, from a bullet wound in his head, admittedly self-inflicted on the previous evening.

It is provided in Section 301 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, 77 PS §431, that “no compensation shall be made when the injury or death be intentionally self-inflicted, but the burden of proof of such fact shall be upon the employer.” The basis of the award of the referee, affirmed by the board, and upon which judgment was entered by the court below without an opinion was that the death was not intentionally self-inflicted. It was held to be compensable because, as expressed by the referee, “the decedent took his life in a fit of temporary insanity which was induced by [an] accident” suffered on January 9, 1937, in the course of his employment as a police officer of the city.

Cubit, thirty-seven years of age, had been employed for eight years as a policeman, and on the night of the accident was the driver of a patrol wagon. The description of the occurrence, as given by a fellow officer employed upon the same wagon, was that shortly after the wagon had returned to a patrol house he found Cubit lying on the garage floor where he had fallen through tripping over the step in the rear of the vehicle. It is conceded that the decedent received at that time an accidental injury to his head which caused a “cerebral *327 concussion.” In the claim petition it was averred that as a result of the accident Cubit’s “mind became deranged and he shot himself.” In addition to denying in its answer that the “decedent died as the result of the [accident],” the city averred that his death resulted from an independent and unconnected cause — “a self-inflicted gun shot wound.”

We are not satisfied, from our review of the record, that the claimant successfully carried the burden imposed upon her under the issue thus framed and the admission that death was self-inflicted, or that the controlling findings of fact of the referee, adopted by the board, are supported by competent evidence.

With relation to the period of nearly five months intervening between the accident and Cubit’s death, there is uncontroverted evidence that he was admitted to the Philadelphia General Hospital on the day following the accident and there came under the care of Dr. Samuel B. Hadden, the consulting neurologist to the Department of Public Safety. He was discharged from the hospital on January 21st, as “improved but not regarded as entirely well,” and directed to report from time to time to the chief surgeon’s office. With respect to the decedent’s condition at the time of and following his discharge from the hospital, Dr. Hadden testified: “A. My diagnosis was post-traumatic psychosis at the time I was .seeing him, I mean, in view of the fact that his mental condition observed in the hospital shortly after the accident did not improve rapidly and could be classified as a psychosis, it was diagnosed as a post-traumatic psychosis. Q. How did that condition manifest itself in Mr. Cubit? A. He continued to complain of rather severe headaches and he was rather drowsy; at times apathetic. It was difficult for you to maintain his attention; had difficulty in concentrating, and those were the things that ware noted. Q. Would you say those things would naturally follow from a *328 blow on the head? A. Frequently they are seen following injury to the head.”

At the direction of Dr. Hadden the decedent returned to light duty at the police station but was never able to perform full duty. There is also lay testimony that during that period he frequently suffered severe pains in his head and about a week before his death in describing these pains remarked to his brother-in-law, Joseph Kelly, “I have to beat my head on the wall and hit my head with ,my fist. I don’t think I will ever get better.” Deferring to another visit to the decedent at his home Kelly testified Cubit “put both his fists up to his forehead and kept punching himself.”

The findings of the referee to which we have referred as having been adopted by the board read:

“12. That as a result of the accident which the said William Cubit suffered on the 9th day of January, 1937, together with his anxiety and worry over his condition, as well as the concussion of the brain which he suffered, the said William Cubit became temporarily mentally deranged.
“13. That while in a fit of mental derangement which was so severe as to deprive him of his sanity and will, the said William Cubit on the 29th day of May, 1937, shot himself in the forehead as a result of which he immediately died.
“14. That the death certificate issued in this case certified that the said William Cubit took hisr life in a fit of temporary insanity.”

There is no competent evidence upon the record supporting the above finding relative to the death certificate. The claimant testified she had a death certificate at home upon which it was stated that decedent “was temporarily insane.” This certificate was not produced and we therefore need not consider whether, if offered, it would have been competent evidence of anything more than the fact of death.

*329 The issue before the referee was, as indicated by our Supreme Court in the case of Lupfer v. Baldwin Locomotive Works, 269 Pa. 275, 112 A. 458, whether the decedent “killed himself while possessed by an uncontrollable insane impulse, or while in a delirium, or frenzy, without rational knowledge of the physical consequences of his act.” See also Gasperin v. Consolidated Coal Co., 293 Pa. 589, 143 A. 187. In Daniels v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 183 Mass. 393, 62 L. R. A. 751, 67 N. E. 424, it was said, “An act of suicide resulting from a moderately intelligent power of choice, even though the choice is determined by a disordered mind, should be deemed a new and independent, efficient cause of the death that immediately ensues.”

No evidence was offered by the city and Avhen the testimony by and on behalf of the claimant, Avith relation to decedent’s mental condition and actions during the forty-eight hours preceding his suicide, is examined in the light of the above principles this situation is disclosed. Claimant’s own testimony is so vague, indefinite and lacking in detail, that it does not bring her case within the scope of the opinion in the Lupfer case. She testified her husband went to the office of Dr. Hadden by himself on May 28th and upon his return told her the doctor had recommended that he do some light work and expressed his desire to comply with the suggestion. Referring to the morning of the day of the tragedy, May 29th, claimant testified her husband went to work about nine o’clock in the morning; that he “looked all right” at that time but had complained of not having slept during the night. Her further testimony was that about two o’clock in the afternoon he Avas brought home by Robert McCullough, the fellow police officer to Avhose description of the accident we have above referred.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 853, 138 Pa. Super. 325, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cubit-v-philadelphia-pasuperct-1939.