Davis v. Asquini & American Casualty Co.

173 A. 672, 114 Pa. Super. 60, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 229
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 1934
DocketAppeal 194
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 A. 672 (Davis v. Asquini & American Casualty Co.) 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
Davis v. Asquini & American Casualty Co., 173 A. 672, 114 Pa. Super. 60, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 229 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

On December 30, 1929, Sidney L. Davis, the claimant in this Workmen’s Compensation Case, while engaged in the course of his employment as a carpenter with John Asquini, accidentally fell a distance of about sixteen feet from a scaffold. In the language of Dr. C. A. Duffy, the physician who first saw him, his injuries were: “A compound comminuted fracture of the left tibia and fibula above the ankle and a crush *62 ing type of fracture of the right oscalcis — heel bone.”

The parties, including the employer’s insurance carrier, entered into an open agreement, on January 20, 1930, for the payment of compensation for disability from January 7, 1930, at the maximum rate under Section 306 (a) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as amended by the Acts of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, and April 13, 1927, P. L. 186— $15 per week. In this agreement the description of the accident and resulting injury read: “Lost balance and fell from scaffold, fracturing right leg.” No explanation has been given of the failure to refer in this agreement to the injury to claimant’s left leg. However, as he was paid compensation for total disability under this agreement from January 7, 1930, to August 9, 1930, he has not been harmed by the omission.

On the last mentioned date a supplemental agreement was executed in which it was provided that claimant should be paid at the maximum weekly rate for the definite period of 150 weeks, provided in Section 306 (c), for the permanent loss of the use of his left foot; this period ended November 21, 1932. In this agreement the description of his injuries was: “Lost balance and fell from scaffold fracturing left leg and injuring right leg.”

On September 25, 1930, claimant petitioned for the commutation of the balance of compensation due him under the supplemental agreement in order to enable him to buy a chicken farm at Mars, Pa., and on February 4, 1931, after several hearings, the petition was granted on the basis of fifty-seven weeks already paid at $15 per week, or $855, and ninety-three weeks, commuted at $1,335.24, or a total of $2,190.24.

Under date of February 11,1931, claimant executed a final settlement receipt for this amount, covering a *63 period of 150 weeks and “for all injuries received by [him] on or about the 30th day of December, 1929.” This agreement and payment compensated him for “all disability” up to November 21, 1932.

On October 19, 1932, (a date within the 150 weeks’ period, but more than one year after the payment of the commuted amount) claimant filed a petition for “modification” of the agreement upon the ground that his “disability...... had increased.” The specific averment reads: “Still have disability to right leg which was injured the same time as left leg. ” Defendants raised an issue of fact by answering that “claimant received no injury to the right leg.”

The petition and answer were referred to Eeferee Christley. At the hearing before him on January 18, 1933, counsel for defendants moved to amend their answer by including an averment that as “the final payment in accordance with the terms of the commutation was made on February 11, 1931,” the petition was too late because it had not been filed within one year after the date of the last payment of compensation. The referee overruled defendants’ motion to dismiss the petition and took the testimony of claimant and of Doctors C. A. Duffy and G. F. Berg. At the conclusion of the first hearing it was agreed that the referee should appoint a disinterested, impartial orthopedic surgeon to examine claimant, at the expense of defendants; Dr. E. W. Fiske. was appointed and examined and cross-examined at a subsequent hearing.

The referee’s eleventh and a part of his twelfth findings of fact read:

“Eleventh: From a consideration of all the testimony in the case" it is our opinion that the claimant as a result of the accident complained of sustained the loss of the use of his left foot, and, in the same accident, he sustained injuries to the right foot which have *64 resulted in the permanent loss of the use of his right foot, confined, however, below, the knee.
“Twelfth: It is our opinion that the claimant has been and is wholly incapable of carrying on as a competitive worker for anything that he is physically equipped or qualified to do. He is aged 54 years and it is our opinion that while the claimant was given a commutation in the hope that he might rehabilitate himself and improve his condition by exercise, yet, we are convinced that he has cooperated in the fullest but that he has been unable to, at any time since the accident, engage in any remunerative employment and that his income from the chickens, of whatever character or nature, has been in the nature of an income from investment rather than from any labor or work which the claimant has been or is able to perform. It is our opinion, therefore, that the claimant as a result of the accident complained of is permanently and totally disabled.”

Based upon these findings the referee made an award for total disability, at the rate of $15 per week, for a period of 433% weeks, or the sum of $6,500,— the maximum amount authorized in Section 306 (a)— the defendant, however, to take credit for 150 weeks, at $15 per week, or $2,250, leaving a balance due of $4,250, with interest and specified costs.

Upon defendants’ appeal to the board, the award was affirmed apparently upon the theory of the “loss of both feet,” constituting total disability, rather than of the loss of the use of “two members,” not amounting to total disability, but entitling claimant, under Section 306 (c), to compensation “during the aggregate of the periods specified for each.”

"When appealed to the common pleas, the ease was argued before Mooke, Pattbbsow, and Egaw, J. J., and in an opinion, written by Moobe, J., the defendants’ *65 exceptions were dismissed and judgment entered upon the award. From that judgment they have taken the present appeal.

The argument at bar, and particularly in behalf of claimant, took a wider range than the record warrants. This was probably due to a statement in the opinion of the court below to the effect that “the testimony supports the finding that the original and supplemental agreements were based upon a mistake of law and fact existing at the time said agreements were made.” No such findings were made by the compensation authorities, nor was such contention suggested in any way either in the petition or in the testimony.

It seems to have been injected as a ground for bringing the petition under the first paragraph of Section 413 of the original Act of 1915, as amended by the Acts of 1919 and 1927, supra, and thereby avoiding the limitation of one year in the second paragraph. The petition was based upon an alleged change in claimant’s physical condition; namely, that his disability had increased, or, at least, that at the time of its filing he had a disability, due to the condition of his right leg, which was separate, apart and distinct from the disability occasioned by the injury to' his left leg.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 A. 672, 114 Pa. Super. 60, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-asquini-american-casualty-co-pasuperct-1934.