Diaz v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.

38 A.2d 387, 155 Pa. Super. 177, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 454
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 28, 1944
DocketAppeal, 59
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 38 A.2d 387 (Diaz v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.) 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
Diaz v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., 38 A.2d 387, 155 Pa. Super. 177, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 454 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

.. The claimant, a painter in the employ of the defendant company for fifteen years, on May 14, 1941, received an injury to his left eye, through some paint which was sprayed into it by a fellow workman, which disábled him from working for seven weeks and required the removal of the eye.

At the hearing upon his claim petition, he proved, to *179 the satisfaction of the compensation áuthorities, his employment, the injury to his eye, his inability to work as a result of the injury for seven weeks, and his permanent loss of the eye by its surgical removal. He thus made out a prima facie case for an award of compensation, for the permanent loss of his left eye, of sixty-six and two-thirds per centum of his wages for 125 weeks, under section 306(c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 21, 1939, P. L. 520, which was in force when he was injured.

It developed at the hearing, although it had not been set xip in the defendant’s answer, that claimant had had a somewhat similar, though much less severe, accident in 1933 while in defendant’s employ, and that his left eye had then been injured by some paint getting into it; and that he also had a condition known as Aphakia Cyclitis affecting that eye. Two doctors testified as experts — one for the claimant and one for the defendant— and were examined with respect to the condition of that eye prior to the accident of May, 1941, and defendant’s counsel, by his questioning of them and of the claimant, undertook to establish that even before the 1941 accident, claimant had lost the use' of his left eye for industrial purposes; that his left eye, by itself and without the use of the right eye, did not give him “industrial vision”; and it was claimed that he was not entitled to compensation under section 306(c) for the loss of the use of an eye that was not useful for industrial vision, but only for compensation under section 306(a) for the seven weeks during which he was actually disabled.

The referee and, on appeal, the board adopted this view and awarded claimant compensation for seven weeks’ disability, but disallowed his claim for compensation for 125 weeks for the permanent loss of his eye, under the schedule in section 306(c). Claimant appealed to the court of common pleas, which ordered the record back to the board, with directions that a further *180 inquiry be made as to (1) the injury of the left eye sustained. by the claimant in 1933 while in the employ of this defendant; (2) the nature of the impairment of vision of the left eye, if any, which the claimant sustained prior to 1933; (3) the effect of. the eye disease; ‘aphakia cyelitis’, upon the left eye from 1933 and until the accident of 1941; and (4) the compensation, if any, paid the claimant as a result of the eye injury of 1933. The court scrupulously refrained from expressing any opinion on the facts calculated to influence the board, but was not satisfied that the facts in evidence justified the order of the board. The defendant company appealed.

We are of opinion that, on the facts in this record, the order of the court below is not appealable; it is not such a judgment as can be presently appealed from (sec. 427); but, as the case will come before the board again and there were manifest, errors in its treatment and consideration, of it, we deem it advisable to refer to them in order to prevent their recurrence; but we expressly disclaim any intent to trespass upon the board’s fact-finding functions.

The fourth subject of inquiry in the courts order has been resolved by the frank admission of the present counsel for defendant that no compensation whatever was paid claimant because of the injury to his left eye in 1933. The materiality of the inquiry would be evident, if defendant company had paid claimant compensation for the loss of the use of that eye in 1933, for he could not twice ask for compensation for the loss of the same eye.

At the outset, we may say that the board — -ras appears from its opinion^ — misunderstood the situation with respect to the burden of proof as to the condition of claimant’s eye from 1933 up to the accident in 1941, and the quantum of proof required in this case. It was apparently under the impression that a burden rested on the *181 claimant to prove, to its satisfaction, as a part of his case, that his left eye, by itself, had industrial vision, or was useful for industrial purposes, at the time it was injured by the paint spray from his fellow workman’s gun or sprayer. For in referring to the testimony of the physicians, called as experts, it said: “We do not base this opinion solely upon the proof of impairment of vision in that eye, but also on the ground that the eye was useless in the claimant’s work prior to the accident. Dr. Brown [claimant’s witness] testified that the claimant ‘could probably’ do rough painting with the sole vision of the left eye before the accident. This testimony falls below the required standard of proof. Elonis v. Lytle Coal Co., 134 Pa. Superior Ct. 264 [3 A. 2d 995]. On the other hand [defendant’s witness] Dr. Markel’s testimony was positive to the effect that the claimant could not do the work with the sight of the left eye alone. Under the testimony, it seems clear that the claimant had no industrial use of his left eye prior to the accident, within the meaning of the Workmen’s. Compensar tion Act, and, accordingly he suffered no compensable loss when the physical eye was removed.” (Italics supplied). The Elonis case is not relevant on the point under discussion. It relates to the sufficiency of medical testimony necessary to establish- the causal connection between the accident and the claimant’s disability, and holds that the physician must testify that in his professional opinion the resulting disability came from the alleged cause. No such issue was here before the board. The claimant’s left eye was unquestionably removed because of the injury of May 1941. We have already pointed out that the claimant made out a prima facie case as to the permanent loss of his left eye, by proving its surgical removal as a result of the injury of 1941. This, unless its effect was overcome by other evidence, would entitle claimant to 125 weeks compensation. If the employer sought to overcome that prima facie case for *182 compensation by proof that the eye so removed, was, even before the' injury requiring its removal, so permanently .useless as an organ of sight as to be equivalent to the loss of the eye, the burden was on it to prove it, not on the claimant to disprove it. The defendant’s answer contained no averment on the subject, and the evidence which it adduced, apparently with that end in view, fell short of the necessary proof in two respects: First, as before stated, the questions asked by counsel who represented the employer at the hearings before the referee were directed to an attempt to show that the claimant had previously lost the use of his left eye for industrial purposes. 1

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 387, 155 Pa. Super. 177, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diaz-v-jones-laughlin-steel-corp-pasuperct-1944.