Dulsky v. Susquehanna Collieries Co.

177 A. 60, 116 Pa. Super. 520, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 334
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
DocketAppeal 403
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 177 A. 60 (Dulsky v. Susquehanna Collieries 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
Dulsky v. Susquehanna Collieries Co., 177 A. 60, 116 Pa. Super. 520, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 334 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

As the result of an accident in the course of his em *522 ployment as a miner with the defendant company, the death of William Dulsky occurred on May 24, 1927. Nearly a year later the claimant filed her petition for compensation as his widow; no mention was made therein of the existence of any children of the deceased employe. It soon developed at the hearing before the referee that claimant was neither living with the decedent, nor dependent upon him, at the time of his death. Claimant was then permitted to modify the proceeding into a claim by her in behalf of four of her children. Her claim as widow was disallowed and no appeal taken from that action.

This appeal is by the employer from a judgment entered by the court below upon an award to four children born to claimant, and the basis for the appeal is that they are not the children of William Dulsky.

The question involved, therefore, is whether the circumstances shown by the credible evidence were sufficient to rebut the legal presumption of legitimacy.

During the last seven years this case has traveled back and forth between different referees, compensation boards and judges of the court below, until the merits have become so obscured by conflicting findings and differing conclusions of law that an historical resume seems to be unavoidable.

William Dulsky was married to claimant, then Elizabeth Kendrick, a widow, on June 14, 1919, at Grirardsville, Schuylkill County. By September 28th of that year the parties had- separated and never lived together again. Dulsky went to live at the boarding house of a Mrs. Norkunskie, with whom he had previously boarded, at Shaft, Pa. At the time of his death Dulsky was living at this house and his wife at that time was, and since about May, 1920, had been, living at the home of and with one Michael Salaway, alias, Nick Solway, at 29 East Spruce Street, Mahanoy City. *523 While living with Solway four children were born to her—Irene, on November 29, 1921 (more than two years after her separation from her husband); Joseph, on December 11, 1923; William, on January 7, 1925; and Anthony, on May 13,1927. These children are the beneficiaries of the award upon which the judgment was entered.

After several hearings before a referee between June 29, 1928, and March 13, 1929, he found in his fourth finding the facts to which we have already referred, and also made a finding to the effect that Dulsky visited claimant “from time to time and remained overnight frequently.” One of his conclusions of law was that the children were entitled to compensation under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, and the amendment of April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, fixing the amount of compensation distributable to children of a deceased employe where there is no widow entitled to compensation. The aggregate amount of the awards to their guardian, made under date of April 27, 1929, is $6,616.43.

Averring that the referee erred in concluding, inter alia, that the beneficiaries were the children of Dulsky, the employer appealed to the board. In an opinion dated September 11, 1929, the board dismissed the appeal and affirmed the findings of fact, conclusions of law and the award of the referee.

Prom this disposition of its appeal by the board, the employer appealed to the Common Pleas of Schuylkill County. Prior to the argument, however, it presented to the board a petition for a rehearing, upon the ground of after discovered evidence, which was granted.

On July 17, 1930, the matter came on for a rehearing before the referee, who stated he found nothing in the additional testimony to cause him to change his *524 prior findings, and accordingly reaffirmed those findings and the award based thereon.

The employer again appealed to the board, excepting particularly to the finding of the referee that the beneficiaries are the children of the ■ decedent, and averring that such finding “is unwarranted by the credible evidence in the case.” Complaint was also made that the referee did not exhibit in his report “any subordinate underlying findings of fact which justify the ultimate conclusions of fact and law” made by him.

In an opinion filed January 23,1931, the board again affirmed the award. In the course of its opinion, the board found: “The evidence to the effect that the children are not in fact the children of William Dulsky is very persuasive” and “It is quite apparent that [claimant] lived in adultery with [Nick Solway].” It also found that the testimony of claimant and her witnesses, to the effect that Dulsky visited her from time to time and remained overnight with her, “is not worthy of credit.”

It was an exclusive function of the board to pass "upon the credibility of the witnesses. But, notwithstanding the foregoing conclusion and its subsequent statement that the evidence proved to its entire satisfaction that at least three of the children “are not the children of the decedent”, it affirmed the fourth finding of the referee that all four are his children.

The position taken by the board seems to have been that the presumption of legitimacy, coupled with the admitted fact that the parties lived within eight miles of each other, prevented it from disposing of the case in accordance with what it was convinced is the truth.

Thereupon the employer appealed to the court below. That tribunal, by a divided court, sustained the employer’s exceptions and remitted the record to the board “for further consideration and action.” The *525 majority opinion was .written by Koch, . P, J, After correctly stating that the question involved upon the appeal was whether the evidence and the law support the finding that William Dulsky was the father of the four children, he summarized the facts appearing from the evidence so clearly and discussed the applicable authorities so fully that we quote liberally from his opinion.

“When a married woman gives birth to a child the presumption of its legitimacy arises. But the presumption may be overcome by proof of circumstances that will satisfy a jury to the contrary.

“ ‘In old times it seems to have been holden that a child born of a married woman whose husband was within the four seas which bound the Kingdom could not be considered as illegitimate. This was unreasonable. When a husband had access to his wife it is right that no evidence short of absolute impotence of the husband should bastardize the issue. But where they live at a distance from each other so that access is very improbable, the legitimacy of the child should be decided upon a consideration of all circumstances’: Commonwealth v. Shepherd, 6 Binney, 283, 286.

“ ‘Where a child is begotten and born whilst its mother is a married woman, its legitimacy is presumed until the contrary is clearly made to appear. This presumption can be removed by showing that the husband had no sexual intercourse with his wife at any time when it was possible for the child to have been begotten’: Dennison v. Page, 29 Pa. 420, 422.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 A. 60, 116 Pa. Super. 520, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dulsky-v-susquehanna-collieries-co-pasuperct-1934.