Easton v. Elk Tanning Co.

195 A. 648, 129 Pa. Super. 535, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 368
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 1937
DocketAppeal, 108
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 195 A. 648 (Easton v. Elk Tanning 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
Easton v. Elk Tanning Co., 195 A. 648, 129 Pa. Super. 535, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 368 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Upon the application of Nellie E. Easton, widow of Howard Easton and acting on behalf of herself and their seven dependent children, we permitted this appeal to be presented in forma pauperis. By it we are called upon to decide whether the court below erred in holding that an award of compensation for the death of her husband (made to her and the guardian of the children by the referee and affirmed by the board) was not supported by the evidence.

In disposing of this case the common pleas did not, as argued by counsel for appellant, weigh the evidence and change the findings of fact made by the compensation authorities. In the opinion filed by Lewis, P. J., it was held that the finding of fact by the referee (adopted by the board), upon which the compensation authorities based their conclusion that Easton’s death was compensable, was, as a matter of law, not supported by competent evidence and that the law had not been properly applied to the facts disclosed by the record. The order appealed from is, in effect, a judgment in favor of the defendant employer.

There is little, if any, conflict in the testimony; the controversies relate to the inferences to be drawn from *538 it. Appellant’s husband died on September 17, 1931, in the Blossburg State Hospital. It is beyond question that the immediate cause of his death was a hemorrhage from a large artery in his left chest, which had become necrosed by a streptococcic infection. When admitted to the hospital several weeks prior to his death, decedent had a high temperature and the presence of the infection was manifested by a swollen condition of the left shoulder and axilla and a lump over his heart.

Contending that her husband’s death had resulted from “an accident in the course of his employment” with the Elk Tanning Company, appellant instituted appropriate proceedings under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, 77 PS Sections 431 and 411. In its answer to the claim petition the employer denied that decedent’s death was caused by any injury suffered by him while in its employ; appellant therefore had the burden of proving that her husband’s death was compensable under the provisions of the statute.

Two hearings were had before a referee. Material facts appearing from the uncontroverted testimony may be thus summarized: Easton was a strong, healthy man and had worked regularly for the defendant company as a laborer for some three years prior to his fatal illness. In the claim petition his employment was described as “hoisting packs in scrub house” and the evidence shows he had been engaged in that work for at least three or four months. From the testimony of his foreman and fellow employees we gather that decedent worked in the scrub house of defendant’s tannery; that his work was the hoisting of wet leather “after it was tanned and. ready to be finished” out of baths and placing it in revolving wheels to be washed. While doing this work his hands necessarily and constantly came in contact with a tannery liquid. An excerpt from the testimony of the foreman reads: “Q. His work required *539 him to handle these hides in the process of tanning? A. He handled leather after it was tanned, ready to be finished. Q. Was it wet working there? A. Yes. Q. Water around there? A. Yes. Q. The job was known as a wet job? A. Yes.” It is also clear from the testimony that the tannery liquid with which decedent and his fellow employees came in contact not infrequently caused cracks to appear upon their fingers and hands. Appellant testified that for some weeks prior to his illness decedent complained of a crack on his left index finger.

Edwin Victor, a fellow employee who had worked with decedent for three months, testified “he (the decedent) had a cracked finger for quite a while ...... [and] had a sore on one thumb for quite a while.” The witness stated his own hands “never bothered [him], much,” but added that “some people’s crack worse than others.” Harry Eeedy, another employee, testified decedent had a sore on his finger. Joseph Golden, decedent’s foreman, testified he had seen decedent every day and “on numerous different occasions” had observed “scratches or cracks on his hands.”

When decedent was obliged to quit work he was treated for a few days at his home by Dr. F. G. Eeese and then removed to the hospital where he came under the care of Dr. L. G. Cole.

Obviously, this is not a case in which there was such an unbroken sequence of events as would justify the conclusion, without the aid of expert testimony, that there was a' causal connection between the happening of some event (for instance, the running of a splinter of brass into a hand, as in Loeffler v. Western Elec. Co., 107 Pa. Superior Ct. 326, 163 A. 322, or a fall, as in Flour v. Penna. R. R. Co., 99 Pa. Superior Ct. 170,) and the death of a workman. It was therefore necessary in this case for appellant to show a connection between the happening of some event, amounting to *540 an “accident” in the course of her husband’s employment, and his death. This she undertook to do by the testimony of Dr. Cole. The referee, as a part of his fifth finding of fact, stated Easton died “from a streptococcic infection of the blood stream,......due to a septic poisoning which he contracted on or about August 25,1931, through the sore or orach which he had on the index finger of his left hand} which he received in the handling of the wet hides.” (Italics supplied) It was upon this finding that the referee and board based the conclusion of law that the death was compensable. It may be noted in passing that the evidence to which we have referred establishes that decedent was not handling “hides,” but “leather after it was tanned, ready to be finished.”

The primary question involved upon this appeal is whether there was any competent evidence supporting the finding that the infection entered the blood stream of the decedent “through the sore or crack which he had on the index finger of his left hand.” Even if the testimony warranted the inference that the streptococcic germ did enter through the crack in decedent’s finger, we still have the important question whether it entered by reason of any “accident in the course of his employment.”

Dr. Cole did not clearly express an opinion even that the crack in decedent’s hand was most probably the “site of entrance” of the germ. He did testify that in the course of the history given by the decedent at the hospital reference was made to cracks on his left hand, but no information was given him with reference to the time “of the formation of these cracks,” and the doctor also stated he had observed the cracks upon making his examination of the patient. When asked upon cross-examination upon what finger the cracks were found the witness replied: “I think the left index, if I remember, and also some blisters in the palm of *541 the hand.” This is the only reference made by Dr. Cole to blisters. If we assume that his recollection about the existence of blisters is correct, there is nothing in the testimony to indicate that they were there prior to decedent’s admission to the hospital. The statement of appellant was to the effect that there were no blisters upon his hands when he was taken ill.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 648, 129 Pa. Super. 535, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easton-v-elk-tanning-co-pasuperct-1937.