Ellenberger v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund

18 Pa. D. & C. 273, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 397
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County
DecidedMay 7, 1932
DocketNo. 1592
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Pa. D. & C. 273 (Ellenberger v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellenberger v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund, 18 Pa. D. & C. 273, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 397 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Reid, J.,

This is an appeal by plaintiff from the decision of the Workmen’s Compensation Board reversing the decision of Referee John R. Keefer, who dismissed a petition of the defendant to terminate a compensation agreement between the plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff, while employed in a mine of Wilbur Coal Mining Company, was injured by a fall of rock which fractured his third, fourth and fifth lumbar vertebra and caused some other injuries. On October 25,1927, a compensation agreement was entered into providing for payments at $12 per week, which continued until June 25, 1928, when total disability ceased. Thereupon a supplemental agreement was made providing for compensation at $8.21 per week, [274]*274which continued in force until August 9, 1929. Then a further supplemental agreement was made, providing for total disability, until September 15, 1929, and after that date at the rate of $8.28 per week — which latter agreement was in full force when the plaintiff was convicted in Somerset County on charges of “breaking and entering” and was sentenced to the penitentiary for from four to eight years, where he has since been confined.

On December 21,1930, defendant filed a petition to suspend compensation as of that date, alleging that “the claimant no longer is entitled to the payment as provided in the agreement.” To this plaintiff filed an answer on January 7, 1931, stating that he has not fully recovered from the injury to his back; must accept low wages on account of inability to do hard work and is “now deprived of the opportunity to support a wife and six children.” At the date of making this answer he was confined in the Western Penitentiary.

It is clear that the sole basis of the petition for suspension of the agreement was the fact of the plaintiff’s imprisonment.

On February 11, 1931, the referee dismissed the petition to suspend and directed compensation payments to continue. In the opinion accompanying the order the referee states that “it appears they are asking for a suspension . . . in view of the fact that that claimant is now incarcerated in the Western State Penitentiary. . . .” The opinion further states:

“We find from the testimony of defendant’s own medical witnesses that the claimant now suffers a permanent partial disability which will probably extend over a period of more than 300 weeks from ten days after the accident . . . and the defendant having offered no testimony whereby it is shown that the status of claimant’s disability would entitle the defendant to any reduction ... its petition should be dismissed.”

From the foregoing decision and opinion the defendant appealed to the board, which, on June 11,1931, in an opinion by Chairman Dale, sustained the appeal, reversing the referee and setting aside the compensation agreement as of December 21, 1930.

The appeal from the above-stated decision of the board, which is now before us, was filed September 8,1931, having been taken after the statutory ten days had elapsed by virtue of an order of this court permitting it to be done. The defendant has moved to quash the appeal upon the grounds hereafter stated.

The exceptions to the decision of the board are substantially as follows:

1. The board erred in terminating the compensation agreement.

2. The board erred as a matter of law in setting the compensation agreement aside and holding that appellant is no longer in a position to establish a valid difference of earning power under section 306 (b) of the act.

3. The board erred as a matter of law in forfeiting the appellant’s established civil rights and by reading into the relationship of the parties, under the agreement between them, conditions not within the agreement.

4. The board erred in not sustaining the decision of the referee.

5. The appellant excepts to the order of the board and avers that there is no competent evidence to sustain its decision.

6. The board erred in reversing the decision of the referee and granting defendant’s petition to terminate the agreement, there being no competent evidence to sustain its decision.

The motion to quash

The reasons are:

1. The appeal was not filed within ten days.

'2. The court is without jurisdiction as the accident happened in Somerset County and plaintiff resided there.

[275]*2753. There was no agreement to confer jurisdiction upon the court of common pleas of this county.

4. The appeal is not in accordance with the provisions of section 427 of the act, its supplements and amendments.

The first and fourth of the reasons stated may be considered together. The second and third will also be thus considered.

There is no dispute about the fact that the appeal was not taken within ten days from the notice of the decision. However, section 427 of The Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2,1915, P. L. 736, as amended by the Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, provides, inter alia: “Such appeal must be brought within ten days after notice of the action of the board has been served upon such party, unless any court of common pleas to which an appeal lies shall, upon cause shown, extend the time herein provided for taking the appeal.”

On August 7, 1931, plaintiff’s petition was presented to this court giving his incarceration in the penitentiary and the failure of his former counsel to act as the grounds of a prayer to be permitted to appeal notwithstanding the expiration of the ten-day period. A rule was thereupon granted upon State Workmen’s Insurance Fund, the defendant, to show cause why the plaintiff should not be permitted to take such appeal — of which petition and rule defendant’s counsel had notice. On September 1,1931, the rule came on for argument and thereupon this court made the rule absolute and directed that plaintiff be permitted to appeal within fifteen days. The appeal was filed September 8,1931.

Defendant’s counsel contend that the application for extension of the time for appeal was ineffective because it was not made within the ten-day period. The language of section 427, in our opinion, does not admit of such a limited construction, and no authority is cited to support it. The liberal construction of the section of the act governing appeals is shown by the ease of Stankiewicz v. Heights Construction and Supply Co. et al., 95 Pa. Superior Ct. 215.

We have been referred to an order of this court quashing the appeal in Black v. Valley Camp Coal Co. et al., 4 Dept. Reps. 2514, as presenting a decision which should now control us. The original record is not available, but the report shows that no opinion was filed, the order being “on argument list and rule absolute.”

As the Black ease was decided under the Act of 1915, section 425 of which contained no provision for an extension of the time for an appeal (now found in section 427 of the Act of 1919), it is clear that the case referred to cannot be given any effect in determining the question now before us.

We are also of opinion that Frazier’s Estate, 7 Pa. Superior Ct. 473, Haller’s Case, 44 Pa. Superior Ct. 481, Miller’s Estate, 159 Pa. 575, and Sherwood’s Estate, 206 Pa. 465, cited by defendant’s counsel, are not determinative of the present appellant’s right to an appeal.

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Related

Stankiewicz v. Heights Construction & Supply Co.
95 Pa. Super. 215 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Miller's Estate
28 A. 443 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1894)
Sherwood's Estate
56 A. 20 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1903)
Estate of Frazier
7 Pa. Super. 473 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)
Haller's Case
44 Pa. Super. 481 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Pa. D. & C. 273, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellenberger-v-state-workmens-insurance-fund-pactcomplallegh-1932.