Fehr v. YMCA, Pottsville

201 Pa. Super. 107
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 11, 1963
DocketAppeal, 431
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 201 Pa. Super. 107 (Fehr v. YMCA, Pottsville) 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
Fehr v. YMCA, Pottsville, 201 Pa. Super. 107 (Pa. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

Opinion by

Watkins, J.,

This is an appeal from the decision of the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill County sustaining a petition to terminate a compensation .agreement. Katherine Fehr, the claimant-decedent, 74 years old, on December 26, 1958, was employed as a dormitory maid by the Y.M.C.A., of Pottsville, Pennsylvania. On that date, while performing her duties, she fell and 'came in contact" with á heating radiator. An agreement No. 6,-980,299 .was executed between the claimant, the defendant and its insurance carrier, Royal Indemnity Company, On January 26, 1959.- The agreement was approved by the workmen’s compensation authorities and compensation was paid under it from December 27, 1958 to September 19, 1959.

Under this agreement, drawn by the defendant’s insurance carrier, the parties agreed and stipulated as follows, as to the description of the accident and nature of the injuries: “While cleaning rooms, making *109 beds, etc., she fell and struck a radiator. She received severe third degree.burns of shoulder and forearm & stroke.”

The petition to terminate was based on the second paragraph of §413 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, 77 PS §772, seeking termination of the agreement based on changed disability. The pertinent parts of the section read as follows: “The- board, or referee designated by the board, may, at any time . . . terminate an original . . .. agreement . . . upon petition filed by either party . . . upon proof that the disability of an injured employe has .'. . finally ceased.”

The burden is on the petitioner to prove the change in disability; in this case that the disability terminated entirely. There is nothing in this record concerning her, condition prior to the accident nor is there anything in this record concerning the accident except that contained in the agreement. One of the doctors called by. the defendant testified to a prior high blood pressure condition but there is nothing in the record to support this.unless he obtained it from hospital records or assumed it or was able to so conclude from her condition at.the.time he examined her.' Her family doctor who attended her at the time of the accident was not a witness. The hospital records discussed by the testifying doctors indicate she was being treated for her burns and for a cerebrovascular accident with a right hemiplegia. The record also shows that her condition grew steadily worse until her death on March 8, 1961 and that she was permanently and totally disabled from the time of the fall until her death. She was steadily employed as a maid or housekeeper up to the time of the accident as indicated by her salary of $20.76 per week, and the compensation paid at the rate of $18.70 per week.

Both doctors called by the defendant testified that there was no present disability resulting from the burns *110 as they were entirely healed and that the disability was due entirely to what Dr. Canfield described as “the cerebrovascular accident of December 26, 1958.” The record, further discloses that further deterioration of the cerebrovascular condition continued until her death on March 8, 1961. The referee found the following pertinent facts:

“5. . . . she was found to have . . . burns of the left arm and shoulder. She was also found to have suffered a right cerebral hemorrhage with accompanying right-sided paralysis . . .

“6. We find that claimant’s burns to her left arm and shoulder completely healed and that she was fully recovered from the said burns on September 19, 1959 and, insofar as the burns were concerned, could have resumed her employment without further disability therefrom or impairment of earning power. That her inability to work on and after September 19, 1959 was due entirely to her systemic condition, namely, the effects of her cerebrovascular stroke and its resultant effects. It has been suggested for the record that claimant’s death occurred on March 8, 1961 at the Schuylkill County Institutional Hospital at Schuylkill Haven, Pa. That claimant’s cerebrovascular stroke and resultant effects thereof was not caused by her accidental burns to her left arm and shoulder.”

The only evidence in this record to support finding of fact No. 6 is the testimony of Dr. Glenney. This is quite evident when you examine the testimony of Dr. John J. Canfield, whose testimony is summed up in the following questions and answers: “Q. Whether or not that total disability was in any way due to or the result of the original injury, the burns of December 26, 1958? A. I think her disability at that time was due entirely to her cerebral vascular accident of December 26, 1958. Q. Is what you call the cerebral vascular accident due to the fall and due to the burns? A. That, *111 I don’t know. I can say that she was paralyzed as a result of her cerebral vascular accident.”

The pertinent testimony of Dr. Glenney is as follows : “Of course, this lady had a cerebral hemorrhage, and that’s what caused her to fall (Italics writer’s), and the accident was she came in contact with the hot radiator.” This testimony was objected to and although the referee sustained the objection it is clear from this record that Dr. Glenney’s testimony was based on that improper statement of the facts in this case. He testified that her disability was due to “arteriosclerosis with hypertension, with the paralysis which resulted from this lesion which she developed' in her brain.” He was asked: “Q. As á matter of fact, do you know from the hospital records and your study of the case whether or not she had this condition prior to the time she fell? A. Well, she had high blood pressure before she fell, and she had disease of her arteries before she fell. Q. Then there was a pre-existing physical condition with which this claimant was afflicted? A. That’s right. Q. And, as a matter of fact, Doctor, what connection did this physical condition and the cerebral condition have with reference to the burns and the process of recovery? A. Well, in my opinion there was no relationship between the two except that when she had this attach of unconsciousness that she fell against the radiator and thereby burned herself.” (Italics writer’s)

It is clear, therefore, from this record that without the testimony of Dr. Glenney, which was clearly based on an assumption of facts contrary to this record, that the petitioner in this case has failed to sustain the burden of proof required for the termination of the agreement, based on a change in disability. The application of the testimony of Dr. Glenney to support finding of fact No. 6 was an error of law.

*112 The court below said: “This argument is based upon the assumption that the fall caused the stroke. The compensation agreement does not so state.

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Bluebook (online)
201 Pa. Super. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fehr-v-ymca-pottsville-pasuperct-1963.