Ferraro v. Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corp.

15 A.2d 559, 142 Pa. Super. 22, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 513
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1940
DocketAppeal, 85
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 A.2d 559 (Ferraro v. Pittsburgh Terminal Coal 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
Ferraro v. Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corp., 15 A.2d 559, 142 Pa. Super. 22, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 513 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Cunningham, J.,

Opinion by

The broad and fundamental question of law involved under this appeal in a workmen’s compensation case is whether the claimant has met the burden of proving by substantial and competent evidence that his disability was caused by an “injury by an accident in the course of his employment” (within the meaning of Section 301 of our Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, 77 PS §411), rather than by the presence of certain conceded spinal deformities and the natural progress of a preexisting osteo-arthritis.

The referee made an award for total disability; the board affirmed and the common pleas entered judgment thereon; this appeal by the employer followed.

The main facts and surrounding circumstances of the incident upon which claimant relies as entitling him to compensation are not in dispute — the difficulty lies in the application of the law to them.

Claimant, fifty-four years of age, had been employed for many years as a coal miner. In the course of his employment in one of the mines of appellant on March 11, 1936, he and his “buddy” were loading coal into mine cars with hand shovels. His description of the alleged “accident” reads: “Q. Did anything happen to you on March 11, of this year? A. Yes, I was load coal and at time I load coal I start get pain in my back and at. the same time in my leg — the muscles in my leg get sore, I was shovel coal with right hand and I can’t shovel it was too close to me and buddy shovel with left hand. Q. This place, where you were working, how big a place were you working in? A. *25 Wide place all right, about 30 to 32 feet wide — I can’t load more than three cars of coal — my buddy work close to me and no got chance to work. Q. What time of the day was it that this happened? A. Dinner time. Q. What time did you go to work that morning? A. Seven o’clock in the morning. Q. Did you work any more after that? A. No, sir. Q. When you got this pain where was the pain? A. The pain started in my back and then leg; went down my left leg; the leg sleep, the nerves get tight and get stiff on me. Q. Did you fall down? A. Sure, I can’t stand up. Q. Did you work any more that day? A. No — I lay down — I call my buddy — I can’t work and my buddy say lay down — I can’t work. Q. How did you get out of the mine? A. I call the driver and he ask me what is the matter and I tell him what whs the matter — I say my leg can’t stand up. Q. Did the driver take you out of the mine? A. Yes. Q. Did you go to the doctor? A. Yes....... Q. Did you ever have any trouble with your back and your left leg before this? A. Once in 1918. Q. And did that get better? A. Yes. Q. How long were you working for this company when this happened? A. Since 1926 — I was working in this mine in 1917....... Q. What way do you usually shovel? A. Shovel every time with right hand. Q. When you felt this pain in your back, what way did you shovel? A. Shovel with left hand. Q. What was the reason you shoveled with your left hand? A. Because I don’t want to hit my buddy with shovel — I was standing too close. ...... Q. How long did you shovel with your left hand or left-handed when you felt this pain in the back? A. In the morning until twelve....... Q. That morning did you start to shovel right-handed or left-handed? A. Right-handed when I get a chance.”

During the three hours referred to claimant and his “buddy” had loaded three cars. Larry Bossi, claimant’s “buddy,” thus described the manner in which they were *26 working that morning: “Q. Now, when you were working on the third car, did anything happen to Angelo? A. I worked in the front and he worked in the back it was too tight to work for two men. Q. You were squeezed together? A. No — it was too close to work and you got cramped like. Q. And did you notice how Angelo shoveled, which hand? A. He was shoveling up and he told me he got hurt. Q. How far away from him were you? A. Indicating about six feet — I stayed close to the rib and he stayed close to the car. Q. What did Angelo say? A. He said he got hurt, no can work no more. Q. Did he keep on working or did he drop his shovel? A. I said, you go sit down and he said can’t work no more. About one hour he try again and he no can do it and he quit....... Q. And they took him out of the mine? A. Yes. Q. When he said he got hurt, did he drop his shovel? A. Sure he dropped his shovel. Q. Did he fall down? A. Sure he fall down.”

Claimant’s medical witness, Dr. J. W. Boice, testified he examined him on March 29 and September 9, 1986, and took X-rays. Excerpts from his testimony read: “Q. What does your examination and X-ray show to be his injury? A. The X-rays — I might incidentally say there that he had an old injury back in 1918 to the back, and the X-ray showed an old fracture of the tip of the first lumbar transverse process on the left, with lipping, and fusion of all the lumbar. There was a torsion of the second, the third, and the fourth lumbar on the left toward the right. There was impingement of nerve tracts of the third, fourth, and fifth on the left. There was lordosis to the right, with apparent pressure on the left side of the cord, separation in the left sacro-iliac which was more marked than on the right, an old injury to the fifth lumbar and the first sacral, which looks as though it might have been an old crush. There was displacement of all the spinal processes of the lumbar region.^ The whole spine shows evidences of chronic arthritis. It is especially marked in the lumbar from

*27 the second down, and involving the sacrum....... Q. Doctor, did you see any X-ray pictures of this previous injury that you mentioned. A. No, sir. Q. And did you get a history of how long he was disabled or what the extent of his injury was as to that previous accident? A. I understood that in that previous accident that he was hurt in 1918 and that he was off work for about four years, and that the injury was to the — I understood the lower back. What I mean by the lower back is from the lumbar region down....... Q. I presume, therefore, doctor, that these old fractures that you described are attributable to that old accident? A. Yes, I would say that the fractures are all attributable to the old injury. Every one of them.”

The first question of law arising out of this review of the evidence by and on behalf of claimant is whether it supports a finding that claimant met with any “accident” during the forenoon in question.

Certain factors frequently present in compensation cases may be promptly eliminated. There is no evidence on this record of any slipping, falling, or the like, or of tEe happening of any undesigned, unexpected or fortuitous, external event, or of any overexertion.

Again, it is not sufficient to stop with showing that during his work claimant was stricken with a severe pain in his back which “went down” his left leg and rendered him unable to continue the loading of the car. There must be competent proof that this condition resulted from an accident: Adamchick v. Wyoming Collieries Co., 332 Pa. 401, 3 A. 2d 377.

Many of the so-called findings of fact- of the referee, adopted by the board, are not findings at all, but merely recitals of portions of the testimony. The only specific finding is that claimant has been totally disabled since March 11, 1936.

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Bluebook (online)
15 A.2d 559, 142 Pa. Super. 22, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferraro-v-pittsburgh-terminal-coal-corp-pasuperct-1940.