Fitzpatrick v. Armour Leather Co.

18 A.2d 92, 143 Pa. Super. 231, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 32
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 16, 1940
DocketAppeal, 282
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 A.2d 92 (Fitzpatrick v. Armour Leather 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
Fitzpatrick v. Armour Leather Co., 18 A.2d 92, 143 Pa. Super. 231, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 32 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The claimant-appellant in this workmen’s compensation case alleges in his assignments that the court below erred in sustaining his employer’s exceptions to the action of the referee and board in setting aside a final receipt and directing the resumption of payments under an open agreement for compensation for total disability. This appeal is from the judgment entered in favor of the defendant employer.

It is not controverted that claimant, twenty-nine years of age, more than six feet in height, weighing 220 pounds and in good health, sustained an injury by an accident in the course of his employment with the defendant leather company on March 3, 1937. The work in which he was engaged was that of lifting hides out of a vat, loading them on a hand truck, and pulling them to loading bins. After stating he was walking backwards and pulling the truck up an incline constructed of concrete, he thus described the accident: “My foot flew out from under me, and I fell down on the concrete at that time, and when I fell I felt something tear in my back.”

On March 24, 1937, an open agreement for compensation, at the rate of $15.00 per week, was executed by the parties and duly approved by the board in which *233 the description of the accident and resulting injury reads: “While pulling on a truck of leather, feet slipped and he fell to the floor, causing bilateral sacro-iliac sprain — sprained muscles of lower back.”

Under this agreement claimant was paid compensation for 3-1/7 weeks in the amount of $47.14. On April 6, 1937, claimant having been advised by Dr. W. E. Delaney, the company doctor, that he would be able to do light work, wearing an orthopedic belt, executed a final receipt terminating the agreement in which it was recited that claimant “was able to return to work on 4/6/37 without any loss of earning power due to aforesaid injuries.”

With the assistance of certain electric treatments, administered by Dr. Delaney and other physicians under his direction, claimant was able to continue at light work until March 15, 1938, when he became totally disabled.

On May 18, 1938, more than one year after the last payment of compensation under the agreement, claimant filed with the board, under Section 434 of our Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as amended June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, 77 PS §1001, a petition to set aside the final receipt. The substance of this petition, as amended, was that claimant had returned to work upon the assurance of defendant’s doctor that he was able to do so, although he was continuously suffering from the results of the accident and required a supporting belt, and that the receipt was founded upon a mistake of fact.

The employer, in its answer, denied the then existing disability of claimant was attributable to the accidental injury and also averred that consideration of the petition upon its merits was barred because it had not been filed within one year after the date of the last payment of compensation.

At the hearing before the referee on September 9, *234 1938, certain facts material to the disposition of this appeal were testified to by Dr. Delaney, the only medical witness called by the defendant. This witness stated he had treated the claimant right along from the time of the accident.and upon a number of occasions after he returned to work; that following the accident claimant complained “of pain in the lower part of the back, and both sacro-iliac regions”; that he gave him infra red ray treatments and sent him to Doctor L. E. Wurster for X-rays. Referring to an examination he made on December 14, 1937, after claimant had been at work a number of months, the witness stated claimant “still complained of pain in both sacro-iliac regions,” and that he advised him to keep on wearing the belt and go to a Mr. Garvey for electric treatments.

Doctor Delaney made a complete examination of claimant on March 14, 1938. In his direct examination he testified claimant had by that time developed arthritis in the sacro-iliac region. Upon cross-examination, the witness conceded that claimant was totally disabled at the date of his last examination. With reference to the question whether there was a separation of the sacro-iliac joints, Doctor Delaney, during his examination in chief, said: “It seems to me it is a sacro-iliac separation or sprain — whether it is a separation or not — Q. Could it be arthritis? A. Well, he has arthritis there also.” An excerpt from the cross-examination of Doctor Delaney reads: “Q. Mr. Cupp (counsel for defendant) has asked you about this widening [at] the sacrum and iliac, while there are cases where there is some widening, but in those cases there doesn’t appear a slight irregularity or bony reaction around the articulation? A. No, that is not a separation. That is another thing. That is arthritis. Q. And that appears where there is an injury? A. That is right, inflammation or. injury. By the Referee: *235 Q. This arthritis Doctor you speak of, did that exist prior to the accident? A. No that came on since the accident. Q. Is it due to the accident? A. Well very likely it is. He also had bad tonsils, which of course will keep it up. Q. Would you say then that the arthritis is due to the injury? A. Yes, it is a traumatic arthritis. Q. And it is really the arthritis that keeps him disabled? A. I think, more than the — personally I don’t think he has sacro-iliac separation, but that doesn’t say he does not have trouble. He can have trouble whether he has separation or not, he can have pain whether he has separation or not.” (Italics supplied.)

We think this testimony of defendant’s own witness demonstrates, inter alia, the lack of merit in its contention that claimant’s petition was filed too late. If the admitted disability from which claimant was suffering at the date it was filed was a recurrence of a disability which immediately followed the accident but had ceased by April 6, 1937, the date of the receipt and of the last payment of compensation under the agreement, so that claimant was then, in fact, able to return to his regular or similar work without any loss of earning power, his remedy would have been a reinstatement of the agreement under the second paragraph of Section 413, of the statute, as amended April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 77 PS §772. Under such circumstances it would have been necessary to file the petition for reinstatement within one year after the last payment of compensation. But defendant, itself, has shown in this case that claimant’s disability had not ceased when it procured the final receipt from him; that at that time, and for nearly a year thereafter, claimant was under treatment by its own doctor; and that his earning power was seriously impaired. The statement in the body of the receipt that claimant was “able to return to work......without any loss of earning power due *236 to [his] ......injuries” was not true and defendant’s doctor knew it was not true.

It is impossible to justify and difficult to excuse the procuring, under such circumstances, of the receipt upon which defendant now takes its stand.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 92, 143 Pa. Super. 231, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzpatrick-v-armour-leather-co-pasuperct-1940.