Flood v. Logan Iron & Steel Co.

5 A.2d 621, 136 Pa. Super. 101, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 188
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1939
DocketAppeal, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 621 (Flood v. Logan Iron & Steel 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
Flood v. Logan Iron & Steel Co., 5 A.2d 621, 136 Pa. Super. 101, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 188 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

We are not satisfied that the findings of fact made by the compensation board in this case are sufficiently specific to enable a court to decide the questions of law involved.

On July 28, 1931, the claimant was accidentally injured while in the course of his employment with the defendant company when a piece of iron fell on his right foot and fractured the metatarsal bone of his fourth toe. An open agreement for total disability at the rate of $13.19 per week was executed and approved. By reason of the fact that claimant had a pre-existing ailment — arteriosclerosis—his injury did not heal as rapidly as would a similar injury in the case of a normal patient. Several unsuccessful efforts were made by the employer and its insurance carrier to terminate, or at least modify, the agreement. Payments for total disability were accordingly made under Section 306 (a) of our Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as amended April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 77 PS §511, up to March 7, 1937, — a period of 291-6/7 weeks and in the total amount of $3,849.57. They were automatically suspended as of that date (77 PS §774) because the defendants had filed, on February 18, 1937, a petition for modification of the agreement; that petition became the foundation of the proceedings which terminated adversely to the defendants in the court below by the entering of a judgment against them upon an award by the board of additional compensation for total disability at the rate of $13.19 per week beginning March 8, 1937, — the date as of which payments had been suspended — to continue, within the limitations of the statute, until claimant’s disability changes or

*104 ceases. This appeal is by the employer and its carrier from that judgment.

The petition was filed under the second paragraph of Section 413, as amended April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 77 PS §772, and averred that claimant’s disability had become partial and was confined exclusively to one foot. The prayer was for a modification of the original agreement into one providing compensation under Section 306 (b), 77 PS §512, for partial disability. Claimant’s answer was that his “entire body” had been affected as a result of the accident. It was stipulated, however, when the case came on for hearing before the referee, that it should be disposed of in accordance with the evidence, regardless of the form of the petition, and that if the evidence showed a “specific loss” an award should be made under Section 306 (c), 77 PS §513. Appellants called Drs. H. C. Cassidy and R. R. Decker; claimant presented the testimony of Dr. F. W. Black and testified in his own behalf. The contention of appellants was that the ultimate result of claimant’s injury was the “permanent loss of the use” of his right leg, within the meaning of Section 306 (c), which provides that the compensation for “all disability resulting from” such permanent injury shall be “sixty-five per centum of wages during 215 weeks.” As compensation had already been paid for a period of 291-6/7 weeks, appellants contended they were entitled to have the agreement terminated as of March 7, 1937. Claimant’s opposing contention was that, in addition to the injury to his foot and leg, other parts and organs of his body had been so injuriously affected by that injury as to cause disabilities, separate, apart and distinct, from those normally flowing from the loss of the use of his leg; and that the combined result was such a total incapacity to labor as entitled him to a continuance of payments under Section 306 (a) from the date as of which they had been suspended.

One of the findings of the referee was that the evi *105 dence before him was “in accord in one respect and that is that the claimant at the [date of the hearing] was totally disabled.” On the issue whether “the effects of the accidental injuries extended to other parts of the claimant’s body,” the finding of the referee reads: “The consensus of medical opinion is that the disability resulting from the injury of July 28, 1931 is confined to the claimant’s right leg, and we must accordingly find this to be a fact. We further find from the evidence that for all industrial purposes this claimant has lost the use of the right leg.”

The logical result of this finding of fact would be the termination of the agreement as of March 7, 1937, because appellants had by that date paid more than the compensation provided by Section 306 (c) for the loss of the use of the leg.

Instead of terminating the agreement the referee dismissed appellants’ petition upon an erroneous view and construction of the second paragraph of Section 413, thus expressed by him: “However, no petition to declare this member an industrial loss was filed by the defendant within a period of 215 weeks. In other words, no petition was filed involving a change of status since the referee’s opinion of June 4, 1934, [dismissing an earlier petition for modification], until the present petition was filed, almost 300 weeks after the accident. In fact, as late as January 17, 1938, an operation was performed in an effort to restore the claimant’s right leg to industrial usefulness.” That paragraph provides, inter alia, for the modification or termination of an agreement upon a petition filed by either party with the board, upon proof that the disability upon which the agreement was based has changed in character or extent. Here, the original agreement was for total disability under paragraph (a) of Section 306 and appellants, contending that the injuries of claimant had resolved themselves into the permanent loss of the use of his leg, sought to have the agreement modified *106 into an agreement or award for compensation, under paragraph (c) of that section. By the amendment to the paragraph certain limitations of time were prescribed, except in the case of eye injuries. An original agreement may have been made for total disability under paragraph (a) with a potential life of 500 weeks, or for partial disability under paragraph (b) with a possible life of 300 weeks, or for any of the definite periods specified in paragraph (c) to cover all disability resulting from one of the permanent injuries therein provided for. If a claimant seeks to review or modify an agreement, executed under paragraphs (a) or (b), he is required to file his petition within one year after the date of the last payment of compensation, or if he seeks to review or modify an agreement executed under paragraph (c) he must file his petition during thd “definite period” fixed in the agreement. No period of 215 weeks, or any other definite period prescribed in paragraph (c), had ever been fixed by an award or agreement in this case. The original agreement was an open one under paragraph (a).

When an employer or its insurance carrier seeks to have an agreement modified or terminated, the petition may be filed at such time, during the life of the agreement, as the employer believes he is prepared to prove that claimant’s disability has temporarily or finally ceased, or, if originally total, has become partial, or that the claimant’s injury has developed into one of the permanent injuries provided for in paragraph (c).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 621, 136 Pa. Super. 101, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flood-v-logan-iron-steel-co-pasuperct-1939.