Ford v. A. E. Dick Co.

135 A. 903, 288 Pa. 140, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 29, 1926
DocketAppeal, 227
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 135 A. 903 (Ford v. A. E. Dick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. A. E. Dick Co., 135 A. 903, 288 Pa. 140, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 430 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Plaintiff, Catherine Ford, filed a claim against A. E. Dick Company to recover compensation on behalf of *143 herself and children for the death of her husband, James Ford, who, she alleged, died as the result of an accident, which occurred in the course of his employment with defendant. The latter’s answer was that Ford had committed suicide. The referee’s award in favor of claimant was approved by the board; on appeal, however, the Common Pleas of Schuylkill County sent the case back for further evidence. Again the referee found in favor of claimant, and the board approved; but the court below reversed and entered judgment in favor of defendant. Plaintiff has appealed to us.

All the evidence which we are about to recite was received without objection. Ford was a watchman for defendant company, his work requiring him to inspect and generally take care of the boilers at the company’s coal mines during the night. He was found at his regular place of service early in the morning of October 4, 1921, by Frank Steibler, defendant’s engineer, with his throat cut and traces of blood spread around the premises, indicating movements by the wounded man after his injury. Steibler, who was the first person to come in contact with Ford following the occurrence, at once asked him, “What is the matter, are you sick?” and received the reply, “No, I cut my throat.” Steibler exclaimed, “What?” Whereupon Ford again said, “I cut my throat,” immediately adding, “Go to hell.” Steibler then inquired, “How did you do it?” and the response was, “With a pocket knife.” When asked by Steibler when this happened, Ford said, “Fifteen after eleven.”

William Fox, foreman for defendant, was summoned by Steibler and arrived at about six o’clock. Fox testified that one of Ford’s sons, a boy, was there, who asked his father, “Pop, what happened to you?” and he said, “I got my throat cut.” The boy inquired, “Who done it?” and the reply was “Myself.” Then the boy asked, “Who told you to do it?” and his father responded, “Neil Ferry.” This witness said that he had met Ford the night before and he seemed to be “perfectly sober,” *144 “all right.” Fox said he had made a search of the premises to discover any knife or other implement with which Ford could have cut himself, but found none. When asked about the state of mind Ford was in when he made the declarations in the witness’s presence, he said: “He spoke straight enough to me; he could speak all right.” Fox, like the witness Steibler, testified to blood being scattered about in several places; and, in addition to the above-quoted declaration on the part of deceased, he testified that he himself had asked Ford what happened to him, and the latter replied, “I cut my throat.” Then Fox asked, “Wliat did you blow the whistle for ?” and the injured man said, “For help.”

Another witness who testified to declarations by Ford was Dr. Wetterau, who was the first physician to attend the injured man. This witness said that he inquired of his patient how it happened and the reply was that he had cut himself with a knife. When asked by the doctor, “Why did you do that, Jerry?” the witness testified that Ford “closed his lips and refused to answer anything further.” This, the witness stated, was “all” that Ford had said; he also stated that Fox was present on the occasion and in a position to hear everything that was said. It will be observed that the declarations of Ford reported by Dr. Wetterau .differ from those detailed by Fox, and that the latter, if he heard what deceased said to the doctor, made no reference to it in his testimony.

The testimony of the above three witnesses covers all the declarations made by deceased before his removal to the hospital. Several days after his injury, Ford’s wife saw him at the hospital. At first he had nothing to say; but on her second visit, when asked, “How did this happen?” she stated that he just lifted his hand and said, “There they come,” and when asked “How many?” replied, “Two.” The witness testified that she thought her husband was sane at the time of these declarations; *145 she said that, though Ford drank at times, he had not been indulging for some days before his death.

Bernard Carlin, a nephew of Ford, testified that he called at the hospital, and when he inquired of the patient, “Who did it?” Ford replied, “I was tackled.”

James Ford, a son of deceased, testified that he saw his father in the hospital and asked him, “Did you do it?” The reply was, “No.” He then asked, “Who did it?” and the father said, “I don’t know.” This witness expressed the opinion that the injured man was conscious and sane when he uttered the declarations just recited.

Dr. Gaughan, who attended deceased at the hospital, said that he arrived in a serious condition, “with the wind-pipe wide open.” This witness stated, the patient was “delirious most of the time.”

Two other witnesses were produced at the second hearing, and no objection has been made to their testimony. The first of these, Neil Ferry, said that he had known deceased for years and was on the most friendly terms with him; that he had never, under any circumstances, told him to cut his throat.

Some point is made in the opinion of the court below about a statement in the testimony to the effect that there were two Neil Ferrys, and that the man who appeared might not have been the one meant by deceased; but it seems reasonably clear from all that was said on the subject of Neil Ferry that this was the one in question. There was nothing to show that the other Neil Ferry, if he existed, lived anywhere in the locality involved in this case, or who or what he was; whereas the testimony shows that the Neil Ferry who appeared was well known to all concerned, and everyone seemed to take it for granted at the hearing that this was the man in question.

The only remaining witness was a man named Thomas, who testified he had known Ford all his life; that he had met him going to work on the night before *146 the fatality and observed nothing unusual about him. Thomas said he had talked with deceased that evening and found him “jovial,” “in a good humor.”

Section 301 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, P. L. 736, provides “that no compensation shall be made when the injury or death be intentionally self-inflicted, but the burden of proof of such act shall be upon the employer.” The compensation authorities believed and found that defendant had not borne this burden; while the court below believed and found to the contrary. Thus arises the point in the case.

There is a presumption against suicide or self-destruction on the part of a sane person, who came to his death under circumstances not explained (Continental Ins. Co. v. Delpeuch, 82 Pa. 225, 231, 235; Travellers’ Ins. Co. v. McConkey, 127 U. S. 661, 667; Guardian Life Ins. Co. v. Hogan, 80 Ill. 35, 42; 22 C. J. 95; Chamberlayne, Modern Law of Evidence, section 1053), and this presumption is expressly recognized by the act before us when it casts on the employer the burden of proving the contrary state of affairs.

In Kelly v. Director General, 274 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 903, 288 Pa. 140, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-a-e-dick-co-pa-1926.