Fye v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

3 A.2d 275, 133 Pa. Super. 550, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 355
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 24, 1938
DocketAppeal, 176
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 A.2d 275 (Fye v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) 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
Fye v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 3 A.2d 275, 133 Pa. Super. 550, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 355 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

*551 The employer in this workmen’s compensation case has appealed from a judgment entered below upon an award by the referee, affirmed by the board, of compensation to claimant for the death of her husband, Joshua Fye, employed by it for a number of years as a car repairman.

Notwithstanding some inaccuracies in pleading and the failure of the compensation authorities to make underlying findings which would indicate clearly the sense in which they used the term “over-exertion” in their ultimate finding of fact, the case may be disposed of upon its merits as it now stands. We have examined the record and exhibits, consisting of more than three hundred printed pages, with care and have reached the conclusion the judgment should be affirmed.

The issues upon which the case turns may be clarified by beginning with its medical aspects. Fye died in a hospital at DuBois on November 28, 1935. An autopsy was performed by Dr. J. H. Woolridge and Dr. H. J. Lewis, the coroner of Clearfield County.

No indications of violence to the external physical structure of decedent’s body were found. With relation to internal injuries, Dr. Woolridge testified: “Q. From your autopsy were you able to discover what, in your opinion, was the cause of Mr. Fye’s death? A. Death was due to strangulation and obstruction of the bowel. It was caught in the right femoral hernial sac. There was a necrosis and perforation of the bowel, and localized peritonitis. Q. Doctor, you call it a femoral hernia. Is that the type of hernia where there is any dropping or protrusion? Is there anything showing externally in that type of hernia? ......A. No. Q. What is supposed to be a palpable hernia? A. One that you can feel. Q. Was there any hernia that you could feel in this case? A. On the outside of the body, No. Q. Did you open the abdomen? A. Yes. Q. With reference to the gall bladder, what was its condition? A. The gall bladder had been operated before; evidently *552 drained. There were numerous adhesions. The gall bladder Avail Avas thickened. It contained a number of stones, some sand and thick bile. Q. State whether or not the condition of the gall bladder, in your opinion, had any relation to the cause of death? A. It had not. Q. You said that the obstruction of the bowel or the intestine was caught in a sac? A. Caught in the femoral ring. Q. Was the entire intestine caught in that ring, or not? A. Ho, just the one half of it. Q. Doctor, when you speak of a ring, is that a breaking of the wall, or do you refer it to a sac? Is there any distinction between a rupture of the membrane and a bulging of the membrane? A. Yes, a rupture would be an actual tearing of the membrane, and in a bulging you usually have, the membrane is stretched, or through an opening Avithout being stretched. Q. Which Avas it in this case? A. A stretching. Q. Ho tearing? A. Ho tearing or breaking. Q. Were you able to form any opinion as to how recent that ring or sac had occurred? A. I may say that the ring is simply the portion through which the sac goes. This sac was of recent origin. There was no scarring of the sac and there were no adhesions. There was only one part of the circumference of the bowel in the sac. The entire bowel had not gone into the sac. From the size of the sac I feel that the bowel had never been in the sac. There had never been any more of it in the sac than at the time we made the examination. Q. Was the bowel perforated? A. Yes, sir. Q. When you use the word perforated, will you define what you mean by the Avord? Does it mean a breaking of it or a wasting away of it? A. There was a hole in it which is due, normally, to wasting away, or due to gangrene. This is a gangrenous condition. The wall falls out inside instead of being pushed out.......Q. Was this such a hernia as Avould furnish evidence of any protrusion? A. Ho, there was no evidence on the outside of the body of a sac,”

*553 Upon cross-examination the witness, in reply to the suggestion that the strangulation might have been caused by adhesions, said: “A. In this hernia there were no adhesions around there and the sac was thin and it was not dilated below this portion which was jammed in there. Q. You testified awhile ago that you saw adhesions around the gall bladder. Is it not a fact that there were adhesions the whole way down from the gall bladder down into the lower quadrant? A. Ho, sir.”

Dr. Lewis fully corroborated the above quoted testimony of Dr. Woolridge. This evidence excludes this case from the requirements of the “Hernia Amendment” of April 13,1927, P. L. 186, to the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, 77 PS §652, (Pollock v. Clairton School District et al., 100 Pa. Superior Ct. 333) and distinguishes it from Pastva v. Forge Coal Mining Co., 119 Pa. Superior Ct. 455, 179 A. 919. Moreover, it also excludes it from that line of cases in which it could reasonably be found that death resulted from the natural progress of a chronic disease with which the employee had been smitten prior to any alleged accident and of which Pelusi v. Mandes et al., 109 Pa. Superior Ct. 439, 167 A. 456; Amentlar v. New Up. Leh. Coal Co., 131 Pa. Superior Ct. 97, 198 A. 678; and Adams v. W. J. Rainey, Inc., 133 Pa. Superior Ct. 550, 3 A. (2d) 270, are examples.

A contrary opinion with relation to the cause of the strangulation and perforation of the bowel was expressed by one medical expert called by the defendant, who saw the body after the post-mortem had been completed, and by three who never saw it. As these opinions were based upon the assumption that there were “adhesions” in the lower right quadrant — an assumption not merely unsupported by, but actually contrary to, the evidence — the referee was fully justified in rejecting th§m and finding, as he did in his seventh *554 finding of fact, “that death was not due to the gall bladder condition.”

By this process of elimination we arrive at the real issue in the case. Claimant based her claim for compensation upon the theory that the fatal injuries to the internal physical structure of her husband’s body resulted from an accident suffered by him in the course of his employment. The question of law with which we are now concerned, therefore, is whether she adduced competent evidence from which the referee and board could reasonably draw an inference that her husband, while performing the work for which he was employed, met with an “accident,” within the meaning of the statute and the scope of the decisions construing it.

These facts were shown by uncontroverted testimony : On the morning of November 19, 1935, Fye was engaged, along with a fellow employee, Joe Guvalla, in jacking up the front end of a steel hopper car, weighing approximately 41,500 pounds, preparatory to removing the wheels and trucks for repairs to them. The car, upon which they were working between 7:30 and 8 o’clock that morning, was the second one of a string awaiting repairs. The method used was to lift one end of the car at a time by placing two jacks underneath the end to be raised — one jack at each corner. These jacks weighed about 125 pounds, each, and had a lifting capacity of 15 tons. They Avere operated by handles or levers, some 45 inches in length.

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.2d 275, 133 Pa. Super. 550, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fye-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-pasuperct-1938.