General Elec. v. WCAB (VALSAMAKI)
This text of 593 A.2d 921 (General Elec. v. WCAB (VALSAMAKI)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION APPEAL BOARD (VALSAMAKI), Respondent.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
*463 Martin J. Fallon, Jr., Philadelphia, for petitioner.
Christina J. Barbieri, Philadelphia, for respondent.
Before COLINS, and KELLEY, JJ., and BLATT, Senior Judge.
BLATT, Senior Judge.
This is an appeal by the General Electric Company (employer) from a decision and order of the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Board) which affirmed a referee's decision granting total disability benefits to Edmund Valsamaki (claimant) pursuant to Section 301(c) of The Pennsylvania Workmen's Compensation Act (Act).[1]
The record reveals that the claimant worked for the employer as a field representative from 1958 to 1984 when he was forced to leave his employment due to persistent pain in his back and right knee. In 1964, while working for the employer at a United States military installation in Turkey, the claimant injured his back while lifting an engine. Following this injury, he underwent surgery at a United States Air Force hospital in West Germany. In 1965, the claimant again underwent back surgery following an injury sustained while working for the employer overseas. The record reveals that he received benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act following both of these injuries.
*464 In 1976, the claimant experienced further difficulties with his back while working for the employer overseas which required his hospitalization and ultimately a third back operation in 1978. Finally, in 1984, after enduring painful cramps and stiffness in his back for several years, he underwent a fourth back operation. When he attempted to return to work in 1985, the employer informed him that it could no longer use him due to the 25 pound weight lifting restriction which his doctor had placed on him.
Following several hearings, the referee found that the pain suffered by the claimant in 1984 was causally connected to the injuries which he sustained while working for the employer in 1964 and 1965, and that due to the aggravation of these prior injuries, the claimant was totally disabled. Referee's Decision, May 20, 1988 at 1. The referee also found that the claimant timely notified the employer of his injury when he left work in 1984. Id. On appeal, the Board affirmed the decision of the referee. The employer then filed a petition for rehearing in which it alleged that the Board had failed to address all of the issues raised in its appeal from the referee's decision.[2] The Board granted the employer's petition for rehearing, and following oral argument, issued a second opinion in which it again affirmed the referee's decision and also disposed of all issues raised by the employer. It is from this order of the Board that the employer appeals to this Court.[3]
The employer raises three issues on appeal:
*465 1) Whether the claimant provided proper notification of injury as required under the Act;
2) Whether the Board erred by failing to grant credit to the employer for wage continuation paid to the claimant from October, 1984 through April, 1985; and
3) Whether the Board erred in awarding benefits where the claimant failed to establish a causal connection between his disability and work activity.
We shall treat the first two issues as one because the Board ruled that by failing to raise these issues before the referee, the employer waived them.
Initially, we note that the purpose of the waiver doctrine is to ensure that the tribunal with initial jurisdiction is presented with all cognizable issues. In the workmen's compensation adjudicatory system, the referee represents the tribunal with initial jurisdiction to which all cognizable issues must be presented. The referee not only functions as the fact finder in workmen's compensation proceedings, he or she is also charged with making a record of hearings, and such findings of fact and conclusions of law "as the petition and answers and the evidence produced before him and the provisions of this act shall, in his judgment, require." Section 418 of the Act, as amended, 77 P.S. § 833. Appeals are taken on the basis of the record produced before the referee, and that record is necessarily limited to the claim petition, the answer and the evidence. De Marco v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., 513 Pa. 526, 522 A.2d 26 (1987). It follows that legal issues and facts not presented to the referee cannot be asserted on appeal without sacrificing the integrity, efficiency and orderly administration of the workmen's compensation scheme of redress for work-related injury and occupational disease. Id., 513 Pa. at 532, 522 A.2d at 529.
Our review of the claimant's petition for compensation reveals that he suffered a herniated disc on October 5, 1984, and that he notified his employer of his injury in November, *466 1984. Claim Petition, August 5, 1985, Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 3a-4a. The employer's answer to the claimant's petition reads as follows:
Defense counsel is awaiting opportunity to review file and investigation material; in the meantime, defendant employer/insurer, by counsel, demands proof and/or denies all relevant allegations in claimant's Petition, reserving the right to assert such additional defenses as may be deemed appropriate thereafter.
Answer, September 10, 1985, R.R. at 5a.
According to Section 416 of the Act, as amended, 77 P.S. § 821, every fact alleged in a claim petition not specifically denied by an answer shall be deemed to be admitted. Furthermore, we have held that an employer fails to specifically deny a claim petition when allegations are unanswered or the answer is equivocal. St. Denis v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 29 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 375, 371 A.2d 252 (1977). In our view, the employer's answer constitutes nothing more than a blanket denial which fails to specifically deny any allegation contained in the claimant's petition, and is thus equivocal.[4] It is not for the referee, the Board, or for this Court to guess what the employer means by contesting "all relevant allegations" in the claimant's petition. Rather, it is the employer's responsibility, pursuant to Section 416 of the Act, to specifically identify which allegations in the claim petition it is denying.[5] Because the employer failed, in its answer, to raise the issues of whether the claimant provided proper notice of his injury as well as whether it was entitled to a credit for wage continuation, the referee was never given the opportunity to resolve these cognizable issues. Thereafter, we *467 must agree with the Board that the employer waived these issues.[6]
What remains to be determined is whether the Board erred in concluding that the claimant established a causal connection between his disability and work activity.
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593 A.2d 921, 140 Pa. Commw. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-elec-v-wcab-valsamaki-pacommwct-1991.