Graham v. Hillman Coal & Coke Co.

186 A. 400, 122 Pa. Super. 579, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 149
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1936
DocketAppeal, 127
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 186 A. 400 (Graham v. Hillman Coal & Coke 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
Graham v. Hillman Coal & Coke Co., 186 A. 400, 122 Pa. Super. 579, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 149 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The controversy in this workmen’s compensation case *581 arose out of the filing by the claimant, on December 14, 1933, of a petition to set aside a final receipt signed by him on August 10, 1932.

After hearings at which medical and lay testimony was taken, the referee erroneously dismissed the petition upon the ground it had been filed too late. The board reversed the referee, set aside the receipt, and made an award of additional compensation. Upon the employer’s appeal, the court below affirmed the action of the board and entered judgment upon the award; hence, this appeal by the defendant employer.

Our conclusion is that the judgment should be affirmed, in a modified form, upon one of the grounds assigned by the board and the common pleas, viz; that the receipt was procured by “improper conduct” upon the part of the employer’s representatives. An additional ground considered by the board need not be discussed.

In the course of his employment with appellant as an inside motorman claimant suffered an injury on November 18, 1931, thus described in his testimony: “Well, I was pushing three coal cars when I put my back up against them to give them a push, something cracked in my back and I went on my face, and I squirmed around there until I got in this position that I could get ease, and it was the foreman and the shot firer that come along there and asked me what was the matter, and I told them.” Under an open agreement compensation was paid for total disability and at the rate of $15 per week from the seventh day after the accident until June 15, 1932, to the amount of $435.

On that date appellant, apparently having decided for itself that claimant’s disability had ceased, abruptly stopped paying any compensation. If it honestly believed claimant’s disability had decreased or finally ceased it was its plain duty to file a petition under Section 413 of the amendatory Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. *582 642, 661, as further amended by the Act of April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 194, to modify or terminate the open agreement. By its arbitrary attempt to terminate the contract in its own way it took the risk of whatever unfavorable inferences might be drawn from such conduct. Naturally, the sudden cessation of payments brought on a dispute with claimant.

We need not recite the findings of fact of the compensation authorities in detail. It is sufficient to say that the evidence established that claimant suffered, in the language of one of appellant’s experts, a “lumbosacro strain” of considerable severity. After treatment in Mercy Hospital from January 12th to February 13, 1932, he was discharged as able to go back to light work.

In March 1932, one of appellant’s doctors placed a brace upon claimant and advised appellant on May 1st of that year that claimant was, “in his opinion”, able to resume light employment. No effort was made to show that appellant offered claimant work within his capacity at that time.

The circumstances under which the final receipt was signed, as testified to by claimant and found by the compensation authorities, may be thus stated: In the latter part of July, 1932, Dr. Paul B. Steele, an orthopedic surgeon, advised claimant to have several infected teeth extracted. A letter to that effect was written by the doctor to claimant’s counsel and given by them to claimant. Referring to the events following the receipt of the letter, claimant testified:

“So after I got the letter I wanted to be a man and I took the letter to Mr. Gundelfinger [appellant’s representative] there and showed it to him, he said, ‘There is not very much the matter with you at that.’ Well, I asked him what he was going to do about it, he said, it was up to me, they had done all they was going to do. Well, I told him to give me my compensation and I would go and have my teeth fixed and when I got *583 able I would come down and report for work. He said, ‘Will you do that?’ I said, ‘Yes, sir.’ The next day I went in to get my compensation, tbe check, and the clerk there said, ‘Come around here Mr. Graham you will have to sign for that/ and I signed for it, and I took my money and paid my store bill of $70 and went and got my teeth fixed.”

The compensation referred to by the witness was the aggregate of the payments which had accrued, under the agreement, subsequent to the date appellant stopped paying. Appellant then paid claimant an additional sum of $111.43, being the amount due, under its contract, up to August 6, 1932, and it was in connection with this payment that the final receipt was taken on August 10, 1932.

After referring to the agreement by number and to the amount which had accrued subsequent to June 15th, the receipt continued: “Being the final payment due under the above agreement .. i... the disability of the said Clarence Graham having terminated on the said August 6, 1932, as follows: Able to return to work.”

Charles Hill, one of appellant’s clerks present when the receipt was signed, testified claimant read the paper and was told “he would not get any more money.” This was denied by claimant who testified Mr. Gundelfinger told him he “would have to sign a receipt” hut did not tell him it was a final receipt. In reply to a question whether he was able to work at that time, claimant said: “No sir, indeed I was not. I got that money to go to the doctor so I could try to get able to go to work.”

The removal of the teeth did not improve claimant’s physical condition and the evidence shows that his disability so increased between the date of signing the receipt and December 14, 1933, (the date upon which the petition was filed), that by the latter date he was totally disabled as a result of his injury.

*584 That claimant’s petition was for the setting aside of the final receipt is beyond question. It refers to the agreement and recites that he received compensation thereunder until the termination of the agreement by the receipt of August 10, 1932. The prayer of the petition was that the board “set aside the final receipt under the provisions of Section 434, Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, for the following reasons: The said final receipt signed by me on August 10, 1932, was signed under a mistake of law and a mistake of fact. My disability had not ceased at that time, and it has continued to date. I did not understand the significance of the final receipt.”

Although the receipt referred on its face to section 434, (Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, 669,) the referee, disregarding everything this court said, more than a year before that time, in Zupicick v. P. & R. C. & I. Co., 108 Pa. Superior Ct. 165, 164 A. 731; Bucher v. Kapp Bros, et al., 110 Pa. Superior Ct. 65, 167 A. 652, and many other cases, to the effect that section 434 relates exclusively to final receipts and that section 413 makes no mention of them whatever, treated the petition as if filed under section 413 and enforced against the claimant the limitation of one year, prescribed in the second paragraph of that section, by dismissing his petition. The board, however, promptly corrected this palpable error upon the part of the referee by considering and disposing of the petition upon its merits.

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Bluebook (online)
186 A. 400, 122 Pa. Super. 579, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-hillman-coal-coke-co-pasuperct-1936.