Hill v. Booth & Flinn Co.

23 A.2d 85, 146 Pa. Super. 575, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 269
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 9, 1941
DocketAppeal, 95
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 85 (Hill v. Booth & Flinn 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
Hill v. Booth & Flinn Co., 23 A.2d 85, 146 Pa. Super. 575, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 269 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The employer and insurance carrier in this workmen’s compensation case have appealed from a judgment entered in the court below upon an order of the *577 referee, affirmed by the board, December 12,1940, which reinstated, as of May 18, 1934, an original open agreement, dated December 7, 1931, for compensation for total disability. The controlling facts are not in serious dispute; the controversies arise out of the application of the law to them. Inaccurate pleading on behalf of claimant and superfluous findings by the referee, which obscure rather than clarify the issue, have led to unnecessary confusion in the record.

The history of the case began on November 6, 1931, when Harry D. Hill, the claimant and appellee herein, now sixty-six years of age, sustained an injury, by accident, in the course of his employment as a well driller with the appellant-employer. A derrick cable broke; the top of the derrick and mast pole fell, striking claimant on the forehead and knocking him off the machine to the ground, a distance of some five feet.

An open agreement for compensation for total disability, at the rate of $15 per week from November 14, 1931, was entered into by the parties and approved by the board. In this agreement, claimant’s injuries were described merely as a lacerated scalp with bruises of the head and back. He was paid under the agreement until June 9, 1933, when appellants discontinued payments and made an unsuccessful attempt to terminate the agreement.

At a hearing before Eeferee Christley on December 14th of that year, X-ray pictures, taken March 4, 1932, demonstrated that claimant’s injuries were much more severe than they were thought to be at the time the agreement was executed. <From the testimony the referee made findings of fact, excerpts from which read: “The claimant sustained a fracture in the left side of the pelvis, through the ischium and pubic region, and X-rays revealed evidence of an impaction or compression in the upper part of the acetabulum or hip joint, where the hip joint fits on to the pelvis. The X-rays revealed *578 further a hypertrophic spur formation on a number of the lumbar vertebrae.”

Claimant had been treated at his home for some time by his family physician and then removed to ,St. Francis Hospital where he came under the care of Doctors J. Huber Wagner and Homer W. Grimm. The referee concluded claimant was still totally disabled, dismissed the petition for termination, and, in effect, ordered that payments be made in accordance with the agreement of December 7, 1931.

Claimant’s payments for total disability were continued, in accordance with the original agreement, until May 17,1934, when he signed a supplemental agreement reciting that his disability had changed as of that date from total to partial and in which the weekly rate of compensation was reduced to $10. This rate was based upon the following recital in the agreement: “His average weekly wage at the time of his accident of Nov. 6, 1931 was $45. He now possesses an earning power equivalent to $29.62. His loss, therefore, is $15.38.” From the date of this agreement until August 6, 1937, (the day upon which a 300-week period from the time of the accident expired), payments were made in accordance with the supplemental agreement and were then discontinued.

On March 3, 1938, less than one year after the last payment of compensation under the supplemental agreement, claimant filed a petition which became the basis of the controversy in this case.

It was prepared by filling in a blank form evidently intended by the board to be used, inter alia, in applying for a modification of existing agreements or the reinstatement of terminated agreements or awards upon the ground of “changed disability” — one of the grounds specified in the second paragraph of Section 413 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as amended, 77 PS §772. The fact that this petition *579 was badly drawn accounts for much of the trouble in the case, but when the record is reviewed and considered as a whole many of the apparent difficulties disappear. This is particularly true in the light ,of the medical testimony showing that a decided change for the worse occurred in claimant’s physical condition between the summer of 1933, when the employer and its insurance carrier endeavored to have the original agreement .terminated, and the spring of 1938, the time of the filing of claimant’s present petition. As to disability, we have on this record the agreement of the employer and its carrier that claimant was totally disabled by the accident of November 6,1931, and an unappealed-from finding by a referee in December, 1933, that his disability was still total as of that date. Under the medical evidence, hereinafter discussed, he was obviously less able to work when he filed his petition.

Looking at the real purpose of claimant’s petition, and disregarding its form, it is clear that the remedy he was seeking was to have the original agreement of December 7, 1931, reinstated upon the ground that his disability to engage in any work had not, in fact, decreased (as recited in the supplemental agreement) but, on the contrary, had increased by reason of disabling changes in his physical condition. The draftsman of the petition instead of praying for the reinstatement of the original agreement erroneously centered his attack on the expired .supplemental ,agreement of May 17, ,1934.

Claimant’s petition contains an averment that his disability has increased and was total on the date of the supplemental agreement. Then, referring to the latter, the petition avers: “The Insurance carrier forced me to agree to accept partial disability in May of 1934 because I was at that time committed to the Allegheny County Workhouse where I was serving a sentence, they contending that my disability on account of being confined in the workhouse was reduced from total disability *580 to partial disability.” We have repeatedly said that if a claimant is entitled to relief under any section of the statute we will consider his petition as filed under that section. , t

Appellants answered denying the averments of the petition and averring that since May 17, 1934, “the claimant had suffered at most only a partial disability for which he has been paid compensation in full.” It was also averred that the petition was filed too late because it had not been filed within the 300-week period.

After a hearing before Referee Dobrowolski, at which .testimony on both sides ,was taken, the referee made an order setting aside .the supplemental agreement and reinstating compensation for total disability. Upon the appeal of the employer and its carrier to the board, the record was remanded to Referee Moore for the purpose of appointing an impartial medical .expert to examine claimant and submit to examination and cross-examination. Dr. C. C. Yount was appointed and he and other witnesses testified at a hearing on November 16, 1939.

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Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 85, 146 Pa. Super. 575, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-booth-flinn-co-pasuperct-1941.