Hilton v. Edwards Memorial Church

50 Pa. D. & C. 341, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 82
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County
DecidedMay 19, 1944
Docketno. 477
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Pa. D. & C. 341 (Hilton v. Edwards Memorial Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilton v. Edwards Memorial Church, 50 Pa. D. & C. 341, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 82 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Valentine, P. J.,

This case strikingly illustrates the complications, difficulties, and delays that not infrequently arise as a result of the creation of an administrative body and the vesting of it with power and authority to decide questions and perform duties properly resting with the judicial branch of the State Government, or which should be heard and determined by a tribunal whose members are familiar with legal principles and procedure.

Claimant seeks compensation for injuries allegedly sustained by slipping on the stairs of defendant church while in the performance of his duties as caretaker. The accident occurred January 12, 1936.

Two weeks after the accident claimant consulted Dr. Davenport, who found a lump in the rectum. Claimant entered a hospital on January 30, 1936. His ailment was diagnosed as osteoarthritis of the pelvis. He was discharged from the hospital on February 27, 1936. The claim petition was filed January 11, 1937.

On hearing of the claim petition on March 24, 1937, claimant testified: “I was looking after the steam and [343]*343I was going down and I happened to make a mis-step and fell down the steps and bumped my back”. Strangely enough, on being admitted to the hospital claimant made no reference to his fall. While he was in the hospital X-rays were taken and his trouble diagnosed as follows: “hypertrophic arthritis of the lumbar spine, and of both hip joints, decidedly more marked on the right side”. At the hearing claimant did not offer Dr. Davenport as a witness. The fact that Dr. Davenport was not called would warrant the inference that his testimony would have been unfavorable to claimant’s contention: Green v. Brooks, 215 Pa. 492, 496; Marshall v. Pittsburgh, 119 Pa. Superior Ct. 189, 197.

Dr. Cavanaugh, then a practicing physician for the period of three years, called as a witness for claimant, testified that he first saw claimant in May 1936, and said:

“A. The diagnosis is arthritis, hypertrophic arthritis of the spine, and of both hip joints.
Q. You heard him testify here today, doctor, did you?
A. I did.
“Q. If he is telling the truth, doctor, concerning this fall, what, if anything, did that fall do to his condition?
A. Why, if there had been trouble in the spine before and he had this fall, it could have aggravated the condition, that condition present, but from what he has told me I didn’t get any history of having any trouble there before.”

On cross-examination the witness said:

“Q. Now, if he had this arthritis before this fall, are you able to tell what condition his arthritis would have been in now had he had no fall?
A. No.
[344]*344Q. If he had it before this fall and it aggravated it, can you tell how long the condition due to the aggravation would exist?
A. No, the only thing I know is that from his history he has been getting a little better since the injury.
“Doctor, in this case, this man you say is disabled as the result of the arthritis; is that right?
A. Yes, the arthritic condition being aggravated by the fall, at present has caused this man to be disabled.
“Q. Can you tell us how much of that is due to the natural progress of that arthritis and how much of it is due to the aggravation?
A. No, there is nobody can tell you that.
Q. Nobody can tell you that?
A. No.
“Q. And you are unable to tell how much of that is due to natural progress of the disease, and how much is due to the aggravation?
A. Yes.”

On the part of defendant, Dr. Davenport, Dr. P. H. O’Connell, and Dr. H. A. Smith (a specialist in orthopedic surgery whose outstanding ability is well known throughout Pennsylvania), who had made an examination of claimant, testified claimant suffered from prostate gland trouble and arthritis and that his disability was in no way related to the accident. The referee (Conniff) determined that claimant’s condition was not due to the alleged accident and dismissed the petition August 23,1937. On an appeal to the board, that tribunal on May 5, 1939 (almost two years later), reversed the referee and found that the accident aggravated a preexisting condition and made an award for total disability from February 2,1936. In making this award the board apparently overlooked or ignored the [345]*345testimony of claimant’s own witness and physician, Dr. Cavanaugh, given at the hearing held March 24, 1937, that claimant “could do janitor work”. An appeal to this court was sustained and the record remitted to the board for “a specific finding of fact as to the extent to which claimant is disabled as the result of the accident as distinguished from any disability attributable to the natural progress of the disease from which he was suffering at the time of the happening of the accident”. This order was made August 1, 1939.

On December 22, 1939, the board set aside all prior findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order of disallowance and remanded the record to Referee Olexy for further hearing and determination in accordance with the opinion of the court. The hearing before the referee was held January 27,1941. At this hearing claimant testified, inter alia:

“Q. Your wife has the arrangement with the church for the janitor work, hasn’t she?
A. Yes.
Q. And she has had for a good many years?
A. 20 years.
Q. And the church pays her?
A. Pays her.”
Dr. Cavanaugh, again called as a witness, testified:
“Q. You testified on a former occasion in this case, did you, doctor?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Have you seen and examined the claimant since that?
A. I did.
Q. What is his condition now as compared with what it was at the former hearing?
A. It is improved.
“Q. What in your opinion did this accident do to this man?
[346]*346A. I think it caused the disability.
Q. In what way?
A. Trauma to a preexisting condition, aggravated it.
Q. Whether or not it was the aggravation that disabled him in your opinion?
A. It is the main thing, trauma I mean caused the disability.
Q. The question I put to you was whether or not in your opinion it was the aggravation that disabled him?
A. Yes.”

He also said on cross-examination:

“A. He has improved now. I think the trauma had stirred the thing up, aggravated the condition, and he is about 20 percent better, 10 to 20 percent than he was.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Pa. D. & C. 341, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilton-v-edwards-memorial-church-pactcomplluzern-1944.