Hudek v. United Engineering & Foundry Co.

33 A.2d 41, 152 Pa. Super. 493, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 223
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 6, 1943
DocketAppeals, 215 and 216
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 33 A.2d 41 (Hudek v. United Engineering & Foundry 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
Hudek v. United Engineering & Foundry Co., 33 A.2d 41, 152 Pa. Super. 493, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 223 (Pa. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

Martin Hudek was accidentally killed on February 7, 1936, while in the course of his employment with United Engineering and Foundry Company. Claims for compensation were filed (1) by his minor son, Adam Hudek (born December 24, 1922, Yandergrift Savings & Trust Company, guardian); and (2) by Anna Hudek, on her own behalf as widow and for her two minor children, as stepchildren of the deceased employee.

Disregarding the immaterial intermediate proceedings, the referee — whose prior findings of fact, conclusions of law and award dated September 12, 1940 had, on December 18, 1940, been reversed and set aside by *496 the board — on July 3, 1941 filed findings of fact, conclusions of law and order disallowing compensation to Anna Hudek, for herself and her two minor children, on the ground that she was not the lawful wedded wife of Martin Hudek at the time of his death or at any other time; that in consequence her two minor children, Anthony J. Zupanovich and William H. Zupano-vich, by her first husband, Joe Zupanovich, were not Martin Hudek’s stepchildren, and that he did not stand in loco parentis to them, because they were not members of his household at the time of his death but were living with their mother in Denver, Colorado. He awarded $1,118.57 compensation to Adam Hudek, as decedent’s only minor child.

On appeal by Anna Hudek to the board, the referee’s findings of fact, conclusions of law and award to Adam Hudek, and disallowance of compensation to Anna Hudek and her children were affirmed; but the board stated in its opinion that it had not considered certain documentary evidence relied on in part by the referee in arriving at his decision.

Anna Hudek appealed from the board’s order to the court of common pleas, which on December 23, 1942 sustained the appeal, reversed the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Board and reinstated the referee’s award of September 12, 1940, and entered judgment on said award in the amount of $4,022.93, as follows:

To the guardian of Adam Hudek, minor
child ................................ $261.66
To the administrator of Martin Hudek, funeral expenses ......................... 150.00
To Anna Hudek for herself as widow and for her children, as stepchildren of decedent 3,611.27
$4,022.93

The defendant and Adam Hudek’s guardian separately appealed.

*497 The judgment must be reversed.

First. The court below had no power to set aside the findings of fact of the board and reinstate the prior findings and award of a referee which had been reversed and set aside by the board.

We have repeatedly said that the referee is only the agent or representative of the board: Morgan v. Sanderson, 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 37, 39, 21 A. 2d 475; Baumeister v. Baugh & Sons Co., 142 Pa. Superior Ct. 346, 349-350, 16 A. 2d 424. The board may disregard his findings and substitute its own. When the board reverses or sets aside a finding of fact of a referee, that finding is thereafter of no force and effect whatever. It has no more bearing in the subsequent proceedings than the verdict of a jury which is set aside by the court and a new trial ordered, resulting in a different verdict. The court has no power to make its own findings contrary to the findings of the board: Icenhour v. Freedom Oil Works, 145 Pa. Superior Ct. 168, 20 A. 2d 817. Still less has it any power to resurrect findings of a referee, which the board had reversed and set aside, and reinstate them in place of the findings of the board. Such a course is wholly beyond its authority.

Secondly, the court below misunderstood the function of the board, and its own authority to interfere with the board’s action.

Where the board sustains a claim for compensation and makes an award, the authority of the court is limited to a determination whether there is substantial competent evidence to sustain the award.

But when the board rejects the claim, either because it feels that the claimant has not sustained the burden of proof, or because it does not believe the testimony, or material parts of it, in support of the claim, it is not the province of the court to weigh the testimony and decide whether it would have made the same de- *498 cisión. It can set aside the findings of the board refusing compensation only if they are inconsistent with each other, or with its conclusions of law and its order, or if they cannot be sustained without a capricious disregard of the competent evidence: Walsh v. Penn Anthracite Mining Co., 147 Pa. Superior Ct. 328, 333, 24 A. 2d 51. The board is not bound to believe testimony even if it is not contradicted: Bakaisa v. P. & W. Va. R. R., 149 Pa. Superior Ct. 203, 210, 27 A. 2d 769; District of Columbia’s Appeal, 343 Pa. 65, 79, 21 A. 2d 883, 890.

The right of Anna Hudek to compensation as widow of Martin Hudek rested on her proving to the satisfaction of the board, that she was his lawful wedded wife. It is not disputed that they obtained from the Clerk of the Orphan’s Court of Westmoreland County a marriage license on July 17, 1935, and returned the certificate of marriage attached thereto, stating therein “that on the 20th of July 1935, we united ourselves in marriage at Greensburg, Pa.” The question before the board was whether she was legally competent on July 20, 1935 to marry Mm. If she was not, she did not become his lawful wife. She was first married to Joe Zupanovieh in Austria (later Yugoslavia) sometime before 1912. He came to America in 1912 and she followed in 1921. She had by him the two children be-forementioned, born April 1, 1922 and March 31, 1924, respectively. Joe Zupanovieh died in 1925. In 1928 she married Tony Bogden. He left this country in 1930 to go back to Yugoslavia. He had received from an insurance company, on June 12, 1930, $4,000 under a group insurance policy issued to employees of the defendant company covering disability insurance. Of this amount $1,000 was paid to his wife, $614 was paid to his creditors, on his orders, and $2,386 he took with Mm. She never communicated with Mm thereafter. She did not obtain a divorce. She said she had been *499 told by a friend that he was dead; bnt she took no steps to verify it. When she first applied, in 1930, to a justice of the peace; — who knew her and of her marriage to Bogden — for a marriage license so that she could marry Hudek, she replied, in answer to his question, that she did not know whether Bogden was living or dead, and refused to make affidavit that he was dead. The justice refused to issue the license. When after her marriage to Hudek she applied to a priest to marry them with a religious ceremony, he asked her “whether she was free to marry, and at that time she said she did not know whether her second husband was really dead or not, bnt she thought he was dead” (55a-56a).

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.2d 41, 152 Pa. Super. 493, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudek-v-united-engineering-foundry-co-pasuperct-1943.