Leaver v. the Midvale Co.

57 A.2d 698, 162 Pa. Super. 393, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 484
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1947
DocketAppeal, 199
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 57 A.2d 698 (Leaver v. the Midvale 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
Leaver v. the Midvale Co., 57 A.2d 698, 162 Pa. Super. 393, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 484 (Pa. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Fine, J.,

The novel question for determination in this workmen’s compensation case is whether John Leaver, the claimant, admittedly entitled to total disability payments before and after his military service, should have the amounts received from the army through his military service .set off against disability compensation which might otherwise be paid him. The referee refused disability payments; the board reversed and the court below affirmed the board. The employer, The Midvale Company, has appealed. ' .....

The accident occurred on February 24, 1942, when the claimant fell from a pile of molds and suffered a fracture of the skull, fractures of the left arm and three ribs, plus facial'disfigurement. By agreement, payments for total disability began on March 4, 1942, and were made thereafter until March 25, 1944, except for the periods May 13 to May 29, 1942, and March 11 to June 8, 1943, when appellee performed light work and was paid on a basis of partial disability.

On January 18¿ 1943, the employer filed a petition to terminate on information that the claimant had been inducted into the army. This petition was later withdrawn when it was learned that the claimant’s draft board had rejected him. However, on January 13,1944, claimant was inducted into the armed forces and on April 19, 1944, the employer filed another petition to *396 terminate averring the induction and army service of the claimant. After hearing on petition and answer, on April 25, 1946, the referee declined to terminate compensation but held that the claimant was not entitled to disability payments during his army service. The board, in reversing the referee, concluded that: “Since it has not been proved that there has been any change from total disability in the claimant’s condition since January 13,1944, the petition for termination . . . must be dismissed.” The board ordered the resumption of compensation payments for total disability from March 23, 1944, until the claimant’s disability ceased or changed.

The claimant was called for cross-examination by appellant and testified to a military record showing repeated army hospitalizations, until he received his medical or “disability” discharge from the army on August 22,1945. One month after induction, he was hospitalized for about two weeks at Fort Bragg after he had “passed out, out on the range.” Approximately six months later he was again hospitalized for a three-week period at Fort Meade after “a spell”. Prior to his hospitalization there he had been removed from the artillery service* and given light duties in headquarters’ service. Subsequently, he was sent to Camp Carson, Colorado, where he was hospitalized for approximately one week. At that time he was given light work in. signal- service, repairing and maintaining portable radio battery sets. * He was last hospitalized in Camp Gruber and there examined by a psychiatrist who told him “[You] shouldn’t have been in the service in the beginning, that the condition seemed to be agitated by the work all.the time, and being on [your] feet, and the work was light but [you] couldn’t hold up under the. pressure.” His history of hospitalization, which was due. to a psycho-neurotic condition of dizziness, fainting spells and “ringing in his ears”, led his military , superiors to have him assigned to headquarters and to technical groups where the physical exertion

*397 would be little, if . any. The appellant concedes claimant’s total , disability .both immediately before and upon his discharge, from the army for psycho-neurosis. As the employer was the moving party to terminate the agreement for total disability the bupden was upon it to show the disability resulting from the accident was removed, or so reduced as to warrant lesser compensation than that provided..in,,the open agreement. Carson v. Real Estate Land T. & T. Co., 109 Pa. Superior Ct. 37, 165 A. 677. Appellant’s, contention, therefore, that the claimant, while in the, army, was not. totally disabled because of the work that he ¡there performed, falls far short of sustaining that burden cast upon it to show a change in the claimant’s condition commensurate with the requirements as set forth in Rennard v. Rouseville Cooperage Co., 141 Pa. Superior Ct. 286, 15 A. 2d 48. The learned court below, in a welLreasoned opinion affirming the board, said: “. . . the Board has found as a fact that Leaver’s condition has not changed from one of total disability since January 13, 1944, the date of his induction. The defendant, seeking, by its: petition to terminate,, to change .the terms of .the compensation agreement, had the burden of. proof:'. . , We see no reason to alter, the Board’s conclusion, the factual settlement of whether disability is partial; or total being, a matter within the Board’s exclusive competence. Byerly v. Pawnee Co., 105 Pa. Superior Ct. 506 (1932): Jones v. Philadelphia and Reading Co., 154 Pa. Superior Ct. 513 (1943). . . . It would be qdd to hold that a man whose inability to do Army work has been proved by his medical discharge should be held to have an earning power during , the period when his incapacity was being demonstrated.. His - medical discharge is compelling proof that he was unable to do even light work.”

In Hughes v. H. Kellogg and Sons et al., 139 Pa. Superior Ct. 580, 582, 13 A. 2d 98, we said: “To determine whether , a claimant is totally disabled within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, the true test *398 to be applied is: did the injury deprive him of his earning power? Keiser v. Philadelphia & Reading C. & I. Co., 134 Pa. Superior Ct. 104, 4 A. 2d 188. Before this claimant is entitled to compensation for total disability, it must appear from the evidence, either that he is not able to do even light work of a general character or that remunerative’employment in that class of labor is not available to him: Consona v. R. E. Coulborn & Co. et al., 104 Pa. Superior Ct. 170, 158 A. 300; Maishock v. State Workmen’s Ins. Fund, 129 Pa. Superior Ct. 118, 195 A. 143; Keiser v. Philadelphia & Reading C. & I. Co., supra.”

There is a fundamentar distinction between those persons who are able to 'do light work in general and those able to’perform'a special class of work not generally available: In the latter Class are the totally disabled, those who are not able uninterruptedly to do even light work owing to the physical limitations due to accidental injury. “The ‘ proper ‘ test is not whether the claimant is able to do exactly the same kind of Avork as he did before’the injury, but whether his'earning power is entirely destroyed so tha the cannof obtain remunerative employment”: Byerly v. Pawnee C. Co., 105 Pa. Superior Ct. 506, 161 A. 460. A review of the competent evidence in this case clearly reveals the claimant was physicálly incapacitated by accidental injury to uninterruptedly perform the' light Avork assigned him by his superiors in the military service.' Since his medical discharge he has done-no light'work although he has expressed a conviction he COuld perform ’ light woik if available. For such willingness Or for such conviction of his ability-to work lightly,'he should be commended, not penalized; the fact is that he is not Avorking, because, as conceded by appellant, he is totally disabled.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A.2d 698, 162 Pa. Super. 393, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leaver-v-the-midvale-co-pasuperct-1947.