Lynn v. Pottsville Box Corp.

62 A.2d 105, 163 Pa. Super. 446, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 384
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1948
DocketAppeal, 2
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 A.2d 105 (Lynn v. Pottsville Box Corp.) 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
Lynn v. Pottsville Box Corp., 62 A.2d 105, 163 Pa. Super. 446, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 384 (Pa. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Dithrich, J.,

In this workmen’s compensation case the learned judges of the court below sitting en banc reversed the decision of the referee which had been affirmed by the Board and awarded claimant compensation. The claim has been pending eight years. It has been before the Board three times and before the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill County twice. Claimant sustained a hernia in the course of his employment, and the sole question involved is whether it is compensable under § 306(h) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, P. L. 736, as amended by the Act of June 21, 1939, P. L. 520.

*448 The compensation- authorities have consistently held that it is not compensable. They rely on the referee’s seventh and eighth findings of fact which have been affirmed by the Board. They are:

“7. We further find that the hernia was not at once precipitated by the occurrence on August 20, 1940.

“8. We further find that the descent of the hernia did not. follow the cause without intervening time.” (Emphasis added..)

In its opinion affirming the action of the referee, the Board states in part: “Claimant has presented no testimony showing that his hernia was at once precipitated by the strain of his lifting and that the hernia descended without intervening time. Beyond his testimony that he first noticed the hernial lump on August 21, 1940, we have no evidence indicating the time of descent.” As we shall later point out, that would be sufficient evidence of descent within a reasonable time, which is all that is required under the 1939 amendment.

The court in reversing the Board and allowing the claim said: “The evidence offered in this case does not sustain the seventh and eighth finding [s] of fact and the second Conclusion of Law . . .” It is as follows: “2. Claimant having failed to establish by incontrovertible proof that the hernia was at once precipitated or that it followed the cause without intervening time, we conclude that claimant’s petition must be dismissed and compensation denied . . The words which we have italicized in quoting the referee’s findings of fact are taken verbatim from § 306(h), the new language in the Act of 1939 being in italics and the supplanted words of the earlier Act being in brackets. 1 The Board and *449 the learned court below both fell into error- in treating the referee’s seventh and eighth findings of fact as such, when they are literally conclusions of law based on an incorrect or improper application of the law to the facts.

The material facts as found by the referee and affirmed by the Board are as follows: Claimant on August 20, 1940, while stacking rolls of -paper in his employer’s stockroom, suffered a “severe strain, in that the rolls which he was then stacking were heavier than the ones he generally worked upon...”; they weighed approximately 175 to 180 pounds per roll; the ordinary paper weighed about 120 pounds. He reported to his foreman that he had “a distressed feeling in the back.” He' “ceased work for about ten minutes ; . . was white and . . . looked sick. About an hour later he vomited.” He continued to work that day and the next and on the evening thereof, namely, August 21, went home “feeling sick with pain. While bathing himself that evening, he noticed a lump in his right inguinal region. He then went to the office of Dr. Wm. A. Burke, who diagnosed his condition as a right inguinal hernia. At or about eight o’clock on the morning of the 22nd he reported the hernia to his foreman. ’ ’ (Emphasis added.)

Appellant has- made much of an apparent confusion by the claimant and Dr. Burke as to the date on which Dr. Burke first saw him. In his Surgeon’s Report, Dr. Burke reported it as August 23, but his office record shows it was August 21. Claimant first said he went to see the doctor three days after the occurrence, but later corrected it to one day. His foreman testified that he reported the hernia to him on the morning of August 22, *450 which was within 48 hours as required by the Act, and in any event the referee found that claimant “noticed a lump” on the 21st and that he “then went” to the office of Dr. Burke. He further found as a fact that claimant reported his hernia to his foreman on the morning of the 22nd; and, to make the findings consistent, “then” must be taken to mean August 21. If taken to mean August 23, it would be inconsistent with the referee’s other findings.

Appellant seeks to make it appear that when Dr. Burke first examined claimant on August 21, 1940 (appellant’s brief, p. 17), “he found a ‘sac’ which was at least a month old.” The record discloses (59a) that the surgeon made that discovery on October 9, 1940, when he operated on claimant, and not on August 21, 1940, as appellant would have us believe. .

In Hopp v. Taub, 117 Pa. Superior Ct. 55, 177 A. 214, where claimant first discovered a “lump” two days after the happening of an accident and the injury was not diagnosed as a hernia until three days later, but claimant’s employer had been notified within 48 hours of the happening of the accident, the Court said (page 58): “Here, the evidence does not show that the ‘descent of the hernia immediately followed the cause.’ On the other hand, it does rebut the statutory presumption that the hernia from which this claimant suffered was a ‘physical weakness or ailment’ which developed gradually. . . . In this case we have proof of an accident and of pain immediately following the slipping of the barrel while being unloaded by claimant and a fellow workman from the truck. By reason of the severity of the pain, claimant was obliged to quit work and return to his home. When visited there by his employer, within forty-eight hours, claimant communicated to him the fact that the accident had occurred and that he was suffering from pains in his ‘stomach.’ ”

That case arose prior to the 1939 amendment, but in Drumbar v. Jeddo-Highland Coal Co., 155 Pa. Superior *451 Ct. 57, 37 A. 2d 25, where appellant’s principal argument was that certain differences in the language in § 306(h) of the Act of 1939 and the earlier Hernia Amendment of 1927 indicated an intention on the part of the legislature to impose, by the Act of 1939, a greater burden of proof than was required by the earlier Act, it was held (pages 59-60): “With the single exception that an entirely new element of proof was introduced by the Act of 1939, viz that the manifestations of the hernia must necessitate immediate cessation of work, the differences in the language are, in our opinion, insignificant. [That new element of proof is not lacking in the instant case.] We have already held there is no substantial difference between incontrovertible proof and conclusive proof (Grant v. Wark Construction Co., 152 Pa. Superior Ct. 214, 31 A. 2d 739); by the use of these expressions it was not intended that proof must be either incontrovertible or conclusive in the literal sense. Such a construction would malee it virtually impossible for an employe to secure compensation for a hernia. When given a reasonable construction (Stat. Const. Act of May 28, 1937, P. L. 1019, art.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rosso v. Aetna Steel Products Corp.
101 A.2d 392 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1953)
Diaz v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp.
88 A.2d 801 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A.2d 105, 163 Pa. Super. 446, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-pottsville-box-corp-pasuperct-1948.