McGahen v. General Electric Co.

177 A.2d 85, 406 Pa. 57
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 2, 1962
DocketAppeal, No. 41
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 177 A.2d 85 (McGahen v. General Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGahen v. General Electric Co., 177 A.2d 85, 406 Pa. 57 (Pa. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Benjamin R. Jones,

On December 17, 1951, Lulu T. McGahen [claimant] sustained an accident in the course of her employment by General Electric Company [employer]. Ten years later — after three hearings before two compensation referees, three decisions by the Workmen’s Compensation Board [Board], three decisions by the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County and a decision by the Superior Court — the question of claimant’s right to compensation for such accident still remains undetermined.

This is an appeal from a unanimous decision of the Superior Court (195 Pa. Superior Ct. 651, 172 A. 2d 321), which reversed a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County [Court] and reinstated an award by the Board to the claimant of compensation, even though, in the language of the Superior Court, that Court could not tell (p. 665) : “[u]nder the state of this record, . . . whether [the employer] will be paying compensation for a non-existent injury under our decision . . .”

[60]*60A proper understanding of the issues which this appeal presents requires a recital at length of the factual background of this litigation. On December 17, 1951, the claimant, in the course of her employment, slipped and fell, striking her right shoulder and knees upon the floor. Claimant suffered a subdeltoid bursitis with contusions of the right shoulder and knees but continued to work until February 9, 1952, at which time she left her employment. On February 29, 1952, the claimant and her employer entered into a written compensation agreement under which the claimant received $25 weekly from February 16, 1952 until March 18,1952 ($114.29) at which time she returned to work.1 The claimant continued to work at her regular employment from March 18, 1952 until September 9, 1952 when she left her employment to which she has not since returned.

On March 28, 1952, the claimant signed, in triplicate, a final receipt and received a check from her employer as final payment of compensation. Two executed copies of this final receipt remained in the employer’s possession but the claimant retained the original executed receipt and the check, the latter having been endorsed by claimant. Both the original executed receipt and the check remained in a “bond box” at claimant’s home, the check not being cashed and the original final receipt not being returned to the employer.2 The execution of this final receipt and the endorsement of the check are admitted by claimant. [61]*61Neither the original nor either of the two executed copies of the final receipt were filed with the Workmen’s Compensation Bureau [Bureau] until after an inquiry on August 4, 1953 directed by the Director of the Bureau to the employer.3 On August 7, 1953 the employer sent to the Bureau a photostatic copy of an executed copy of the final receipt, “apparently informing the Bureau that the original had not been returned and the check had not been cashed”. Upon receipt of the photostatic copy, the Bureau did nothing.

On September 14, 1952 — -five days after leaving her employment — claimant was hospitalized and at that time she applied for benefits under a mutual group health insurance policy stating as the cause of her hospitalization: “right subacromial bursitis, chronic, scalenus anticus syndrome secondary to No. 1 involutional melancholia-paranoid type with depressed features.”4 In the application for insurance benefits claimant failed to answer the question whether her disability resulted from an accident. Insurance benefits for twenty-six weeks were paid to claimant.

Thereafter, claimant inquired of Referee Smith as to her compensation rights and he finally wrote to her stating that, from the information obtained from her [62]*62employer, Iier claim, not having been filed within one year, was barred.

On January 12, 1954 — approximately two years after the accident and one year and nine months after the date of the most recent payment of compensation to her — claimant filed a petition to review, under Section 413 of The Pennsylvania Workmen’s Compensation Act, as amended,5 the compensation agreement entered into on February 29, 1952. Thereafter, three hearings were held before two referees.6 On February 26, 1954— the first hearing — neither claimant nor any witnesses on her behalf appeared but claimant’s counsel called J. A. Hurley, a representative of employer, for cross-examination,7 and this hearing was continued to give the employer an opportunity to locate the check which had accompanied the original final receipt; on April 20, 1954 — the second hearing — neither the claimant nor any witnesses on her behalf appeared but again Mr. Hurley was cross-examined. At this hearing, Hurley testified that a photostatic copy of the final receipt had been mailed to the Board on August 7, 1953, that the employer heard nothing further from the Bureau and that the claimant had returned to work in March 1952. On August 15, 1955 a third hearing was held before Referee Cartwright at which the only witness was the claimant. The claimant testified that, although she had been injured on December 17, 1951, she continued to work until February 9, 1952, she signed the compensation agreement, returned to work on March 18, 1952 and continued to work until September 9, 1952. [63]*63At the time of injury she was treated by Dr. Chaffee who continued to treat her until February 1954. Claimant admitted she signed the final receipt on March 28, 1952 and endorsed the accompanying check and described how she put the uncashed check and original receipt in a “bond box” in her home where they remained until produced at the hearing. Claimant’s testimony on the subject of her disability was as follows: “Q. Does the injury which you received still bother you to the extent that you receive treatment for it? A. Yes, I have always had to and it is dreadfully painful, right here in the shoulder where I hit. Q. Are you able to go back to work now? A. No. I am not. By the Referee: Q. Your arm still bothers you? A. Yes. Q. Can you do light work? A. Sometimes it is worse than others, it catches me quick. What I mean is it grabs me quick. Q. Can you do any work at all? A. I work around the house, but to keep at it I can’t. Q. Do you have a driver’s license? Can you drive a car? A. I could not swing the wheel.” Although treated by Dr. Chaffee and other doctors, the claimant presented no medical testimony as to her condition, past or present.

On the basis of this testimony, Referee Cartwright found, inter alia, as facts: “Tenth, While the claimant executed the final receipt, copies of which were kept by the [employer], she never cashed the final check nor sent in the original final receipt, claiming her disability was still in effect.8 Eleventh, The claimant filed a petition to review the provisions of the compensation agreement on January 12, 1954, however, at the hearing, claimant, through her attorney . . . stated the purpose was to compel the [employer] to live up to the provisions of the compensation agreement . . . Thir[64]

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Bluebook (online)
177 A.2d 85, 406 Pa. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgahen-v-general-electric-co-pa-1962.