Parks v. Miller Printing MacHine Co.

9 A.2d 742, 336 Pa. 455, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 29, 1939
DocketAppeal, 103
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 742 (Parks v. Miller Printing MacHine 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
Parks v. Miller Printing MacHine Co., 9 A.2d 742, 336 Pa. 455, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 540 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stern,

In this case the Superior Court reversed a judgment of the Common Pleas entered in favor of defendant, and directed judgment to be entered on the award to plaintiff which had been made by the Workmen’s Compensation Board (133 Pa. Superior Ct. 530).

Plaintiff’s husband, hereinafter referred to as decedent, was a machinist by trade and worked for defendant, Miller Printing Machine Company, in Pittsburgh, as a “planer hand.” On March 17, 1936, a part of that city was flooded. The water in defendant’s plant reached a height of eleven feet, filling the basement and the first floor and covering the machinery with mud and dirt. When the waters had receded defendant employed a corps of workmen to clear up the debris, and directed the regular employes, including decedent, to clean their machines. Decedent started on this task about a week after the flood had occurred, but the floors were still damp and muddy. After working for eight days he became ill, and a day or two later called in a doctor, who made a diagnosis of pneumonia, which he attributed to the conditions under which decedent had been working. Decedent’s death, as a result of the pneumonia, occurred shortly thereafter.

*458 We thus have for consideration another of the perplexing cases in which prostration is suffered or disease contracted as the result of exposure to excessive heat, cold or other unusual environmental conditions, and the question arises whether such circumstances can be said to constitute an “accident.” A study of the decisions upon that subject in the Superior Court and in our own Court reveals that, while they do not all agree in the reasoning and the principles upon which they purport to rest, they are not incapable of reconciliation. It would seem helpful, in considering the present case, to classify the more characteristic ones in order to obtain a guide to the proper adjudication of this type of litigation.

The first class comprises the cases where there is an involuntary, unexpected, fortuitous happening which causes the disease. This is the most familiar type, embracing what would universally be conceded to be accidents pure and simple. For example, where a lineman falls from a pole as a consequence of coming in contact with a wire charged with electricity, and fractures a rib, from which, a week later, lobar pneumonia develops (Mu rdock v. New York News Bureau, 263 Pa. 502); or where a miner is squeezed and bumped by a large stick of lumber, causing an abrasion on the side of his body and the result is a traumatic pleurisy which culminates in pneumonia (Dumbluskey v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., 270 Pa. 22); or where a workman receives an injury resulting in arthritis or inflammation of the hip-joint and terminating in pneumonia (D opkin v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal and Iron Co., 296 Pa. 71); or where a miner with wet clothing is compelled, due to the derailing of a hoisting car, to stand for an hour in a drafty place at the foot of the slope, as a consequence of which he contracts lobar pneumonia (Broch v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co., 296 Pa. 502); or Avhere an employe is struck by a piece of coal or rock, suffers contusions of various parts of the body, *459 and develops pleurisy which turns into pneumonia (Borovski v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., 101 Pa. Superior Ct. 304); or where an employe, clearing snow from the sidewalk in front of the store where he is employed, slips and falls into the gutter, receiving a wetting which brings on an attack of pneumonia (Brown v. Moss, 120 Pa. Superior Ct. 336). In all of these instances compensation was properly allowed.

The second group consists of cases where the work or act performed by the employe is voluntary, and not marked by any abnormal or unusual feature, but where there occurs an unexpected and unusual pathological result; that is to say, where the accident resides in the extraordinary nature of the effect rather than in the cause. A familiar illustration is where one engaged in ordinary manual labor unexpectedly suffers a muscular strain or internal lesion, as, for example, where the exertion in moving a piano causes an abscess which superinduces pneumonia (Wolford v. Geisel Moving & Storage Co., 262 Pa. 454). In the field here under consideration are the sunstroke and heat prostration cases, which have been uniformly held to be compensable : Lane v. Horn & Hardart Baking Co., 261 Pa. 329; Matis v. Schaeffer, 270 Pa. 141; Clemens v. Cornish, 295 Pa. 73; Clancy v. Booth & Flinn Co., 109 Pa. Superior Ct. 452; Consentino v. Union Paving Co., 113 Pa. Superior Ct. 295; Trovato v. W. J. McCahan Sugar Refining Co., 122 Pa. Superior Ct. 499. 1 These rest upon the theory that the prostration is not the natural, probable and predictable result of an exposure to the prevailing conditions, but constitutes an extraordinary and unlooked-for mishap visited suddenly upon the employe while at work.

*460 The third group, more indefinite but nevertheless well established, is where the exposure is, from a technical standpoint, voluntary, and the resulting pneumonia or similar disease reasonably foreseeable, but where the “accident” consists of an unusual and suddenly developing concatenation of circumstances which necessitates impulsive rather than deliberate action and tinder conditions markedly different from those attendant upon the usual course of the employe’s regular work. For example, a workman was suddenly called upon to attempt a rescue of his father who had been buried by the slide of a culm bank; the effort lasted about 2% hours; a large quantity of water was used in the rescue work and the employe was drenched from his knees down; the result of this exposure was a cold which later took the form of pneumonia. The act thus performed by the employe was voluntary and under conditions from which a resulting pneumonia might readily have been anticipated, but compensation was allowed because of the extraordinary circumstances which demanded prompt action on the part of the employe under unusual and exceptionally unfavorable conditions (Jones v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., 285 Pa. 317). So, where the janitor of a building was called upon to turn off steam which was escaping because of the breaking of a pipe, and in doing so he had first to walk on the street in extremely cold weather, and then for a short distance through the hot steam in the basement, whereby his clothing became wet, and a day or two later he developed bronchial pneumonia, compensation was allowed on the ground that this was a situation well out of the ordinary and not reasonably to be foreseen in the course of the employe’s usual work (Heisler v. Lincoln Realty Company, 121 Pa. Superior Ct. 516). Where a surgeon was one night summoned professionally to a hospital on an emergency call, the weather being cold and windy with snow and rain falling intermittently, and the operation, requiring about *461

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 742, 336 Pa. 455, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-miller-printing-machine-co-pa-1939.