Paxos v. Jarka Corporation

171 A. 468, 314 Pa. 148, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1934
DocketAppeal, 359
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 171 A. 468 (Paxos v. Jarka Corporation) 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
Paxos v. Jarka Corporation, 171 A. 468, 314 Pa. 148, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 464 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Nick Paxos, appellee, was engaged in the business of cleaning tanks in vessels used in the transportation of fuel oil or other liquid cargoes. Thomas Strong, one of his employees, was the foreman of a gang of workers. While Strong, in the course of employment, was about to descend into a fuel tank on appellant’s ship, a plank, part of a hatch covering on the deck above the tank open *150 ing, was dislodged from its place by appellant’s employees who were at that time, by tbe use of winches and booms, loading the ship. The plank fell and struck Strong on the back, seriously injuring him.

This action was commenced under an act of congress by the employer “in his own right and to the use of Thomas Strong, as their interests may appear.” After the trial, but before appeal, the American Employers’ Insurance Company, petitioned to intervene as insurance carrier. This the court below permitted after the appeal to this court.

In determining whether this action was properly instituted by the employer, consideration must be given the acts of congress which control the substantive rights involved. Before this action was started, an award had been made to the employee, Strong, under the Federal Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, March 4, 1927, c. 509, 44 Stat. 1924. As a result, the employer was substituted as “assignee,” to the rights of the employee to the extent of the compensation payments; he thereby acquired the legal rights of the employee for redress against the tort-feasor. “The Compensation Act permits him to enforce them in his own name”: * Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Moses, 287 U. S. 530. *151 Under Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Moses, supra, appellant’s liability is measured by the injury caused the employee. It can therefore make no difference to appellant whether the amount recovered from it goes to the injured person or to his employer or both, as long as no additional liability is imposed. Plaintiff Strong’s substantive right was controlled by the federal law, which allocates a portion of that “right” to parties who share in the relief of the injury.

Admittedly, practice in the federal courts does not control in the courts of this State, but we will enforce the substantive rights given all parties here of record by the federal statute. The situation is analogous to the enforcement of an employee’s right or claim for injury in an action for damages under the Federal Employees Liability Act, where we have held that when congress acts in a field where its jurisdiction is concurrent with that of a state, its laws are supreme, state laws are superseded and state courts enforce the federal acts as though they Were state laws: Hogarty v. P. & R. Ry. Co., 245 Pa. 443; Idem., 255 Pa. 236. Congress by the Longshoremen’s Act has covered the field of the recovery of damages for injuries occurring during maritime employment, though occasioned by a person other than an employer as that term is understood. The right to recover in a state court for such injury is under the Longshoremen’s Act; it supersedes state laws, and gives a right of action to the employer (Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Moses, supra) which our courts must enforce. See also Dickinson, Admrx., v. Jones, 309 Pa. 256.

Moreover, our procedure is much the same in cases of like nature. The name of the proper plaintiff is upon the record; the manner in which the name of any one beneficially interested may appear, is unimportant: Methodist Episcopal Church of Franklin v. Equitable Surety Co., 269 Pa. 411; Hewitt, Receiver, v. Democratic Publishing Co., 271 Pa. 546; Mangan v. Schuylkill Co., 273 Pa. 310; Gentile v. P. & R. Ry. Co., 274 Pa. 335.

*152 Mere objection to the form of stating plaintiffs should not delay litigation. We said in Mangan v. Schuylkill Co., supra, page 313: “......all parties in interest having been brought upon the record, they can be placed by the court below in whatever position would best and most practically work out the ends of justice......that which might have been done at trial, can and will be done here......; we accordingly treat the suit as though instituted in the manner above indicated.” See also Barnhill v. Haigh, 53 Pa. 165; Patton v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & St. Louis Ry. Co., 96 Pa. 169.

There is no merit in appellant’s contention that the plaintiff must prove the payment of compensation under the federal act. Such payment does not affect the degree or amount of defendant’s liability. It is liable for the injury caused by its negligence, and will be fully protected against a double recovery by the form of this action, in which the employee is named as a use-plaintiff. Defendant cannot prejudice employee Strong’s right to recover from a third party by parading before the jury an array of figures paid to him by his employer under the Compensation Act. The court below will protect the employee’s right by admitting testimony only to show “acceptance of compensation.” Here, the record of a proceeding before the federal commission as to such acceptance was offered. It was ample. We have held it reversible error to admit evidence of compensation payments in an action against a third person to recover damages for children whose father had been killed through defendant’s negligence: Lengle v. North Lebanon Twp., 274 Pa. 51.

The court below over objection admitted records of the hospital where Strong had been a patient, on the theory that they came within the same class as records kept in the usual and ordinary course of business, trade, or similar operations. Had there been no other evidence, it is apparent that were these records admissible and not impeached, plaintiff’s case was made out. Therefore, the *153 substance and background of these records must be carefully analyzed to determine the question of their admissibility.

To sustain the admission of entries such as these, they must pass the rules which guard the admission in evidence of declarations, book accounts and records though offending the letter of the rule against hearsay. Coming from this particular institution, the mere existence of these records might be circumstantially probative of their truth, but that alone is insufficient. To avoid the hearsay rule three probative elements must be present. We may admit from an examination of these records that they satisfy the first requirement: they were made cotemporaneously with the acts which they purport to relate; there is no doubt about the way these records are made up. The fact that each case bears its own number, makes it difficult, if not impossible, to invent such a record. Its individual and mechanical integrity may be guaranteed by its form, the manner of its keeping and the institution from which it came. Secondly, at the time of making, it was impossible to anticipate reasons which might subsequently arise for making a false entry in the original. No motive to falsify the records is suggested by their background. Undoubtedly, in an institution of the character of this hospital, there is an utter lack of all motive to misrepresent.

The third and primary, probative element of this, as of all evidence, however, is the knowledge

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 468, 314 Pa. 148, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paxos-v-jarka-corporation-pa-1934.