Reddicks v. Welsbacb Gas & Electric Co.

188 A. 417, 124 Pa. Super. 285
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 1936
DocketAppeal, 330
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 A. 417 (Reddicks v. Welsbacb Gas & Electric 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
Reddicks v. Welsbacb Gas & Electric Co., 188 A. 417, 124 Pa. Super. 285 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The claimant in this workmen’s compensation case had been in the employ of Welsbach Gas & Electric Company for some years as an outside and inside salesman. On August 21, 1930, he first suffered accidental *287 injuries to his right knee, through a fall in front of a building owned by the U. S. House Furnishing Company, and brought an action for negligence against that company in which he averred he had “sustained traumatic arthritis and other severe and serious injuries to his right knee.” The result of that litigation was the payment to claimant in October 1933, of $750, as damages.

Early in January, 1931, claimant resumed his work with the present defendant. While in the course of his employment he sustained a second injury to the same knee on March 9, 1932, through another fall. Thereupon an open agreement was entered into between the present parties, under which claimant was paid $15 a week for total disability until May 30, 1932, (a period of 10 6/7 weeks) when he signed a final receipt and returned to work. The receipt was plainly entitled, “Final Settlement Receipt,” and by it claimant acknowledged the receipt at that time of $27.86, which, with payments theretofore received, aggregated the total sum of $162.86, “for all injuries received...... on or about the ninth day of March, 1932.” Claimant, apparently an intelligent business man, testified he read the receipt before signing it, and the letter in which it was enclosed advised him that the payment then made was “final compensation.”

His explanation for not continuing with his employment was that his employer proposed that he go to work upon “a straight commission basis” instead of the salary of $25 a week he had been receiving prior to the accident, but he also testified his main reason was that he could not get around properly or go up and down stairs. He has not worked since that time.

On January 17, 1934, more than one year after the last payment of compensation under the agreement but within 300 weeks from the time of the second accident, claimant filed with the board a petition under *288 section 434 of the amendatory act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, 669, 77 PS §1001, to set aside the final receipt and reinstate the agreement for compensation for total disability. The basis for the application was thus stated in the petition: “That the signing of the said final receipt was founded upon a mistake of fact concerning the true physical condition of your petitioner, in that he was, at the time, permanently and wholly disabled and prevented thereby from further gainful occupation.” There was no suggestion in the petition of any fraud, coercion, or other improper conduct upon the part of the employer in procuring the execution of the receipt. In its answer the employer denied all the averments of the petition.

After hearings on May 18, 1934, and February 21, 1935, the referee made findings to the effect that the final receipt was not executed through any mistake of law or fact and that “any and all disability due to or resulting from [claimant’s] accident of March 9, 1932, had ceased on May 30, 1932, when he signed the final receipt”; the petition was accordingly dismissed.

Upon appeal by claimant to the board, these findings of the referee were practically reversed and the board substituted therefor its own conclusions that claimant’s kneecap was broken as a result of the second accident; that he was totally disabled at the time the final receipt was signed; that he “did not fully realize his rights to compensation during the period of his disability”; and that the final receipt should be set aside and the agreement reinstated upon the ground that the receipt had been signed “through a mistake of fact.”

The employer then appealed to the common pleas and that tribunal, after reviewing the record, stated it could not find either in the testimony of claimant or that of the medical and X-ray experts “any basis for an inference that the claimant was more than temporarily disabled by the second accident or that his disability is *289 now any greater than it was prior to this accident; nor can we find in the record sufficient evidence to support a finding of causal connection between the second accident and the claimant’s present disability.”

Referring to the testimony of claimant himself, Parry, J., speaking for the court below, said, “Furthermore, the claimant himself nowhere testifies that Ms disability is greater now than it was during the period between the first and the second accident. He says he does not use his cane any more now than he did then. The pain is no greater now than it was then and he cannot say that the condition of Ms knee has changed for the worse. His conclusion is that he is unable to work as an outside salesman at the present time because of the necessity of using a cane and the difficulty in going up and down stairs and that he was permanently and wholly disabled at the time he signed the final receipt, although he didn’t find it out until nineteen months later. The mistake he appears to rely upon is found in his statement that he didn’t know that the X-ray taken after the second accident showed a crack in the kneecap and that none of the doctors ever told him what was the matter with his knee. Since this crack appears to have healed and is nowhere shown to have caused an increase in his disability, we do not think his ignorance of its existence at some time prior to his signing the receipt a sufficient reason for setting that receipt aside.”

For the reasons thus stated, the common pleas sustained the employer’s exceptions to the findings of the board and entered judgment for the defendant. The present appeal is by the claimant from that judgment.

Upon a careful examination of the record, we, also, are unable to find therein any support for the findings and conclusions of the board.

As it is provided in the section under which these proceedings were instituted that a final receipt shall *290 be prima facie evidence of the termination of the employer’s liability to pay compensation, claimant had the burden in this case of showing, primarily, that during the period between the signing of the final receipt and the date of the hearing he had a disability attributable to the second accident which was greater in degree than, and in addition to, the disability incident to the first accident—in other words, that he had not already been paid under the agreement for the aggravation of his condition caused by the second accident. In addition to claimant’s own testimony, which is fairly summarized in the above quoted excerpt from the opinion of the court below, it is to be noted that we have in this record the results of three X-ray examinations of claimant’s knee made respectively on October 31, 1930, about two months after the first accident, March 19, 1932, ten days after the second accident, and May 17, 1934, immediately before the first hearing. From the evidence thus adduced, it is apparent that claimant had not had a normal knee for a considerable period prior to the first accident. Dr. J. W.

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

Related

Harrison v. Alden Park Manor Apartments
51 A.2d 418 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)
Ruby v. Hutchison
36 A.2d 244 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Cooper v. Byllesby Engineering & Management Co.
14 A.2d 222 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Dosen v. Union Collieries Co.
8 A.2d 442 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)
Eberst v. Sears Roebuck & Co.
6 A.2d 577 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)
Augustine v. Evert Lumber Co.
3 A.2d 284 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)
Conley v. Allegheny County
200 A. 287 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 A. 417, 124 Pa. Super. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reddicks-v-welsbacb-gas-electric-co-pasuperct-1936.