Rhoads v. United States Asbestos Division

36 Pa. D. & C. 457, 1939 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 218

This text of 36 Pa. D. & C. 457 (Rhoads v. United States Asbestos Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhoads v. United States Asbestos Division, 36 Pa. D. & C. 457, 1939 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 218 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Atlee, P. J.,

This is an appeal from the decision of the Workmen’s Compensation Board made on March 23,1939, awarding compensation to Dawson M. Rhoads, claimant, and against the United States Asbestos Division of Raybestos Manhattan, Inc., claimant’s employer, and the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Casualty Insurance Company, insurance carrier. Claimant alleged he was suffering from asbestosis incurred while working for the employer.

Eight specific exceptions to the findings of the Workmen’s Compensation Board have been filed on behalf of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Casualty Insurance Company, defendant’s insurance carrier and appellant. These exceptions are as follows:

“1. Exception is taken to the finding of fact of the Workmen’s Compensation Board and of the referee to the effect that claimant’s disability was primarily caused by asbestosis.

“2. Exception is taken to the conclusion of law of the Workmen’s Compensation Board and of the referee to the effect that claimant’s disability was primarily caused by asbestosis.

“3. Exception is taken to the finding of fact that no partial disability from asbestosis existed prior to January 1,1938.

“4. Exception is taken to the finding of fact that claimant was not totally disabled prior to January 1,1938.

[459]*459“5. Exception is taken to the conclusion of law that, since the findings of fact involves partial disability of claimant from asbestosis prior to January 1, 1938, and total disability therefrom only subsequent to January 1, 1938, claimant is entitled to compensation and an award.

“6. Exception is taken to the failure to clarify the award so that after the 500-week period, provided by the act of assembly, and should liability still continue, then payments should only be assessed against defendant at the rate of $3 per month, which is one tenth of the $30 per month provided by the act of assembly.

“7. Exception is taken to the conclusion of law that the act of assembly, upon which this award is based, is constitutional.

“8. Exception is taken to the failure to clarify the award against defendant to a total liability of one tenth of $3,600, or $360.”

The act of assembly whose validity and interpretation are before the court in this appeal is known as the Occupational Disease Compensation Act of July 2,1937, P. L. 2714, effective January 1, 1938. The act is entitled “A Supplement to the act, approved the second day of June, one thousand nine hundred fifteen (Pamphlet Laws seven hundred thirty-six) ”, which act is The Workmen’s Compensation Act. The supplement is to be known and cited as the “Occupational Disease Compensation Act.” The term “occupational disease” is defined in the act. In section 2(1) “asbestosis” is defined to include:

“Asbestosis in any occupation involving direct contact with, handling of, or exposure to the dust of asbestos,”

The opinion of the Workmen’s Compensation Board in the present case states the following facts: Dawson M. Rhoads, claimant here, began working for defendant in 1915. He worked as a spinner for about five years, then was out of defendant’s employ for a period of six years, and for the last 13 years has worked continuously for the United States Asbestos Division, etc. During this 13-year period claimant worked in what is known as the [460]*460“mule spinning department.” His duties there were described by him as follows:

“Well, you put the twist into the roving and while those spindles are turning that is what puts a twist in it and that, of course, throws off dust and you inhale it.
“Q. How were the conditions in the room in which you worked?
A. “They were dusty and there was no way to really relieve that dust I don’t think because the mule travels about six feet and there is no way to put a hood or anything over it to keep the dust down, so I just have to follow this back and forth and that is how you inhale it.”

On January 15, 1938, on the advice of Dr. Hershey, a practicing physician in Manheim, claimant stopped working. Dr. Hershey testified that three years previous claimant had called to see him. At that time claimant had an irritative cough, with loss of strength; the condition gradually got worse and at the beginning of 1938 there developed a pain in the side of claimant. The physician testified that he advised claimant to stop all work. The physician further testified that claimant was totally disabled, “not fit to do anything.” Dr. Hershey described the progress of asbestosis as, first, a mild deposit of asbestos dust without much irritation, then a secondary stage, where the lung tissue hardens and becomes fibrotic, and the third stage, which is a continuation and aggravation of the second state.

Dr. Paul 0. Snoke, an X-ray specialist, testified that on April 23, 1935, he made an X-ray of plaintiff’s chest and found a moderately well-developed first-stage asbestosis; that he again examined claimant on January 22, 1938, and at that time found claimant to be suffering from the first stage of asbestosis, with early pulmonary tuberculosis of chronic fibrous type and a constricted pericarditis. Claimant had developed tuberculosis between the times of taking the two X-rays. Dr. Snoke attributed claimant’s disability to three causes: asbestosis, tuberculosis, and heart trouble. Dr. Snoke further testi[461]*461fied that he was of the opinion that claimant’s heart condition was the primary cause of his disability, to the extent that 75 percent of claimant’s condition was due to his heart; 25 percent to his lungs. From this qualification, in Dr. Snoke’s opinion, it is entirely probable that the chronic constricted pericarditis is tubercular in origin. Dr. Snoke further testified that tuberculosis of the pericardium was the precise nature of the heart difficulty; that a heart condition caused by asbestosis would have produced a very much enlarged heart, whereas claimant’s heart was exceedingly small. Dr. Snoke then testified that he believed that asbestosis played a definite part in reducing the resistance and allowing tuberculosis to develop.

On behalf of defendant Dr. Wilhelmina S. Scott, of the Lancaster General Hospital, testified that she had Xrayed claimant in June 1933. Dr. Scott testified that, in her opinion, asbestosis plays a certain percent in claimant’s disability, but that claimant’s chief disability came from his infection about the pericardium, and that this infection probably is tubercular in origin. At the time Dr. Scott examined claimant, she testified that she found that claimant was not totally disabled as a result of asbestosis alone.

Dr. Hershey was recalled and testified that in his opinion the heart condition was due to the extra burden placed on the heart due to the constricted condition of claimant’s lungs.

The opinion of the Workmen’s Compensation Board recites that the referee made an award for total disability resulting from asbestosis. Thereupon, defendant insurance carrier appealed, and has raised the question of the constitutionality of the Occupational Disease Compensation Act, supra. The board declined to enter into any discussion of the question of constitutionality because such question was not for the board’s consideration.

Under the established practice in Pennsylvania in workmen’s compensation cases, the compensation author[462]

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Bluebook (online)
36 Pa. D. & C. 457, 1939 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhoads-v-united-states-asbestos-division-pactcompllancas-1939.