Rosenberry v. Gillan Bros.

197 A. 523, 130 Pa. Super. 469, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 148
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 13, 1937
DocketAppeal, 274
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 197 A. 523 (Rosenberry v. Gillan Bros.) 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
Rosenberry v. Gillan Bros., 197 A. 523, 130 Pa. Super. 469, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 148 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The claimant in this workmen’s compensation case has appealed from a judgment of the court below sustaining the exceptions of her employers and their insurance carrier to an award to her by the board of compensation for the permanent loss of the use of her left hand. The main ground for the judgment entered in favor of the defendants was that claimant at the time of her accidental injury was “engaged......in agriculture” and, therefore, nothing contained in our Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, applies to or affects her or her employers. See the exempting act of June 3, 1915, P. L. 777, 77 PS §24.

The only issue of fact raised before the compensation authorities was whether claimant had lost the use of her entire hand, or had only lost two fingers and the use of a third. It is not questioned by defendants that claimant’s second and third fingers of her left hand have been amputated as the result of an accident which occurred in the course of her employment on September 11, 1933. If, however, she was then engaged in agriculture, the extent of her injuries is not a factor in the disposition of her claim.

The compensation authorities do not seem to have given that question the consideration it deserved; neither of the referees who conducted the various hear *471 ings nor the board made specific findings one way or the other upon this pivotal issue. Their conclusion that claimant was not engaged in agriculture is evidenced, however, by their repeated findings that “both the claimant and defendants were bound by the provisions of Article III of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915 and amendments thereto.” Moreover, the second and third findings of fact made by the first referee read: “2. That on September 11, 1933, and for some time prior thereto the defendants, Gillan Brothers, operated a commercial fruit farm, selling fruit wholesale, and also retail at stands along the Lincoln Highway near Saint Thomas, Penna. 3. That on September 11, 1933, and for some time prior thereto the claimant, Mrs. Walter Rosenberry, was employed by the defendants, retailing fruit from a road stand, for which she was paid fifteen cents an hour, averaging about $10.00 per week.”

With these underlying findings of fact, adopted as they were by the board, upon the record, it became the duty of the court below, upon the appeal of the defendants to it, to review the compensation authorities’ application of the law to the facts so found. The above quoted findings of fact were amply supported by competent and uncontroverted evidence and the question whether the board properly applied the law to them was purely a matter of law for disposition by the court below, subject to review here. 1

We are in accord with that portion of the opinion of President Judge Davison of the court below in which he holds that the issue relative to the nature of claimant’s employment is ruled against her by the case of Bucher v. American Fruit Growers Co. 107 Pa. Su *472 perior Ct. 399, 163 A. 33, in which it was held that the term “agriculture,” as used in the exempting statute, includes fruit growing — the cultivation of orchards, and the harvesting, marketing and shipping of fruit raised therein.

Grillan Brothers, claimant’s employers, owned and operated several farms in Franklin County, a considerable portion of the acreage of each being devoted to the growing of peaches and other fruit. Claimant and her husband lived on one of these farms. A portion of the farm was devoted to the cultivation of ordinary agricultural products and the remainder to the raising and marketing of fruit. Claimant’s husband was employed steadily upon the farm. As we understand the record, a roadside stand was operated, in connection with the tenant house occupied by claimant and her husband, from which fruit was sold during the marketing season. During the months the stand was in operation claimant was employed to sell fruit from it and was paid at the rate of fifteen cents an hour; as a part of her duties she frequently assisted purchasers in loading fruit upon trucks and in their automobiles. Claimant testified that practically all the fruit sold at retail from the farm upon which she lived was sold “off the fruit stand.” She further stated that when her employers had men employed in threshing, or baling hay, she boarded them and was paid for such services.

During the course of her employment in selling fruit on September 11, 1933, she was assisting a customer in loading a basket of peaches in the rear of an automobile and suffered an accidental injury to her left hand when the lid of the rear compartment of the car fell upon and crushed her middle, ring, and little fingers.

We adopt the following excerpt from the opinion of the court below: “The question before us is whether this claimant when employed as above set out was en *473 gaged in agriculture so as to be excluded from the protection of the compensation law. That she was employed by the defendants and paid a wage by them is not disputed, and that she was engaged in marketing their crop when injured we think can not successfully be contested. The fact that the crop had been harvested by others and delivered to the stand of the defendants to be sold by the claimant does not in any way affect the fact that she was marketing their product. That she was so marketing it from a stand owned and operated by the defendants on their land and she being hired to sell for them at that stand clearly connects her with the operation of agriculture. She was as much engaged in agriculture as was the claimant in Bucher v. American Fruit Growers Company, supra, and we can see no reason to distinguish this case from that one.”

We would affirm the judgment in favor of the defendants without further comment if it were not for the fact that counsel for the claimant contend defendants by their conduct estopped themselves from questioning the jurisdiction of the compensation authorities to hear and determine their client’s claim upon its merits. A review of the proceedings is essential to an understanding of the grounds for their contention and to its disposition.

As a result of the development of infection in claimant’s fingers and the palm of her hand the middle finger was amputated November 15, 1933. Although her employers and their insurance carrier have contended throughout the litigation that claimant was engaged in agriculture at the time of the accident, the insurance carrier paid her, without any compensation agreement or proceedings under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, the sum of $210., being the amount fixed by section 306(c) of that statute for the loss of a second finger — sixty-five percentum of wages ($7.00) during thirty weeks. We gather from the record that although *474

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Bluebook (online)
197 A. 523, 130 Pa. Super. 469, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenberry-v-gillan-bros-pasuperct-1937.