Sayre v. Textile Machine Works

195 A. 786, 129 Pa. Super. 520, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 366
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 1937
DocketAppeal, 192
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 195 A. 786 (Sayre v. Textile Machine Works) 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
Sayre v. Textile Machine Works, 195 A. 786, 129 Pa. Super. 520, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 366 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J:

The appeal in this workmen’s compensation case is by the claimant. On February 10, 1928, he was accidentally struck on the head by a falling brick while in the course of his employment, as a common laborer, with the defendant-appellee. An open agreement for compensation for total disability was executed by the parties and approved by the board. In it his injuries were described as a “depressed, comminuted, compound fracture of skull with contusion and laceration of brain,” and his weekly wages at the time of the accident were fixed at $25.20. Under this agreement he was paid compensation, in accordance with Section 306 (a) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as finally amended by the Act of April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 77 PS §511, at the rate of $15 per week from the seventh day after the accident — Feb *522 ruary 17, 1928, — until April 17, of! that year, a period of 8-1/3 weeks .and a total amount of $125.

On the latter date he signed a final receipt, reciting, inter alia, that he had “returned to work on the 16th day of April, 1928, at a wage of $25.20 per week.”

He was continuously employed by the appellee until May 23, 1932, a period of four years, one month and six days, when the department in which he worked was closed and all the employees therein dismissed.

At the time of the accident appellant’s wages were at the rate of 45 cents per hour. Through the period between his returning to work and the closing of the department he earned and was paid wages varying from a minimum of 47 to a maximum of 61 cents per hour.

On October 5, 1932, appellant instituted proceedings before the compensation authorities to have the final receipt set aside and for an award for partial disability from the date thereof. It is not necessary to review the course of these proceedings. They ended with findings by the board to the effect that the receipt had been signed under a mistake of fact with respect to appellant’s actual physical condition and that he had a 40% disability from the date he returned to work up to and beyond November 16, 1933, — the expiration of the statutory period of 300 weeks for partial disability.

The receipt was set aside and an award made, under date of March 12, 1936, of compensation at the rate of $6.55 per week “beginning on April 16, 1928, [the date of returning to work] and continuing to and including November 16, 1933, the end of the three hundred week period, a total of 291-4/7 weeks, the sum of $1909.79,” with interest. The award was based, under Section 306(b), upon sixty-five per centum of the difference between appellant’s wages when injured and a sixty per centum “earning power” thereafter.

The employer appealed to the common pleas and presented three propositions of law for its consideration:

*523 (1) Whether there was competent evidence supporting the finding that the final receipt had been signed under a mistake of fact; (2) If so, whether a partial disability of 40% was shown by the evidence to have existed during the period covered by the award; and (3) Whether, in any event, the employer was legally liable for the payment of any compensation for the period during which it reemployed appellant and paid him wages equal to or higher than those he was receiving at the time of the accident.

Speaking for the court below, Shanaman, J., in a clear and comprehensive opinion decided the first and second propositions against the employer and the third in its favor. The employer has not appealed and we are therefore required upon this appeal by the employee to consider only whether the court below erred in applying the law to the facts as found by the compensation authorities. As a practical matter, the effect of the conclusions of the court below is that appellant is entitled to compensation for his partial disability, at the rate of $6.55 per week, only from May 23, 1932, the date upon which the employment by the appellee ceased, to November 16, 1933, the end of the statutory period. The order appealed from remits the record to the board to the end that “the award may be modified” in accordance with the opinion of the common pleas.

In disposing of this appeal it should be kept in mind that one of the fundamental propositions upon which the applicable statute is based is that the compensation payments therein provided for are intended as a substitute for the wages which the employee would have earned if he had not been injured: Zimmer v. Closky et al., 122 Pa. Superior Ct. 142, 186 A. 403. No intention was disclosed by the legislature to penalize an employer who, in the language of the referee in this case, “has shown a proper spirit and a desire to serve the *524 best interests of [an] injured man, and a willingness to comply with all the requirements of the law.”

In the present, as in every other compensation case, we must deal with the concrete condition presented by the evidence rather than with technicalities and theories. Prior decisions are controlling only when the facts are substantially identical and the issues arose in a similar way.

An understanding of the kind of employment in which appellant engaged prior to his injury and of the nature of his work during the four year period here in question is, therefore, essential. Before the accident he had been employed in laborious occupations, such as “hammer operator,” and when it occurred was using a pick and shovel and wheeling bricks. It is an established fact in this case that appellant when he returned to work and up to the final disposition of his case by the board had a partial disability, consisting of a weakened and atrophied left arm and leg. The court below correctly summarized the evidence upon this point when it said: “The testimony easily supports a finding that claimant had not recovered, and could not, when he signed the final receipt nor at any time since, do the heavy labor he had done prior to the accident for defendant and for previous employers. The work to which claimant was put by defendant after his accident was novel, light, and selective. He has nevertheless suffered a continuous partial disability which is likely permanent.”

The basis prescribed by Section 306(b) for the calculation of compensation for disability partial in character is “sixty-five per centum of the difference between the wages of the injured employe [at the time of the injury] and the earning power of the employe thereafter.” It has been held in a number of cases that, “Earning power, under the statute, does not always depend upon the sum actually received, but on a con *525 sideration of all the elements that make it up or detract from it as defined or considered by the compensation act”: Bausch v. Fidler, 277 Pa. 573, 579, 121 A. 507.

In the course of its opinion, the court below correctly held that the fact that appellant “could and did, during four years, earn approximately as much or more than he had earned as a common laborer prior to the accident is not conclusive that his partial disability due to the accident has not reduced his earning power.”

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 786, 129 Pa. Super. 520, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayre-v-textile-machine-works-pasuperct-1937.