Shay v. North Side Bank & Trust Co.

200 A. 302, 132 Pa. Super. 53, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 1938
Docket1; Appeal, 56
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 200 A. 302 (Shay v. North Side Bank & Trust 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
Shay v. North Side Bank & Trust Co., 200 A. 302, 132 Pa. Super. 53, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This appeal and its companion, at No. 7, October Term, 1938, of this court, are the latest of a series of unwarranted maneuvers by which an employer and its insurance carrier have succeeded up to the present time in delaying payment to an injured employee of $1,572, *55 judicially and finally adjudicated a year and a half ago to be then due him as compensation for injuries accidentally suffered in the latter part of 1933. There is not the slightest merit in either appeal. In the language of the court below: “This claimant [now eighty-eight years of age] has been bandied about from pillar tio post by proceedings which have delayed the payment” of even the amount of compensation now admitted by appellants to be due him.

Motions to quash both appeals were made by counsel for the claimant-appellee for failure to comply with certain rules of this court in printing the record. As these motions were based upon purely technical grounds we directed that they be heard along with the argument upon the merits and they are now overruled. A chronological review of the record will clarify the issues involved.

For sixteen years prior to November 14, 1933, the appellee had been employed by the appellant bank as a janitor. On the morning of that day, while firing a furnace in the bank building, he was suddenly overcome and rendered unconscious by the inhalation of coal gas. His description of the accident reads: “A. I went to work and wanted to fill the hopper up with coal. Q. Then what happened? A. Then I was throwing about half of it in, and it sprung a leak in the grate. Q. What sprung a leak? A. A hole in the grate, and it throwed sulphur out in the room.” When discovered by a fellow workman, appellee was removed to a hospital and after being revived was taken to his home. His testimony relative to the existence and extent of the disability caused by the accident reads: “Q. Can you work now? A. No, I can’t hardly work, just through that poison going in. Q. You could do your work well before this happened? A. They were always satisfied. Q. Could you get along — get around pretty sprightly? A. Sure. Q. Did you use a cane before this happened? A. No. *56 Q. Do you use a cane now? A. Yes. Q. Could you do that work now? A. No. I had went down and tried it. Mr. Oberholtzer [one of the bank’s officers] said he wants to see me, and then he said he has to lay me off. Q. Can you do any work any more? A. I don’t think I could. I couldn’t stand it in my limbs, you know.” The bank employed another janitor, and appellee has had no employment since the date of the accident.

On May 4, 1934, he filed his claim-petition for compensation for total disability. A joint denial of any liability was made by the employer and its insurance carrier, Aetna Life Insurance Company, appellant in the appeal at No. 7 October Term, 1938. The insurance carrier formally asked to be made a party defendant on the record and its request was granted by the referee to whom the claim had been referred. At the hearing before him on October 29, 1984, no separate appearance was entered in behalf of the employer but counsel for the insurance carrier entered a general appearance and participated in the proceedings. It is not necessary for present purposes to review the lay and medical testimony before the referee. The circumstances of the accident and the fact that appellee had not worked since its occurrence were not questioned.

The sole controversy related to the question of how much, if any, of appellee’s disability was attributable to the accident as distinguished from the natural disabilities incident to his age — then eighty-four. The referee reached the conclusion that the disability caused by the accident had not lasted longer than “the seven day waiting period provided in the act,” and that the disability from which appellee was suffering at the time of the hearing was “due to conditions resulting from his advanced age.” A disallowance of any compensation was accordingly entered upon the record.

Upon appellee’s appeal to the board these findings were, on January 22, 1936, set aside and the board sub *57 stituted its own finding to the effect that appellee had “shown by competent and convincing testimony that his present disability is the result of the injury sustained in the accident.” An open award ivas accordingly made against appellants directing them to pay appellee “compensation at the rate of 65% of $13.85 [employee’s weekly wages], or $9 per week, payable semi-monthly beginning from November 21, 1933, [the seventh day after the accident], with interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per annum on each of the deferred payments from the date when each of them respectively should have been made, beginning with interest on the first payment from December 5, 1933.”

It may be well to note at this point that one of the quibbles, raised by the insurance carrier a year and a half after the award had been made, was that it “established only thej fact that compensation was due and payable from November 21, 1933, but it did not establish the extent or period of time for which such compensation was payable.” It was an open award, and although it did not contain the usual phraseology that compensation should “continue within the limitations of the statute,” no interpretation, other than that compensation for total disability should continue for the potential period of five hundred weeks unless modified or terminated in the manner provided by the statute, is possible.

From this award by the board the insurance carrier appealed, on February 11, 1936, to the court below, at No. 310 March Term, 1936, of that court. In none of the exceptions upon which the appeal was based is any reference made to the form of the award; the sole ground of the appeal was that the findings of the board were not supported by any competent evidence.

In an opinion filed December 15,1936, by the learned President Judge of the court below, Henky, the exceptions were dismissed and judgment entered upon *58 the award in the sum of $4,632 with costs. The material portions of the judgment read:

“The above judgment is made up as follows, namely:
Weekly instalments from Nov. 21, 1933 to Dec. 15, 1936, 160 weeks at $9 a week .... $ 1,440.00
Interest on said instalments from the time when they were due and payable to Dec. 15, 1936 .................................. 132.00
or a total of............................ 1,572.00
For future payments at $9 per week for 340 weeks, or the sum of................ 3,060.00
with the right of execution for defaulted payments, but with stay of execution as to payments unmatured. The amount of the judgment to be subject to any future legal determination as to diminution or cessation of the amount of the order.”

The judgment was entered in substantial accordance with the principles announced by this court in Graham v. Hillman Coal & Coke Co., 122 Pa. Superior Ct. 579, 186 A. 400, and Kessler v. North Side Packing Co. et al., 122 Pa. Superior Ct. 565, 186 A.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 302, 132 Pa. Super. 53, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shay-v-north-side-bank-trust-co-pasuperct-1938.