Shumkas v. P. & R. C. & I. Co.

101 Pa. Super. 401, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 127
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1930
DocketAppeal 349
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 101 Pa. Super. 401 (Shumkas v. P. & R. C. & I. 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
Shumkas v. P. & R. C. & I. Co., 101 Pa. Super. 401, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 127 (Pa. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This appeal is from the refusal of a compensation award. Shumkas, a coal-miner, lost his life at work, August 6, 1925. A claim was filed on behalf of a widow and daughter December 7, 1925. Evidence was heard by a referee January 7, 1926, February 15, 1926 and March 24, 1927. Sections 411, 417, 427 of the statute require us to direct the attention of all who have to do with the administration of the Workmen’s Compensation Law to the duty of disposing of compensation cases as promptly as may be.

June 3,1927, the referee filed a report, holding that the alleged widow was not decedent’s widow, and was therefore not entitled to compensation, but that his daughter, the other claimant, was dependent within the statute. Compensation was, however, refused on the following findings:

(3) That decedent, “was in the employ of the defendant company as miner on August 6, 1925....... and that......while he was tamping dynamite in a hole with an iron drill the dynamite exploded and instantly killed him;” and

(4) That he “transgressed rule 30, Article XII, of the Anthracite Mining Laws of Pennsylvania of 1891 [P. L. 199] and at the time of his death he was not in the relationship of employee to the defendant company. That is, by his own act he had [ taken f] himself momentarily out of his employ.”

Rule 30 of Article 12 of the Anthracite Mining Laws referred to is as follows:

“In charging holes for blasting in slate or rock in any mine, no iron or steel needle shall be used, and a tight cartridge shall not be rammed into a hole in coal, slate, or rock with an iron or steel tamping bar unless the ends of the tamping bar are tipped with at least six inches of copper or other soft metal.” Rule 58 malees such violation a misdemeanor.

*404 Claimants appealed to the board, excepting, inter alia, to findings 3 and 4 quoted above. The board agreed with the referee, refused compensation, and in the opinion filed, said: “Claimant contends that the testimony of decedent’s working companion, John Bonasavage, was not sufficient to warrant the referee’s findings that the decedent was tamping dynamite with an iron drill. Taking the witness’s testimony in parts only we agree, but taking the witness’s testimony as whole, and corroborated by the other testimony, we think it is clearly sufficient to show that decedent was using an iron drill for tamping the charge when killed.” We may note, in passing, that we think that is a sound conclusion of law. On appeal to the common pleas, exceptions to the 3d and 4th findings were sustained; the action of the board was reversed, and the record was remitted for further hearing.

The following quotation from the opinion of the learned court below in disposing of the first appeal, will aid in understanding the record in view of the subsequent proceedings, in which a second opinion was filed in disposing of the second appeal from the board: “The board must specifically find the facts which bring the deceased within the rule of prohibition before the latter can be charged with having committed a criminal act. And before the decedent in this case can be charged with having committed a violation of rule 30, supra, it must be specifically found that he either was tamping dynamite in a hole in rock or slate with an iron or steel pointed needle, or that he was ramming a tight cartridge into a hole in coal, slate or rock with an iron or steel tamping bar that was not tipped with at least six inches of copper or other soft metal. A steel drill or iron bar, we believe, would come within the interpretation of an iron or steel pointed needle. We are not suggesting whether the evidence indicates that the decedent was tamping a *405 hole with dynamite with a bar or drill in coal bnt if the board or the referee should so find, then the decedent would not have violated rule 30, supra. There certainly is no evidence that the decedent was ramming a tight cartridge into a hole, for all the testimony in the case points to the fact that the decedent was tamping dynamite into the hole, without indicating whether the hole was in coal, slate or rock, the cartridge not yet having been handled by the decedent, it having been lately prepared by the eye witness to the accident.” (In view of the second opinion of the learned court below, attention may be directed at this point to the statement that the court was then of opinion that the evidence showed that “the cartridge [had] not yet......been handled by the decedent......” when the explosion took place.) The court therefore properly returned the record for re-hearing. At the re-hearing, no additional testimony was offered by the claimant. The employer, however, called a witness, apparently for the purpose of giving his understanding or interpretation of rule 30. His testimony was received subject to objection, and was returned to the board without additional findings of fact by the referee. The board then filed a second report, and, referring to this additional testimony, stated “From our examination of the expert testimony we are of the opinion that it failed in its purpose.” The board was right in disregarding the opinion of the witness; he was incompetent to interpret the statute; that is the duty of the court.

In its second report the board made, inter alia, the following finding: (a re-affirmation of the 3d finding originally made by the referee): “That on this day and place, while tamping dynamite in a hole with an iron drill, the dynamite exploded, instantly killing him;” and awarded compensation to the dependent child on the ground that the accident took place in *406 the course of employment within the statute, being also of opinion that the case was not within rule 30. The employer again excepted, inter alia, to the finding of fact quoted. The common pleas then filed an Opinion again reversing the action of the board, but without remitting the record, having concluded that on the facts claimant was not entitled to compensation. Claimant has appealed and asks a review by this court on two points:

1. She asserts that there was no authority to modify the findings of fact by the additions made by the court.

2. That the court erred in holding that decedent violated the mining laws.

"We must sustain the appeal. In its second opinion, the court properly says that the board “found as a fact that ‘while tamping dynamite in a hole with an iron drill, the dynamite exploded, instantly killing him’ which is supported by competent evidence.” But —and here the dispute centers — the court added findings of fact; the right to make them is challenged by claimant. The supplementary findings appear by the following quotations from the opinion of the court on the second appeal. “The stick of dynamite with a detonation cap had been prepared by the witness Bonasavage, a fellow workman of the deceased, and he suggested that he ‘go get a tamping stick’, when the decedent said ‘all right’, and before the stick could be secured, the shot went off. The witness testified that the decedent was tamping the dynamite with the iron drill, that no tamping stick was there where they were working, and he told his superiors that the decedent ‘used an iron drill to tamp the shot’, tamped the dynamite with the drill and that he would not wait for the wooden tamping stick.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 Pa. Super. 401, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shumkas-v-p-r-c-i-co-pasuperct-1930.