Smaligo v. Fireman's Fund Insurance

247 A.2d 577, 432 Pa. 133, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 497
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1968
DocketAppeal, 135
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 247 A.2d 577 (Smaligo v. Fireman's Fund Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smaligo v. Fireman's Fund Insurance, 247 A.2d 577, 432 Pa. 133, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 497 (Pa. 1968).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

Michael and Mary Smaligo, as personal representatives of their daughter’s estate, instituted arbitration proceedings to recover for the daughter’s death caused by a hit-and-run driver on March 27, 1967, at a time said daughter, aged 37, was on a home week-end visit from Mayview State Hospital where she had been a patient since 1962. Arbitration proceeded under the “Uninsured Motorist Clause” of Smaligos’ policy of insurance with Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, which resulted in an award to Smaligos of only |243.00 (a figure which represented one-third of the cost of the family memorial monument).

Smaligos moved to vacate the award on the ground of certain irregularities in the arbitration proceedings, to wit: (1) that the arbitrator proceeded to make an *135 award even though informed by Smaligos’ counsel of their acceptance of a settlement offer made prior to the arbitration proceedings, which offer Smaligos claimed was still outstanding; and (2) that the arbitrator denied a request of Smaligos’ counsel for a recess to obtain the testimony of Dr. Parsons, decedent’s attending physician, as to decedent’s future work expectancy, the arbitrator holding such testimony not to be necessary. Smaligos argued that these irregularities resulted in an unjust, inequitable and unconscionable award for the death of a 37-year old woman who had been gainfully employed prior to her commitment to Mayview State Hospital in 1962. After a hearing on Smaligos’ motion the court below issued an order vacating the award and remanding the case, for hearing de novo before another arbitrator to be selected from the American Arbitration Association Panel.

The insurance company has appealed from said order, contending that, since the proceedings were admittedly under the common law, the court was bound by the arbitrator’s action. In making this argument, the insurance company relies on our holding in Harwits v. Selas Corporation of America, 406 Pa. 539, 178 A. 2d 617 (1962), as follows: “If the appeal is from a common law award, appellant, to succeed, must show by clear, precise and indubitable evidence that he was denied a hearing, or that there was fraud, misconduct, corruption or some other irregularity of this nature on the part of the arbitrator which caused him to render an unjust, inequitable and unconscionable award, the arbitrator being the final judge of both law and fact, his award not being subject to disturbance for a mistake of either.”

A review of the record reveals the following facts: Elizabeth Smaligo, the decedent—a high school graduate who had also attended night classes at Duque,sne *136 University—bad been gainfully employed as a secretary by Westinghouse Electric Corporation from 1949 until October, 1962, when she was admitted to Western Psychiatric Hospital and there diagnosed as schizophrenic. Later she was committed to Mayview State Hospital and, at the time of her death, was still so committed though permitted to visit her home on weekends and holidays. During such a home week-end stay she was struck by a hit-and-run driver on March 27, 1967. Smaligos then made claim against their insurance company under the terms of the Uninsured Motorist Provisions of an automobile liability policy that had been issued to them by that company wherein the company had agreed to pay “all sums which the insured or his legal representative shall be legally entitled to recover as damages.” The company refused to pay the $9,-750.00 asked by Smaligos in settlement and on July 27, 1967 the company notified Smaligos’ counsel by letter as follows: “We concede that there is a settlement value to the ease but that it is not worth $9750. as demanded by you. In an effort to avoid further expenses and time to both, I will now make an offer to conclude this claim on an amicable basis and for the sum of $7500. which you may convey to your clients. If the offer of $7500. is not acceptable, I would then suggest that your arbitration papers be prepared as we have no intention of increasing this offer, feeling that it is fair and just to all parties concerned.”

On August 30, 1967, Smaligos’ counsel made a demand for arbitration to the American Arbitration Association and on October 11, 1967 Thomas J. Reinstadtler, Jr., Esquire, was appointed as arbitrator. A hearing was held on December 18, 1967 which, as before stated, resulted in the arbitrator awarding only $243, being one-third of the cost of a family memorial monument. The arbitrator determined that the funeral *137 bill of $1016.30 wag payable under the Medical Payment Clause of the policy and thus not recoverable under the Uninsured Motorist Clause.

It must be conceded that there was no evidence in the record that decedent would ever again be gainfully employed. However, Smaligos’ counsel testified at the hearing on the motion to vacate that he had asked the arbitrator for a continuance in order to secure the expert testimony of Dr. Parsons on the question of decedent’s future earning ability and capacity and that the arbitrator stated that such testimony was not necessary. Dr. Parsons was decedent’s attending physician. The arbitrator, on the other hand, testified that no formal motion for continuance was made and that he could not remember “specifically what Mr. Maurizi asked or what my response was,” although he did not deny that he had said Dr. Parsons’ testimony was unnecessary. In fact, counsel who had represented defendant company during the arbitration proceedings testified that the arbitrator did state that the doctor’s testimony was unnecessary.

Whether or not a formal motion for continuance was made is not as governing as the arbitrator seeks to make it. The important fact that stands clear is that Smaligos’ counsel did proffer medical testimony which was relevant and of great import in the determination of loss of future earnings of the decedent and that the arbitrator determined such testimony was not necessary. It may be true that Smaligos’ counsel should have come prepared with the medical testimony at the time of the hearing and that perhaps the necessity of such testimony came to him as an “afterthought” (as stated by the arbitrator), but such observations cannot militate from the all-important fact that counsel did at the time of the hearing make an offer to present the medical testimony and the arbitrator viewed such testimony as “unnecessary”.

*138 This was not a mere mistake of law or of fact binding upon all parties and the court. The arbitrator’s failure to regard Dr. Parsons’ testimony of any import resulted in Smaligos being denied a full and fair hearing. That an award is not binding where there has been a denial of a hearing has been clearly stated by this Court on several occasions. In Newspaper Guild v. Philadelphia Daily News, Inc., 401 Pa. 337, 346, 164 A. 2d 215 (1960), we stated: “The defenses available to the News in a proceeding to enforce a common law award are extremely limited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 A.2d 577, 432 Pa. 133, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smaligo-v-firemans-fund-insurance-pa-1968.