Stauffer v. Hubley Manufacturing Co.

30 A.2d 370, 151 Pa. Super. 322, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 290
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 1942
DocketAppeal, 209
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 A.2d 370 (Stauffer v. Hubley Manufacturing 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
Stauffer v. Hubley Manufacturing Co., 30 A.2d 370, 151 Pa. Super. 322, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 290 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Kenworthey, J.,

This is a claim for workmen’s compensation, (1) for total disability, and (2) for death, alleged to have been caused by silicosis, filed under the Pennsylvania Occupational Disease Act of June 21, 1939, P. L. 566. The provisions of this Act differ from those of the prior Act of July 2, 1937, P. L. 2714 — which it repealed — as respects, inter alia, disability or death caused by silicosis, anthraco-silicosis or asbestosis.

The Act of 1937 provided in section 4(b) : “Compensation shall not be payable for partial disability due to silicosis, anthraco-silicosis, or asbestosis. Compensation shall be payable, as otherwise provided in this act, for total disability or death caused primarily (as definitely distinguished from a contributory or accelerating cause) by silicosis, anthraco-silicosis, or asbestosis, or by silicosis, anthraco-silicosis, or asbestosis, when accompanied by active pulmonary tuberculosis or strep* tococeic infection of the lung......”

The corresponding provision in the Act of 1939, (sec. 301(e)), reads as follows: “Compensation shall not be payable for partial disability due to silicosis, anthracosilicosis, or asbestosis. Compensation shall be payable, as otherwise provided in this act, for total disability or death caused solely (as definitely distinguished from a contributory or accelerating cause) by silicosis, anthraco-silicosis, or asbestosis, or by silicosis, anthracosilicosis, or asbestosis, when accompanied by active pulmonary tuberculosis.” (Italics supplied).

*324 It will be noted that under tbe Act of 1939, payment of compensation for the occupational disease, silicosis, is limited to total disability or death caused solely by silicosis or by silicosis when accompanied by active pulmonary tuberculosis; while under the Act of 1937, compensation was payable for total disability or death caused primarily by silicosis or by silicosis when accompanied by active pulmonary tuberculosis or streptococcic infection of the lung. Under both acts compensation would not be payable at all for partial disability, or for total disability or death where silicosis was only a contributory or accelerating cause.

Both acts show a clear intention to differentiate silicosis, anthraco-silicosis, and asbestosis from the other occupational diseases included within their provisions.

Counsel for claimant at the hearing before the referee apparently proceeded on the theory that the claim was being made under the Act of 1937, for the questions asked the medical witnesses for the claimant indicate an attempt to show that silicosis was the primary cause of the employee’s death.

It is true that both medical witnesses who were called by the claimant testified that the silicosis, from which Howard B. Stauffer, the claimant’s husband, suffered, although not the immediate cause, was the primary cause of his death. But a reading of their testimony shows that they did not understand what was meant by the phrase “total disability or death caused primarily — as distinguished from a contributory or accelerating cause — by silicosis,” as used in the Act of 1937.

Dr. Thelma G. Boughton, assistant pathologist at the Lancaster General Hospital, testified: “The primary cause of death is the underlying cause; the complicatmg causes are the immediate causes of death; our death certificates are all made out that way.” (Italics supplied).

*325 She was evidently referring to the certificates of death required to be furnished to the Department of Health under the Act of June 7, 1915, P. L. 900, and its amendment of May 24, 1933, P. L. 976, 1 which in section 7 prescribed that the certificate of death should contain, inter alia, the following information:

“(17) Cause of death, including the primary and immediate causes, and contributory causes or complications, if any, and duration of each.”

The certificate prescribed by the Act of Assembly made a distinction between primary and immediate causes on the one hand and contributory causes or complications on the other.

By primary cause is meant the main, chief, principal or predominant cause of the death that had then occurred — not some serious disease which would probably have caused the patient’s death in the future, but was not the principal cause of his death at that time.

By immediate cause is meant the direct, present, instant or proximate cause of the death that had taken place; that which produced the result without any intervening agency.

In many cases, — perhaps in the majority of cases— the primary cause and the immediate cause are the same. Webster’s New International Dictionary gives them as synonymous. In such event any other cause or disease which contributed to or accelerated the death was a secondary, contributing or complicating cause of death.

Where the primary cause and the immediate cause are not the same, in order to be the primary cause of the death it must have produced or brought about the immediate cause which resulted in the death.

This can best be shown by concrete examples:

*326 If a diabetic man is severely crushed about his chest in an accident, and traumatic pneumonia sets in resulting in his death from pneumonia, the immediate cause of death was the traumatic pneumonia; the primary cause of death was the crushing of the chest, which produced or brought about traumatic pneumonia, the immediate cause of death; and diabetes may have been a contributory, secondary or complicating cause of deafh.

On the other hand, if a man suffered an accident which merely lowered his vitality or powers of resistance, and in his weakened condition he fell a victim to a germ disease which was not produced or brought about by his accident, the primary and immediate cause of his death was the germ disease and his accident was a “passive ally,” or at the most, only a contributory, secondaiy or accelerating cause of death.

With these preliminary observations, we can now better consider the facts in this case, which are not in serious dispute.

Howard R. Stauffer had worked as a moulder for Hubley Manufacturing Company for about twenty-five years. His occupation exposed him to the hazard of silicosis; but he had worked there practically continuously since 1919, when he came home from military service in this country. About three years before his death on March 17, 1941, he consulted Dr. H. R. Bryson, who diagnosed his trouble as acute bronchitis, but about two years before his death became convinced that Stauffer had silicosis and advised him to change his occupation. He was not disabled or laid off because of silicosis, but on January 25, 1941 was unable to work because of what was afterwards diagnosed as streptothricosis, a rare, branching fungus type of infection, which resulted in an abdominal abscess.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A.2d 370, 151 Pa. Super. 322, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stauffer-v-hubley-manufacturing-co-pasuperct-1942.