Strickland v. Baugh & Sons Co.

11 A.2d 547, 139 Pa. Super. 273, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 1939
DocketAppeal, 316
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 547 (Strickland v. Baugh & Sons 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
Strickland v. Baugh & Sons Co., 11 A.2d 547, 139 Pa. Super. 273, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by Rhodes, J.,

As the result of an accident in the course of his employment on September 17, 1936, claimant suffered certain injuries to his left hand, which were described in a compensation agreement of September 30, 1936, as “traumatic amputation of left middle finger through middle of middle phalanx, amputation of ring finger through middle of middle phalanx.” The agreement called for payment of compensation for fifty weeks at $13.66 per week, based upon an agreed weekly wage of $21.01. There is no dispute that under the compensation agreement claimant was paid the fifty weeks for the loss of the amputated fingers, under section 306(c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, as amended April 13,1927, P. L. 186, §1, and that he signed *275 a final receipt (approved November 12, 1937), for the period covered by the agreement which expired on September 9, 1937. He returned to work for the same employer about two months after being injured, and was given janitorial duties instead of the heavy laboring work he had done formerly, although he was paid the same wages as before. After working as janitor for five months claimant was returned to his laboring job in a rock shed, but he was unable to perform those duties to the same extent as before being injured, yet he was paid the same amount of money. He could not do shoveling, and worked only intermittently, working several days and resting several days. This was due to the fact that his little finger, index finger and stump of the middle finger, as claimant expressed it, “would irritate if I handled anything, I could mash them that way and get blood out of them,” and the tips of them would swell. He continued to work in this manner until May 9, 1938, when he was no longer able to work. On May 26th following, claimant returned to defendant employer and asked for work. He was given a job which involved handling bags of bone black, which, being a hard substance, made the ends of his fingers raw, so that he was unable to continue, and has not worked since.

Dr. Kleinman testified that on June 2, 1938, he found an infection in the little finger of claimant’s left hand which was due to an abrasion, and that the abrasion occurred because there was an insufficient palmar pad on the finger to withstand such trauma as claimant encountered in his work. The palmar pad on his left index finger was also deficient although not so much so as the little finger, and there was no actual lesion there. In his opinion claimant was able to do only light work, and the condition of these fingers was due to the previous injury. The doctor explained that claimant had only the index and little fingers to approximate against his thumb, and that this contributed to the breaking *276 open of those fingers, especially if the work was such as to require the tips of the fingers. He thought that the condition of the little finger would be improved by an operation to remove some bone from the tip in order to allow more fleshy pad, and that the condition of the index finger could not be improved by anything less than a plastic operation.

On September 17, 1936, when the accident occurred, the Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation (appellee herein) was the insurance carrier; on January 1, 1938, the Travelers’ Insurance Company assumed the risk.

The referee found that claimant had suffered a recurrence of disability due to the accident of September 17, 1936, and awarded compensation for total disability from May 26, 1938, to October 18, 1938, the date of the hearing, and for fifty per cent partial disability thereafter. Both claimant and defendants appealed to the Workmen’s Compensation Board which found as a fact that claimant had been partially disabled to the extent of fifty per cent from the time of the accident on September 17, 1936, to May 26, 1938, at which time disability became total, and so continued until the date of the hearing, when it again became fifty per cent partial disability, and that such partial disability still continued. Accordingly, the board struck out the referee’s eleventh and twelfth findings, and substituted its own findings, eleven to fourteen. 1

*277 The board was of the opinion that the claimant sustained disability under both section 306(b) and section 306(c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, as amended April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, §1, as the result of the accident on September 17, 1936. The compensation agreement made no mention of the injuries to the index and little fingers. The board found that the agreement was executed under mutual mistake of fact, and could be corrected under a petition for review, which it considered appellant’s petition to be, filed June 17, 1938; and the final receipt for the compensation paid for fifty weeks ending September 9, 1937, under section 306(c) was accordingly considered out of the case by the board. See Johnson v. Purnell et al., 131 Pa. Superior Ct. 230, 200 A. 151; Busi v. A. & S. Wilson Co. et al., 110 Pa. Superior Ct. 95, 101, 167 A. 655; section 413 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, as amended by Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, §6.

*278 The board awarded compensation to claimant for fifty per cent partial disability from September 9, 1937, the end of the fifty-week period covered by the agreement, to May 26, 1938; for total disability from May 26, 1938, to October 18, 1938, the date of the hearing, and for fifty per cent partial disability thereafter.

Defendant employer and its insurance carrier, the appellee, appealed to the court below, which did not agree with the board that the agreement was executed under mistake of fact, and which held that there was no evidence to support the conclusion that claimant had suffered a fifty per cent loss of earning power, and further that whatever disability he has is due to a second accident on May 26, 1938, and not to that of September 17, 1936. The court below directed also that the record be remitted to the board for further proceeding not inconsistent with its opinion. Claimant has appealed.

Appellee’s counter statement of questions involved submits two propositions, and appellee’s argument, in addition thereto, refers to a third. They are substantially as follows:

1. That appellant suffered an accident on May 26, 1938, in the course of his employment, whereby the skin was torn from his index and little fingers, and disability followed; and that there was no evidence of any sort to support the finding of the board that appellant was not accidentally injured on May 26, 1938.

2. That appellant was not entitled to an award of fifty per cent partial disability from September 9, 1937, to May 26, 1938, and from October 18, 1938, until such time as the disability of appellant shall cease or change in extent within the meaning and limitations of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, as amended.

3. That the appeal to this court is interlocutory.

In the briefs submitted considerable argument has been devoted to the question of whether or not appellant had a second accident on May 26, 1938. The evi *279

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 A.2d 547, 139 Pa. Super. 273, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-baugh-sons-co-pasuperct-1939.