Thomas v. Tasty Baking Co.

13 A.2d 100, 140 Pa. Super. 76, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 421
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 1940
DocketAppeal, 4
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 A.2d 100 (Thomas v. Tasty Baking 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
Thomas v. Tasty Baking Co., 13 A.2d 100, 140 Pa. Super. 76, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 421 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtfeld, J.,

This is a workmen’s compensation case. In it the widow of David E. Thomas is seeking compensation for the death of her husband in the course of his employment. The case was started by David E. Thomas in his lifetime. After the hearing on his claim petition had been held, he died and the case then continued as a claim by his widow.

David E. Thomas filed his claim petition with the Workmen’s Compensation Board. The defendant and insurance carrier filed an answer. After a hearing, the referee, A. H. Young, filed an opinion disallowing compensation on the ground that the claimant had failed to show that his disability was due to an accident. Thomas appealed to the Workmen’s Compensation Board which held that the referee was in error in holding that Thomas had not sustained an accident, but, because Thomas had died since the hearing before the referee, it made no award but remanded the case to the referee to have placed upon the record, the names of Thomas’ dependents and the cause of his death. After additional *78 testimony had been taken by the referee supplying the information requested by the board, the referee, without changing substantially his findings of fact, but following the opinion of the board, made an award of compensation. The defendant and insurance carrier appealed to the Workmen’s Compensation Board, which sustained the award. An appeal was taken to the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County, which, speaking through Schaeffer, P. J. sustained the award of compensation. This appeal is from the order awarding compensation to the widow and son of David E. Thomas and the judgment entered thereon.

David E. Thomas, the original claimant, was employed by Tasty Baking Company for about eight years prior to January, 1936, as a supervisor of the men who delivered the products of the company in Montgomery, Berks and Schuylkill counties. These men, nine in number, received the baked goods consigned to them at the railroad station near them and by means of automobile trucks made delivery to grocery stores in their territories. The deliveries were made over established routes which were followed daily. These routes ran both on and off main highways. As supervisor of these men, it was Thomas’ duty to assist them in their sales and deliveries. To do this, he frequently accompanied the men on their routes to remedy faults in their work and to show them how to increase their sales. He also ironed out disputes that may have arisen between deliverymen and customers. Also, when any of the deliverymen were disabled, it was his duty to take over the route of the disabled distributor and make his deliveries for him.

On January 2d to 9th, 1936 (except January 5th), he took over the route of the distributor who delivered products from Tamaqua, Schuylkill County. On January 10th and 11th, he took over the route of the driver who distributed from Pottstown, Montgomery County. On January 21th and 25th he handled the Tamaqua *79 route again. From January 29th to February 8th he again took over the Tamaqua route.

During this period in which Thomas made deliveries, there were several heavy snows. The snow was a foot deep on the level and in drifts it was six or seven feet deep. The weather was extremely cold. The snow and ice formed ruts on the highways. Because of the deep snow there was one-way traffic at some places. Thomas’ truck at times became stuck in the snow, necessitating his shoveling it out of the snow. He had to do this two or three times a day. The shoveling took between fifteen minutes and half an hour. He also had to put chains on the tires and get the truck out of the snow when it was stuck. To do this he had to jack up the truck, and at times to crawl under it. These things made him work faster than usual to cover his route. They also made his working days longer than usual. Some times he worked until eleven o’clock at night. These weather conditions and the heavy work which they brought on continued during the entire period of his deliveries.

For at least three years and possibly for twenty years prior to January, 1936, Thomas was afflicted with heart disease, which came from a venereal infection. In 1933 he had been unable to work for about six months due to this and a tubercular infection. During this period, he spent some time in a sanitarium.

On January 4th, after shoveling snow while covering his route, Thomas felt a pain in his chest which extended from the left side to the middle of his chest and down his left arm to his elbow. It lasted about ten or twenty minutes. He also noticed a shortness of breath. He again noticed this pain on January 6th, as also a swelling of his1 ankles. He had pains a number of times between January 6th and February 8th. On January 6th, he went to his physician, Dr. Carl High, who gave him some heart medicine and advised him to go home and rest. Thomas did not heed this advice but kept on working, doing the same kind of strenuous work *80 he had done before. He consulted his physician again on January 13th and January 23d. On February 9th, at about 1:00 A. M., Thomas, while at home, had a severe attack. He described it as “a very heavy pressing in my chest, and continual forming of mucus, which it caused me to spit out, and it was sort of a bronze color, appeared something like blood. And the pain was quite severe. And my heart felt as if it was going—as if each side was trying to get ahead of the other. And I had a rather choking feeling in my throat. A very uncomfortable feeling.” Dr. High, who was called about 2:00 o’clock described the condition as “pulmonary edema”, which, he explained, was “fluid getting into the lung tissue due to one side of the heart not working in harmony with the other.” He described Thomas’ heart condition as “an infection of the heart valves due to damage by infection of a specific type, and also an injury to the larger blood vessels due to the same cause”; that the disease of the heart valves was due to a luetic infection caused by an organism, treponema pallidum, the source of which was a venereal infection.

From February 9th, the day of his severe attack, Thomas was completely disabled. He died, as a result of the same disease which produced his disability, on December 25, 1936, at the age of 40 years.

The sole question in this appeal is whether there is sufficient legally competent evidence to sustain the finding of an accident which would entitle claimant to recover.

In the language of Judge Cunningham in O’Neill v. Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co., 108 Pa. Superior Ct. 425, 426, 427, 165 A. 60: “In considering and disposing of this appeal, we are thus met at the very threshold with this question of law: Is there any legally competent evidence upon this record from which the compensation authorities could reasonably conclude that claimant’s husband met with an 'accident’, within the meaning of our compensation law. That is the controlling *81 question; claimant must first show that decedent suffered some ‘accident’; only after she has done that, is she in a position to ask the compensation authorities to consider its alleged harmful results: Vorbnoff v. Mesta Machine Co., 286 Pa. 199, 205.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 A.2d 100, 140 Pa. Super. 76, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-tasty-baking-co-pasuperct-1940.