Valent v. Berwind-White Coal Mining Co.

94 A.2d 197, 172 Pa. Super. 305, 1953 Pa. Super. LEXIS 393
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1953
DocketAppeal, 180
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 94 A.2d 197 (Valent v. Berwind-White Coal Mining 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
Valent v. Berwind-White Coal Mining Co., 94 A.2d 197, 172 Pa. Super. 305, 1953 Pa. Super. LEXIS 393 (Pa. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hirt, J.,

In this action the widow of George Valent sought to recover compensation after the death of her husband *307 on May 4, 1950, from occupational disease. He had worked as a miner in the defendant’s bituminous coal mines, for many years. The Board ultimately found: “Fifteenth: . . . that [George Valent] became totally disabled on March- 30, 1946 as a result of anthracosilicosis by reason of the employment.... in a hazardous occupation having a silica hazard for the necessary statutory period”. On a further finding that he on March 13, 1947 “knew or should have known that he was totally disabled as a result of anthraco-silicosis” an award of compensation was refused because of his failure to give notice of his disability to the defendant employer, within ninety days from that date. The claim was disallowed also for a second reason based upon a finding by the Board “that the death of the decedent, George Valent, occurred more than three years from the date of .his last employment with defendant, herein”. Section 311 of the Occupational Disease Act of June 21, 1939, P. L. 566, 77 PS §1411 requires notice to the employer within ninety days “after the beginning of disability”. And under §301 (c) of the Act as amended, 77 PS §1401, compensable death from occupational disease is restricted to death within three years from the date of last employment in the hazardous occupation.

Following the order of disallowance the widow-claimant petitioned the Board for a rehearing on the single ground that the record in this case will not support the conclusion that her husband on March 13, 1947, (corrected to May 13, 1947) knew or should have known that his total disability was attributable to occupational disease. The Board refused a rehearing. The present appeal is from the order of the lower court affirming the action of the Board. In our view there is error in the refusal of a rehearing; the order will be reversed.

*308 Admittedly, the burden was on this claimant to show compliance with statutory requirements. But George Valent in his lifetime, on September 20, 1947, filed a claim petition for compensation and the circumstances do not charge him with knowledge before that date that his total disability was from occupational disease. It is difficult to imagine a case in which there could be more uncertainty in medical opinion. And we are unwilling to say, from this record, that George Valent must have known that his total disability was attributable to anthraco-silicosis when it required at least 5 hearings over a period of 4 years to establish that fact to the satisfaction of the Board.

By agreement the testimony before the referee on the claim of George Valent in his lifetime was made a part of the proofs in the present proceeding brought by his widow. The referee in effect found upon competent evidence (and the Board did not disturb the findings) that decedent became totally disabled on March 31, 1946; and that tests at the Windber Hospital where he was treated for lobar pneumonia from April 26 to May 18, 1946 demonstrated the presence of active tuberculosis of the right lung and a bundle branch block resulting from a degenerative myocardial disease. At the first hearing before the referee on December 2,1947, Dr. A. O. F. Zobel testified that from an examination of the claimant on October 29, 1946, he found a mass in the upper right pulmonary zone but he was then unable to make a definite diagnosis as to the cause of the condition and “was quite confused”. He examined the claimant a second time on May 13, 1947, and then made a diagnosis of a moderately advanced anthraco-silicosis in both lungs with a secondary tuberculosis involvement. At the hearing he expressed the opinion that these conditions had totally disabled the claimant.

*309 The remaining testimony is a maze of conflicting medical opinion. Dr. W. S. Wheeling in charge of Windber Hospital had observed George Valent there during April 1946. He was called by the defendant and testified at the first hearing that a positive sputum test indicated tuberculosis and from electrocardiogram examination he found a bundle branch block. He had read a series of x-ray films and stated that, although he found a mild form of anthraco-silicosis, the disabling factors in his opinion were pulmonary tuberculosis of the right upper lobe and myocardial disease. Dr. H. B. Anderson for defendant used the evidence of the x-ray films and the history taken by Dr. Wheeling and from them, and a heart examination, he diagnosed claimant’s total disability as attributable wholly to tuberculosis of the right lung and a degenerative heart disease. On appeal from the disallowance of the claim by the referee, in that proceeding, the Board appointed an impartial medical expert in chest diseases and remanded the record to the referee. Dr. I. H. Alexander the impartial medical witness so appointed considered all of the testimony before the referee and made a physical examination of claimant. He testified at the hearing ón May 19, 1949, that claimant presented a clinical picture most difficult to evaluate although he was of the opinion that claimant did not then have active tuberculosis but that “well advanced anthraco-silicosis” was present and claimant suffered from a chronic myocardial disease. He gave that tentative opinion as to claimant’s condition, as the most likely under the evidence, but admitted that he was unable to make a positive diagnosis. He found the claimant in an extreme state with a life expectancy in his opinion of only a few weeks and he suggested that final decision be withheld until after death and an autopsy. The suggestion was adopted but the claimant did not die *310 until May á, 1950,- about one year later. His widow then filed the present claim.

A post mortem examination was had. Dr. F. S. Mainzer who performed the autopsy reported that he diagnosed the cause of death as “Anthraco-silicosis tuberculosis” with failure of the right side of the heart due to fibrotic condition of the lungs. Dr. H. A. Slessinger who was present at the autopsy took a different view. He found only moderate anthraco-silicosis to a degree insufficient to have produced either disability or death. By agreement the reports of these physicians, based upon their findings at the autopsy, were referred to the impartial expert who had testified in the case of the employe-claimant in his lifetime. At a hearing on January 31, 1951, Dr. I. H. Alexander, the impartial medical witness, then gave it as Ms opinion based upon the autopsy reports and the history of the case, that-the cause of death was “silico-tubereulosis, and that the cardiac lesions were secondary to [decedent’s] pulmonary pathology”. Dr. W. S. Wheeling who was again called at a further hearing on May 7, 1951, accepted the view expressed in the autopsy report of Dr. Mainzer. In this more or less balance of the proofs the Board on August 21, 1951, referred the record to the Medical Board in accordance with §420 of the Occupational Disease Act of June 21, 1939, P. L. 566, then in effect. The Medical Board found that the cause of death was “anthraco-silicosis with superimposed active tuberculosis”. The Workmen’s Compensation Board in its Fifteenth finding, quoted above, adopted the finding of the Medical Board as to the cause of death but refused an award for the reasons above stated.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A.2d 197, 172 Pa. Super. 305, 1953 Pa. Super. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valent-v-berwind-white-coal-mining-co-pasuperct-1953.