Ware v. Northern Metal Co.

24 A.2d 119, 147 Pa. Super. 102, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 239
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1941
DocketAppeal, 258
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 A.2d 119 (Ware v. Northern Metal 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
Ware v. Northern Metal Co., 24 A.2d 119, 147 Pa. Super. 102, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 239 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Kelleb, P. J.,

We are not, satisfied that the petition for rehearing *104 in this case was filed too late. It was filed on January 6,1941, well within a year after the awards of compensation by the board on October 31, 1940. See section 426 of the Act of June 21, 1939, P. L. 520, 77 PS §871, reenacting and amending the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, P. L. 736. The language of section 426 of the Act of 1939 aforesaid is practically identical with section 426 as amended by section 8 of the Act of April 13,1927, P. L. 186, and the decisions construing it under that act are applicable here. We held in Newancavitch v. Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corp. 131 Pa. Superior Ct. 391, 200 A. 137, that the section does not limit a rehearing by the board to cases which have been appealed to the court of common pleas; that the board upon petition of any party and upon cause shown may grant a rehearing of any petition upon which it had made an allowance or disallowance of compensation, or other order or ruling, including cases which have been appealed to the court of common pleas from said order or ruling, provided, (1) that such rehearing shall not be granted more than one yewr after the board made its order of allowance or disallowance, etc., and (2) provided also, as to orders appealed to the common pleas, that the rehearing must be granted before the court has taken final action on the appeal (p. 394). As section 426 relates to procedure, it will be applied to claims which accrued before the effective date of the Act of 1939 (July 1, 1939), as well as those accruing after it. The board, in effect, did reconsider the case to the extent of raising the wage basis used in calculating the aw!ards from $15.40, the deceased employee’s actual weekly wages, to $18.50, the minimum wage basis in death compensation cases fixed in section 307(7), by the amending Act of June 4, 1937, P. L. 1552 1 , as sug *105 gested by appellants; and it accordingly increased the award to the widow to $8.14 weekly (44% of $18.50) and the award to the mother to $8.32 weekly (45% of $18.50), making total weekly payments of $16.46, or $1.06 in excess of the employee’s weekly wages of $15.40; but it refused to adopt the contention advanced by appellants that the total amount of compensation payable to the employee’s dependent wife and totally dependent mother should be $12, instead of the $16,46 awarded in the amended order. Hence this appeal.

Clarence Weaver, the deceased employee, was accidentally drowned in the course of his employment on November 16, 1938. He left a widow, dependent upon him, but no children, and a totally dependent mother.

Claim petitions were filed by the mother (No. 79,302) and widow (No. 80,863) on January 18, 1939 and May 19, 1939 respectively. The board, on October 31, 1940, made ,an award in favor of the widow of $6.78 weekly, being 44% of his weekly wages, $15.40, for 500 weeks, (plus $5 per week thereafter as long as she remained unmarried), and an award in favor of the mother of $6.93 weekly, 45% of $15.40, for 500 weeks. The defendant and its insurance carrier did not appeal, but subsequently filed the petition for a rehearing, with the result above stated.

The awards were calculated according to the percentages of wages fixed by section 307 of the amendment to the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 4, 1937, P. L. 1552, which was in force at the date of the employee’s accidental injury. The pertinent parts of the schedule of compensation fixed in section 307 may be summarized as follows:

1. If the employee left children, but no widow entitled to compensation, award should be made to the guardian of the children, ranging from 30% of wages, not exceeding $12 per week, if he left one or two children, to 65% of wages, not exceeding $18 per week, if he left five or more children.

*106 2. If he left a widow, hut no children, 44% of wages to the widow, not exceeding $12 per week.

3. To widow, if one child, 59% of wages, not exceeding $15 per week.

4. To widow, if two children, 65% of wages, not exceeding $16 per week.

4y2. To widow, if three or more children, 65% of wages, not exceeding $18 per week.

Then comes the clause or paragraph most directly involved, the words italicized being the changes or additions made by the Act of 1937:

“5. If there be neither widow, widower, nor children entitled to compensation, or if the widow, widower or children are npt receiving the maximum compensation payable under this act, then to the father or mother, if dependent to any extent upon the employe at the time of the accident, twenty-five per centum of wages, but not in excess of ten dollars per week ...... And provided further, That if the father or mother was totally dependent upon the deceased employe at the time of the accident, the compensation payable to such father or mother shall be forty-five per centum of wages, but not in excess of fifteen dollars per week, but the provisions of this paragraph in connection with other provisions of this section shall not be deemed to require the payment of compensation in excess of eighteen dollars per week in any one case ”

As paragraph 6 may throw some light on the matter, and was the relevant paragraph in Bucci v. Lincoln Coal Co., 140 Pa. Superior Ct. 538, 14 A. 2d 359, hereinafter referred to, we quote its material provisions also:

“6. If there be neither widow, widower, children, nor dependent parent, entitled to compensation, or if the widoiv, widower, children or dependent parent are not receiving the maximum compensation payable under this act, then to the brothers and sisters until the age of eighteen, if actually dependent upon the decedent for *107 support at the time of his death, fifteen per centum of wages for one brother or sister, and five per centum additional for each additional brother or sister, with a maximum of twenty-five per centum......but the provisions of this paragraph in connection with other provisions of this section shall not be deemed to require the payment of compensation in excess of eighteen dollars per week in any one case

The principal question before us here — which is purely one of law — is what is meant by the words “maximum compensation,” as used in -the italicized portion of paragraph 5, section 307, above, to wit, “or if the widow ......or children are not receiving the maximum compensation payable under this act.”

The maximum compensation payable under the Act for disability is eighteen dollars per week. See sections 306(a) (p. 1560) and 306(c) (p. 1563); and the maximum compensation payable under the Act to dependents of a deceased employee is likewise eighteen dollars. See section 307, supra, paragraphs 1(d), 4%, 5 and 6, pp. 1566, 1567.

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Bluebook (online)
24 A.2d 119, 147 Pa. Super. 102, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-northern-metal-co-pasuperct-1941.