Wellinger v. Brackenridge Borough

27 A.2d 716, 149 Pa. Super. 394, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 383
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1942
DocketAppeal, 274
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 716 (Wellinger v. Brackenridge Borough) 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
Wellinger v. Brackenridge Borough, 27 A.2d 716, 149 Pa. Super. 394, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 383 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The judgment in this workmen’s compensation case, entered by the court below in favor of the claimant and in direct conflict with the findings of fact of the board, must be reversed because in so doing the judges of the common pleas not only ignored the applicable principles of law but also, in effect, usurped the functions and powers exclusively vested in the compensation authorities by undertaking to pass upon the credibility of witnesses, weigh the evidence, and substitute their own findings of fact for those of the board.

About 9:30 o’clock in the forenoon of January 6, 1939, the body of claimant’s husband, Fred Wellinger, 61 years of age and employed by the Borough of Brack-enridge, during certain hours of each day, as the filter operator at its water supply reservoir, was found in the reservoir by persons searching for him. An autopsy established that his death was caused by “asphyxiation due to drowning.”

Claimant, contending that her husband had accidentally “slipped” into the water “while working about the reservoir’’ and that his death was therefore compen-sable under Sec. 301 of our Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as amended June 4, 1937, P. L. 1552, 77 PS §§411, 431, filed her claim-petition on January 31, 1939.

The defense interposed by the municipality and its insurance carrier was that Wellinger had committed suicide; it was based upon the concluding paragraph of that section, reading: “......no compensation shall be paid when the injury or death is intentionally self inflicted, but the burden of proof of such fact shall be upon the employer.” This provision relative to the burden of proof is merely a recognition and declaration of the legal “presumption” against suicide. (See Wat *396 kins v. Prudential Insurance Co., 315 Pa. 497, 505, 173 A. 644.)

Upon the issue of fact — suicide or accident — thus squarely raised by the pleadings the ultimate finding of the board (by expressly adopting the language of the referee) reads: (204a)

“Twenty-first: From all of the testimony, together with the coroner’s report, and inferences drawn by your referee from the testimony and surrounding circumstances your referee finds as a fact that the decedent, Fred Wellinger, died between 9:00 P.M., January 5, 1939, and 7:00 a.mv January 6, 1939, by voluntarily taking his own life by jumping into the Brackenridge Borough City Reservoir, as a result of which he died of asphyxiation due to drowning.”

When the record contains any substantial competent evidence supporting a finding of this kind, the only possible ground upon which it could be set aside by any court was clearly stated by our Supreme Court in Ford v. Dick Co., 288 Pa. 140, 135 A. 903. That was a case in which the compensation authorities made an award upon their finding that the employee’s death was accidental. The common pleas, upon the employer’s appeal, said, “We think the testimony clearly shows decedent cut his own throat......[and] proves that the injury was intentionally self-inflicted.” There, as here, there was no eye witness to the occurrence and the case had to be decided one way or the other by a consideration of the circumstantial evidence appearing upon the record. In reversing this substitution by the common pleas of its own finding for that of the board and reinstating the award, the Supreme Court held that the finding of the board in any case then in hand, whether of accident or suicide, is so conclusive that it cannot be reversed by either court unless the evidence against the finding is of the quality and quantity thus defined at page 146 of the opinion:

*397 “Whether the presumption [against suicide] is rebutted is for [the triers of the facts] unless the evidence to the contrary is clear, positive, credible and either uncontradicted or so indisputable in weight and amount as to justify the court in holding that a verdict against it must be set aside as a matter of law.”

In the Ford case the board found that the employer had not successfully rebutted the presumption against suicide, i. e. shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the death was intentionally self-inflicted; but in the case at bar the board, as the ultimate fact-finders and exclusively authorized to weigh the evidence and draw legitimate inferences therefrom, concluded, under all the evidence, that the employer had successfully carried the burden of proof resting upon it. That finding must stand unless the evidence supporting the claimant’s theory of accident is “so clear, positive, credible and either uncontradicted or so indisputable in weight and amount” that if the issue had been tried before a jury a verdict of suicide would have to be set aside, as a matter of law.

The comparatively recent case of Brecker v. P. & R. Coal & Iron Co., 138 Pa. Superior Ct. 421, 10 A. 2d 827, is an illustration of a case in which the testimony required the setting aside of a finding by the board. There, the issue was accident or suicide; the compensation authorities found accident. The common pleas upon reviewing the testimony held, as a matter of law, that the facts and circumstances there presented did not “permit of an inference of accidental death......the inevitable conclusion is that Brecker committed suicide ...... no other consistent conclusion could be arrived at,” and entered judgment for the employer. A majority of the members of this court affirmed that judgment.

On the other side of the line, we have affirmed, under the same principle, judgments based upon findings by *398 the board of accident, where the defense was suicide, in the following cases: Tuttle v. Holland Furnace Co., 111 Pa. Superior Ct. 290, 169 A. 462; Franks v. Point Marion Bridge Co., 128 Pa. Superior Ct. 269, 193 A. 421; Podgur v. Otto Eisenlohr and Bros. Inc. et al., 135 Pa. Superior Ct. 469, 5 A. 2d 603; and Hunter v. American Oil Co. et al., 136 Pa. Superior Ct. 563, 7 A. 2d 479.

That the principle announced in Ford v. Dick Co., supra, and applied by us in the cases above cited, was disregarded by the court below in the present case is apparent from the record.

When the claimant first appealed, on October 31, 1940, to the common pleas from the disallowance of her claim, for the reasons fully set forth in the opinion written for the board by Commissioner Jacoby, the record was returned to the board in an opinion and order by Gardner, J. In the closing paragraphs of the opinion it is said, “It apears to us that the referee and the board were not justified in finding that the deceased came to his death by suicide.”

The dissatisfaction of the court with the finding of the board seems to have been largely based upon its review of the nature and comparative strength of the testimony indicative of suicide in the Ford, Tuttle, Franks and Podgur cases, above cited. The opinion, however, entirely overlooks the important facts that in each of those cases the finding of the board was death by accident,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 716, 149 Pa. Super. 394, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wellinger-v-brackenridge-borough-pasuperct-1942.