Zbirowski v. John T. Lewis & Bros.

196 A. 606, 130 Pa. Super. 222, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 111
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1937
DocketAppeal, 247
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 196 A. 606 (Zbirowski v. John T. Lewis & Bros.) 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
Zbirowski v. John T. Lewis & Bros., 196 A. 606, 130 Pa. Super. 222, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 111 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, J.,

The court below, in this workmen’s compensation case, sustained exceptions filed by defendant employer *224 to the action of the Workmen’s Compensation Board in affirming the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and award of the referee in favor of claimant and her minor children for the death of the husband and father, an employee of defendant, and entered judgment in favor of defendant. Claimant, for herself and two minor children, has appealed from this judgment entered by the court below.

Claimant filed a claim petition on September 6, 1933, in which she averred that her husband and the father of her minor children, a lead furnace attendant, suffered an accident in the course of his employment with defendant in the month of May, 1931, between 12 o’clock midnight and 3 a. m. on a day, the exact date of which was unknown, and that, as a result of the accidental injury, he died on March 27,1933. The claim petition further stated: “A piece of iron was throw into or fell into the boiling lead and it caused the molten lead to splash on the arm and lower lip of the deceased, resulting in burns on the arm and lip.” Defendant filed an answer to the petition in which it alleged that the cause of deceased’s death was cancer of the lower lip, which had no connection with the accident or injury sustained by the deceased in the course of his employment. After hearings held by referee, the petition was dismissed and compensation disallowed. During the progress of the proceeding, the claim petition was amended to state that the injury to deceased was caused by flames or backfire or by oil igniting, and to fix March 6, 1931, as the date of accident. Claimant then appealed to the Workmen’s Compensation Board which remanded the record to the referee for further hearing and determination, with instructions to ascertain whether the claimant desired to amend the claim petition by substituting October 24, 1929, as the date of the accident, and that, if the petition was so amended, the referee was instructed to appoint an impartial *225 cancer specialist. The claim petition was again amended, fixing the date of the accident on or about October 24, 1929. Hearings were held at which Dr. Thomas A. Shallow appeared as the impartial cancer expert. Considerable additional testimony, including medical, was introduced by defendant. The referee made new findings of fact and conclusions of law, and made an award in favor of claimant in her own right and on behalf of the dependent children of the deceased. Defendant appealed to the board which affirmed the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and award of the referee. Defendant’s appeal to the court of common pleas was sustained, the board reversed, and judgment entered for defendant. This appeal followed.

The appeal involves two questions: (1) Whether there is competent evidence to sustain the findings of fact and award of the referee as affirmed by the board; and (2) whether defendant is entitled to a credit of $51,300 on account of the award.

It is incumbent upon us to view the evidence in the light most favorable to claimant, as the fact-finding bodies have determined the factual issues in her favor.

The record is not free from confusion, but much of this may be attributed to the fact that the hearings were held in 1934 and 1935, while the accidental injury which the deceased employee sustained was, as found by the referee and board, on October 24, 1929.

The evidence shows that deceased suffered an injury as the result of an accident while in the employ of defendant; that there was only one such accident; and that deceased was burned on that occasion only. The testimony is conflicting as to when it occurred. Claimant’s witness Louis Dombroski, a fellow workman, testified that deceased, about i midnight, was burned when flames shot out from an oil burning lead furnace; that, in order to quench the fire, he threw a bag over the head and arms of deceased; that Chaminski, the *226 foreman, was at dinner when the accident actually happened, but that he was there immediately afterwards and talked to deceased. Joe Sikadorn, a witness for defendant, described the occurrence in practically the same manner, and testified that Dombroski was there at the time. Dombroski testified that the accident happened on or about the 6th of March, 1931; Sikadorn fixed the time about November, 1928. Theodore Chaminski, called by defendant, testified that he was foreman in defendant’s plant in 1929; that he had been there employed for 23 years; that deceased worked under him at night; that deceased was an employee of defendant down to March, 1932; that he came in as the accident happened; that he did not know the exact date; that he gave deceased some linseed oil; that about 2 years after the accident he noticed a sore on deceased’s lip; that the day foreman sent deceased to the company doctor at the time the sore was observed by the witness. Dr. Scull, the company doctor, testified that on April 5, 1932, deceased came to him, and he found a small sore on deceased’s lip, and on April 18, 1932, sent him to the Episcopal Hospital. Claimant and her daughter were positive that the accident happened in May, 1931; but claimant testified that, when deceased came home on the morning of the accident, he had a pint of linseed oil given to him by Chaminski for his burns, and that deceased was never burned except on this one occasion. Defendant’s record introduced in evidence showed that deceased suffered an accident in its plant on October 24,1929, at 12:30 a. m., and contains the following: “Nature of injury: Burn of face left side. Describe how accident occurred: Was lighting oil burner when flame shot out hitting face and causing burn.”

Claimant offered in evidence the records of the Episcopal Hospital and of the Jeanes Hospital. They were received without objection. Deceased was admitted to *227 the former on April IS, 1932, and to the latter on July 5, 1932. The Episcopal record shows the following: “Patient [deceased] states that about 2 years ago burned on the face with oil, several days later noticed several small blisters on the lower lip which he states have enlarged during a course of time, including at present the entire lower lip. Patient states that he did not notice definitely that there was a growth on the lower lip until one year ago.” The Jeanes record contains the following: “The patient [deceased] states that approximately 2 to 3 years ago he noticed a whitish nodule just within the lower lip near the outer angle which slowly changed to a red and became ulcerated about three months ago. He can ascribe no apparent cause.......He is quite certain that there was no ulceration previous to a course of radiation which was given three months ago.” About April 23, 1932, deceased went to the Philadelphia General Hospital for radium treatment. The record of the Philadelphia General Hospital, offered in evidence by defendant, contained the following: “Give your own version of the cause of the present trouble: Don’t know.”

Notwithstanding the conflicts in the evidence as to the date of the accidental burn which deceased suffered while in the employ of defendant, we think the record contains competent evidence which supports the finding by the referee and board that the accident in question occurred on October 21, 1929.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A. 606, 130 Pa. Super. 222, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zbirowski-v-john-t-lewis-bros-pasuperct-1937.