Opinion by
In this workmen’s compensation case the wife-claimant alleged that her husband’s death resulted from injuries sustained in a fall while in the employ of defendant. The referee disallowed compensation. The Workmen’s Compensаtion Board affirmed the referee; and the County Court of Allegheny County affirmed the board’s order of disallowance.
The facts as established by the evidence are not in dispute. Testimony of claimant and her witnesses was uncоntradicted. The defendant-employer presented no evidence. Thomas W. Allen, deceased husband of claimant, was employed by defendant at the mill of the Pittsburgh Steel Company, Monessen, Pennsylvania. On October 19, 1951, while аscending a flight of stairs, he turned and fell, face down, to the concrete floor below. Before falling he had taken about two steps up the stairway. After the fall his face was skinned and bruised and he was bleeding in the region of his eye and nose. He was taken by ambulance to a hospital where he was examined by a doctor, but he had died on the way. Deceased’s death occurred about 3:30 p.m., but claimant was not notified of this fact until about 7:30 that evening, when she was informed of her husband’s death by a foreman of the defendant-employer and another employe. Deceased was apparently in good health, and as far as the testimony shows was a sound, healthy individual. There was no testimony as to the cause of his death.
Prior to deceased’s death, claimant resided with him at 801 West Main Street, Monongahela City, Pennsylvania. Immediately after his death claimant moved to North Carolina, аnd is presently living in Rocky Point in that state. Claimant testified she mailed the claim petition on October 5, 1952. It was mailed from Burgaw, North Carolina, but was not received by the board *289 until October 20, 1952. This was one day beyond the statutory limitation which prоvides that such claims are barred unless filed within one year after the accident. See section 315 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2,1915, P. L. 736, as amended, 77 PS §602.
The referee, in his order of disallowance of compеnsation, found that the claim petition was filed on October 20, 1952, more than one year after the date of the alleged accidental injury; and that the deceased did not sustain an accidental injury while in the course of his employment. These findings of fact were affirmed by the board. The board in its discussion observed that no medical testimony had been produced by claimant to establish any connection between the alleged accident and the subsequent death.
Apparently after the appeal had been taken to the County Court of Allegheny County from the board’s order of disallowance but before final action by that court, claimant petitioned the bоard for a rehearing, offering to prove by competent medical authority that deceased died as the result of the fall and not as the result of any preexisting condition. The board denied the petition and refused tо grant a rehearing, indicating that claimant had adequate opportunity to present such medical testimony in support of her claim. The board’s action in this matter seems to have been based on the assumption that claimant failed to establish an accident, and that nothing could be gained by presenting such testimony as claimant now offered.
The court below held that the claim petition was filed more than one year after the allеged accident; that claimant failed to show the happening of an accident ; that there was no evidence of causal relationship between an accident and deceased’s death; and that clаimant failed to give the defendant-employer the required notice of the alleged accident within ninety days after the occurrence thereof.
*290
Claimant’s claim was not barred by the failure to give proper notice of the accident or by delay in filing the claim petition. Section 311 of the Act of June
2,
1915, P. L. 736, as amended, 77 PS §631, provides: “No compensation shall be allowed unless notice be given within ninety days after the occurrence of the injury.” The purpose for requiring such notice is to protect the employer from stale claims for accidental injuries, of which he had no knowledge, made after the opportunity had passed for a full and comрlete examination thereof.
Wilkinson v. United Parcel Service of Pennsylvania, Inc. (No. 1),
All of our decisions on these subjects are to the effect that the Workmen’s Compensation Act must be liberally construed, and that technicalities are not looked upon with favor in compensation cases.
Wilkinson v. United Parcel Service of Pennsylvania, Inc. (No. 1),
supra,
In this case we are of the opinion that the finding of the referee that the deceased did not sustain an accidental injury while in the course of his employment, adopted by the board and affirmed by the court below, is not sustained by the record. Where, as here, the triers of the facts refused to find facts in favor of the
*292
party having the burden of proof, the question on review is not whether competent evidence would sustain such a finding, if made, but whether
there
was a capricious disregard of the evidence in the refusal so to find.
Williams v. New Bethlehem Burial Service,
A case applicable to the present factual situation is
Leber v. Naftulin,
*293
In
Hodgdon v. Kerr Salt Company,
However, a claimant seeking compensation has the burden to establish a causal connection between the accident and the employe’s death.
Skomra v. Weirton Coal Company,
Claimant, in her petition for rehearing, offered to prove that deceased died as a result of the fall and not from a preexisting condition. Since the Workmen’s Compensation Act is a remedial statute and is to he liberally construed in order to accomplish its broad humanitariаn purpose
(McAvoy v. Roberts & Mander Stove Company,
supra,
The judgment is reversed, and the record is remanded to the court below with direction to return it to the Workmen’s Compensation Board for further consideration and determination consistent with this opinion.
