27 A.2d 732 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued April 16, 1942. The sole question in this workmen's compensation case is whether claimant,1 on November 30, 1939, sustained *300 an "injury by an accident" within the meaning of Sec. 301 of our Workmen's Compensation Law.2
On the date in question, claimant was seventy-seven years of age. For some years he had been suffering from a "rather severe" osteoarthritis of the lower back for which he was wearing a brace. He was employed by defendant as a construction supervisor. His work frequently required him to walk up and down an inclined plank leading into the building under construction. The plank was twelve or fourteen feet long; the elevated end was three feet above ground level. Between ten and eleven o'clock in the morning of November 30, 1939, he walked down the plank and, when he reached the end or bottom, he made a "quick stop." He said he did this to keep from falling forward. There was no evidence of any external mishap, such as slipping, falling or the like, but he said as he stopped, "I felt a little pain in my back, just jagging me." He continued to work until December 9, 1939, when he quit because of the increasing pain. It is conceded that he was totally disabled until the time of his death, August 25, 1941.
His attending physician, who said he had also treated him for the same condition in 1936, testified that the "osteoarthritis [was] aggravated by trauma, causing acute sciatic, and herpes zoster and shingles." By "trauma" he did not mean a blow, but "A physical effort of any type which will produce injury to tissue. . . . . ." And he said that, ". . . . . . any twist or jarring with the narrowing of the intervertebral space as shown by X-rays, would cause" an injury to the sciatic nerve.
The referee found that claimant's disability resulted from chronic osteoarthritis of the spine "which condition has been gradual in its development, resulting in the claimant's present disability, and which condition *301
is not the result or in any way associated with the accident complained of." The board, principally relying upon our decisions in Betts v. American Stores Co. et al.,
The judgment must be reversed.
In fairness to the lower court, it should be pointed out that subsequent to its order (March 11, 1941), the Supreme Court reversed this court in the Crispin Case,
Judgment is reversed and entered for defendant.