34 A.2d 837 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued October 25, 1943. In this workmen's compensation case the claimant, Joseph Bronkowski, in the course of his employment with defendant on September 13, 1937, suffered a laceration of the ring finger on the right hand and a chip fracture of the end of the distal phalanx. An agreement was entered into on October 15, 1937, wherein claimant was paid compensation for total disability. On October 4, 1937, he returned to work and sometime between that date and October 18, 1937, signed a final receipt. He worked until January 21, 1938. The next day he suffered a stroke of paralysis affecting his entire right side and causing the loss of speech. On September 11, 1939, he filed a petition alleging the receipt was signed under a mistake of fact and asked that it be set aside. The referee, after a hearing, granted petitioner's prayer and awarded compensation for total disability. Exceptions filed to the referee's findings of fact and conclusions of law were sustained by the board, which held that the proof was insufficient to establish by clear and specific evidence a causal relationship between the accident and the alleged disability. The court below on appeal sustained the board's action. Claimant appealed to this court.
The appellant's chief contention appears in his statement *576
of the first question involved, reading as follows: "Where a Referee finds facts which are sufficient to set aside a final receipt and the Board affirmed by the court below overrules the Referee on the ground that the testimony submitted by the Claimant was not sufficient to set aside a final receipt, is such an order and judgment reviewable?" In his argument he states that the referee's findings of fact are "comparable to the verdict of a jury," and that the function of the board is "to review on appeal the evidence for the purpose of determining whether or not the findings of fact are based upon competent testimony." The appellant evidently misconceives the extent of the board's authority. It seems necessary to repeat what we have frequently, and but recently, said that referees are only representatives of the board, which is the ultimate fact finding body: Smith v.William Hodges Co. et al.,
Under section 423 of the Workmen's Compensation Act of 1915, P.L. 736, the board could not reverse the findings of fact by the referee without granting a hearing de novo, which was not done in this case. That section, however, has been amended, first by the Act of 1919, June 26, P.L. 642, § 6, and finally by the Act of 1937, June 4, P.L. 1552, § 1,
In the instant case Dr. Spencer testified that the *577 claimant was suffering from traumatic encephalitis, the result of embolism. His opinion was based upon the history of an infected finger. His diagnosis and opinion were in conflict with the opinions of three medical witnesses called by the defendant, who testified that there was no relation between the injured finger and the claimant's disability. Dr. Buczko, who treated the claimant from the date of his injury until October 4, 1937, said there was no infection in the injured finger and that it had fully healed.
The Supreme Court has held that the evidence to over-throw a final receipt ". . . . . . must be of a more definite and specific nature than that upon which initial compensation is based; the causation between the alleged disability and the accident must be established by more than simply the testimony of the employee and medical testimony based solely upon the employee's own history of the case." Eberst v. Sears Roebuck Company,
The appellant relies principally upon Hamer v. West VirginiaPulp Paper Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.