34 A.2d 823 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued November 8, 1943. This appeal presents the single question whether there was an accident within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Law.
The referee's findings of fact were unchallenged throughout. They are clear and concise and establish that:
"4. On January 19, 1942, Norman Buck, the claimant, was in the employ of Milton H. Arndt, the defendant, as a carpenter, and on that morning was engaged in his usual work, helping to build a porch on a house. He was carrying a 2 x 4 rail, which was about 16 feet long, on one of his shoulders. When he was about to put down the rail, he lifted it off his shoulder and, as he did so, he felt a sharp pain in the region of his heart. He dropped the rail and was so severely affected that he immediately had to cease work. He was immediately taken to Dr. Stanley A. Brunner, whose house was about *634 three miles away. The doctor diagnosed the condition as a strain of one of the muscles of the heart, brought about by the lifting of the rail over the claimant's head as he was about to put it down. The claimant's heart was in sound condition up to the time of this accident and was again in sound condition on May 25, 1942, when he was able to return to work without any loss in earnings or earning power. . . . . ."
The referee concluded claimant had suffered a compensable accident and made an award. The board, being of opinion our recent decision in Apker v. Crown Can Co. et al.,
The right to compensation for an unexpected injury caused by the performance by the employee of his usual work in the usual manner is clear. Good v. Pennsylvania Department of Property andSupplies,
The real difficulty is in determining whether claimant has met the burden of establishing by substantial, competent evidence that an accident occurred during the course of his employment — the controlling question of law is whether there is evidence sufficient in quantity and quality to support findings that the injury resulted from the performance of the work and was unforeseen and unexpected.
When the emphasis is shifted to the question of proof the recent decisions of the Supreme Court commencing with Adamchickv. Wyoming Valley Collieries Co.,
The Adamchick, Harring1 and Crispin2 cases establish *635
the principle (followed by us in Brodbeck v. W.F. Trimble Sons,
The Adamchick case has also established, in our opinion — and we leaned on the principle as an alternate ground of decision inApker v. Crown Can Co., supra — that, even where the board has not made an express finding that there was a preexisting condition, the court may act as though it had when the evidence of it is so overwhelming that any other finding would amount to an error of law.
Finally, we have held in Toohey v. Carnegie Coal Corp.,
In the Toohey case, claimant's wholly uncorroborated testimony was that he felt a pain while at work on October 18, 1938, although he continued to work without interruption until November 23, 1938 and first saw a physician on December 1, 1938. In theApker case, there was likewise no corroboration and no interruption in plaintiff's work. We there said, at page 306: "In the present case, there is no evidence of any occurrence *636 whatever except claimant's statement that on the afternoon ofJuly 26, 1939, he felt a sharp pain." (Italics supplied).
In Eberst v. Sears, Roebuck Co.,
The reasons for adopting a strict rule of proof in cases like the present are equally impelling.3
Without attempting to point out just how much or what kind of corroboration is necessary in other future cases which may arise — each case will require an application of the principle and whether it falls on one side of the line or the other will depend upon recognition of differences in degree — it is our opinion that in *637 the present case claimant is entitled to compensation. For, the finding of the referee was not based merely on the statement of claimant that he felt pain while performing his usual work in the usual way; claimant "dropped the rail and was so severely affected that he immediately had to cease work. He was immediately taken to Dr. Stanley A. Brunner. . . . . ." And claimant's heart "was in sound condition up to the time" of the alleged accident.
Since the board adopted all the referee's findings of fact and reversed only the conclusion of law that, upon those facts, claimant had sustained a compensable accident, the court was not bound to return the case but had the power to enter judgment.Apker v. Crown Can Co., supra, at 304.
The order of the court below is affirmed.