27 A.2d 656 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued April 17, 1942. This is a workmen's compensation case. The employer has appealed from an order of the referee affirmed by the board and the court modifying an earlier award by increasing the amount of compensation. The dates in the history of the case are important.
On March 9, 1933, claimant, the widow of Clarence F. Busch, filed a petition for compensation for herself and four dependent children. The petition alleged that Busch had met his death as a result of an accident in the course of his employment on January 25, 1933. The full record of the hearing is not before us, but it appears from the referee's findings of fact and discussion that the principal dispute was whether Busch died from monoxide poisoning or from an attack of angina pectoris. The only portion of the record which has been printed comprises a statement by the referee that the parties were agreed on the following facts: (1) Employment; (2) the parties were bound by Article *50 III of the Workmen's Compensation Act (Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736); (3) Busch died on January 25, 1933, at defendant's southside plant; and (4) the average weekly wage "for compensation purposes" was $14 per week. The referee resolved the principal issue of fact in favor of claimant, and made an award of compensation at a rate based on the weekly wage of $14 per week. On appeal by defendant, the board affirmed.
The full compensation provided by this award has been paid.
On July 15, 1938, and before all compensation had been paid, claimant filed a "Petition for Termination or Modification of Agreement or Award on Ground of Changed Disability." The only ground alleged was: "The wage base on my case was computed wrong, and the agreement on page 3 of the testimony, that the wages were $14 per week, is wrong." After denying this allegation, the answer averred that the petition was filed too late.
The only evidence offered was a record of Busch's earnings which shows that, during the six-months' period immediately preceding the accident, he worked a total of thirty-nine and a half days and earned a total of $175.24. The referee, applying the formula adopted in Romig v. Champion Blower Forge Co.,
Clearly the petition of July 15, 1938 cannot be treated as a petition under the second paragraph of Sec. 413. As we so recently pointed out in Gleyze v. Hale Coal Co.,
The first paragraph of Sec. 413 provides for the review, modification or setting aside of an agreement. "It has no relation to `awards' made by the referee or the board, following a claim petition filed by the claimant." Ernst v. Sassaman,
The proper procedure was to file a petition for rehearing *52
under Sec. 426 (Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, art. IV, as amended, April 13, 1927, P.L. 186, Sec. 8; Tinsman v. Jones Laughlin Steel Corp.,
Judgment is reversed and entered for defendant.