200 A. 147 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued April 12, 1938. The claimant, 68 years of age, was injured in the course of his employment on February 26, 1936, about 3:30 P.M. when he was attempting to open the door of a machine which cleaned empty cement sacks. The chain by which the door was operated broke and the door flew open, releasing about 300 sacks therein which fell against him. The impact threw him to the floor and as he was falling he hit a bench and injured his left side. He finished his day's work at 4 o'clock. That night he did not feel well and retired about 9 P.M. The following day he called his physician, Dr. Louis Ignelzi, who testified that claimant had a myocardial degeneration about two years previous to this injury but had recovered sufficiently to be able to work practically every day; that he was "suffering from a slight condition of *494 the lower chest wall, in the mid-axillary line, but the main trouble with this individual was not this injury but the heart condition which had been aggravated as result of this accident." Dr. Ignelzi expressed the opinion that the accident totally disabled the claimant.
Dr. Schleiter, called in behalf of defendant, testified, in chief, that he examined the claimant on April 13, 1936, and, in his judgment, at that time he was recovering from the effects of the injury, although he was not yet able to do any work; that he had a higher pulse pressure than normal but that condition did not necessarily indicate a cardiac insufficiency. He stated that claimant was not suffering from any physical disability due to a defective heart and that the accident did not aggravate a pre-existing heart condition. This witness, however, admitted on cross-examination that he was unable to state from the one examination he had made whether claimant's injury aggravated a pre-existing heart condition.
Dr. Carpenter, another witness called by the defense, testified that he had examined claimant's left shoulder, elbow, chest, and back on March 11, 1936, and found no sign of injury; but he did not testify as to the condition of claimant's heart.
Dr. Heard, a heart specialist who was appointed as an impartial witness by the referee, testified that upon examination of the claimant he found him to be totally disabled due to a myocardial decompensation which had been existing for years; that, while at the time of the accident his heart condition was aggravated to some extent, he did not attribute his disability to the injury, but to an arteriosclerosis heart disease.
The referee awarded compensation, and his action was affirmed by the board. Upon appeal, the learned court below dismissed exceptions to the board's findings and conclusions of law. We must accept the findings of the compensation authorities if there is any competent *495
and relevant evidence to support them: Younch v. Pgh. Term. CoalCorp.,
The defendant argues that the compensation authorities in granting an award were guilty of abuse of discretion as they either disregarded or discredited the testimony of the impartial physician. Section 420 of the Act of June 26, 1919, P.L. 642 (
Taking into consideration that there was proof that claimant had worked steadily for years prior to the accident and had been ill for only a few weeks from influenza in 1933, together with the testimony of Dr. Ignelzi, we cannot say there was not legally competent evidence to support an award.
We are of the opinion that this case was correctly decided by the learned court below.
Judgment affirmed.