In the Matter of the Claim of GERTRUDE S. AHERN, Respondent, against SOUTH BUFFALO RAILWAY COMPANY, Appellant. WORKMEN‘S COMPENSATION BOARD, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Argued December 4, 1951; decided March 13, 1952.
303 N.Y. 545
Nathaniel L. Goldstein, Attorney-General (Daniel Polansky, Wendell P. Brown and Roy Wiedersum of counsel), for Workmen‘s Compensation Board, respondent. I. The record before the referee at the time of the rendition of the award was devoid of any proof establishing that either decedent or the employer was engaged in interstate commerce. (Matter of McGuirk v. Harrington & Co., 262 App. Div. 980, 287 N. Y. 854; Matter of Foerg v. Sackett & Wilhelms Corp., 249 App. Div. 900; Matter of Mittiga v. United States Aluminum Co., 227 App. Div. 680; Matter of Waterman v. Jamaica Hosp., 262 App. Div. 978; Matter of Strand v. Harris Structural Steel Co., 234 App. Div. 341.) II. No substantial constitutional or Federal question is here involved. (Matter of Yeannelis v. Menides, 259 N. Y. 513; Valley S. S. Co. v. Wattawa, 244 U. S. 202; Matter of Kane v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co., 250 App. Div. 888, 277 N. Y. 533; Heagney v. Brooklyn Eastern Dist. Terminal, 190 F. 2d 976.) III. The employer has waived its right to raise the issues of jurisdiction and interstate commerce. It is estopped from raising these questions because of gross laches and conduct prejudicial to decedent‘s widow. (Heagney v. Brooklyn Eastern Dist. Terminal, 190 F. 2d 976; Matter of Haglund v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co., 255 App. Div. 895; Matter of Kane v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co., 250 App. Div. 888, 277 N. Y. 533; Fitzgerald v. Harbor Lighterage Co., 244 N. Y. 132; Matter of Agne v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co., 255 App. Div. 897; Holland v. Atlantic Stevedoring Co., 210 App. Div. 129, 239 N. Y. 605; Matter of McEntee v. City of New York, 207 App. Div. 878, 237 N. Y. 523; Davis v. Wakelee, 156 U. S. 680; People v. Gowasky, 244 N. Y. 451; Vose v. Cockcroft, 44 N. Y. 415; Phyfe v. Eimer, 45 N. Y. 102.)
CONWAY, J. This is an appeal by the self-insured employer from an order of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, Third Department, entered November 27, 1950, unanimously affirming a decision made by the Workmen‘s Compensation Board, pursuant to the provisions of the
A motion for permission to appeal to this court was denied upon the ground that an appeal therefrom to this court lies as of right. (302 N. Y. 877.)
In January, 1945, Thomas J. Ahern, the decedent, who had been employed as a switchman by the South Buffalo Railway Company (hereinafter called the Railway Company) at Lackawanna, New York, where the employer had its principal place of business, filed a claim for disability compensation with the board. The claim was based upon a coronary occlusion which the decedent suffered on July 1, 1944. It was the decedent‘s claim that he was engaged in the regular course of his employment while attempting to throw a switch which had become stuck, and was compelled to use extra exertion which brought about the occlusion, with resultant disability. In its notice to the board dated February 1, 1945, the Railway Company controverted the claim on the grounds of accident and causal relation, expressly reserving the right to controvert the claim for such other reasons as might later appear. Several hearings were held between March and July, 1945.
An award of compensation was rendered in favor of the decedent in September, 1945, for disability compensation in respect of temporary total disability from July 1, 1944, to June 5, 1945. The case was continued for consideration of the extent and length of disability subsequent to June 5, 1945.
The employer paid this initial award in the sum of $1,353.33. A second award was made in favor of the decedent on January 10, 1946, for the period from June 5, 1945, to January 8, 1946. A third award was rendered on February 5, 1947, for the period from January 8, 1946, to February 4, 1947, and payments were directed to be continued by the employer.
The employer paid all of the awards and continued to pay compensation to December 20, 1948, in accordance with the order of the board.
On January 3, 1949, the decedent died as a result of his heart condition. On January 18, 1949, a hearing was held before the referee at which the decedent‘s widow was requested to file a death claim. At that hearing, the question of the widow‘s right to an award for disability compensation for the unpaid two-week period up to the time of decedent‘s death arose. It was at that hearing that the employer, for the first time, challenged the jurisdiction of the board and thus sought to controvert the disability claim. The employer sought to raise the same objection to any claim for death benefits. The referee then rendered the award now on appeal for disability compensation for the final two-week period preceding death, to which reference has been made.
Thereafter in February, 1949, the Railway Company filed with the board an application for review or rehearing of the decision and award of the referee on the ground that at the time of the accident the decedent was employed by the Railway Company in interstate commerce; that under these circumstances the case came within the provisions of the
On appeal the Appellate Division confirmed the board‘s determination.
On the oral argument before us counsel for the Railway Company stated that it is not seeking to recover the payments covering disability from July 1, 1944 (the date of the accident) until December 20, 1948 (the date of the last payment made), but that it is attacking the award of two weeks compensation ($56) made to the decedent‘s widow for the period from December 20, 1948, until the decedent‘s death. The Railway Company contends that the determinations of the board and the Appellate Division were improper and should be reversed and that the proceeding should be remanded to the board for submission of proof as to jurisdiction of the board over the subject matter of the proceeding.
It is well established that Congress, by enacting the
In Matter of Newham v. Chile Exploration Co. (232 N. Y. 37, 42), and Matter of Doey v. Howland Co. (224 N. Y. 30), we have had occasion to consider the question of waiver of lack of jurisdiction of the board.
In the Newham case (supra) we held that the fact that an employer had agreed to bring before the appellate courts of this State solely the question of the claimant‘s employment did not operate as a waiver of his right to question the jurisdiction of the board thereafter; and in the Doey case (supra) we held that an employer, who had recognized the validity of a board award and made payments thereon, was not precluded from moving to vacate the award on the ground of lack of jurisdiction, where subsequent to the payments under such award the United States Supreme Court determined that the New York State Workmen‘s Compensation Law was void insofar as it applied to persons engaged in maritime work, such as the employee. In this latter case we concluded that since the board lacked jurisdiction to render the award, any award in fact made by the board was a nullity and would be so treated at any time the parties saw fit to question it by either a direct or collateral attack.
The foregoing cases establish unequivocally that the State is powerless to invade the field of liability as to injuries to railroad employees engaged in interstate commerce. There is another avenue of approach to the problem which bears exploration, however.
The
Prior to the decision in the Callen case (supra) we held in Brassel v. Electric Welding Co. (239 N. Y. 78), that where an employee engaged in maritime work had accepted a final award of the New York State Workmen‘s Compensation Board, his cause of action for damages growing out of the same injuries, though based upon maritime law, was extinguished. At page 80 we declared: “We think the acceptance of the payment has destroyed the right of action. The question is not whether the award has the effect of a binding adjudication. We may assume that it is void, and that, at least while unpaid, it might have been set aside or disregarded (Matter of Doey v. Howland Co., Inc., 224 N. Y. 30). The question is whether a right of action has survived the collection of the award and the retention of the proceeds.”
The Brassel and Larscy cases (supra), although decided in 1924 and 1925, represent the state of the law as it existed prior to 1922 when the injuries in those cases took place. At that time section 114 of the New York Workmen‘s Compensation Law declared that the act applied to persons engaged in intrastate commerce and interstate or foreign commerce only to the extent that their mutual connection with intrastate work was clearly separable from interstate or foreign commerce. In 1922 (L. 1922, ch. 615), section 114 of the Compensation Law was renumbered section 113 and the following addition was made by the Legislature: ” awards according to the provisions of this chapter may be made by the board in respect of injuries subject to the admiralty or other federal laws in case the claimant, the employer and the insurance carrier waive their admiralty or interstate commerce rights and remedies, and the state insurance fund or other insurance carrier may assume liability for the payment of such awards under this chapter.”
In 1926, in Fitzgerald v. Harbor Lighterage Co. (244 N. Y. 132, CARDOZO, J.), we considered, for the first time, the statutory addition to section 113. It is interesting to note that we have not had occasion to consider that addition since the Fitzgerald case. There the plaintiff was injured on a vessel while working as a stevedore in navigable waters. He filed a claim for compensation for the resultant disability. The employer submitted to the jurisdiction of the board. Two awards were made and
Here, it is clear, that we must construe the addition to section 113, in the words of Judge CARDOZO, “In the setting of the context,” and it is equally clear that there is present in the facts already detailed ” a concurrent evidence of intention having the force of an agreement to forego one set of remedies and abide by another “, and that such intention has been announced by all who must participate in such an agreement.
In the Report of the Joint Legislative Committee (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1922, No. 55) which recommended the enactment of the above-quoted addition to the New York Workmen‘s Compensation Law, the following statement appears (p. 12): “The proposed amendment will permit those who choose to elect to accept the provisions of our law to so elect, and the one to pay [and] the other to accept compensation thereunder.”
In the light of the wording of the addition to section 113 providing for waiver and the statement of legislative intent above quoted, it cannot be urged that the statute was intended simply to codify the rule that only a final award of the board, made and paid, precludes an individual from asserting his Federal rights. If that were so, section 113 would be meaningless. It provides that if the parties waive their Federal rights and remedies the board may act. If the payment of a final
There is nothing contained in the Constitution of the United States which prohibits, nor has the United States Supreme Court held, that, after an accident, all interested parties may not dispose of their controversy as they themselves see fit, provided that the means whereby such dispute is settled or adjusted does not violate public policy. If all of the parties agree that the employer and carrier will pay and the employee will accept compensation, in the amounts and manner provided by the workmen‘s compensation statute of a State, rather than resort to litigation and the State has permitted its compensation board to make awards under such circumstances, we can conceive of no valid objection to such an arrangement. If the parties agree on a sum of money to be paid in discharge of the claim for personal injuries, such agreement, if there has been no overreaching or fraud, does not violate any constitutional provision, Federal legislation or announced public policy. Neither is there any sound reason why the parties may not designate an impartial third person or group of persons to determine the amount to be paid in extinguishment of the claim. To our mind that is all that section 113 of the Workmen‘s Compensation Law purports to accomplish.
The court answered the first two questions in the affirmative. In determining the third question the court pointed out that the New Jersey statute in question consisted of two parts. One part dealt with liability founded upon negligence and the other liability in the absence of negligence if the injury to the employee was an incident of the service in which he was
With respect to the means by which such agreement was to be manifested the statute provided that every contract of hiring “shall be presumed to have been made” with reference to that part of the statute and unless the contract or a notice from one party to the other contain ” an express statement in writing” to the contrary, it “shall be presumed” that the parties “have agreed to be bound” by that part of the statute. (Emphasis supplied.) The court stated at pages 173-174: “There was no express agreement in this instance and there is no basis for regarding the carrier as in any way bound by this part of the statute, save as it provides that an agreement to be bound by it shall be presumed in the absence of a declaration to the contrary. But such a presumption cannot be indulged here * * *.” (Emphasis supplied.) The court held that it was beyond the power of a State to interfere with the operation of the
It will be seen that the court did not declare that it is beyond the power of a State to enact a statute conferring upon the employer, employee and insurance carrier the privilege of compromising their dispute by submitting it to the board. Moreover, the language of the Supreme Court in the Erie case (supra) above quoted, indicates that the court would have reached a different result had the parties actually agreed to forego their Federal rights and remedies.
Section 113 of the New York Workmen‘s Compensation Law, unlike the New Jersey statute, does not require the parties to choose between the Federal act and the State Workmen‘s Compensation Law, nor does it impute such an election to them by means of a presumption as did the New Jersey statute. Section 113 merely offers the parties a means whereby they may compromise their dispute, if they are mutually desirous of so doing.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has recently considered, in the case of Heagney v. Brooklyn Eastern Dist. Terminal (190 F. 2d 976, certiorari denied 342 U. S. 920), section 113 of our Compensation Law, and the conclusion of that court that the section is valid and that the agreement of the parties to abide by the awards of the State board, plus payment of a substantial number of such awards, constitute a release or compromise of the parties’ rights under the Federal act, is in agreement with the position that we have outlined above.
In that case the plaintiff, a hostler working atop one of the defendant‘s locomotives, brought an action in a Federal District Court pursuant to the provisions of the
It is to be noted that in that case the employee expressly declared that he had no intention of suing his employer but wished to receive voluntary compensation. The employer, in turn, expressly declared that it was waiving the “Question of Jurisdiction.” The parties submitted to the jurisdiction of the board and pursuant to the direction of that board the employer tendered and the employee accepted a number of interlocutory awards.
It was the employee‘s contention that “waiver is insufficient; there must be an ‘accord and satisfaction,’ meaning thereby a ‘final award’ by the Board duly paid and accepted.” (P. 978.)
The United States Court of Appeals concluded, to use the words of Judge FRANK who dissented, that “His [plaintiff‘s] agreement, plus payment by defendant of a substantial portion of those partial awards, constituted a release or ‘full compromise’ of whatever he might otherwise have recovered by suit under the federal statutes, and thus constituted a complete defense to plaintiff‘s present suit.” (P. 980.)
Several of the statements of the majority of the court bear repetition here. At page 978 it was said: “When counsel came into the case and conducted its prosecution over many
The court then considered the employee‘s claim that “waiver is insufficient“, and that “there must be an ‘accord and satisfaction‘“. In discussing that question the court recognized the general rule that a claim is not discharged until the accord executory or agreement is satisfied or performed but pointed out that the phrase “executory accord” is a confusing one, and that the test to be applied in determining whether the parties have given up their Federal rights is as follows: “What we must look for, therefore, is a fair compromise whereby the parties settle their dispute in substitution for the litigation permitted by the Federal Acts; there is no mystic significance to be accorded a ‘satisfaction’ upon some assumed ‘final award.’ When a state procedure accomplishes just that by agreement of all concerned, it should therefore be at least as valid as a formal release secured on payment of a few hundred dollars. And certainly no invidious distinction should be made so that only a purely temporary injury can be settled in this way, and that any permanent injury is excluded from settlement just because the state process requires continuing payments for the good of the injured employee.” (P. 979.)
In the Heagney case (supra), the employee — the one seeking to escape from his declared intention and to question jurisdiction of the board — made his agreement in words. In the case now before us the employer which made its agreement by conduct rather than declared intention, must be held to be equally bound since in the law there is no distinction between agreements made by words and those made by conduct. There was an equal disclosure of intention to settle the dispute through the board “in substitution for the litigation permitted by the Federal Acts“. It is elementary that there can be no agreement unless all of the parties involved intended to enter into one. Moreover, it is well-established contract law that in determining whether the parties possessed the necessary intention to con-
In the case now before us it is clear that there was no agreement between the parties when the initial hearings were held. At that time the employer had not agreed with the employee as to the amount the deceased was to receive, nor did it agree to have the board determine the sum to be paid. At the initial hearings held between March 6, 1945, and July 3, 1946, the employer indicated its unwillingness to have the board act by controverting the claim on the issues of accident and causal relation. Furthermore, we do not think that it may be said that the employee was then disposed to declare that, in filing a claim, he was prepared to abide by the ruling of the board, so as to be foreclosed from claiming his Federal rights should the board deny him compensation. However, it is clear that the conduct of the parties subsequent to the board‘s ruling on the questions of accident and causal relation and its decree that compensation be paid, establishes, as conclusively as the evidence in the Heagney case (supra), that it was the mutual desire of the parties that the board, acting as an impartial third person, should determine the amount to be paid in discharge of the claim by the deceased.
The employer, in thus arguing, overlooks the fact that its other conduct belies its protestations of lack of intent and does evince the intention to enter into a compromise whereby the dispute in question might be settled without litigation: First: No appeal was ever taken by the employer from any of the awards made except that herein which has to do with the award covering the last two weeks of the decedent‘s life, and second: From the outset the employer was represented by counsel and is chargeable with the knowledge that the board was powerless to require it to pay compensation unless it waived its Federal rights and remedies. The records in our court commencing with Ives v. South Buffalo Ry. Co. (201 N. Y. 271), and continuing through Herke v. South Buffalo Ry. Co. (227 N. Y. 618) and Keogh v. South Buffalo Ry. Co. (233 N. Y. 31) indicate clearly that the various counsel for the Railway Company, and thus the Railway Company, over the last forty years have been cognizant of the nature of its liability to its employees, and the remedies of the latter both under the Compensation Law and the
The employee‘s intention to thus settle the dispute is equally clear. The employee filed his claim for workmen‘s compensation six months after the accident. At the first hearing, held less than two months thereafter, he was represented by counsel. We must assume that at that time he was fully aware of any Federal rights that he might possess. Furthermore, he was bound to know, whether in fact he did know, that the New York Workmen‘s Compensation Board was powerless to award him compensation unless he waived his Federal rights and remedies. With this knowledge he was content to submit his claim to that board. At no time did the deceased indicate a desire to enforce his Federal rights. In the Heagney case (supra) it was said at page 978: “If there is ever to be any settlement of legal claims we feel that it must be in a case such as this where a claimant before an administrative board is adequately represented by counsel over a long period, during which the rights, potential and actual, of the client are perfectly obvi-
That language is equally applicable here. When the acts of the decedent and the employer are viewed in the light of what reasonably intelligent persons would naturally have intended by them, we think the inference, fairly to be drawn, is that both the employer and employee intended that the board‘s determinations be taken ” in substitution of the litigation permitted by the Federal Acts “. That being true, we can conceive of no sound reason why the employer should be permitted to urge his Federal rights at this late date.
The Fitzgerald case (supra) is not to the contrary. It is essential to note that in that case (1) the employee asserted his lack of intention of waiving his Federal rights, (2) the employer in its answer declared that in making payments it had acted under mistake of fact and law and asked for repayment, and (3) there was no evidence that the carrier supplied the moneys with which the provisional awards were paid. Certainly those being the facts it could not be held that all of the parties had waived or agreed to forego their Federal rights and remedies. Here (1) the employee has indicated his willingness to forego his Federal rights and remedies, (2) the employer has not asked for repayment of the awards on the ground that it acted under mistake of fact and law in paying them and there is no question about the agreement of an insurance carrier since the employer is self-insured.
The Newham and Doey cases (supra) decided prior to the enactment of the addition to section 113, which held that the lack of jurisdiction in the board had not been waived, are distinguishable. In neither of those cases could it be said that the facts established that the parties with full knowledge of their Federal rights jointly waived or agreed to relinquish them and resort to compensation as a substitute for litigation and since then the statute has been amended.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
If the Railway Company had challenged the jurisdiction of the Board prior to the making of any award, that challenge, it is indisputable, would have been sustained, since, on the facts posited, the
On the strength of the employer‘s acquiescence in, and payment of, the three temporary awards, and its continuation of payments subsequent to the third temporary award, the Workmen‘s Compensation Board made a finding of fact that the employer had “waived ” its jurisdictional objection and was further precluded from asserting such objection by reason of laches and estoppel. The Appellate Division similarly relied
It is not entirely clear whether the decision of this court is predicated on the theory of waiver or on the view that the facts establish a binding executory accord between the parties. Whichever be the basis of the decision, I am constrained to dissent.
We all agree that Congress, by enacting the
We are all further agreed upon the fundamental principle that a determination made by a tribunal that is without jurisdiction of the subject matter is a nullity, and that the lack of jurisdiction cannot be waived or overcome by the consent or agreement of the parties. (See Matter of Doey v. Howland Co., supra, 224 N. Y. 30, 39; Matter of Newham v. Chile Exploration Co., supra, 232 N. Y. 37, 42; cf. Mitchell v. Maurer, 293 U. S. 237, 244; United States v. Corrick, 298 U. S. 435, 440.) In such circumstances, this court has held, “it is elementary that no agreement, waiver or stipulation could confer upon the state of New York or its courts or commissions, jurisdiction which it does not and cannot possess.” (Matter of Newham v. Chile Exploration Co., supra, 232 N. Y. 37, 42.)
The court, however, reaches the result it does herein in reliance upon an amendment to section 113 of the Workmen‘s Compensation Law enacted in 1922, subsequent to the Doey
In Fitzgerald v. Harbor Lighterage Co. (244 N. Y. 132), the only case in which we have heretofore had occasion to consider the amended statute, we found it “unnecessary to determine whether waiver in accordance with this section [§ 113] would supersede the remedy in admirality“, since we concluded that the facts did not establish a ” waiver ” of the kind required by the statute (244 N. Y., p. 136).
Considered purely as a matter of ” waiver “, I am unable to see how the mere declaration by the state legislature that the parties may ” waive ” the state‘s lack of jurisdiction of the subject matter, can have any added force, when the acts of the parties, relied upon as constituting the waiver, would, in the absence of the statutory declaration, be entirely ineffectual to confer jurisdiction. If the state is excluded from the particular sphere of action, it follows that the state is powerless by its own fiat to confer jurisdiction on itself or on its tribunals.
The parties may, of course, enter into a valid agreement for a release or a compromise or an accord and satisfaction of the employee‘s claims under the
The court is apparently interpreting section 113 as giving binding effect, as an executory accord, to an express or even implied agreement by the parties to accept any award that
If we put aside section 113, it is plain that under our settled course of decision nothing short of an actual accord and satisfaction, evidenced either by express agreement of the parties or by the payment by the employer or insurance carrier, and the acceptance by the employee, of a final award of the Workmen‘s Compensation Board would operate to extinguish the employee‘s claims under the federal statute and thereby supplant the federal remedy. (See, e.g., Brassel v. Electric Welding Co., 239 N. Y. 78.) Thus, we have squarely held that the ” acceptance of an award not final is at most an accord, and not a satisfaction, with the result that the cause of action for damages continues unextinguished, though subject to a set off to the extent of partial payments “. (Fitzgerald v. Harbor Lighterage Co., supra, 244 N. Y. 132, 135; see, also, Larscy v. Hogan & Sons, 239 N. Y. 298.)
Whether or not any special significance is to be assigned to section 113 in this regard, Fitzgerald v. Harbor Lighterage Co. (supra, 244 N. Y. 132) impresses me as decisive of the issue now presented. That case involved a stevedore who, injured while working on a vessel in navigable waters, filed a claim for disability compensation with the state compensation tribunal. Two awards were made and paid, covering a period of almost a year, and the case was then placed on the “final adjustment calendar“. Before a final award was made, the employee commenced a suit for damages under the federal act. The court, in an opinion written by Judge CARDOZO, held that, since no final award had been made, the acceptance of the temporary awards constituted ” at most an accord, and
In enacting
Moreover, the court‘s decision seems necessarily to be grounded on an implied finding as to the existence of an agreement between the parties in the nature of a binding executory accord. Even assuming that the court has the power — which I very much doubt (cf. Murray Co. v. Lidgerwood Mfg. Co., 241 N. Y. 455, 458; Shohfi v. Shohfi, 303 N. Y. 370; Matter of McGrinder v. Sullivan, 290 N. Y. 11; Cohen and Karger, Powers
I go further. Even if section 113 were to be given full effect in this case, the facts do not establish the requisite elements of the ” waiver ” envisaged by that section.
In Fitzgerald v. Harbor Lighterage Co. (supra, 244 N. Y. 132), as noted above, though the employee accepted payments under two temporary compensation awards covering a period of almost a year, and though no jurisdictional objection was voiced by any of the parties at the time of the making of such awards, this court held that section 113, even if valid, did not operate to extinguish the employee‘s right of action under the federal act, since “the waiver which it contemplates has never been announced.” Thus, the court (per CARDOZO, J.), declared (pp. 136-137): “Claimant, employer and insurance carrier must unite in foregoing their admiralty remedies before the statute will be operative, if its validity be assumed. * * * We put aside the question whether waiver by the claimant within the meaning of this section is sufficiently established by the election to file a claim, unaccompanied by express disclaimer of admiralty remedies. Even if this be assumed, the defendant is not
The mere payment and acceptance of temporary awards can no more be given the effect of a ” renunciation ” of the federal remedy herein, than they were in the Fitzgerald case (supra), notwithstanding the longer period covered by the payments in this case. The court‘s opinion in Fitzgerald cannot be read as assigning controlling importance to any one of the factors urged by Judge CONWAY (supra, pp. 553-554), and to distinguish that case on the grounds suggested is to ignore its basic rationale that the mere payment of temporary awards, amounting to ” acquiescence “, does not constitute a waiver or a renunciation by the employer of the right to challenge the unauthorized assumption of jurisdiction by the Board.
The order of the Appellate Division and the decision of the Workmen‘s Compensation Board should be reversed and the proceeding remitted to the Board for consideration of the objections raised by the employer to the Board‘s jurisdiction over the subject matter of this claim.
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., LEWIS, DESMOND, DYE and FROESSEL, JJ., concur with CONWAY, J.; FULD, J., dissents in opinion.
Order affirmed.
