264 Pa. 529 | Pa. | 1919
Opinion by
Bridget Clark, widow of Patrick Clark, sought compensation for the death of her husband; the referee found in her favor, but the Workmen’s Compensation Board reversed; the Common Pleas of Luzerne County affirmed the board, and claimant has appealed to this court.
The referee reported, inter alia, as follows: “The testimony in this case shows that Patrick Clark, the claimant’s husband, was employed by defendant company in looking after a line of pipe used for the purpose of conveying silt from the surface into its mine; his duties were to keep that line in repair, and, in order to enable him to examine it under ground, he carried an open lamp; on the morning of February 23, 1916, his lifeless body was found inside the mine, a short distance from this pipeline, and Ms lighted lamp about two feet away from him; his clothing was burning and he had severe burns upon his body; he was in a kneeling position, on his hands,
The report also contains these further findings: (1) “The vomiting was due to probably one of three causes, either noxious gases, the smell of the burning clothing, or fright from discovery of his clothing being on fire”; (2) deceased was afflicted with a “syphilitic condition, in which he might have lived four or five years, or his death might have occurred at any time”; (3) although this condition rendered deceased more susceptible to a rupture of the aorta, than he otherwise would have been, yet, in point of fact, the rupture was immediately “caused by extra effort in vomiting”; finally (4), deceased “met with an accident and sustained injuries which caused his death,” while engaged in “discharging his duties” as an employee of defendant.
Defendant asked review by the compensation board upon the ground of lack of evidence to sustain the referee’s finding of fact that “the death of decedent was due to a rupture of the aorta......, caused by extra effort in vomiting, due to one of three causes,” etc.; and its appeal was classed by the board, not as raising a question of fact as to whether the evidence warranted, or justified, this finding, but rather as involving a pure point of law concerning the presence of any evidence to sustain the finding. The board decided there was no such evidence; and, therefore, set aside the referee’s compensation order.
We say the appeal was classed as involving a question of law, and not of fact, because the referee was reversed without a hearing de novo, such a hearing being essential whenever the intention is to disturb findings of fact
As some explanation of the erroneous course thus pursued, the report of the board indicates a fundamentally wrong idea of its powers and duties. For instance, it is there stated: “[1] We have no evidence that will justify us in connecting the vomiting with the death, nor [2] the burnt clothing with the vomiting”; whereas, on the appeal then pending, neither was a proper test to be applied.
We shall consider the second test first. Under the Pennsylvania statute (Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736) the injury need not arise out of, or be due to, the person’s employment, it is sufficient if it happens in the course thereof: Lane v. Horn & Hardart Baking Co., 261 Pa. 329, 335. Here, concededly, Clark died in the course of his employment, but the question is, did he meet death as a result of accidental “violence to the physical structure of the body”? McCauley v. Imperial Co., supra, p. 327. Irrespective of anterior causes, if the vomiting took place and this “extra effort” caused the rupture of the aorta, these facts were sufficient to entitle the claimant to compensation, and it was not essential that the “burnt clothing” should be connected with the vomiting. In other words, the rupture itself, occurring from “extra effort in vomiting,” would, under the circumstances, constitute accidental violence to the physical structure of the body, within the broad meaning of that term as heretofore defined by us: McCauley v. Imperial Co., supra, p. 326-7; Lane v. Horn & Hardart Co., supra.
All of which brings us to a consideration of the first test (supra) applied in examining the referee’s findings and the testimony relating to the cause of Clark’s death. At this point the board mistook its powers and duties as an appellate tribunal, and thereby fell into material error. The question was not as to the existence of evidence which, in the opinion of the reviewing body, would “justify” it “in connecting the vomiting with the death,” but, was there any evidence which, within the bounds of
Therefore, the conclusions of law, pretending to assert a lack of evidence to sustain the findings of the referee, having been arrived at through an examination that ignored the controlling rules which should have guided the board, cannot stand; and the only findings of fact properly before us are those of the referee. In the absence of correctly derived conclusions of law to overcome these findings, they are decisive (McCauley v. Imperial Co., supra, p. 329); thereon claimant is entitled to compensation, and the board erred in deciding otherwise, as did the court below.
The judgment of the common pleas and the order of the compensation board are both reversed; the award of the referee is reinstated and affirmed.