272 Pa. 494 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
Joe Gairt, claimant and appellee, on October 10,1919, presented a petition to the Workmen’s Compensation Board to reinstate a compensation agreement, which had been entered into May 4, 1917, between him, the Curry Coal Mining Company, defendant, and the ¿Etna Life Insurance Company, insurance carrier (intervenor), for injuries which Gairt had sustained, on March 10, 1917, while in the course of his employment as a coal miner for defendant.
On July 29, 1918, the compensation authorities made an order that the agreement of May 4,1917, should “terminate,” for “total disability,” as of July 9, 1918, and that further compensation, “to be determined after claimant has returned to work and his loss of earning power has been established,” should be paid for “partial disability.” Payments ceased as of July 9, 1918. Between December 2,1918, and March 24,1919, three separate petitions were presented by Gairt, asking for review and modifications, all of which were refused. On August 24, 1920, the board, acting on the petition of October 10, 1919, first above mentioned, found that claimant was totally and permanently disabled; and it made an order reinstating the compensation agreement as of July 9, 1918. This was affirmed by the common pleas; and thereupon defendant and the insurance carrier appealed.
Appellants contend that the compensation authorities were without jurisdiction to make the order now before us, because claimant’s right to receive compensation covering the period since July 9, 1918, was finally adjudicated against him by the refusal of the three prior petitions, and the board’s power to act in that regard was exhausted. As to this, the court below held that the
We quite agree with the conclusion reached by the compensation board and affirmed by the learned court below; and, since the chairman of the former, in his opinion filed in this case, so correctly states the law, we quote therefrom as follows: “The act gives to the board jurisdiction over an agreement [for purposes of review] at any time during the life of the agreement, or during the period of time [it has] to run. A disability agree
The fundamental error of appellants lies in their idea that a proceeding under the Workmen’s Compensation Law is “litigation,” and that established rules and principles of common law practice should be applied thereto ; whereas the fact is quite the contrary.
Although the arrangement inaugurated by the Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 735, to pay standardized compensation in cases of injury or death, rests on the theory of contract between employer and employee (Anderson v. Carnegie Steel Co., 255 Pa. 33, 39, 40), yet, in administering this plan, those vested with authority act for the State, in its capacity of parens patriae, and the relevant legislation clearly contemplates that, after a compensation agreement has been filed, or an order for compensation made, persons affected may apply for review and modification during the time the agreement or order has to run: Article IV, section 423, Act of 1915; article IV, section 408, and particularly article IV, section 413, Act of 1919; Hughes v. American Int. S. S. Corp., 270 Pa. 27, 30; also see Kuca v. Lehigh V. C. Co., 268 Pa. 163, 166, holding that procedural párts of the Act of 1919 apply to pending cases. Under this benevolent piece of legislation, one in the position of the present claimant may, from time to time, come to those in authority saying, “Since you stopped payments to me, facts have developed which show my need of, and right to, compensation; I pray you to look into these facts and determine what, if anything, I am now entitled to receive”; and that, in substance, is what the present claimant did.
We need refer to but one remaining point suggested by appellant: While the board makes reference to the fact that it had not been demonstrated whether or not
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.