31 A.2d 739 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued March 8, 1943. In this workmen's compensation case, the Workmen's Compensation Board set aside the referee's findings, substituted its own findings and awarded compensation to the claimant for a hernia. Defendants' appeal was dismissed by the court below.
Appellants contend that claimant did not establish his case by "incontrovertible proof" required by the Pennsylvania Workmen's Compensation Act of 1939, P.L. 520, § 306(h),
The phrase "incontrovertible proof" as employed in § 306(h) must be read in its context. That section recognizes that hernia is generally "a physical weakness or ailment, which ordinarily develops gradually" and, therefore, is not compensable "unless incontrovertible proof" is offered to rebut what we have called a statutory presumption: Hopp v. Taub, *216
It should be added that claimant explained his discrepancies to the satisfaction of the board. He was not represented by counsel at the first hearing and in his petition for a rehearing alleged that "he was led to believe and was always given the impression that he would receive compensation without objections from the insurance carrier and that the hearing before the referee was but a mere formality prerequisite to receiving compensation." One gathers from the reading of the testimony that this unlearned claimant, without the assistance of counsel at the first hearing, in the language of the court below, "with the courtesy of his race, wanted to be as obliging as he could to the white gentlemen who questioned him." If his explanation did not restore his credibility, the board, nevertheless, did grant him a rehearing and favorably considered the testimony of the unimpeached witness who appeared for the first time at the second hearing. We are not warranted in disturbing its conclusion.
The judgment is affirmed. *217