70 A.2d 472 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1949
Argued September 29, 1949.
After hearing, on the claim petition of plaintiff's decedent during his lifetime, the referee found him totally disabled from silicosis and entered an appropriate award. On appeals of both the employer and the Commonwealth, the award was affirmed by the Workmen's Compensation Board. Thereafter, the defendant employer alone appealed from the award to the common pleas. In disposing of that appeal the lower court, by order dated February 3, 1942, set aside the award and entered judgment in favor of the defendant employer and its insurance carrier. Based upon the Commonwealth's failure to appeal to the common pleas of Philadelphia County from the affirmance of the award by the Board, the claimant, on November 24, 1943 entered judgment against the Commonwealth ostensibly under § 428 of the then applicable Act of June 4, 1937, P. L. 1552,
The precise point here raised has not been squarely decided, but from the import of our decisions it is clear that the Commonwealth's liability on a claim resting upon occupational disease, is purely derivative, since in every case it is predicated upon a final award, or judgment thereon, entered against the employer. That is the necessary conclusion from this language of KELLER, P.J., in Weyant v. GeneralRefractories Co.,
Certainly the Commonwealth is bound, under liability which it assumed in the Act, where the employer *101
alone appeals from an award to the common pleas and the award in claimant's favor is finally sustained. Agostin v. Pgh.Steel Foundry Corp.,
Order affirmed.