141 A. 481 | Pa. | 1928
Argued March 13, 1928. Andrew Johnston was employed as a laborer by the Payne-Yost Construction Company, which was building a road in Fayette County. On June 2, 1926, during working hours, he was burned on the nose; nine days later, on June 11, he died of tetanus. Emma Johnston, his widow, on behalf of herself and her minor children, filed a claim for compensation. On claimant's proofs, the referee found that Johnston had died as a result of an accident in the course of his employment. Neither defendant nor its insurance carrier, the latter having intervened as a party defendant, offered any evidence. They defended on two grounds: (1) Lack of competent proof that Johnston had been injured through an accident in the course of his employment; (2) absence of medical testimony on behalf of the claimant sufficient to show that the tetanus infection which killed her husband resulted from the burn.
In cases arising under the Workman's Compensation Act, the revisory powers of the appellate courts are limited to such consideration of the testimony as will enable the reviewing tribunal to ascertain whether the record contains competent evidence to support the findings of the compensation authorities, and whether, on such findings, the law has been properly applied: Kuca v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.,
No witness saw the occurrence which caused Johnston's burn. A fellow workman, Murray, was allowed to testify for the claimant, under objection, that Johnston had told him about the accident ten minutes after it had happened. The referee admitted Murray's testimony as a part of the res gestæ; this ruling was approved by the Workmen's Compensation Board, and by the court below. Defendants contend that the testimony in question was mere hearsay, — not competent evidence; and that, since there was no other testimony to establish the happening of the accident, the judgment in favor of claimant should be reversed.
A well recognized exception to the hearsay rule is found in the admission of spontaneous utterances: see 3 Wigmore on Evidence (2d ed.), sec. 1746, p. 736. In Commonwealth v. Gardner,
It must be remembered that we are considering the allowance of a claim under the Workmen's Compensation Act, and that, while the record of every such award must show it to be supported by competent proof, yet the rules of evidence are not applied in these cases with the same rigor as in litigation before a jury: see the Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, secs. 417 (P. L. 752), 421 (P. L. 753), and 428 (P. L. 755). A strict or unduly technical application of the rules of evidence would at times defeat the chief purposes of the act, — which are to give compensation to employees injured by accidents in the course of their employment and to provide an administrative tribunal, less formal than a court, where such claims can be proved in as simple and direct a manner as is consistent with justice to both sides and a proper administration of the compensation law. With these legislative purposes in mind, we cannot pronounce this record devoid of competent evidence to support the award to claimant. Of course, even in compensation *515
cases, the material findings must have a basis of legal proof on which to rest, and may not be based on hearsay alone (McCauley v. Imperial Woolen Co.,
So far as appellants' second contention is concerned, we have several times held that the testimony of a medical expert is insufficient to show the connection between an injury and a later ailment, or death, unless the witness says that in his professional opinion the result in question came from the cause alleged (Fink v. Sheldon A. S. Co.,
The judgment is affirmed. *516