4 A.2d 188 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued December 14, 1938. This controversy in a workmen's compensation case arose out of a petition by the employer for the termination of an open agreement for total disability.
Compensation was paid 300 weeks, the maximum period for partial disability. On January 22, 1936, the employer filed a petition for the termination of the agreement, in which it was alleged that claimant has an earning power as he is able to work. The claimant filed an answer denying these averments. The referee, after hearing, dismissed the petition and made an award based upon a finding that claimant is totally disabled. The board affirmed the referee and the court below entered judgment upon the award. This appeal by the employer followed.
On February 8, 1930, the claimant, while in the employ *106 of the defendant as an ordinary laborer, sustained a fracture of the fifth lumbar vertebra as the result of an accident. The injury affected him from the waist up, requiring him to wear a brace. It rendered him incapable of walking normally or bending his body, and at times his breathing is impaired. The physicians called by the claimant testified that he is unable to perform any kind of labor.
It appears that claimant was elected to the office of tax collector of Mahanoy City in 1933 and that he received substantial commissions on the money collected. The duties of the office were not required to be discharged personally by the claimant, and the referee found as a fact that practically all the work connected therewith was done by claimant's wife and assistants she hired.
The question for our determination is whether the facts establish that claimant is totally disabled within the meaning of the workmen's compensation law. The answer thereto is not dependent upon whether he receives an income from a public office which does not require his personal services. The true test to apply is, Did the injury deprive him of his earning power?
It was entirely proper, of course, for the compensation authorities to consider the fact that claimant was elected tax collector, in determining whether he has an earning power; but that fact is not necessarily controlling. It does not follow inevitably that in receiving emoluments by virtue of holding public office claimant has an earning power. That source of income is not earnings or wages based on his performance of manual or clerical work. As pointed out by Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) KEPHART, in Bausch v. Fidler,
The reasonable inference from the underlying facts adduced is that this claimant, with all his physical affliction, is incapable of performing any sort of labor.
It must always be borne in mind that the disability contemplated by our compensation law is the loss of earning power as the result of an injury. If the compensation authorities find on sufficient evidence that a claimant is not able to do continuously even light work of a general character, then he is entitled to compensation for total disability: Consona v. R.E.Coulborn Co. et al.,
In Henry v. Pittsburgh Railways Co.,
Concluding, as we do, that the holding by the claimant of a public office, to which is attached certain remuneration, does not of itself establish an earning power, and that the evidence showed that the claimant *108 is totally disabled to perform any labor, no reason appears for disturbing this award.
Judgment affirmed.