43 A.2d 616 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued April 10, 1945. The Workmen's Compensation Board affirmed the referee's order of disallowance of compensation and dismissed claimant's appeal on the ground that no causal connection was shown between the accident suffered by deceased and his death. On appeal the court of common pleas reversed the board and directed it to make an award of compensation in favor of claimant. This order of the court below was based upon the conclusion "that the board should have found: 1. That the claimant's decedent did suffer an accident. 2. That such accident was the cause of his death." The defendant and his insurance carrier have appealed.
We are of the opinion that the order is appealable. The practical effect of the order is the same as if judgment had been entered in favor of claimant and against appellants. The record would be returned to the board merely for the formality of an award. See Parisi v. Freedom Oil Co. et al.,
Claimant's husband died on October 20, 1942, while in the course of his employment in the coal mine of defendant. Claimant filed a claim petition to which an answer was made. At the hearing before the referee claimant produced several lay witnesses and one medical expert. No witnesses were called by defendant. The referee, in disallowing the claim, found (ninth finding of fact) that deceased's death was not the result of an accident suffered in the course of his employment, but was due to natural causes. The board was of the opinion that there was evidence to support a finding that deceased did suffer an accident. Consequently, it struck out the referee's ninth finding of fact, and in lieu thereof substituted the following: "9. No causal connection has been shown between the accident suffered by the [deceased] and his death."
It appears from the other findings of fact of the *395 referee, affirmed by the board, that deceased was pushing an empty coal car into his working place in defendant's mine, when he stumbled and said that he hurt himself, but went on with his car. Later he was found by other miners lying alongside the main track, unable to talk and gasping for breath. He died within a few minutes after the workmen found him. It had been the work of deceased, during the time he had been employed by defendant, to push empty and loaded cars over the same track that he was using on the day in question and under the same conditions. The work that he was performing that day was no more unusual than on any other day. The certified copy of the certificate of death filed with the Bureau of Vital Statistics stated that the cause of death was acute dilatation of the heart. The doctor who made the certificate was not called as a witness.
We have frequently had occasion to consider this type of case, and each time we have repeated the applicable principles. InWalsh v. Penn Anthracite Mining Co.,
The compensation authorities are vested with the power to find the facts in compensation cases, and there can be no interference by the courts with such findings whether based upon direct or circumstantial evidence or the inferences to be drawn therefrom.Russell v. Scott Paper Co. et al.,
While the court below may have differed with the compensation authorities in the disposition of this case, it had no power to make its own findings contrary to the findings of the board.Icenhour v. Freedom Oil Works Co. et al.,
In the present case the board did not act capriciously, nor were its findings inconsistent, justifying the setting aside of its order. No autopsy was performed, and the medical expert based his opinion that overexertion caused the acute dilatation of deceased's heart on a hypothetical question which assumed overexertion on the part of deceased. The witness who described the occurrence was also pushing an empty mine car in defendant's mine, and doing the very same kind of work *397
that deceased was performing at the time. There was no proof that the character of deceased's work was unusual in the sense necessary to establish the occurrence of an accident due to overexertion. See Good v. Pennsylvania Department of Property Supplies et al.,
We cannot say that the board's opinion, as expressed in its finding, is not warranted by the facts, or that the findings do not support the board's order. As we have said, the weight to be attributed to the facts proved, and the inferences to be drawn from them are for the board to determine, not the courts. Even where the evidence presented is subject to several inferences, the inference to be adopted is for the board as the fact-finding body. The board has sufficiently set forth the basis for its decision, when it said: (1) The mere happening of an accident is not sufficient upon which to make an award without proof of injuries resulting therefrom; (2) claimant had the burden of proving both an accident and an injury resulting from the accident; and (3) no causal connection was shown between the accident suffered by deceased and his death. The claimant failed to prove to the satisfaction of the board the affirmative of both the essential questions of fact. Bakaisa v. Pittsburgh WestVirginia R. Co.,
The order of the court below is reversed, and the order of the Workmen's Compensation Board is reinstated. *398