Opinion by
This сase arises under The Pennsylvania Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, 77 P.S. 1 et seq. The employer and his insurance carrier have appealed from an order of the County Court of Allegheny County reversing the Board and remanding the record. There is an involved procedural history which it will be necessary to set forth in some detail.
William Lako was employed by Max Schlessinger as a truck driver. On October 18, 1961, he was oрerating a truck loaded with steel coils. His claim petition, filed April 11, 1962, alleged that, while checking the load, a chain binder snapped, “striking petitioner in the face, causing destruction of 16 teeth, disfigurement оf upper lip and face”. The employer supplied dentures and paid the medical and hospital bills. Claimant lost no compensable time from his work. The Referee disallowed compensatiоn for disfigurement on the ground *88 that claimant had not established that the resulting scar on his lip was permanent or of an unsightly appearance. By order entered August 15, 1963, the Board dismissed claimant’s appeal.
On October 21, 1963, claimant filed a petition for reinstatement on which he alleged recurrence of disability as follows: “A delayed eruption or facial disfigurement occurred because of nerve injury sustained; consequent damage to the remaining natural teeth now requires additional extraction”. On November 1, 1963, the Board assigned this petition to the Referee. Testimony was taken on March 10, 1964. On August 14, 1964, claimant filed with the Board another, or second, petition in which he requested a rehearing. On October 23, 1964, considering the first petition, the Referee found that changes had occurred in the facial structure and tissues around clаimant’s mouth with resulting disfigurement of the face which “consists of contraction of the tissues of the left half of the upper lip thereby exposing the dentures and creating a snarled expression”. An award of 35 weeks was made for unsightly permanent facial disfigurement. Cf.
Muchnick v. Susquehanna Waist Co.,
On March 18, 1965, because of the pending appeal by the employer on the first petition, the Board entered an order denying claimant’s second petition without prejudice. The time for claimant to appeal from this order was extended by the court below until after the Board came to a decision on the first petition. On July 29, 1965, without passing on the merits, the Board sustained the employer’s appeal from the award on the first petition on the ground that it could not be considered as a petition for reinstatement under Section 413 of the statute (77 P.S. 772) because there was neither an award nor an agreement, and that it could not be considered as a petition for rehearing under Sec *89 tion 426 (77 P.S. 871) because “it is the Board which grants a rehearing, and not the Referee”.
On August 17, 1965, claimant appealed the Board’s decisions of March 18, 1965, and July 29, 1965, to the County Court of Allegheny County. That tribunal subsequently entered the order before us on this appeal, as follows: “And Now, to-wit, this 3rd day of Deс., 1965, the claimant’s appeal is sustained; the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Board dismissing claimant’s petition and claim is reversed and the petition for the relief now claimed is declared valid аnd timely filed; this case and the record is now remanded to the Workmen’s Compensation Board, so that it may by itself, or by reference to any of its referees, make specific findings of fact and conclusions of law as to the factual matters declared to have arisen after the first order for disallowance; the parties to be given an opportunity to call and examine witnesses, to cross-exаmine, to present evidence de novo, lay and/or medical, as to the factual matters claimed to have developed after the first order of disallowance; exception noted to all parties in the record and bill sealed”.
Appellants first contend that a petition for reinstatement under Section 413 of the statute cannot be maintained to reconsider the disallowance of a claim. The court below relied upon
Guzik v. Laurel Ridge Construction Co.,
While appellants are correct in asserting that a reinstatement petition under Section 413 is proper only where there has been an agreement or an award, Section 426 expressly provides that the Board “may grant a rehearing of any petition upon which the Board has made an award
or disallowance”
(italics supplied). Cf.
Conley v. Allegheny County,
Appellants argue that, when the dismissal of the original claim petition was affirmed by the Board under date of August 15, 1963, the proceeding was ended unless kept alive by appeal to the court. Reliance is placed on
Calabria v. State Workmen’s Insurance Fund,
Appellants further argue that the instant appeal is governed by
Leeper v. Logan Iron & Steel Co.,
' Appellants’ second contention is that, since the Board did not treat the reinstatement petition as a petition for rehearing, the court has no power to order the Board to do so. A sufficient answer is that thе Board did in effect treat claimant’s first petition as a petition for rehearing. What has already been said relative to the liberality to be accorded procedure under the statute apрlies equally here. Indeed, the case cited by appellants under this contention,
Petrovan v. Rockhill Coal & Iron Co.,
Appellants argue that the fact that the Board denied claimant’s second petition, in which he expressly requested a rehearing, is an “unsurmountable reason why the court erred in holding that the Board had in effect granted a rehearing by permitting the reinstatement petition to be filed”. As previously noted, the order of March 18, 1965, was made without prejudice. Moreover, this order did not, and could not, alter the fact thаt a rehearing was in effect granted by the Board upon the filing of the petition of October 21, 1963. Since the original treatment of the petition for reinstatement by the compensation authorities was as though it had been one for a rehearing, the court below properly ruled that the petition should be so considered thereafter.
Appellants’ third and final contention is that, in the absence of an abuse of discretion, the court cannot order a rehearing where the Board has refused to grant a rehearing. It is argued that the lower court did not find that there was an abuse of discretion on the part of the Board in refusing a rehearing. We have no intention to depart from the rule that the grant or refusal of a rehearing is generally within the discretion of the Board. See
Conti v. Butler Consolidated Coal Co.,
In conclusion, claimant has consistently taken the position that the injury сaused disfigurement. While his claim in this regard was originally disallowed, he filed a timely petition for reinstatement which the Board assigned to the Referee and which was in effect considered as a petition for rehearing. Indeed, the claimant thereafter filed a timely petition for rehearing. The Referee made an award of 35 weeks for disfigurement. The Board reversed this award on technical grounds only. We are in accord with the conclusion of the court below that claimant is entitled to a review of his claim on its merits.
Order affirmed.
