63 A.2d 109 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued October 11, 1948. Claimant has appealed from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas No. 2 of Philadelphia County affirming the denial by the Workmen's Compensation Board of his petition for a rehearing. The petition for rehearing was not filed until after the time for taking an appeal from the decision of the Board reversing the referee's award of compensation had elapsed.
While driving a laundry truck for his employer, claimant in some manner caught his right foot under the brake pedal, thereby bruising it. He received treatment for the injury to his foot from his family physician from January 20, 1944, a day or two following the accident, until February 14, 1944, when the "lacerations" caused by the trauma had healed, but the condition of the foot indicated the existence of Buerger's disease. On February 22, he was treated by Dr. Louis B. Heimer for gangrenous ulceration of the injured foot. As this condition became progressively worse, Dr. Heimer called in consultation Dr. Paul Meshberg, who in turn advised referring the case to Dr. Meyer Naide, a vascular specialist. Dr. Naide, having received a history of Buerger's disease for a period of nine or ten years, advised immediate hospitalization and surgery to halt or arrest the ravages of gangrene. Consequently the right leg was amputated.
At the hearing before the referee Dr. Naide testified that an injury such as claimant sustained "could" and *595 in this case "very likely did" aggravate the disease with which claimant was afflicted. The Board reversed the referee's award on the ground that a causal connection between the injury and the loss of the leg had not been proven.
Claimant concedes that the testimony of Dr. Naide, the vascular specialist and the one consulting physician best qualified to express an opinion on Buerger's disease, falls far short of the required standard of definiteness. Elonis v. Lytle Coal Co.,
The question thus presented is whether the Board was guilty of an abuse of discretion in refusing the petition for a rehearing. We agree with the learned court below that "There is no doubt whatever that the Board in reaching its conclusion acted judicially and in the reasonable exercise of a sound discretion. In such a case we have no power to substitute our judgment for that of the Board. Fronko v. U.S. Sanitary Manufacturing Co.,
Gaffey v. John J. Felin Co.,
Judgment affirmed. *597