62 A.2d 105 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued September 29, 1948. In this workmen's compensation case the learned judges of the court below sitting en banc reversed the decision of the referee which had been affirmed by the Board and awarded claimant compensation. The claim has been pending eight years. It has been before the Board three times and before the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill County twice. Claimant sustained a hernia in the course of his employment, and the sole question involved is whether it is compensable under § 306(h) of the Workmen's Compensation Act of 1915, P.L. 736, as amended by the Act of June 21, 1939, P.L. 520. *448
The compensation authorities have consistently held that it is not compensable. They rely on the referee's seventh and eighth findings of fact which have been affirmed by the Board. They are:
"7. We further find that the hernia was not at once precipitated by the occurrence on August 20, 1940.
"8. We further find that the descent of the hernia did not follow the cause without intervening time." (Emphasis added.)
In its opinion affirming the action of the referee, the Board states in part: "Claimant has presented no testimony showing that his hernia was at once precipitated by the strain of his lifting and that the hernia descended without intervening time. Beyond his testimony that he first noticed the hernial lump on August 21, 1940, we have no evidence indicating the time of descent." As we shall later point out, that would be sufficient evidence of descent within a reasonable time, which is all that is required under the 1939 amendment.
The court in reversing the Board and allowing the claim said: "The evidence offered in this case does not sustain the seventh and eighth finding[s] of fact and the second Conclusion of Law . . ." It is as follows: "2. Claimant having failed to establish by incontrovertible proof that the hernia was at once precipitated or that it followed the cause without intervening time, we conclude that claimant's petition must be dismissed and compensation denied . . ." The words which we have italicized in quoting the referee's findings of fact are taken verbatim from § 306(h), the new language in the Act of 1939 being in italics and the supplanted words of the earlier Act being in brackets.1 The Board and *449 the learned court below both fell into error in treating the referee's seventh and eighth findings of fact as such, when they are literally conclusions of law based on an incorrect or improper application of the law to the facts.
The material facts as found by the referee and affirmed by the Board are as follows: Claimant on August 20, 1940, while stacking rolls of paper in his employer's stockroom, suffered a "severe strain, in that the rolls which he was then stacking were heavier than the ones he generally worked upon . . ."; they weighed approximately 175 to 180 pounds per roll; the ordinary paper weighed about 120 pounds. He reported to his foreman that he had "a distressed feeling in the back." He "ceased work for about ten minutes . . . was white and . . . looked sick. About an hour later he vomited." He continued to work that day and the next and on the evening thereof, namely, August 21, went home "feeling sick with pain. While bathing himself that evening, he noticed a lump in his right inguinal region. He then went to the office of Dr. Wm. A. Burke, who diagnosed his condition as a right inguinal hernia. At or about eight o'clock on the morning of the 22nd he reported the hernia to his foreman." (Emphasis added.)
Appellant has made much of an apparent confusion by the claimant and Dr. Burke as to the date on which Dr. Burke first saw him. In his Surgeon's Report, Dr. Burke reported it as August 23, but his office record shows it was August 21. Claimant first said he went to see the doctor three days after the occurrence, but later corrected it to one day. His foreman testified that he reported the hernia to him on the morning of August 22, *450 which was within 48 hours as required by the Act, and in any event the referee found that claimant "noticed a lump" on the 21st and that he "then went" to the office of Dr. Burke. He further found as a fact that claimant reported his hernia to his foreman on the morning of the 22nd; and, to make the findings consistent, "then" must be taken to mean August 21. If taken to mean August 23, it would be inconsistent with the referee's other findings.
Appellant seeks to make it appear that when Dr. Burke first examined claimant on August 21, 1940 (appellant's brief, p. 17), "he found a `sac' which was at least a month old." The record discloses (59a) that the surgeon made that discovery on October 9, 1940, when he operated on claimant, and not on August 21, 1940, as appellant would have us believe.
In Hopp v. Taub,
That case arose prior to the 1939 amendment, but in Drumbar v.Jeddo-Highland Coal Co., *451
"In the new act, proof is required that the hernia was `at once' precipitated, that the descent followed the cause `without intervening time' and that the manifestations of the hernia were noticed `at once,' whereas the earlier act used the word `immediately.' We think there is no substantial difference between `at once' and `without intervening time' on the one hand and `immediately' on the other. The standard dictionaries indicate no appreciable difference. We have held that `immediately' does not mean instantaneously, but within a reasonable time; that for a hernia to be compensable it is not necessary to prove that the injured workman removed his clothing and discovered it on the spot but he is within the requirements *452 of the law where it was noticed for the first time several hours afterwards."
It was further held that an immediate cessation of work for "two or three minutes" was sufficient to meet the requirement of the amendment. Here, the referee found as a fact that claimant had immediately ceased work for ten minutes.
The case turns then on a determination of whether the hernia was "at once" precipitated, and whether it followed the cause "without intervening time" within the meaning of § 306(h) of the amendment of 1939.
The findings, which the learned court below held were not sustained by the evidence, are negative, not positive, and are phrased in the exact language of the statute. They do not reveal when the hernia was precipitated, but only that in the opinion of the referee and the Board it was not precipitated according to the statutory requirement. They are not supported by any affirmative testimony, but rest rather on an inference that since the claimant himself did not notice any abdominal swelling or protrusion until the day following the accident, it had not descended "at once." In the recent case of Nemonich v. PittsburghCoal Co.,
What we said, speaking through Judge HIRT, in Davis v. Jones Laughlin Steel Corp.,
Whether on the facts as found by the compensation authorities claimant is entitled to compensation is a question of law and as such open to review. Strunk v. E.D. Huffman Sons,
In Hein v. Ludwig, supra, the referee made no award and the evidence did not show clearly the full amount of the claimant's wages at the time of accident. For *454 that reason the record was remitted with direction to make a definite award. But here, all the evidence necessary for framing an award was before the court and, since the amount was not in controversy, the court was justified in making the award. To send the case back for that purpose would only have further delayed a cause already too long delayed.
Judgment affirmed.