Opinion by
This is а workmen’s compensation case in which the controverted question is whether claimant’s total disability changed to partial.
On July 17, 1952, claimant sustained an accidental injury in the course of his employment with defendant. He was employed as a guard, and his duty was to collect a fee from motorists entering defendant’s premises which were operated as a resort on Lake Erie. In attempting to avoid a starting vehicle, upon which he had placed the required toll ticket, he was injured. An open compensation agreement for total disability was entered into between defendant and claimant, and approved. Claimant was paid compensation for total disability from July 25, 1952, to January 2, 1953, when payments were discontinued by defendant. Thereafter, on April 17, 1953, defendant filed a petition for modificаtion of the compensation agreement, alleging that claimant’s disability had changed from total to partial.
At the hearing before a referee the president of the defendant association and a medical witness called by it testified. Claimant presented no evidence. The referee found that claimant’s disability had changed from total to 25 per cent partial on October 19, 1952. He grаnted defendant’s petition for modification and allowed a credit to defendant for the payments made from October 19, 1952, to January 2, 1953.
On appeal by claimant the Workmen’s Compensation Boаrd set aside the referee’s fourth and fifth findings of fact, made new findings* sustained claimant’s appeal, and dismissed defendant’s petition to modify. Defendant then appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County which reversed the order of the board and remanded the case for reinstatement of the
The burden of proof was on defendant which was seeking modifiсation of the compensation agreement; and it was obliged to establish in the first instance that the disability of claimant had changed from total to partial, and the extent of that change. Barckhoff v. Westmoreland Coal Co.,
We find no complaint as to the consistency of the findings and conclusion of the board. Rather, the arguments relate to the weight to be given to, and the interpretation to be made of, the medical testimony concerning the alleged change in the extent of claimant’s disability.
The disposition of this appeal depends on the testimony of Dr. Lloyd R. Bashaw, defendant’s medical witness and the only medical witness who testified. Our examination of his testimony convinces us that the board acted -within its province as the final fact-finder and that it did not act cаpriciously.
Dr. Bashaw testified that he examined claimant and began treatment five days after the accident. His examination disclosed that there was a “complete fracture through the chest оf the 11th rib on the left side, with the separation of approximately % inches between the main chest and the distal fragment.” Claim
The extent to which claimant could perform general light work was in dispute, and the solution is not entirely clear from the evidence. On a number of occasiоns Dr. Bashaw stated that in his opinion claimant’s disability in this respect was only 25 per cent. When questioned in detail as to the basis of his estimate the doctor became confused and uncertain; in fact, he requested that he not be asked to select the kind of light work which claimant could perform. It finally became apparent that in fixing the amount of disability for general light work the doctor’s testimony was wholly inconsistent.
The board, not the referee, is the final fact-finder in workmen’s compensation cases. Hudek v. United Engineering and Foundry Co.,
“4. The evidence submitted by defendant shows that the claimant ivas not able to do light work in general, but only selective light work that would not require lifting or bending.
“5. There ivas no evidence of availability to the claimant of special light work.”
Obviously, the оnly portion of the doctor’s testimony which Avas rejected Avas his opinion on the percentage of disability as it related to general light Avork. We think, under the circumstances, that the board acted Avеll Avithin its poAver in so appraising' this testimony. Rohner v. Fox Products,
In Barckhoff v. Westmoreland Coal Co., supra,
The decision of the board was justified on this record; and it was reached in a proper manner. In concluding that defendant had not met its evidentiаry burden, the board weighed the opinion of Dr. Bashaw against the established physical facts and found his opinion to be uncertain and unacceptable. The only other evidence of the extent of claimant’s disability was the stipulation and the factual description of the injury as given by the doctor. These were insufficient to establish any material change in the extent of claim
The order of the court below is reversed, and the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Board is reinstated.
Notes
In this respect Dr. Bashaw testified in part:
“. . . Mr. Muenz’s general physical structure is such that bending will cause an increased pressure under the rib that is fractured and would cause him pain. Lifting or stooping for any length of time, or just a short down and up in the bending position, would, I am afraid, cause him pain in that lower rib.”
“It is stipulated by and between counsel for the claimant and counsel for the employer that if questioned, the doctor who has heretofore testified, would state that this claimant is 10Ó per cent capable оf performing selected light work, but that if he were re quired to perform any work requiring lifting, bending and analogous duties he would be 100 per cent disabled.”
In fixing claimant’s disability of 25 per cent to perform general light work, the doctor considered claimant able to perform
