156 A. 749 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1931
Argued March 11, 1931. On October 19, 1917, Aniello Di Fluri, an employe *244 of Pennsylvania Coal Company, suffered, in the course of his employment, accidental injuries which resulted in his death on September 1, 1919. Compensation for total disability was paid during the period between the time of the accident and the death of the employe. More than sixteen months after his death, viz., on January 20, 1921, a claim petition for compensation by reason thereof was filed on behalf of his widow and two children, non-resident, alien dependents. The referee and board disallowed compensation upon the ground that the claim of his widow and children was barred by the provisions of Section 315 of Article III of our Workmen's Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, 748; the court below, upon appeal to it, dismissed appellants' exceptions and entered judgment in favor of the employer, and we now have this appeal in behalf of the dependents from that judgment.
The provision of the act now in question reads: "In cases of death all claims for compensation shall be forever barred, unless, within one year after the death, the parties shall have agreed upon the compensation under this article; or unless, within one year after the death, one of the parties shall have filed a petition as provided in article four hereof." To the claim petition the employer filed its answer on January 27th, questioning the regularity of the petition and demanding proof of the existence of the alleged dependents, but did not therein plead the provisions of the statute barring claims after the expiration of the time limited. No further action seems to have been taken in behalf of the claimants until April, 1928, when letters rogatory, with interrogatories annexed, were issued. The employer propounded cross interrogatories "without prejudice to its rights to raise any and all legal and proper objections to these proceedings, as well as to the claim herein presented and the sufficiency of the evidence covered by the interrogatories in this case." *245 A hearing was had before the referee on May 8, 1929, at which counsel for the employer, before any testimony was received, objected "to any and all proceedings under the petition upon which these proceedings are based" for the reason, among others, that it "was filed after the time required for the filing of such petition by the Workmen's Compensation Act and is therefore barred."
In behalf of appellants it is now contended that the employer was not entitled to interpose the bar of the statute at the hearing because (a) the statute was not pleaded in its answer and (b) its conduct in propounding cross interrogatories and remaining silent until the date of the hearing amounted to an estoppel. Our primary inquiry is whether the legislative intent disclosed in the act is that it shall operate merely as a technical statute of limitation, based upon presumption and affecting only the remedy and not the right, as, for instance, in an action of assumpsit, where the statute applies only to the remedy and the claim remains and may be revived by a new promise. If such was the intent, the statute must be specially pleaded: Barclay v. Barclay,
The contention on behalf of the employer is that it is strictly a statute of repose, which extinguishes the right and not merely the remedy, and may be invoked without having been specially pleaded. The statute of April 26, 1855, P.L. 309, requiring that an action for negligence, where the injuries result in *246
death, "shall be brought within one year after the death, and not thereafter," and the statute of April 22, 1856, P.L. 532, providing, inter alia, that no action shall be "maintained for a specific performance of any contract for the sale of any real estate ...... but within five years after such contract was made," etc., are illustrations of statutes which bar not merely the remedy but the right as well and need not be specially pleaded: Martin v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co.,
The reason for the rule requiring technical statutes of limitation to be pleaded, and for the exception thereto, is thus stated in 17 R.C.L., Sec. 367, p. 988: "The reason for this rule lies in the fact that statutes of limitation presuppose an established substantive right, but forbid the plaintiff from enforcing it by the customary remedies. Therefore, the statute is a weapon of defense, and ordinarily must be pleaded and relied on by the defendant. Yet the necessity of pleading the statute of limitations applies only to cases where the remedy alone is taken away, and in *247 which the defense is by way of confession and avoidance and does not apply where the right and title to the thing is extinguished and gone, and the defense is by denial of that right."
The right which appellants now seek to assert is purely statutory. "The purpose of the act was to displace the common law liability for wrong and to substitute a system of redress for industrial accidents for which the common law furnished inadequate relief or none at all": Olinsky v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.,
Judgment affirmed.