Rogers Motor Lines, Inc. (Employer) has appealed from an order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming a decision of a referee which dismissed Employer’s termination petition and effectively reinstated payment of partial disability benefits to claimant, Kenneth E. Baker.
Baker was injured in a truck aсcident on January 2,1986. He was paid compensation at the rate of $347.00 per week from January 3,1986, until July 25,1988, when a supersede-as was granted. On March 9, 1987, Employer filed a petition for modification in order to reduce the benefits to partial disability alleging that there was work available which Baker could perform. Consequently, Baker toоk a job as a counter person at NAPA Auto Parts and worked from November 9, 1987 to November 20, 1987. On November 20, 1987, Baker quit due to a dispute over time off. Choosing to leave his job had no effect on Baker’s benefits, however, because the job paid so little compared to his time-of-injury job that his earnings at NAPA were not sufficient to affect his ratе of compensation. While working for those ten days, Baker was in the posture of being partially *495 disabled but was receiving the equivalent of his total compensation benefits ($347.00 per week). The impact of the fact that Employer made this job available to Baker and of the job still being available after he voluntarily left it, was to chаnge Baker’s status from totally disabled to partially disabled. The term “partially disabled” used in this context refers to economic loss and in Baker’s particular case referred only to the fact that since his “disability” was now partial, compensation payments were limited to 500 weeks.
Mention of the March 9, 1987, petition for modification and thе decision regarding it, dated September 16, 1988, is necessary to this opinion only in that it elucidates the posture of Baker when Employer brought the termination petition, the outcome of which is now appealed to this Court. Thus, we make it clear that due to a previous hearing and decision of the referee, Baker, at the time the termination was sought, was partially disabled.
In the petition upon which this appeal is based Employer alleged that Baker had fully recovered from his work-related disability аnd that his benefits should be terminated. 1 Employer presented the testimony of Dr. Frank J. Flit and Referee Ada Guyton found the following concerning this doctor’s testimony:
EIGHTH: Based on the testimony of Dr. Flit, this Referee finds that the claimant is able to return to his preinjury job without restrictions____
NINTH: The employer submitted no evidence to establish that the claimant’s pre-injury job was аvailable to him.
The referee then states in conclusion of law named SECOND that:
The defendant has failed to sustain its burden of proof for a suspension and that it failed to establish that thе claimant’s pre-injury job was available to him. (Emphasis added.)
*496 And, in conclusion of law named THIRD she determined that:
The defendant has failed to sustain its burden of proof for a termination because it has not shown that the clаimant’s problems were not caused by or aggravated by the January 2, 1986, injury.[ 2 ]
Employer asserts on appeal here that the referee placed the wrong burden of proof on it and reached the wrong legal conclusion with respect to its termination petition. Specifically, Employer contends that it sought a termination petition and the referee and Board erred in instead imposing on it the burden of proof attendant to a suspension or modification petition. It further asserts that the refеree, having found that Baker was able to return to his pre-injury job without restrictions, should have granted a termination. The two issues are interrelated; however, this case is bettеr understood if we consider the second issue first.
As previously noted this is a termination petition and the grant of such a petition may be based only upon a finding, supported by substantial evidence, that the claimant’s disability has entirely
ceased. Brown v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (City of Pittsburgh),
134 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 31,
In
Zimcosky v. Workmen’s Comрensation Appeal Board (U.S. Steel Corp.),
118 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 209,
In Zimcosky the employer specifically argued that job availability was not an issue because the claimant had been released to return to his pre-injury job. We disagreed holding that where a suspension is sought, and the claimant has a continuing medical disability and therefore a temporary or permanent рartial disability, the employer must demonstrate job availability and such burden is not met when the pre-injury job has been eliminated.
This case is similar to
Zimcosky
in that the referee found that Baker could return tо his time-of-injury job. It is also similar in that the referee did not find that Baker had medically recovered from his disability. It is dissimilar, however, in that Employer here seeks to
terminate,
not suspend benefits, thе former being a more draconian request from a claimant’s standpoint. In
Zimcosky
the employer ultimately lost because it failed to demonstrate job availability justifying a suspension in a case where the claimant’s medical disability continued. In this case then, Employer must certainly lose on its termination petition, which seeks greater relief than the employer sought in
Zimcosky,
because Employer here, as in
Zimcosky,
has failed to prove that Baker’s disability has ceased. As we have previously observed, a termination of benefits may not be based on the mеre finding that a claimant can return to his pre-injury job when, as here, there is evidence found
*498
credible by the referee that the claimant’s medical disability continues.
Buckley v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Corbo’s AM PM Mini Market),
109 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 64,
The referee, having found that Employer could not prevail upon its termination petition, then went on to consider whether a suspension would be warranted. Such an action was entirely proper and in fact this Court in Brown reversed the entry of a termination and sua sponte entered an order suspending the claimant’s benefits. The referee, however, concluded that while Baker was cleared to return to his time-of-injury job there was no evidеnce that that job remained available. Nor was there any other evidence submitted by Employer that any job within Baker’s medical limitations was available to him. She thus properly ruled that the lesser relief of a suspension was also not available to Employer. Inasmuch as Employer does not even suggest that it demonstrated job avаilability, clearly Referee Guyton’s determination that no relief in the form of a suspension was warranted was proper. Accordingly, having found that Employer is not entitled tо either a termination or a suspension as a matter of law, we affirm the Board’s order.
ORDER
NOW, January 6, 1992, the order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board in the above-captioned matter is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. Employer also petitioned for a review of medical expenses alleging that further physical therapy was unnecessary and the referee granted Employer's petition. This, however, is not an issue on appeal.
. The referee also made certain findings on causation and aggravation which are irrelevant to a termination petition.
