Opinion by
While in the course of his employment, the claimant in this workmen’s compensation case sustained, on August 27, 1937, an accidental injury to his left eye which resulted in the permanent loss of the use of that member. Under the provisions of Section 306(c) of our Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, *472 P. L. 736, as amended April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 77 PS §513, and in force at the time of the injury, lie became vested, under his contract of hiring, with a statutory right to be compensated for the loss of the use of his eye to the extent of sixty-five per centum of his wages during one hundred and twenty-five weeks. His cause of action arose and became complete cotemporaneously with the happening of the accident, but it could be asserted only in the manner and in accordance with the machinery provided by the Act of 1915 and its applicable amendments.
By Section 315 of the statute, 77 PS §602, also in force at the date of the accident, it was provided, inter alia, that “all claims for compensation shall be forever barred, unless, within one year after the accident...... one of the parties shall have filed a petition” with the board. Although both the employer and insurance carrier had ample notice of the accident and its results, and the investigation of the circumstances under which it occurred had been referred by the former to the latter, no agreement upon the amount of compensation was reached during the year following the injury.
It was not until September 21, 1938, nearly thirteen months after the accident, that claimant filed his formal claim-petition with the board. This petition was dismissed by the referee upon the ground that its consideration was barred by the limitation of one year- contained in Section 315.
Claimant thereupon appealed to the board, contending that by reason of certain legislative enactments which became effective during the year succeeding the date of his accident the time within which he was required to file his claim-petition had been extended to “two years after the accident.”
The legislation, invoked by claimant is the Aet of June 4, 1937, P. L. 1552, re-enacting and amending the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, supra. By this Act of 1937, Section 315 of the former act, above cited, *473 was re-enacted and amended (also as Section 315 of the new act, P. L. 1573, 77 PS §602) in several particulars. The only amendment with which we are now. concerned was the extension of the period within which claim-petitions must be filed from one year to two■ years after the accident. In Section 507 of the. Act of 1937 it was provided that, with the exception of a section not here applicable, the provisions thereof should “become effective January first, one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight.”
The board, agreeing with the contention of claimant, reversed the action of the referee and entered an award in favor of claimant for compensation at the rate of $15 per week for a period of 125 weeks.
Upon the appeal .of the employer and its insurance carrier to the common pleas, the opinion of the board was adopted by that court; defendants’ exceptions were dismissed and judgment entered upon the award; the present appeal by defendants from that judgment followed.
The question with which we are confronted is whether the amendment relates to and affects the substantive rights and obligations of the parties under their contract of hiring, or only the procedure for their enforcement — their rights or merely their remedies.
. The fundamental test was defined by our Supreme Court in
Kuca v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.,
Upon the question whether the amendment applied to the case then pending, it was.said: “The section in question affects the procedure; it does not disturb vested rights,, or impair contract obligations. Procedure is a matter of statutory regulation, and, unless
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prevented by the Constitution, the legislature may alter it at will, provided the obligations of contracts are not impaired;’but where the remedy is not entirely taken away, and the scope of the powers or duties of the hearing tribunals are merely enlarged, no contract is impaired. Legislation -which affects rights will not be construed to be retroactive unless it is declared so in the act. But where it concerns merely the mode of procedure, it is applied, as of course, to litigation existing at the time of its passage:
Kille v. Reading Iron Works,
It is true there was no litigation actually pending in the case at bar on the date upon wliich the amendment became effective, but on that date claimant had a full and complete right of action and the period within which he was required to assert it, under the legislation in force at the time of the injury, had not expired.
We have held with respect to other limitations in various sections of the statute that they were procedural and therefore applied to existing proceedings and pending claims. For instance, in
DeJoseph v. Standard Steel Car Co. et al.,
In the course of the opinion Keller, J., (now President Judge) said: “We agree with the learned court below that the Act of April 13, 1927, in/ so far as it amends Section 413 of the Act of 1919 relates to pro
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cedure and applies to pending cases and is not confined to accidents which occur after its passage land approval.” Similarly in
Marchuk v. Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corporation,
Eeferenee has been made by appellants, inter alia, to several prior decisions of this
court
— Ratto
et al. v. Pennsylvania Coal Company,
' In the Bowles case, the claim-petition in question had not been filed within one year after the accident. In discussing the limitation Parker, J., said: “The limitation contained in §315 is a special statutory limitation qualifying a given right and is not a pure statute of limitations.”
In the absence of clear proof of fraud, coercion, or such other improper conduct as would estop an employer or carrier from invoking the limitation, the right is forever lost unless the claim is made within the statutory period.
In the Batto case reference was made to the limitation in Section 315 as analogous to that contained in the Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 309, 12 PS, §§1602-1603, which created a right to recover damages for wrongful death which did not exist at' common law, and it was noted that neither limitation is a pure statute of limitations in the sense that it may operate only when pleaded. Although, by origin, an incident of a new substantive right created by statute, the period of limitation in both cases deals merely with the exercise of that substantive right and is so basically procedural that it may be altered from time to time.
Rosenzweig, Admrx., v. Heller,
Another indication that the change in the limitation period was intended to be ápplicable to existing causes *477 of action is the fact that although the Act of 1937 was approved on June 4, 1937, it.did not become effective until January 1, 1938. As stated in 37 C. J. 697 §15: “The fact that a statute of. limitations is postponed in its operation, and is not to take effect from its passage, ha,s been held to be a. circumstance showing that the statute was intended to be retrospective in its operation and therefore applicable to existing, as well as prospective, causes of action......” As we have already indicated, changes in procedure may properly have a retroactive as well as prospective application and this rule is quite generally applied to statutes of limitation, aside from the question of postponement of the operation of the statute. See 37 C. J. 695, §12, where it is said: “......the rule is frequently laid down that inasmuch as statutes of limitation affect the remedy only, the statute in force at the time of suit brought governs the case and operates, in the absence of saving .clauses, on causes of action accruing prior to its passage, especially if the statute extends,, instead of shortens, the pre-existing limitation period......” (Italics ours).
The case of
Russell v. Ralston et al.,
Here, as above indicated, the happening of the accident created in claimant a full and complete cause of action. Claimant, in addition to contending he had two years within which to file his petition, asserted, and introduced evidence for the purpose of showing, that the insurance carrier had estopped itself from raising as a defense the bar of the limitation in the section by reason of its assurances to him that compensation would be paid, i. e., claimant endeavored to bring himself within such cases as
Guy v. Stoecklein Baking Co. et al.,
In view of the conclusion we have reached on the main branch of the case, it is unnecessary to consider 'the question of estoppel and we express no opinion upon it.
Judgment affirmed.
