43 A.2d 342 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued April 12, 1945. We have before us this question: Did the claimant establish by sufficient proof that he lost the permanent use of his left eye on May 8, 1941, as the result of an accident while in the course of his employment
On July 2, 1941, the parties entered into a compensation agreement. It gave the following description of the accident: "Claimant was loading truck with brush, particle of dust from brush flew into eye. Inflamed and irritated left eye." In September of that year the defendant, in payment of total disability from May 21, 1941, to July 3, 1941, tendered claimant a check for $56.57, having attached thereto a final settlement receipt which he refused to sign. The insurance carrier then filed a petition to terminate the agreement. The claimant on October 14, 1941, filed a petition alleging complete loss of the sight of his left eye as the result of the accident. By agreement of the parties these petitions *303 were considered together. The referee found the claimant had lost the industrial vision of his left eye due to the accident and awarded compensation for 125 weeks under section 306(c) of our Workmen's Compensation Act and by a separate order dismissed the petition to terminate. The board on appeal reversed the referee, ordered the termination of the agreement as of August 4, 1941, and found in its seventh finding that the claimant had no "reading vision" in his left eye before the accident and in the eleventh finding that prior to May 8, 1941, he had no "industrial vision" in that eye, and dismissed his petition. The claimant appealed to the court of common pleas and it at first affirmed the board. A reargument was granted and after further consideration the court sustained the exceptions to the board's findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order and directed the record to be remitted to the board "for further action." Admittedly, the claimant did not have a "reading vision" before the accident, but neither "reading vision" nor want of "industrial vision" is the proper standard to apply in this case.
Under the amendment of June 4, 1937, P.L. 1552, § 1, of the Workmen's Compensation Act of 1915, P.L. 736, proof of the permanent loss of the use of an eye for industrial purposes was the equivalent of the permanent loss of the eye and supported an award. There was a further amendment on June 21, 1939, P.L. 520,
This case is strikingly similar in its facts to those in Diazv. Jones Laughlin Steel Corporation,
We thoroughly agree with the appellant that the court of common pleas does not have the right to weigh the testimony or to determine the questions of credibility; that is solely within the province of the compensation authorities, (Monahan v. Seeds Durham et al.,
Order is affirmed.