167 A. 236 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1933
Argued March 16, 1933. This is an action under the Workmen's Compensation Act. There was a compensation agreement entered into between the laborer and the employer, which the latter sought to terminate on the ground that claimant had recovered sufficiently to do light work as of May 6, 1930. The claimant denied that he had recovered sufficiently to do light work, and on March 6, 1931, the referee found as a fact that claimant was partially disabled, the extent of which was indeterminate, that the defendant company had offered claimant four different jobs, but he had refused to make any effort to do any one of them. The referee ordered the claimant to get a job so that an intelligent decision could be rendered in the case, and dismissed the petition. An appeal was taken by the employer, the Hazle Brook Coal Company, which appeal was dismissed by the compensation board, and although it did not agree with certain of the referee's views in the case, it expressed itself that he had acted correctly in dismissing the petition. It formed this conclusion, as stated in the opinion, from the testimony of Dr. Murphy who was positive that Yednock was not able to go back to anything like the work in which he was formerly engaged and, therefore, the board found that there was not sufficient testimony to justify the termination of the agreement and that, although the defendant company offered the claimant four different jobs, the medical testimony does not prove that claimant was able to fill any of them. On an appeal from the decision of the board to the court of common pleas, this action was confirmed.
The total result of the testimony produced was to the effect that the claimant could do light work. He expressly stated that he could be employed, if he could get a job, at light work, where he would not have to be on his feet. He testified that he could walk two, *185
three or four miles, but that he had to sit down and take a rest. He said, "I can do light work." In answer to the question, "What kind of a job would you think you could do?" He stated, "A job I would not have to stand on my feet too long." The medical testimony was to the effect that he had only been partially disabled. The doctor, called by the claimant, upon whose testimony the decision of the board was predicated, stated that the earning capacity of the claimant was reduced by 30 or 40%. It is apparent that the claimant cannot do the work he did prior to the accident, but that is not the criterion. See Fillip v. William Cramp Son,
The case is remanded back to the lower court with instructions to remit it to the compensation board that it may, upon the facts which have been produced before it, reduce the amount now payable for total disability to such sum as will compensate for the partial disability, under which the claimant is suffering, unless evidence is produced showing that he, in consequence of his injury, is unable to procure any employment.