82 Pa. Super. 489 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Argued December 4, 1923.
This case arises under the Workmen's Compensation Act. The claimants are the widow and child of an employee of the Lytle Coal Company, who died August 20, 1917, as the result of an accident occurring in the course of his employment. The decedent was a native of Austria-Hungary. The claimants reside in that empire *491
and were never in the United States. The defense to the claim is that it is barred by the limitation in the Compensation Act. It is conceded that this limitation was suspended during the war between this country and Austria-Hungary by implication arising from the unexpected occurrence of that conflict, but it is contended that Czecho-Slovakia of which part of the empire the claimants were residents became an independent state and was recognized as such by the United States in September, 1918, as a consequence of which the suspension of the limitation ceased, and the claimants became bound to present their claim within a year from that date, including the four months which had elapsed before the declaration of war between the United States and the empire. The sole question is therefore whether by such recognition the political status of Czecho-Slovakia was changed so that the law as stated in Siplyak v. Davis, Director, etc.,