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Huerbin v. D. L. Clark Co.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 24, 1940
14 A.2d 175 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1940)

Summary

In Huerbin v. D.L. Clark Co. et al., 140 Pa. Super. 406, 14 A.2d 175, under a statute similar to ours, the State Industrial Commission had allowed temporary total disability at irregular intervals covering the period during which the injured employee was not employed. The court vacated the award for temporary total disability, holding that temporary total disability may end and recur.

Summary of this case from National Well Service v. Brumley

Opinion

April 9, 1940.

June 24, 1940.

Workmen's compensation — Practice — Setting aside final receipt — Recurrence of disability — Section under which relief is sought — Evidence — Findings of compensation authorities.

1. Where an injured person, thinking he has fully recovered, makes a settlement with and releases the employer, it is proper, on development of future disability, to reopen the case and award compensation pursuant to the second paragraph of section 413 of the Workmen's Compensation Law, if the facts warrant it, provided a petition is filed within the limitations fixed in that section.

2. It is not essential under which section a petition may have been presented provided proper grounds for action under either be proven.

3. Findings of the compensation authorities must be supported by substantial evidence, that is, evidence which is more than a scintilla and has rational probative force.

Workmen's compensation — Earning power — Evidence — Wages — Award — Total disability — Partial — Short periods.

4. In determining the loss of earning power of an employee, for which compensation is provided by the statute, loss of wages is only one of many elements to be considered.

5. Where an employee is totally incapacitated for a substantial length of time immediately after an accident, and then there are short periods of total disability in between periods of partial disability, or where the degree of partial disability varies, compensation should be allowed for total disability for the period immediately after the accident, and, thereafter, instead of making allowance for short periods of total disability and for varying degrees of partial disability for the balance of the time, a longer period or periods of time should be considered and an average or averages of disability obtained.

6. Where a claimant as a result of hospitalization or confinement to home and medical treatment for a substantial period of time is totally disabled, compensation may properly be allowed for total disability for that time.

Appeal, No. 116, April T., 1940, from judgment of C.P. Allegheny Co., April T., 1938, No. 2787, in case of Anna Huerbin v. D.L. Clark Company et al.

Before KELLER, P.J., CUNNINGHAM, BALDRIGE, STADTFELD, PARKER, RHODES and HIRT, JJ. Judgment reversed.

Appeal by defendants from decision of Workmen's Compensation Board setting aside compensation agreement and making award.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the Superior Court.

Judgment entered setting aside final receipt and directing payment of compensation, before McNAUGHER and KENNEDY, JJ., opinion by McNAUGHER, J. Defendants appealed.

Errors assigned, among others, related to the actions of the court below in dismissing defendants' exceptions.

Murray J. Jordan, with him Fred J. Jordan, for appellants.

Herman Lipsitz, for appellee.


Argued April 9, 1940.


In this workmen's compensation case the claimant met with an accident on February 6, 1935, in the course of her employment, and compensation for total disability was paid to her until September 4, 1935. She executed a final receipt on September 5, 1935, and returned to work at her former wages. On January 18, 1936, she and a number of fellow employees were laid off. She then worked off and on for other employers until June 30, 1936. On August 24, 1936, she filed a petition to set aside the final receipt, apparently relying upon § 434 of the statute.

The board set aside the receipt and awarded compensation for disability as follows: Partial from September 9, 1935, to January 18, 1936, then total to August 1, 1936, partial to October 1, 1936, total to March 2, 1937, partial to April 15, 1937, and then total for an indefinite period. On appeal a court of common pleas affirmed the award and entered judgment for the claimant.

The appellant attacks the judgment on the alleged grounds that the evidence was not sufficient to warrant setting aside the final receipt and that in any event the evidence was not sufficient to support a finding that claimant was entitled to compensation for total disability. We find no merit in the first contention, but the second contention must be sustained at least in part.

We have many times stated that it is not essential under which section a petition may have been presented provided proper grounds for action under either be proven: Krock v. Ballard Sprague Co., 104 Pa. Super. 389, 397, 159 A. 191; Gardner v. Pressed Steel Car Co., 122 Pa. Super. 592, 598, 186 A. 410. Where an injured person, thinking he has fully recovered, makes a settlement with and releases the employer, it is proper, on development of future disability, to reopen the case and award compensation pursuant to the second paragraph of § 413 of the Workmen's Compensation Law if the facts warrant it (Dewees v. Day Zimmerman, 291 Pa. 379, 140 A. 345), provided a petition is filed within the limitations fixed in that section ( 77 P. S. § 772). Since the application for relief was presented within the time that the agreement had to run and within one year of the date of the last payment of compensation, the claimant is in time and is entitled to relief if the disability has increased or recurred.

Assuming that disability had ceased, as appellant contends, on September 5, 1935, there certainly was ample evidence to support a finding that within the year disability recurred. Her disability was shown to have been caused or at least aggravated by a fall in which her back was twisted. Even when working she suffered constant pain and special consideration had to be shown her when she did work. She was compelled to wear a brace and there was definite evidence of injuries to one or both of the sacroiliac joints. Even the defendant's expert gave testimony showing a serious involvement of the parts in that region. For a time she was confined to her bed in a cast. Under such circumstances, it is idle to suggest that if the disability ceased on September 5, 1935, it did not recur. The real problem the board had to meet was to determine the degree of disability of the claimant.

The proofs met the requirements as stated in Eberts v. Sears Roebuck Co., 334 Pa. 505, 510, 6 A.2d 577, that where a final receipt has been given the evidence required to overthrow it "must be of a more definite and specific nature than that upon which initial compensation is based," even though § 413 is invoked.

The findings of the board with relation to the periods during which claimant was totally disabled are not supported by substantial evidence and the board erred in applying the law to the facts. The statute provides compensation for loss of earning power and loss of wages is only one of many elements to be considered in ascertaining what the compensable loss is in fact. While the law divides the field of compensable loss by making provision for total and partial disability, the line of demarcation is frequently so obscure that it is not practicable to divide a given period into short periods and say that for so many hours, a few days, or an even longer period, the disability was total and for the balance of the time partial. Where one has short periods of total incapacity, or even when the degree of partial disability varies, a more satisfactory result is obtained by considering a longer period and striking an average. We thus not only take into account the actual cash income that is lost, but we may also give weight to the effect which intermittent service has on the ability to secure and retain employment.

When one meets with a severe accident it is usually followed by a period in which the injured party is totally incapacitated for a time and very properly total disability is allowed until he is able to return to some employment or obtain an earning power. That is proper and reasonable and it is practicable to draw a line there. The present case suggests a second situation where a similar treatment of the matter might be given. The claimant here contends that she went to a hospital for an operation at a time when she was disabled, that she was placed in a plaster cast and returned to her home where she was confined to bed for a period and then confined to her home for a time. If the board finds that the claimant was totally disabled for such a period it would be proper to allow compensation for total disability for that time.

Total disability was found for the period from January 18, 1936, to August 1, 1936, yet it is admitted that claimant worked during part of that period for Donahoe's and earned about the same wages as she did before the accident. The total disability was dated from the exact date that she was discharged by the defendant, yet she complained that she was discharged and testified that at that very time she looked for other work, that she found it and was gainfully employed. This rebuts any inference that she had no earning power at that time. The evidence with relation to this period will require further consideration by the board, and in that connection we call attention to the unsatisfactory character of the claimant's testimony. At the same time the board will take into consideration the fact that there was some expert testimony from which an inference could be drawn as to her loss of earning power.

Total disability was found for the period between October 1, 1936, and March 2, 1937. It was during this period that she had hospitalization, beginning October 29, 1936, and ending November 2, 1936. She wore a cast for four weeks. Dr. Blumer, who treated her in the hospital, testified that on January 18, 1937, she was able to return to work and that she told him she was. She denied that statement, but we quote from her testimony given on February 23, 1937: "Q. Why are you not working now? A. I was laid off. . . . . . Q. And why couldn't you do any of that work? A. Well, I have that pain constantly; it wouldn't pay me to take a job because I would be laid off. I would not be able to work steady in the job. [Italics supplied]. . . . . . Q. And what is your present physical condition? A. Well, I can't do any work at all. I had three offers of a job but had to refuse them. . . . . . Q. Do you feel any worse now than you did on September 5, 1935? A. Well, I feel a little better since I came out of the hospital."

Since she was only partially disabled prior to her treatment at the hospital and as she admitted she felt better in February than she did before the hospitalization, her own testimony corroborates the doctor. It follows that the record will not support a conclusion that she was totally disabled for the entire period between October 1, 1936, and March 2, 1937.

Total disability was also found for an indefinite period beginning April 15, 1937. The claimant was employed as a canvasser by Leber Brothers from March 2, 1937, to April 15, 1937. At an adjourned hearing held May 13, 1937, claimant testified that it caused her pain to do that canvassing work, that she was compelled to cease that employment due to a pain in her leg. She also called as a witness at the May hearing Dr. E.W. Fiske, one of the many doctors who attended her, and he said that he examined claimant on March 20 and April 16, 1937. The doctor described in technical terms and in considerable detail the result of his clinical examination and of operating her muscles and joints. His observations indicated quite clearly some serious disturbance in the sacroiliac region although he did not testify that it was necessarily due to trauma. He did give it as his opinion that claimant should be examined and treated in a hospital and that at least six months' treatment would be required to restore her to such a state that she could work "without any further trouble." He did not testify that she was then totally disabled nor give any evidence from which the conclusion could be reasonably drawn that she was then disabled to that extent.

The testimony given at the May hearing will not support the finding that claimant was totally disabled after April 15, 1937. The burden was on claimant to show the extent of her disability. This burden cannot be met by the statement of indefinite conclusions. When we say that findings of the board must be supported by evidence, it means substantial evidence which is more than a mere scintilla. "It means such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion": Consolidated Edison Co. v. National Labor Relations Board, 305 U.S. 197, 229, 59 S. Ct. 206. While it is desirable that there be a flexibility in administrative procedure, such desire will not justify orders where they are not made on the basis of evidence having rational probative force.

There was sufficient testimony given at different times to support a finding of partial disability, but the evidence is meager as to the extent of even that disability after April 15, 1937. There is nothing in the evidence to indicate whether claimant intends to submit to hospitalization during a period that would necessarily entail total disability and unless there is further evidence of a change in her physical condition compensation may not be allowed for total disability for that time.

Three years have passed since the last evidence was furnished and many changes may have taken place. As this record must be returned to the board for new findings, an opportunity should be afforded the parties to furnish, if they so desire, further testimony bearing on claimant's condition since April 15, 1937. In connection with a re-examination of the facts, we call attention to the board's action in finding a change from partial to total disability almost invariably on a basis of a loss of wages rather than loss of earning power. The two may be coincident but are not necessarily so.

Judgment reversed and the record is remitted to the court below that it may be returned to the workmen's compensation board for such further hearings as may be necessary and for further findings as to degree of disability in harmony with this opinion.


Summaries of

Huerbin v. D. L. Clark Co.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 24, 1940
14 A.2d 175 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1940)

In Huerbin v. D.L. Clark Co. et al., 140 Pa. Super. 406, 14 A.2d 175, under a statute similar to ours, the State Industrial Commission had allowed temporary total disability at irregular intervals covering the period during which the injured employee was not employed. The court vacated the award for temporary total disability, holding that temporary total disability may end and recur.

Summary of this case from National Well Service v. Brumley

In Huerbin v. D.L. Clark Co. et al., 140 Pa. Super. 406, 408, 409, 14 A.2d 175, we said: "Where an injured person, thinking he has fully recovered, makes a settlement with and releases the employer, it is proper, on development of future disability, to reopen the case and award compensation pursuant to the second paragraph of § 413 of the Workmen's Compensation Law if the facts warrant it (Dewees v. Day Zimmerman, 291 Pa. 379, 140 A. 345) provided a petition is filed within the limitations fixed in that section (77 P. S. § 772)."

Summary of this case from Smith v. Union Collieries Co.
Case details for

Huerbin v. D. L. Clark Co.

Case Details

Full title:Huerbin v. D.L. Clark Company et al., Appellants

Court:Superior Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: Jun 24, 1940

Citations

14 A.2d 175 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1940)
14 A.2d 175

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