DocketNumber: Appeal 13
Citation Numbers: 193 A. 397, 128 Pa. Super. 65, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 98
Judges: Keller, Cunningham, Baldrige, Stadteeld, Parker, James
Filed Date: 3/8/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Argued March 8, 1937. There is no reasonable doubt that Antenas Kalvinskas, the father of the minor dependent claimants, died on April 12, 1935, from streptococcic septicaemia or blood poisoning as a result of an infection of the right thumb, received through a cut or scratch. In the words of the coroner's physician, "I believe undoubtedly he had an infection of the hand, resulting in generalized invasion of the bloodstream, and death." The records of the Pennsylvania Hospital to which he was taken on April 4, and where he died, and the laboratory report of the pus cells taken from his right hand confirm this.
Kalvinskas worked as a laborer for the defendants, Heyl Brothers, manufacturers of syrups, and it was part of his duties to fill barrels with syrup, and roll them into the aisle where the shipper would weigh them. The barrels were wooden barrels with iron or wire hoops. He worked on the first floor of the plant, and his home was two squares distant from his place of work — one block by the railroad. His quitting time was four o'clock in the afternoon. On the afternoon of April 2, 1935, he came home from the plant — arriving not later than 4:15 — with his right thumb bleeding from a cut or scratch. He washed it, put some peroxide on it and bandaged it. As soon as he came into the house to get the peroxide he told his daughter, aged fourteen years, that he had cut his thumb on the hoop of a barrel at the plant. At about the same time he told John York, who had lived with him for two years and "make for him eats," that he had cut his thumb on a barrel hoop, while rolling barrels at the plant, *Page 68 a couple of minutes before he came home. The thumb was bleeding slightly at the time, and he washed it and put peroxide on it. The next day he went to the plant and worked all day, but the morning of the day following, April 4, the hand and arm had swollen so that he was not able to work and York reported for him at the plant that he was sick. The foreman told York to tell Kalvinskas to come there, which he did, arriving about nine-thirty o'clock. He showed the foreman, Joseph Bagdon, his hand which, at that time, was "swollen something awful," and told him he had cut it on the afternoon of April 2d on a barrel hoop, while rolling barrels. On the afternoon of the same day he was taken to the hospital, where the hand and arm grew worse, causing his death on April 12th, with complication of bronchial pneumonia, induced by the streptococcic infection. All of the patient's statements to the doctors and attendants, as noted in the hospital history of the case, were consistent with his original declarations. There was also the additional evidence that when he left home after lunch to go back to his work, there was nothing wrong with the thumb.
The only real question involved in this appeal is whether there is any competent evidence in the record to sustain the finding that the injury to Kalvinskas' thumb, which undoubtedly caused his death, was received by him while at work in defendant's plant on the afternoon of April 2, shortly before quitting time. The learned court below reversed the award of the board in favor of the claimants based on the findings of the referee, which had been adopted and approved by it, on the ground that competent evidence to support them was wholly lacking. We feel obliged to differ from the court and agree with the board that there is competent evidence to sustain the award.
1. Leaving out of the case, for the present, consideration of the declarations made by the employee to his *Page 69
daughter, to York, and to Bagdon, the defendant's foreman, as being too remote in time to constitute part of the res gestae, we are of opinion that the circumstantial evidence in the case pointed clearly to the injury to the thumb as having been received while at work at defendant's plant. When he left home to go back to his work, after lunch, the thumb was not injured. His work required the rolling of heavy barrels with iron or wire hoops, which might easily cause a cut or scratch of this nature. He lived only a stone's throw from the plant and on arriving home at the close of work, his hand was still bleeding from a cut or scratch which must have been lately received. There was no evidence tending to show that he had done anything on the way home, after leaving his work, to cause the scratch. The fact finding body has a right to use the conclusions and tests of everyday experience and draw the inferences which reasonable men would thus draw from similar facts: Neely v.Provident Life Acc. Ins. Co.,
2. But we are not satisfied that Kalvinskas' declarations to his daughter and to York were made under circumstances that took them out of the res gestae rule. They were made within 20 or 25 minutes after the occurrence of the injury. They were spontaneous declarations, uttered within a short time after the occurrence and while he was still affected by it, for his first act on arriving home was to wash the cut and put peroxide on it. Declarations made from fifteen minutes to thirty minutes — and in some cases even longer — after the event, were held admissible as part of the res gestae in Eby v. Travelers Ins.Co.,
3. But there is another matter to be considered, which tends to support the award in this case. When York was called as a witness for the claimants, no objection was made by the defendants to his testifying to the declarations made to him by Kalvinskas immediately after his return home in the afternoon — beyond that a question was leading — until after the witness had testified fully to Kalvinskas' declaration that he had cut his thumb that afternoon on a barrel hoop, while rolling barrels at his work, and had been cross-examined by the defendant's attorney or representative; and the ground of objection was not stated. Following this, the defendants' representative, himself, in further cross-examining the witness as to when Kalvinskas had injured his thumb, which had not previously been brought out, elicited the reply that he (Kalvinskas) had said it occurred a couple of minutes before he came home.1
Our Supreme Court held in Poluski v. Glen Alden Coal Co.,
On full consideration of the whole case, we are satisfied that there was competent evidence to sustain the award, and this being so, that the learned court below erred in setting it aside and directing judgment for the defendants.
The judgment is reversed, and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to enter judgment for the claimants on the award of the Workmen's Compensation Board in accordance with the general instructions laid down in Graham v. HillmanCoal Coke Co.,
"By Mr. Merrifield: [for the defendants].
Q. Tell this gentleman here what Antenas said to you at quarter after four? A. Well come home and says cut finger.
Q. Is that all he said? A. Yes.
Q. ``I cut my finger'? A. Yes.
By the Referee:
Q. Did he tell you where he hurt it? A. Well, told me in barrel when roll barrel, on hoop.
By Mr. Merrifield:
Q. Did he tell you when? A. Yes, told on hoop.
Q. When? A. He said before came home, couple minutes."
Commonwealth v. Stallone , 281 Pa. 41 ( 1924 )
Poluski v. Glen Alden Coal Co. , 286 Pa. 473 ( 1926 )
Neely v. Provident Life & Accident Insurance , 322 Pa. 417 ( 1936 )
Harrah v. Montour Railroad Company , 321 Pa. 526 ( 1936 )
Johnston v. Payne-Yost Construction Co. , 292 Pa. 509 ( 1928 )
Wiltbank v. Fire Assn. of Phila. , 293 Pa. 206 ( 1928 )
Howe v. Howe , 1901 Pa. Super. LEXIS 43 ( 1901 )
Smith v. Welsh Bros. , 102 Pa. Super. 54 ( 1931 )
Graham v. Hillman Coal & Coke Co. , 122 Pa. Super. 579 ( 1936 )
Van Eman v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. , 201 Pa. 537 ( 1902 )
Smith v. Stoner , 243 Pa. 57 ( 1914 )
Eby v. Travelers Insurance , 258 Pa. 525 ( 1917 )
McCauley v. Imperial Woolen Co. , 261 Pa. 312 ( 1918 )
Riley v. Carnegie Steel Co. , 276 Pa. 82 ( 1923 )
Cattison v. Cattison , 22 Pa. 275 ( 1853 )
Fulton National Bank v. City of Lancaster , 112 Pa. Super. 565 ( 1933 )
Nesbit v. Vandervort & Curry , 128 Pa. Super. 58 ( 1937 )
Bracken v. Bethlehem Steel Co. , 115 Pa. Super. 251 ( 1934 )
Tomczak v. Susquehanna Coal Co. , 250 Pa. 325 ( 1915 )
Wolford v. Geisel Moving & Storage Co. , 262 Pa. 454 ( 1919 )
Ceccato v. Union Collieries Co. , 137 Pa. Super. 174 ( 1939 )
Smith v. State Workmen's Insurance Fund , 140 Pa. Super. 602 ( 1940 )
Cease v. Thomas, Exrx. , 155 Pa. Super. 215 ( 1944 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Berry v. Berry , 165 Pa. Super. 598 ( 1949 )
In the Int. of: S.P., Appeal of: S.P. ( 2019 )
Haas v. Kasnot , 371 Pa. 580 ( 1952 )
Jessie v. Dash , 194 Pa. Super. 1 ( 1960 )
Alberta M. McCurdy Administratrix of the Estate of Robert A.... , 346 F.2d 224 ( 1965 )
Troxell v. Shirk , 130 Pa. Super. 40 ( 1937 )
Lambing v. Consolidation Coal Co. , 161 Pa. Super. 346 ( 1947 )
Harring v. Glen Alden Coal Co. , 130 Pa. Super. 552 ( 1938 )
Lusk v. Monongahela City Water Co. , 164 Pa. Super. 354 ( 1948 )
Kempa v. Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Corp. , 133 Pa. Super. 392 ( 1938 )
Goettel v. Pittsburgh Coal Co. , 140 Pa. Super. 516 ( 1940 )
Commonwealth v. Goetz , 129 Pa. Super. 22 ( 1937 )
Baker v. Freed , 138 Pa. Super. 315 ( 1939 )
Moyer v. Branch Storage Co., Inc. , 138 Pa. Super. 71 ( 1939 )
Thomas v. Decommene , 133 Pa. Super. 489 ( 1938 )
Yankunos v. Hinds Catering Co. (Et Al.) , 130 Pa. Super. 187 ( 1937 )
Hansky v. Jones & Langhlin Steel Corp. , 149 Pa. Super. 605 ( 1942 )