DocketNumber: Appeal, 124
Judges: Arnold, Baldrige, Dithrich, Hirt, Reno, Rhodes, Ross
Filed Date: 4/16/1945
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued April 16, 1945.
Claimant filed his petition under the Occupational Disease Act of June 21, 1939, P.L. 566,
Claimant has been a coal miner all his life in the soft coal mines of Western Pennsylvania. He started to work for the defendant company in 1925 and continued in its employ until February 4, 1943. A few days prior to that date, he was forced to cease working in the mine because of what is commonly known as miner's asthma and is so described in the petition and referred to in the act as anthraco-silicosis. He was given an outside job, shoveling red dog, but that proved to be too strenuous for him, and on February 4, 1943, he discontinued work altogether. In his claim petition he alleges that he is totally disabled as a result of employment in an occupation having a miner's asthma hazard.
There is sufficient competent evidence to support the referee's findings of fact, affirmed by the board, which are in part as follows: "Fourth: The claimant is totally disabled for coal mining, and has been since he ceased work on February 4, 1943, because of a lung condition, which has been diagnosed an anthraco-silicosis. He is however, able to do work of a lighter nature, such as a watchman or an elevator operator." Claimant's physician, a lung specialist, the only medical expert who testified, said: "His disability is permanent but I do not think it can be classified as total. He is unfit to do heavy laboring work and should not return to the mine. I believe he might do light work which would not require sustained physical effort. . . . . . Q. Can you be a little more specific about it? What form of light work? A. Well, I suppose the man could sit and run an elevator. I suppose he could sit in front of a gate and be a watchman. I don't know how much cleaning he could do if he had to use a broom or something like that. I imagine it would be very limited. *Page 319 . . . . . Q. And, Doctor, the long and short of the matter is he could do light work if it did not require very much physical exertion and if it were all outside or at a place free from dust. That is about the situation? A. That is the sum and substance of it."
The principal question raised is whether the claimant istotally disabled1 within the meaning of the act. The compensation authorities have found that although the claimant is totally disabled as a coal miner, he is able to do work of a lighter nature. Appellant contends that from this finding it must follow, as a matter of law, that claimant is totally disabled. We do not agree with this contention. The Occupational Disease Act of 1939, supra, does not define the word "disabled." The Occupational Disease Compensation Act of July 2, 1937, P.L. 2714, § 3, 77 P. S. § 1103, repealed by the Act of 1939, provided: "The word `disabled,' as herein used, means disabled from earning full wages in the employment in which the employe was employed." Concerning this definition, we said in Rando v. State Workmen'sInsurance Fund et al.,
The general rule is that if the claimant is unable to *Page 320
do light work he is entitled to compensation for total disability: Consona v. R.E. Coulborn Co. et al.,
Appellant also assigns as error the referee's fifth finding of fact: "No testimony was offered by the claimant to prove a silica hazard, nor did the defendant adduce any testimony in this case. Therefore this record is barren of any evidence that would warrant a finding that the claimant, over his period of employment with the defendant, was subject to a silica hazard." The record supports this finding of fact. Although the doctor diagnosed claimant's lung condition as anthraco-silicosis, claimant offered no evidence to prove that he was subject to a silica hazard in the defendant's employ. The Occupational Disease Act of 1939, supra, § 301(d),
The order is affirmed.