From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Co.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania
Apr 15, 1935
178 A. 161 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1935)

Summary

In Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Co., 117 Pa. Super. 480, 178 A. 161, on May 11, 1932, claimant fell and fractured his kneecap.

Summary of this case from Manley v. American Packing Co.

Opinion

March 5, 1935.

April 15, 1935.

Workmen's compensation — Disability — Recurrence — Second injury result from first injury — Evidence.

In a compensation case, the evidence was on appeal held sufficient to sustain a finding that claimant's disability, following a fall caused by weakness and inflammation of his leg, resulted from a prior injury to his knee for which claimant had received compensation under an open agreement for total disability until he had signed a final receipt, and to sustain an award of compensation based upon a recurrence of claimant's original disability.

Appeal No. 22, February T., 1935, by defendant from judgment of C.P., Lackawanna County, March T., 1934, No. 574, in the case of Peter Gallagher v. The Hudson Coal Company.

Before KELLER, P.J., CUNNINGHAM, BALDRIGE, STADTFELD, PARKER, JAMES and RHODES, JJ. Affirmed.

Appeal from order of Board of Workmen's Compensation, affirming award of referee.

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

Order of board affirmed and judgment entered for claimant, in opinion by LEACH, J. Defendant appealed.

Error assigned, among others, was judgment.

Rudolph S. Houck, John P. Kelly, and Thomas L. Ennis, for appellant.

Roger J. Dever, for appellee.


Argued March 5, 1935.


On May 11, 1932, the claimant, while in the course of his employment with the defendant, fell and broke the knee-cap of his right knee, near the lower end. The broken fragment was fastened to the rest of the knee-cap with a silver wire and apparently healed. A compensation agreement was entered into for total disability beginning May 19, 1932, for an indeterminate period. He was paid compensation until October 16, 1932, when he signed a final receipt. The defendant had no work for him, and on January 16, 1933, he went to work as an inside laborer for South Penn Collieries Co. In the meantime, in December 1932, his injured knee began troubling him. On January 26, 1933, while working for South Penn Collieries Co. his injured knee gave way, while he was walking, and he fell, pus coming out immediately from the place where he had been hurt. On consulting a surgeon who specialized in bone and joint surgery, the latter found that the knee was swollen and there was a small wound from which fluid was discharging. He sent claimant to a hospital until the wound healed up and then had an X-ray taken, after which he operated on the knee and found a large amount of clotted blood in the joint; the knee capsule was rent across and the knee-cap ligament stripped off the lower end of the knee-cap. He made an artificial ligament by taking half of claimant's heel cord or tendon of Achilles, and grafted it to the bone. A hole was bored on each side of the knee-cap and the ligament was threaded through that and then holes were bored in the tibia and the ligament was threaded through that and fastened in what remained of the knee-cap tendon, which gave him "a pretty good leg."

The surgeon, who performed the second operation, testified that claimant would not have had the second injury if he had not had the first; that the first injury weakened the tissues about the knee-cap; that, in his judgment, a certain amount of degeneration set in and that the circulation was not as good as before; that in walking about with an insecure knee the knee-cap tendon stripped off the lower end of the knee-cap. The evidence of the claimant was that while he was walking the knee gave out and caused his fall; and the doctor explained this as follows: "What he told me was that he felt his knee give out without any warning and while he was walking the knee gave out and he fell. Now I think when he fell he got that or could get that little hole in the skin. There was a piece of wire was drawn tightly against the skin and, as he flexed it forcibly, made a little wound, but it also stripped the patella tendon away from the bone and rent the capsule straight across." He also gave it as his opinion that claimant's leg gave out as the result of his former injury.

We think this evidence supported the finding of the referee that claimant's disability of January 26, 1933, was the result of his accident on May 11, 1932, and could be classed as a recurrence of disability; and justified the award of compensation from January 26, 1933, to August 16, 1933. The proximate cause of the second accident was the giving way of his leg due to the weakened condition of the tissues about the kneecap, as a result of the first accident. If his leg had been sound and well it would not have given way. If he had tripped over some object and fallen, causing a new injury, this defendant would not have been liable for the resulting disability. But when the leg gave way from weakness, or inflammation, which was the result of the first fall, the disability following the fall, which resulted from this weakness or inflammation, may properly be referred back to the original injury. See Carey v. Wiedlandt Co., 100 Pa. Super. 220, and Hornetz v. P. R.C. I. Co., 277 Pa. 40, 120 A. 662.

The judgment is affirmed.


Summaries of

Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Co.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania
Apr 15, 1935
178 A. 161 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1935)

In Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Co., 117 Pa. Super. 480, 178 A. 161, on May 11, 1932, claimant fell and fractured his kneecap.

Summary of this case from Manley v. American Packing Co.

In Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Co., 117 Pa. Super. 480, 178 A. 161, we came to a similar conclusion in the case of a knee injury. The situation here presented differs from those cases in that the second injury was here to another member.

Summary of this case from Marshall v. Pittsburgh
Case details for

Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Co.

Case Details

Full title:Gallagher v. Hudson Coal Company, Appellant

Court:Superior Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: Apr 15, 1935

Citations

178 A. 161 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1935)
178 A. 161

Citing Cases

Manley v. American Packing Co.

Goetz v. J.D. Carson Co., 206 S.W.2d 530; Stephens v. Spuck Iron Foundry Co., 214 S.W.2d 534. (2) The finding…

Yarbrough v. Polar Ice Fuel Co.

The Industrial Board concluded otherwise and found "that the injury that the plaintiff sustained on June 14,…