Karpati v. Cambria Steel Co.
Karpati v. Cambria Steel Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Section 409 of the Employer’s Liability Act of 1915, provides that the board’s findings of fact shall in all cases be final but on a question of law an appeal may be taken to the courts as in the act provided. No provision is made for bringing up the testimony by a bill sealed, a certified record or otherwise. The appeal to the Court of Common Pleas is, therefore, in the nature of a certiorari, all questions of fact being left to the final determination of the compensation board. While the review by an appellate court on a writ of certiorari ordinarily only extends to an examination of the record to ascertain whether the judgment is according to law it has been held in numerous cases that in statutory proceedings we may examine the opinion of the court below on such an appeal to ascertain the grounds of its action: Independence Party Nomination, 208 Pa. 108; Franklin Film Mfg
The same reasoning applies to the claim of dependency. The wife was living with her parents and was supported by them. She made no effort to lpcate her husband or to induce him to provide for her. As related to the responsibility of the employer we think there is po presumption that the wife was actually dependent upon her husband for support. To charge the employer it must affirmatively appear that she was actually dependent. There is no disclosure of facts in the opinion of the court which would justify the conclusion that it sufficiently appeared that the wife was dependent on her husband.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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- Workmen’s compensation — Practice, O. P. — Appeals—Findings. An appeal to the Court of Common Pleas under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, is in the nature of a certiorari, all questions of fact being left to the deliberation of the compensation board. On an appeal from the Common Pleas to the Superior Court, the latter court may examine the opinion of the Court of Common Pleas to ascertain the grounds of its action. Where the opinion discloses the facts on which the judgment is based, the appellate court may inquire whether they support the conclusions reached. A widow is not living with her husband at the time of his death or “actually dependent upon him for support” within the- meaning of the act, where the evidence shows that the husband and wife were married in February, 1914, and lived with the wife’s parents in New York, the wife being dependent on her husband for support, except as to rent and board for a year which the parents agreed to provide; that subsequently they moved to New Jersey, and thereafter the wife in June, 1915, returned to her parents, and the husband went to Pennsylvania to secure work; that while working there in a steel works he was killed in January, 1916, and that the husband never communicated with his wife nor furnished her funds, although he knew where she was.