Harold Grubin v. The United States

333 F.2d 861, 166 Ct. Cl. 272, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 101
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 12, 1964
Docket167-60
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 333 F.2d 861 (Harold Grubin v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold Grubin v. The United States, 333 F.2d 861, 166 Ct. Cl. 272, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 101 (cc 1964).

Opinions

DAVIS, Judge.

This is a claim for disability retired pay by a doctor who served actively in the Army Medical Corps (while in his early thirties) from March 24, 1944, to September 15, 1946. When he entered on active duty he acknowledged that he had previously had asthma and that he suffered moderately from hay fever. Because of these conditions he was put on limited service and at first marked unfit for overseas duty, but some months later he was found suited for limited foreign service with a station, post, or camp complement. Accordingly, he was assigned to an area in the Philippine Islands which was free from asthma and hay fever. There he developed a serious and continuing bout . of gastrointestinal trouble which caused his hospitalization in the Philippines from July 25, 1945, to August 12, 1945, and again from September 1, 1945, until October 28, 1945. He was shipped to the mainland at that time, and stayed in Army hospitals, almost continuously, from his arrival until the end of March 1946. During that period he had two separate Disposition Boards (to which we shall later refer). He had no Retiring Board, though the [862]*862first Disposition Board recommended that he appear before a Retiring Board.1

After a 30-day leave and a 2¡4 month :stint of duty, plaintiff was ordered (in July 1946) to Tilton General Hospital for '“evaluation of temporary limited duty prior to separation.” A third Disposition Board met and found him disabled because of his asthma and allergy,2 but recommended that he be returned to duty in a limited service status. During this process, plaintiff received a telegram from his brother, then in the Philippines, that the latter had suffered an attack of paralytic poliomyelitis and would shortly come to the continental United States for care at the Army-Navy Hospital at Hot Springs, Arkansas. In order to meet his brother on his arrival, plaintiff (a surgeon) waived a Retiring Board and asked that the proceedings for his discharge be hastened. He was discharged from the hospital on August 2, 1946, and ordered released from active duty, not for physical disability, at the end of his terminal leave on September 15, 1946. An application to the Correction Board (on October 21, 1957) for disability retirement pay was denied, without a hearing, 'in April 1958. This suit followed on Hay 4, 1960, based upon the gastrointestinal ailment.

Because plaintiff left active •service in the middle of 1946 and brought "his action in 1960, defendant says that "he is far out of time. We have repeatedly held, however, that a cause of action for disability retirement pay does not ac■crue on the claimant’s discharge; it does not ripen until he has had a competent board (or unsuccessfully sought one). Friedman v. United States, Ct.Cl., No. 377-60, decided Nov. 7,1962, slip op., pp. 10-11, 13-15, 20-21, 31, 310 F.2d 381, 389-390, 391-392, 395-396, 402, cert. denied Lipp et al. v. United States, 373 U. S. 932, 83 S.Ct. 1540, 10 L.Ed.2d 691 (1963); Harper v. United States, Ct.Cl., No. 206-59, decided Nov. 7, 1962, slip op., pp. 2-3, 310 F.2d 405, 406; Hoppock v. United States, Ct.Cl., No. 33-62, decided Nov. 15, 1963, slip op., p. 2; Proper v. United States, 154 F.Supp. 317, 139 Ct.Cl. 511 (1957); Patterson v. United States, 141 Ct.Cl. 435 (1958). The only board proceedings plaintiff ever had or sought were before Disposition Boards and the Correction Board. We have specifically ruled that Disposition Boards are not competent or proper boards to determine retirement for disability. Hoppock v. United States, supra. The Correction Board was, of course, competent, and it was the first competent tribunal to determine plaintiff’s case. Its decision was given only two years before this suit was begun. The claim therefore accrued at that time and not before.

Plaintiff's waiver of a Retiring Board in the summer of 1946, while he was at Tilton General Hospital, does not alter this conclusion. In this respect, his case is parallel to Harper v. United States, supra, slip op., pp. 3-4, 310 F.2d at 406-07, in which the court held that a similar declination of a Retiring Board offered to the claimant was “not enough to ripen the claim.” The various factors taken into account in Harper, on this issue, are all present here. Dr. Harper “was greatly concerned over the immediate needs [863]*863of his family — his wife was in a hospital on account of a mental illness; his children were living with relatives; and his father needed an operation for cancer— and he therefore desired to effect a quick separation” (slip op., p. 3 n. 1, 310 F.2d at 406-07 n. 1). Dr. Grubin, in this case, was concerned over the plight of his brother who was being returned to the United States with paralytic poliomyelitis; as a doctor, plaintiff desired to be present to help and comfort his brother immediately upon his arrival. Harper “was told that Retiring Board proceedings might require additional lengthy hospitalization and that a hardship release would be much speedier” (ibid.). Similarly, this plaintiff knew— from his own personal experience, as well as his knowledge as an Army doctor — that a Retiring Board proceeding would take considerable time and that an ordinary release not for disability would be much quicker. Harper mistakenly “thought that he could ‘get along’ or ‘make [his] own way’ in civilian life” (ibid.). This plaintiff, too, “at the time of his release from active duty * * * felt that he could control his condition in civilian life with proper working hours, diet, and rest.” This proved not to be possible. See finding 15. The final factor noted in Harper is that neither the claimant nor his doctors fully knew the nature and extent of his disability at the time of his discharge. The same is true in this case. The exact nature of the disfunctioning of plaintiff’s gastrointestinal system is still not entirely clear, but it appears that he probably suffers from ulcerative colitis— an unpleasant and lasting disease of the intestine for which no precise cause is yet known.3 Plaintiff erred in thinking that his illness, whatever it was, was sufficiently moderate and controllable that he could return to his life as a surgeon; the fact is, as shown in finding 15, that he was soon forced to give up surgery and, then, general practice, and to become a pathologist so that he could, minimize stresses and regulate his activities, diet, and rest periods. The Army doctors were likewise mistaken in-thinking that plaintiff’s colitis was moderate and improving; the truth, as it. now appears, was that the disease was. merely quiescent toward the end of his. service and flared up at frequent intervals thereafter.

On this issue of the claimant’s declination of a Retiring Board, Harper is on-, all fours. We cannot find any significant, distinction in the fact that Dr. Harper was a dentist while Dr. Grubin was a. surgeon. Like lawyers, medical men are-often poor judges of their own eases, and. surgeons are not specialists in internal, medicine. The events here show that plaintiff was as far wrong as the Army-experts. There is no reason to believe that he, any more than Harper, knew (or should be held to have known) the true course of his disability.

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Harold Grubin v. The United States
333 F.2d 861 (Court of Claims, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
333 F.2d 861, 166 Ct. Cl. 272, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-grubin-v-the-united-states-cc-1964.