Law v. United States

290 F. 972, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1573
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedJuly 13, 1923
DocketNo. 1016
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 290 F. 972 (Law v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Law v. United States, 290 F. 972, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1573 (D. Mont. 1923).

Opinion

BOURQUIN, District Judge.

This action involves a war risk insurance contract. Plaintiff enlisted in defendant’s, army in June, 1917, the contract issued in February, 1918, and his injuries were received in battle in September, 1918. These latter were shell wounds, involving loss of his left arm at the shoulder, loss of some tissue of his left thigh, and neurasthenia. Theretofore and in the service he had developed flat feet. He is native-born and at enlistment was 24 years [974]*974old, sound, and of farm laborer vocation. Upon discharge, the Bureau of Insurance rated him of temporary total disability, and he was paid compensation accordingly. Rater, in 1919, defendant provided him with vocational training in' law, to continue four years, and compensation, $80 to $100 per month, which he accepted and has enjoyed. He contended, however, that he was entitled to payments by virtue of the contract of insurance. This defendant denied, -and this action was begun in March, 1922, and tried in October, 1922, plaintiff his own counsel throughout.

From the evidence it does not appear reasonably probable that his flat feet are of permanent, if any, occupational disability. In respect to his neurasthenia, a physician in whose home plaintiff resided from October, 1919, to August, 1921, testifies by deposition in October, 1922, that it manifested itself by “trembling voice and mental distraction,” and “it was permanent” in his opinion; that he made numerous examinations of plaintiff; that when the first was made in October, 1919, plaintiff could have performed no “concentration and work” “without rendering said nervous condition more serious” ; that “the proper treatment would have been absolute rest” ; that during said period of observation plaintiff’s “capacity for concentration, and work remained about the same, but his ability to sleep was considerably impaired.” He also testified that the injury to plaintiff’s left thigh is permanent, and diminishes the leg’s normal efficiency from 30 per cent, to 50 per cent. Another physician testified orally that plaintiff’s neurasthenia is “mild,” and that the injury to his thigh disables him 10 per cent.; cannot say-how much permanent disability from it, but in an occupation requiring plaintiff to be on his feet would not “hinder, except to a minor extent.”

-At the time of trial, plaintiff in the law school of the University of Montana, had studied more than three years, and, although yet of trembling voice, manifested, no lack of power of concentration and no distraction, and upon his feet he moved about with facility, though he testified that the muscles of the left leg “knot” and from walking it becomes “stiff.” It does not appear reasonably probable that plaintiff’s neurasthenia is of permanent occupational disability, but it does thus appear that his injured thigh is. And that the loss of his left arm is of permanent occupational disability is obvious. Whether plaintiff’s ailments and injuries reduce him to a state of “total permanent disability,” within, the intent and meaning of article 4 of the War Risk Insurance Act (40 Stat. 409), is the. determinative issue.

Said act supersedes, pension laws and their policy of gratuities, sounds in contract throughout, and is of unprecedented liberality. It creates, a bureau and director,, with express power (otherwise implied) to make all necessary rules to execute the act, but none “inconsistent with” it, grants allowances to families of all enlisted men, grants to officers and-men; and their dependents, compensation based on death and disability .reducing earning capacity not less than 10 per cent, (article 3), and. for “greater protection” than this compensation affords offers to officers and. men insurance against death or “total permanent disability” - (article 4). The director is authorized to “deter[975]*975mine upon and publish the full and exact terms and conditions of such contract of insurance,” again, of course, to any extent reasonable and not inconsistent with the act.

In the latter is no definition or limitation of the term “total permanent disability,” and after the contract in suit had issued and in March, 1918, the director made a “regulation” that “any impairment of mind or body which renders it impossible for the disabled person to follow continuously any substantially gainful occupation shall be deemed, in articles 3 and 4, to be total disability,” and deemed to be “permanent whenever it is founded upon conditions which render it reasonably certain that it will continue throughout the life” of the disabled person. Thereafter, and in June, 1918, Congress amended both the compensation and insurance provisions of the act (40 Stat. 609), but again without defining or limiting the term “total permanent disability.” In December, 1919, it again amended said act (41 Stat. 371), and in the compensation provisions inserted a proviso:

“That tlie loss of both feet, or both hands, or the sight of both eyes, or the loss of one foot and one hand, or one foot and the sight of one eye, or one hand and the sight of one eye, or becoming helpless and permanently bedridden shall be deemed to be total, permanent disability.”

The act, clearly enough, in its insurance feature was intended to afford the soldier the advantages of the ordinary life and accident insurance, which was no longer available to him save at rates proportionate to a soldier’s risk and prohibitive to his purse. It is a substitute for a common, valuable, necessary, and well-known institution, both intended to serve the like purpose and to accomplish the like end, and in reason and the nature of things the contracts of both in so far as like in terms must be like in construction. As in any government contract, the act and contracts by virtue of it must be interpreted and construed by the same rules as are like statutes and contracts involving none but private parties.

The analogy between the contracts of this act and those of accident insurance is not close, for that amongst other variations the latter as a rule associate words of definition and limitation in respect to disability that the former do not. Nevertheless general rules of construction of accident insurance contracts have applicability to contracts like this at bar. Congress must have intended as it must have known, that as usual, resort would be had fo all the usual aids to arrive at its intent and meaning.

So in respect to this contract, as to those of accident insurance generally, the term “total permanent disability” must be taken in reasonable and practical (here, perhaps, even liberal) sense relative to the status of the beneficiary and to be determined largely by the circumstances of his particular case. The insurance, like enlistment, extends to all soldiers, of infinite diversity of ability and variety of vocation. It is to compensate them for earning capacity destroyed, the earning capacity the soldier had before its destruction.

In determining as a question of fact the extent of the destruction and consequent disability, the inquiry is not to be restricted to the vocation the soldier may have followed, but extends to any other [976]*976gainful vocation that it is reasonably probable he can follow with reasonable effort and success. The soldier’s capacity or ability to earn, and not merely the vocation in which he has earned, is the test of disability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 F. 972, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/law-v-united-states-mtd-1923.