Storey v. United States

60 F.2d 484, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2558
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1932
DocketNo. 604
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 484 (Storey v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Storey v. United States, 60 F.2d 484, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2558 (10th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff below, a mechanic by trade, enlisted in the United States Army on December 15, 1917. His policy of war risk insurance lapsed on December 1,1918 unless it matured prior to that date. Claiming to have been permanently and totally disabled prior to December 1, 1918, the plaintiff filed this action. The ease was tried without a jury, and, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the government moved for judgment on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove by any evidence in the ease that he was permanently and totally disabled while the policy was in force. This motion was sustained. This appeal presents the question of whether plaintiff’s proof disclosed such substantial evidence of permanent and total disability as would support a judgment in his favor.

The plaintiff was on active duty from the time of his enlistment until March 17, 1918, when he was ordered to a base hospital on account of severe pains in his back, right hip, and leg. Excepting for a few days in April, he was in army hospitals from that date until his discharge by a surgeon’s certificate of disability, on October 2, 1918. During that [485]*485period lie was examined by many doctors, and the diagnosis and treatment were repeatedly changed in an effort to afford Mm relief. Medical ion, massage, X-rav, electrical treatments, and serum injections were resorted to; for one period of 35 days he was in a plaster cast from his ankles to his armpits.. Opiates and sedfitrv es were resorted to in order' to induce sleep. His legs drew up and his spine curved; ho submitted to an operation, described by the surgeon’s report as an “operation double plnsvtie spiea consuming' thirty minutes time without anaesthetic by four doctors.” But all the medical skill at the disposal of the government could not relieve him; in September the doctors recorded: “Forward bending practically impossible * * * no improvement.” The difficulty centered in the sacroiliac joint; the disease was a progressive one which later involved the spine, and which eventually resulted in the obliteration of the joint and an ankylosis of the vertebras. The plaintiff testified to the circumstances of his discharge as follows: “After about six weeks of these treatments, Doctor Willson came to my bod and told me that the treatment they had been giving me did not seem to benefit me very much and they had come to the conclusion that time was the only thing that would decide my ease, and ho wanted to know how I would like to go home. I told Mm I did not want to go home in the condition I was in as I was bedridden and not able to walk without mutches. He insisted the change of climate would benefit me and that be had recommended my discharge. On October 2,1918,1 was discharged and sent home by way of pullman, with a United States Hospital attendant, as I was unable to walk without the aid of crutches.”

A board of medical officers rated the plaintiff, taken from a. hospital bed and sent home on crutches with an attendant, as two sixteenths disabled.

By March, 1919, the plaintiff “managed to walk without the aid of crutches,” although still suffering severe pains in his back. The government awarded him $4.40 a month compensation ; he sought and secured from a personal friend employment at a motor company, performing sneh light work as his physical condition would permit. He held this position for 14 months; during that period ho was compelled to lay off on account of illness more than a dozen times, one lay-off being for four weeks. At other times he was compelled to quit in the middle of the afternoon, or to lio down and rest during working hours. He was off on account of his disability nearly a fourth of the time. His total wages, as a skilled mechanic, for 14 months, were $1,434.-75, a fact which throws a significant light upon the breaks in the continuity of his employment. He gave up the position on account of his physical inability to hold it. In August, 192.0, he secured another position as a shop foreman which he held for four or five months. During this period he was off duty frequently, and again he was compelled to give up the position on account of his disability. From 1920 until 1929 he did no work. In 1929 he secured employment from a personal friend, answering inquiries at a road information desk at an automobile supply company, which involved no physical effort, lie was paid at the rate of $75 a month when ho worked, but he lost more than half of his time on account of his disability, and was finally forced to give up this position.

Space permits of a summary only of Ms later medical record. From the dale of his discharge until May, 1919, he called no physician, because, as he testified, his Army experience) taught him that relief could he had only by complete rest and the application of heat.

From May, 1919, to August, 1920, treated at Ms home by Dr. Crank.

From December, 1920, until 1923, treated by Dr. Purvis, an orthopedic surgeon of the Veterans’ Burean, and by Dr. Grage, a private physician.

June 8, 1921, a part of shin bone grafted in his spine. In government hospital three months following operation.

February, “ 1922, another operation removing part of graft from spine and draining pus pocket. In hospital three months. When discharged, unable to walk to any advantage.

January, 1923, back in hospital;' another operation, removing balance of graft from spine. In plaster cast 30 days. In hospital three months.

May, 1924, until August, 1924, in hospital.

October, 1924, until January, 1925, in hospital.

November, 1926, sent to government hospital at Muskogee; stayed three weeks.

April to August, 1927, bedfast.

During these years, he wore such body braces, or belts, or jackets, as were prescribed from time to time by the government physicians. During the intervals between hospitalizations, he was under treatment by government or private physicians, or both.

Dr. Purvis, a government physician, tes[486]*486tified that he considered him to be permanently and totally disabled in 1923. There was competent medical evidence that it was not possible for the plaintiff to follow continuously a substantially gainful occupation, involving physical effort, since his discharge from the Army.

When discharged from the Army, the plaintiff was on crutches, and a hospital attendant was required to enable him to return to his home. That he was then totally disabled is. not open to dispute. The remaining question is, Was his condition permanent; or, to use the language of the governing regulation, was his disability “founded upon conditions which render it reasonably certain that it Tyill continue throughout the life of the person suffering from it?” The disease from which plaintiff suffered is a progressive disease. It is conceded by the government that the insured is now permanently and totally disabled. Plaintiff’s proof discloses no permanent improvement in his condition — no arrest of the disease — between the time of his discharge and the time of the trial. Plaintiff co-operated with the medical staffs to the fullest extent; he submitted to every suggestion of the government physicians; he has undergone four operations; twice his body has been incased in plaster casts for many .weeks; he has submitted to the physical discomfort of every body brace or belt that has been suggested. It is not too much to say that his disability has baffled all the medical skill which the government could muster.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 484, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/storey-v-united-states-ca10-1932.