United States v. Ellis

67 F.2d 765, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4627
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 11, 1933
DocketNo. 7122
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 F.2d 765 (United States v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Ellis, 67 F.2d 765, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4627 (5th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Willie Ellis, a colored man, by occupation a laborer, was inducted into the United States Army in March, 1918. While in its service he applied for and was granted a war risk insurance policy for $10,000. Demobilized July 30, 1919, he paid no further premium on his policy, and took no further action about it. On November 1, 1920, after an attack of influenza, he died. The attending physician wrote down his death as caused by mitral insufficiency, and there the matter stood until [766]*7661929. In that year, the appellees, his father and mother, claimed the maturity of the policy while in force through the soldier’s having become totally and permanently disabled. This claim denied, they brought this suit and prevailed below with both court and jury.

Defendant comes here complaining that it was error not to give the general charge in its favor, and that the court erred to its prejudice in giving and refusing instructions.

Appellee, on the main point urged, the insufficiency of the evidence, rightly relying on it that an appellate court will only reluctantly and in the clearest kind of case reverse the action of a trial court in declining to give a peremptory instruction, vigorously opposes the claim that plain error has been done by letting the ease go to the jury, calling the record to witness. The appellant, with equal show of confidence, invokes the record. We look to it. It shows that plaintiff, a strong, hardy young negro laborer, 27 years of age, served for sixteen months, from March, 1918, to July, 1919, in the Army of the United States. Twelve months of that time was served in a labor battalion overseas. From his enlistment record it appears that at the end of his service he was discharged, account demobilization, physical condition good. Neither plaintiffs nor defendant offered his service medical record. Plaintiffs relied on the showing of their lay witnesses as to the deceased's physical condition and as to his inability to follow continuously any gainful occupation after his discharge, on the testimony of the physician in attendance at his death, and on expert medical opinion. The defendant, relying mainly on the insufficiency of plaintiffs’ proof, offered only an application for insurance in a private insurance company, purporting to have been made by the soldier, and controverting expert opinion. By their witnesses plaintiffs proved that on one occasion, while in the army, the soldier “fell out” during morning exercises; that on other occasions he had sick spells, “but he did not fall out like he did the first time”; that after his discharge he looked thin and was sick and was taking medicine, at one time being treated by a doctor. One witness, Callie Landry, at whose house he lived, testified that after the soldier came back from the army he was slender and underweight, that he was sick and treated by a doctor, and that “from the fall of 1919 until he died in 192# he was principally at home. He seemed to be hurting always.” Other witnesses testified to his shortness of breath and wheezing, while all offered testimony that, though he did try to do laborer’s work, whieh was all he was fitted for, he was not able to stand it. “He was short-winded, would blow and pant, and just absolutely did not have the strength to work.” Two witnesses, rice farmers who had employed him before the war, testified that in August after he was discharged he came back to work on the rice farm; this was heavy work, handling 299-pound sacks in the rice fields in the hottest month of the year, and he just could not stand it; that they put him on lighter work, but he could not do that. Other witnesses testified to his trying to wheel coal to a boiler room; that he was weak and had to have frequent intermissions; “that he was kept on because labor was scarce, and that the boy worked off and on for a while until his health got so bad he could, not work any more”; this was from some time in December, 1919, until some time in January, 1920; that he worked at this job again for a short while in October, just before his death. Others testified to his working with difficulty for a com.mission house, trucking fruit and produce.

The medical testimony was that of the doctor who attended him in his last illness, that it was not influenza, but a heart condition, which killed him, and the testimony of a heart specialist that the facts in evidence whieh were detailed to him in a hypothetical question indicated plainly that the man was suffering from a defective heart condition before August, 1919, and that that condition was no doubt greatly aggravated by the hard work he attempted to do in the rice fields in that month; that a heart condition such as the deceased had was one which required careful treatment; that with careful treatment and avoidance of any kind of overstrain or overexertion the patient might live a long time; but that the condition, when it had advanced far enough, required abstention from all kinds of hard labor.

Defendant’s expert testified as to the prevalence of mitral insufficiency; that it was in itself only a symptom, not a disease, and not in itself disabling; that countless numbers of persons had some insufficiency of that kind whieh they carried all through an active normal life without injury or detriment.

In a charge submitting to the jury the question whether plaintiffs’ deceased had, during the lifetime of the policy, that is, on or before August 31,1919, become totally and permanently disabled, the court fully defined totality and permanence, and left it to the jury to say whether plaintiffs had made out a case of totality and permanence as he defined it to them.

[767]*767There was no error in refusing the general charge. The assignment on that point is overruled. The evidence offered by plaintiffs was sufficient to take their case to the jury, and, if believed, would warrant a verdict in their favor.

We think, however, that reversible error was committed in the giving and in the refusal of charges on the issue of permanent disability. Just before the judge gave his charge to the jury, the defendant presented and requested the giving of five special charges. These were refused under Rule 13, a local rule, on the ground that they had been presented too late for adequate consideration. The defendant excepted to this ruling. Of these, charges Nos. 2 and 5 presented in a definite and precise way, the point that to mature a policy for total and permanent disability the disease relied on as producing it must not only have brought about total disability while the policy was in force, but must have progressed before the policy lapsed to such a point as to make it appear reasonably certain that the condition of total disablement would continue throughout the natural life of the sufferer. In the main charge the judge at first correctly defined permanent disability as “an impairment of the body or mind, or both body and mind, such as to render it impossible for the soldier to continuously engage in or follow any substantially gainful occupation or employment, and which is founded on conditions which render it reasonably certain that such disability will continue throughout the soldier’s life, then incorrectly or in this ease you would find whether it did continue throughout the soldier’s life.” He then proceeded again to incorrectly define permanent disability as applied to the case in hand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 F.2d 765, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ellis-ca5-1933.