United States v. Mayfield

64 F.2d 214, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4052
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 1933
DocketNo. 746
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 214 (United States v. Mayfield) 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
United States v. Mayfield, 64 F.2d 214, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4052 (10th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of Mayfield on a war risk insurance policy which was kept in force by payment of premiums until July 1, 1918. The trial was without jury, and at the close of the evidence each party moved for findings and judgment. The court ruled in favor of plaintiff and found that the soldier was totally and permanently disabled at the time of Iris discharge on May 16, 1918, — that is, “said impairment of body rendered it impossible for him to follow continuously any substantially gainful occupation. * * *»

About March 1, 1918, he accidentally shot himself in his left foot. In August, 1918, his foot was amputated above the ankle, and in 1926 a second amputation was believed advisable which was made below the knee. He testified that before enlistment on July 10, 1916, he had done farm work and common labor; that he was discharged from military service May 16, 1918; that the first work he did after the first amputation was shoe repairing; he bought a shop from a German in Mangum and a set of hand tools, and operated there for about six months, and then moved part of the same shop to Burkbumett, and operated it there for about three months; that he was not able to make a living and sold the shop -to his brother; that the first farm work he did after his discharge was shocking wheat in 1919, which took about thirty days; that during the fall of that year he picked cotton; his wife’s children assisted him; he had married a widow with three children after his discharge; in 1920 he rented a farm of 160 [215]*215acres and stayed there dining that year, planted seventy-five acres of cotton and some milo maize; his wife’s boys did part of the plowing, and he helped them; in 1921 he went to “San Antone” with his family, and was there about ten months; that the Red Cross helped him part of the time; while there he worked in a harness shop about eight months as a harness maker; that he had to stand up; he was using a peg leg at that time which he made; that fall he went to Paris, Texas, and picked cotton, and remained there two or three years; while there he did farm work part of the time when he was able to work; he then went back to Oklahoma, near Durant; that during the winter of that year lie cut some stove wood; at that time he had his artificial leg; that in March 1923, he received a compensation cheek for an amount between $2,700 and $2,-800; he bought an automobile and ran it himself; be also bought forty acres of land near Silo, Oklahoma; he bought some cows and hogs; in the fall of 1923 he rented a. house and two blocks of land in Silo and kept the cows and bog's and chickens he bought, and fed and tended them and sold the cream; he had nine cows and 100 hens, and sold eggs, hut lie didn’t have any luck in raising chickens; in 1924 he took possession of the forty acres, moved over there, and sold the cows because the feed bill was greater than the income; that he couldn’t work the crop that year and it was a failure; in 1925 he left the forty acres and went back to Western Oklahoma; that during that summer he didn’t do anything; bis limb was sore and he couldn’t work; in the fall he picked cotton; pulled off his artificial leg and crawled; in 3926 ho took vocational training in shoe repairing; when he applied for vocational training he said he was working in a shoe maker’s shop, and was making a living, but he testified that he never had made a living; that when he went to take vocational training ho was asked if he was satisfied with the work he was then doing, and he answered, “Yes, but I want to learn the Lade”; but he testified that they had already told him that he couldn’t get anything else and inasmuch as he couldn’t get anything else he was willing to take shoe repairing; that the government trained him about twelve months; he started in a shop at Cherokee owned by one Turner; on his way to Mangum he stopped at Gotebo and found a shoe man there who wanted a repair man; lie worked there about a month; his limb got sore, and he couldn’t hold the job down; he then brought some shoe repairing machinery which he had bought to Gotebo and set up a shop of his own, kept it about a month, and sold it to his brother for $300; that after that he couldn’t do anything in 1926; that he had a second operation in August, 1926, and was discharged in the following' December; that lie took a few jobs of auto top repairing; in 1927 he went to Guthrie, Oklahoma, and has been there since; he first tried to represent the Health Products Company there, selling their goods, but found it was too much walking; that at the time of the trial he had a filling station, a garage, and a tourist camp three miles from Guthrie where he also sells cold drinks; he got that place for his wife’s boy to run; there were four tourist cabins; he, his wife, and the boy occupied two of them, and the other two were for the accommodation of tourists.

The complaint seems to be that the end of his leg would not heal over, but he testified that it would at times heal over, and that occurred when lie was not trying to do hard work; at times he would let it heal up, and it would get so he could get about again; that using the artificial limb pulls the flesh back from over the end of the stump. It is observed that he worked eight months in a harness shop at San Antonio, had to stand up, and was then using the peg leg. He did not testify that the peg leg pulled the flesh back, over the end of the stump. Ho did say, “I get along better with the artificial than the peg leg.” He said that all the work he had done caused the end of the limb to become sore. There was testimony that at times lie used crutches.

Not only is it a matter of common knowledge that there are many occupations which men with one leg can successfully follow, but the record contains unchallenged proof of that fact. Dr. Border, a physician and surgeon and a witness for the defendant, testified that, in his opinion while a man with one leg- is permanently disabled he is not totally disabled; that he had seen men with one leg making a living at various sorts of trades; that he had seen a man with one leg off doing carpenter work; that he could run elevators; that he had seen a man who was then at Mangum with both legs off, who acts as depot agent and walks a half mile back and forth every day; that in his opinion the knee could be properly padded so that the stump wouldn’t become sore with the peg leg; that plaintiff could conduct a tourist camp, and follow other occupations.

[216]*216The shoe repair man whom plaintiff had bought out had lived at Mangum twenty-four years, and had been in the shoe repair business since 1882. He had electrical machinery in his shop. He testified that he had seen lots of men with one leg operate a shoe repair shop with success; that such work does not require standing up all the time; that there was a man with one leg operating and carrying on a shoe repairing business at El Reno; one at Stamford, Texas, with both legs off making a living for his family; one at Wichita'Falls, Texas, on crutches who had to sit down to do the work, but was making a living. But as said, this is a matter of common knowledge.

In Hanagan v. United States (C. C. A.) 57 F.(2d) 860, 861, the soldier did not lose his leg, but he was wounded while in the service in the left knee so that his leg, according to the proof, was practically useless. For a considerable time he used crutches and afterwards a cane. At times the leg gave way in walking. His occupation had been that of a miner. The court in affirming the judgment in favor of defendant said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 214, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mayfield-ca10-1933.