68 F.2d 654 | 5th Cir. | 1934
This is an appeal from a recovery on a war risk insurance policy for a total and permanent disability, the errors assigned being a refusal to direct the verdict and a refusal to admit in evidence a Veterans’ Hospital medical report. The appellant has died pending the appeal, and his executrix has been substituted. The evidence is abundant but not seriously conflicting. The insured, Ivey Preston Timmons, was honorably discharged from the army June 25, 1919, aged twenty-five years. While in the army he had influenza and double pneumonia, and infected tonsils ending in rheumatic fever and the removal of the tonsils, and had not reeov-ei'ed at his discharge. He. continued sick, coughing and weak, and uixable to work for a year aftex-wards. He had then a quick, unstable heart, which his attending physician had frequently obsexwed to follow influenza and pneumonia. B'efore entering the army Timmons had been managing a Fox-d automobile ageney, axid in August, 1920, financed by his uncle, he bought the Ford dealership in Kissimnfee, Fla., employing a manager but himself acting in an advisory capacity. In 1921 he took a partixex’. In December, 1922, the business was sold out without much profit, but the bank accounts showed that during the period the business had made total deposits of $174,096'.97, and his personal bank accounts showed deposits of $26,431. The latter are not shown to have arisen from any soui’ee other thaix withdrawals from the business. The testimony is that during this period he was. still weak and coughing, axxd lost a day or a week fx-om business from time to time. He maintained his war risk policy, with two lapses and two reinstatements, until December 31, 1921, wheix it lapsed finally. Oxx January 21, 1922, he applied to the New York Life Insurance Company for insurance, not mentioning the war risk policy among his existing insurances, and affirming in the application that he had had pneumonia and influenza in' 1918 but had been permanently cured and was then a proper subject for life insurance. The medical examiner found a slight murmur over the tricuspid valve of his heart. The insurance was accepted by the company, but without disability benefits, Timmons being “marked up fifteen years” as to premium rate, and he declined the policy. Beginning December, 1922, for eighteen months he sold Gray automobiles in connection with his uncle; the lay witnesses saying again that he was weak, easily exhausted, and not able to work all the time. He was sometimes working oix a salary and sometimes on a commission, but says he made little money. It appears that during this time in July, 1923, he applied to the Veterans’ Bureau for compensation on account of heart and lung trouble originating in the .service, and in November, 1928, a government physician found present mitral insufficiency of the heart, with an unfavorable prognosis; but he was rated able to x-esume his pre-war occupation as salesman. In February, 1924, Timmons applied to reinstate his war risk
On this evidence it cannot in reason and justice be found that Timmons was totally and permanently disabled at the lapse of his policy December 31, 1921. He was no doubt totally disabled while ho had influenza, pneumonia, and rheumatic fever in the army and while he was recovering immediately after his discharge, but the conditions were not such as to make it reasonably certain that for the rest of his life he would be unable to follow continuously any gainful occupation. He did in fact follow several such occupations consecutively for tho next seven years. He was apparently a man of intelligence and business experience, and should have known after working for over a year just prior to December 31, 1921, whether or not he was totally and permanently disabled. so as to claim under his policy. Instead of claiming under it, he reinstated it and then dropped it, attempting to take instead other insurance which was granted but at a premium rate ha was seemingly not willing to pay. Eighteen months later, when he sought compensation, he did not claim under his policy as for a total and permanent disability occurring before its lapse, but sought its reinstatement for tlio future, expressly affirming that he was not totally and permanently disabled. So late as 1927 or 1928 he was continuously earning $175 per month for twenty-five months. There is no sufficient evidence that all these years he was laboring under a great mistake as to his condition and was working when he was really unable to. His weakness and inability to take violent physical exercise and the occasional loss of time from sickness do not amount to total disability, for he was still able to follow the occupation in which he was engaged. That he could have done so more successfully if his health had been better only shows a partial disability. Considering the intelligence and the experience of the insured, his dealings with his policy, and the history of his actual activities, it cannot be reasonably concluded that he became totally and permanently disabled before his policy lapsed. Lumbra v. United States, 54 S. Ct. 272, 78 L. Ed.-; White v. United States (C. C. A.) 53 F.(2d) 565.
The report of a government physician of a physical examination of a veteran at the Veterans’ Bureau and there filed is evidence, notwithstanding the maker of it is not swom| and cross-examined. There is an exception to the rule against hearsay evidence, because the report is a contemporaneous entry mado in the line of duty by a public functionary. Demeter v. United States, 62 App. D. C. 208, 66 F.(2d) 188; Long v. United States (C. C. A.) 59 F.(2d) 602; Sprencel v. United States (C. C. A.) 47 F.(2d) 501. But unless certified as such under the act of Congress, 28 USCA § 661, or otherwise identified and authenticated, the report cannot he admitted. For lack of authentication the paper offered in this case was properly excluded.
Because the verdict should have been directed for the United States, the judgment is reversed, and the ease remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.