1. The War Risk Insurance Act, as amended, commits to the
Director of the Veterans' Bureau the duty and authority of
administering its provisions and of deciding all questions arising
under it. P.
266 U. S.
225.
2. The decision of the Director upon a right to compensation
claimed under the act is final and conclusive, and not subject to
judicial review, at least unless the decision be wholly unsupported
by evidence, wholly dependent upon a question of law, or clearly
arbitrary or capricious.
Id.
3. The act authorizes the Director to discontinue compensation
which he finds to have been erroneously awarded. P.
266 U. S.
224.
4. Disability, to be compensable under the statute, must have
resulted from injury or disease caused or aggravated in the line of
duty.
Id.
Page 266 U. S. 222
5. Evidence tending to prove the unsoundness of the Director's
determination of a matter properly submitted to his judgment
held to fall far short of proving the determination
arbitrary. P.
266 U. S.
224.
285 F. 397 affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the district court dismissing an action
brought against the United States under subdivision 20 of Jud.Code
§ 24 on a claim for compensation under the War Risk Insurance
Act upon the ground that the determination of the matter by the
Director of the Veterans' Bureau was final and not reviewable by
the courts.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error brings here for determination the question
whether the United States may be sued under subdivision 20, §
24, of the Judicial Code upon a claim for compensation arising
under § 300 of the War Risk Insurance Act, as amended by
§ 10, c. 104, 40 Stat. 609, 611, and subsequent acts, and, if
so, under what circumstances such suit may be maintained. That
section, so far as necessary to be stated, provides that
compensation shall be paid to any enlisted man for a disability
resulting from personal injury suffered or disease contracted in
the line of duty when employed in active military service. The
statute fixes a scale of monthly payments, dependent upon the
extent of the disability.
See § 11, c. 16, 41 Stat.
371, 373. The administration of the original act was committed to
the Director of the War Insurance Bureau, § 13, c. 105, 40
Stat. 399, and so remained until the creation of the Veterans'
Bureau by the Act of August 9, 1921, c. 57, 42 Stat. 147, when the
authority was developed upon
Page 266 U. S. 223
the Director of that Bureau. The official in each instance was
directed to administer, execute, and enforce the provisions of the
act, with authority to makes rules and regulations not inconsistent
therewith necessary or appropriate to carry out its purposes and
"decide all questions arising under this act" except as otherwise
provided therein.
See § 2 of the 1921 Act, 42 Stat.
148.
An examination of the original act and the various amendatory
acts fails to disclose, so far as this question is concerned, any
exception to or limitation upon the authority of the Director.
There is no provision therein expressly granting the right to
maintain any suit against the United States in respect of claims
for such compensation.
The original Act of 1917 and subsequent amendatory acts
conferred upon the Bureau the authority to revise an award at any
time, in accordance with the facts found, and to end, diminish, or
increase compensation previously awarded. Section 305, c. 105, 40
Stat. 398, 407; § 19, c. 57, 42 Stat. 154.
The court below, after a very full review, dismissed the
petition, holding that it was the evident intention of Congress to
confer upon the Director full and exclusive authority to decide all
questions arising under the act, insofar as they involved the
exercise of executive duties and required the determination of
disputed questions of fact, and, to the extent indicated, to make
his decision final and not reviewable by the courts. 285 F. 397;
280 F. 917.
Plaintiff in error was in the military service as an enlisted
man from December 9, 1917, until February 8, 1918, when he was
discharged on account of physical disability. He was at first,
awarded compensation as for a total temporary disability, which was
subsequently reduced to 20 percent as for a temporary partial
disability (§ 11, c. 16, 41 Stat. 371, 373), and finally taken
away altogether on and after March 18, 1921, on the ground that the
disability had ceased to be compensable.
Page 266 U. S. 224
The petition alleged that the decision of the Director was
arbitrary, unjust, and unlawful, constituted a usurpation of power,
was "contrary to the proofs, if any," and "contrary to the weight
of evidence on file in petitioner's case." The action of the
Director was alleged to be arbitrary:
(1) Because, after allowing compensation, he discontinued it,
although petitioner's physical condition had not improved, but had
become worse,
being the same and resulting from the same causes
for which compensation was originally allowed. But this is to
say only that the Director had changed his mind, and, for aught
that appears, that may have been based upon another and better view
of the facts. Ample authority for his action is found in the
provision already referred to, conferring power upon the Bureau to
revise an award at any time and to end, diminish or increase the
compensation.
(2) Because he allowed for temporary partial disability when the
undisputed evidence as found showed that petitioner was temporarily
totally disabled. But, as the court below pointed out, it is not
alleged that such evidence showed that such disability resulted
from injury or disease caused or aggravated "in the line of duty,"
as provided by the statute.
(3) Because petitioner was suffering from disabilities shown by
entries in the Adjutant General's office not to exist at the time
of his entering into the service, and there was no cause therefor
other than petitioner's military service; that it was admitted by
the Veterans' Bureau hospital authorities that, since his
discharge, petitioner had been suffering from disabilities incurred
in the military service, as evidenced by communications and letters
attached to petition. These are all matters bearing, at most, upon
the soundness of the Director's determination upon a matter
properly submitted to his judgment, and fall far short of
establishing its arbitrary character.
Page 266 U. S. 225
The general allegations of the petition that the Director's
decision was arbitrary, unjust and unlawful, and a usurpation of
power are merely legal conclusions. Clearly, the petition does not
present a case where the facts are undisputed and the only
conclusion properly to be drawn is one favorable to petitioner, or
where the law was misconstrued, or where the action of the
executive officer was arbitrary or capricious.
We pass, without deciding, the question raised by the contention
of the government that the claim is in fact for a pension, and
hence expressly excluded from judicial review by the terms of
subdivision 20, § 24, of the Judicial Code, and that, in any
event, it is for a mere gratuity for which no suit can be
maintained, even if the United States were otherwise suable, since,
in any view of the matter, we conclude that no case is made for
judicial intervention.
The statute which creates the asserted right commits to the
Director of the Bureau the duty and authority of administering its
provisions and deciding all questions arising under it, and in the
light of the prior decisions of this Court, we must hold that his
decision of such questions is final and conclusive, and not subject
to judicial review, at least unless the decision is wholly
unsupported by the evidence, or is wholly dependent upon a question
of law, or is seen to be clearly arbitrary or capricious.
Bates
& Guild Co. v. Payne, 194 U. S. 106,
194 U. S.
108-110;
Medbury v. United States, 173 U.
S. 492,
173 U. S.
497-498;
Ness v. Fisher, 223 U.
S. 683,
223 U. S.
691-692;
Degge v. Hitchcock, 229 U.
S. 162,
229 U. S. 171;
Int. Com. Comm'n v. Union Pacific R. Co., 222 U.
S. 541,
222 U. S. 547;
Int. Com. Comm'n v. Louis. & Nash. R. Co.,
227 U. S. 88,
227 U. S.
91.
Since it is not made to appear from the allegations of the
petition that any of these exceptional conditions exist, the
judgment of the district court must be, and it is
Affirmed.