1. Section 11(3) of the Act of December 24, 1919, amending
§ 302 of the War Risk Insurance Act, bringing conclusively
within the term "total permanent disability" the specific loss of a
hand and an eye, is limited in its operation to compensation
allowances, and has no application to war risk insurance. P.
294 U. S.
438.
2. An administrative regulation, especially one which has the
effect of creating an obligation, cannot be construed to operate
retroactively unless the intention to that effect unequivocally
appears. P.
294 U. S.
439.
3. Because it assumes to convert what in the view of the statute
is a question of fact requiring proof into a conclusive
presumption, the provision of Veterans' Administration Regulation
No. 3140 that the loss of a hand and an eye "shall be deemed to be
total permanent disability under yearly renewable term insurance"
is invalid. P.
294 U. S.
439.
4. To entitle an insured under a policy of war risk insurance to
benefits conditioned on total permanent disability, he has the
burden of showing not only the character and extent of his injury,
but also that, as the result of the injury, he was disabled
permanently from following any substantially gainful occupation. P.
294 U. S.
440.
5. Under the circumstances of this case,
held that an
insured claiming disability benefits under a policy of war risk
insurance had not sustained the burden of proving total permanent
disability. P.
294 U. S. 442.
It appeared that, while the insured was unable after the injury
(loss of an arm and an eye) to follow the occupation in which he
was engaged prior to entering the service (surveying), and while,
because of the injury, he was thereafter unable to continue in
employments requiring the use of both hands, yet he did undertake
other gainful occupations, in which he failed not because of his
physical condition but because of his general inaptitude for the
work; also, that the policy was permitted to lapse upon his
Page 294 U. S. 436
discharge, and no claim of total permanent disability was made
upon it until twelve years thereafter.
71 F.2d 361 affirmed.
Certiorari, 293 U.S. 551, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment for the United States in an action upon a policy of war
risk insurance.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner enlisted in the United States Army June 7, 1917, and
was honorably discharged April 3, 1919. On January 22, 1918, there
was issued to him a war risk insurance policy by the terms of which
he was entitled to receive $57.50 per month in the event of his
sustaining injuries causing total and permanent disability. No
premiums were paid after the date of his discharge, and the policy
then lapsed. Claim was made for insurance on June 5, 1931, twelve
years later. The claim was disallowed by the Administrator of
Veterans' Affairs on April 1, 1932. Thereupon, this action to
recover judgment upon the policy was brought.
The facts upon which the action is based follow: on October 26,
1918, while in active service in France, petitioner sustained
injuries in a railway accident resulting in the amputation of his
right arm. He alleges that, for all practical purposes, the sight
of his left eye was destroyed at the same time. Although the
evidence shows that the
Page 294 U. S. 437
defective condition of the eye was congenital, no point is made
in respect of that fact, and, for present purposes we put it aside.
At the conclusion of the evidence before the trial court, the judge
sustained a motion of the government for a directed verdict on the
ground that the injuries did not, as a matter of law, result in
total and permanent disability. Verdict and judgment followed
accordingly. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment, 71 F.2d
361, and we brought the case here on certiorari.
Article III of the Act of 1917 (chapter 105, 40 Stat. 398, 405)
relates to compensation for death or disability. The provisions in
respect of insurance are dealt with separately (p. 409) in Article
IV of the act, and this separation of the two subjects has been
maintained a subsequent acts. The provision in respect of insurance
(page 409) is that, upon application to the Bureau, the United
States "shall grant insurance against the death or total permanent
disability" of enlisted men and other classes of persons named in
the act. The provision of the act (§ 302) with respect to
compensation was enlarged by the amending act of December 24, 1919,
c. 16, § 11, 41 Stat. 371, 373, so as to bring conclusively
within the term "total permanent disability" the loss of one hand
and the sight of one eye, and this has since remained the law. No
such amendment was carried into the insurance article of the act
and, in that respect, the statute has never been changed.
Section 13 of the 1917 act, as amended, Act May 20, 1918, c. 77,
40 Stat. 555, confers upon the Director of the Bureau authority to
make such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the
provisions of the act, as may be necessary or appropriate to carry
out its purposes. Under that provision, a regulation was issued
March 9, 1918, declaring:
"Any impairment of mind or body which renders it impossible for
the disabled person to follow continuously any substantially
gainful occupation shall be deemed, in Articles III and IV, to be
total disability."
It was while this regulation was in
Page 294 U. S. 438
effect that § 302 of the act was amended, as stated above,
to provide in respect of compensation that the loss of one hand and
the sight of one eye should be deemed total permanent disability.
In May, 1930, Regulation 3140 was promulgated. That regulation,
among other things, declares that the loss of one hand and one eye
"shall be deemed to be total permanent disability under yearly
renewable term insurance."
Succinctly stated, petitioner contends (1) that § 302, as
amended, applies to war risk insurance as well as to compensation
allowances; (2) that regulation 3140 is within the power of the
Administrator of Veterans' Affairs (who succeeded the Director of
the Bureau), and controls the present case, and (3) that, the
foregoing aside, the evidence was sufficient to justify a verdict
in his favor.
First. The argument as to the first point, in brief, is
this: the amendment to the compensation article of the act, adopted
in 1919, must be construed and applied in the light of the
regulation of March 9, 1918, of which regulation congressional
knowledge and approval are to be assumed. By that regulation, the
Bureau adopted a uniform rule applicable alike to compensation and
insurance, and the contention seems to be, since Congress did not
by express words limit the operation of the amendment of 1919 to
compensation, it is fair to conclude that it was intended that the
amendment, conforming to the principle of the regulation, should
apply to both compensation and insurance. We see no warrant for
that conclusion. When the regulations was adopted, neither Article
III nor Article IV contained any specific provision in respect of
the disabling effect of the loss of one hand and the sight of one
eye. By the amendment, not only was the formal expression of the
new rule confined to Article III, but the opening words of the
amendment quite clearly indicate a legislative intention to confine
its application to that article. These words are: "If and while the
disability is rated as
Page 294 U. S. 439
total and permanent, the
rate of compensation [italics
added] shall be $100 per month," etc. It is hard to see why the
intention of Congress to limit the operation of the amendment to
compensation allowances is not thus definitely and clearly
manifested.
Second. Regulation 3140 was not adopted until eleven
years after the insurance policy had lapsed and petitioner's cause
of action thereon had fully matured. Undoubtedly, the regulation in
terms declares that permanent loss of the use of one hand and one
eye shall be deemed to be total permanent disability under an
insurance policy such as that issued to petitioner. But the
regulation is both inapplicable and invalid.
It is inapplicable because it contains nothing to suggest that
it was to be given a retrospective effect so as to bring within its
purview a policy which had long since lapsed and which had relation
only to an alleged cause of action long since matured. The law is
well settled that generally a statute cannot be construed to
operate retrospectively unless the legislative intention to that
effect unequivocally appears.
Twenty Per Cent.
Cases, 20 Wall. 179,
87 U. S. 187;
Chew Heong v. United States, 112 U.
S. 536,
112 U. S. 559;
Fullerton-Krueger Lumber Co. v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co.,
266 U. S. 435,
266 U. S. 437.
The principle is strictly applicable to statutes which have the
effect of creating an obligation. An administrative regulation is
subject to the rule equally with a statute, and accordingly, the
regulation here involved must be taken to operate prospectively
only.
It is invalid because not within the authority conferred by the
statute upon the Director (or his successor, the Administrator) to
make regulations to carry out the purposes of the act. It is not,
in the sense of the statute, a regulation at all, but legislation.
The effect of the statute in force at the time of the adoption of
the so-called regulation is that, in respect of compensation
allowances, loss of a hand and an eye shall be deemed total
permanent disability
Page 294 U. S. 440
as a matter of law. There being no such provision with respect
to cases of insurance, the question whether a loss of that
character or any other specific disability constitutes total
permanent disability is left to be determined as matter of fact.
The vice of the regulation, therefore, is that it assumes to
convert what, in the view of the statute, is a question of fact
requiring proof into a conclusive presumption which dispenses with
proof and precludes dispute. This is beyond administrative power.
The only authority conferred, or which could be conferred, by the
statute is to make regulations to carry out the purposes of the act
-- not to amend it.
United States v. 200 Barrels of
Whisky, 95 U. S. 571,
95 U. S. 576;
Morrill v. Jones, 106 U. S. 466,
106 U. S. 467;
United States v. Grimaud, 220 U.
S. 506,
220 U. S. 517;
Campbell v. Galeno Chemical Co., 281 U.
S. 599,
281 U. S. 610.
Third. The burden was on petitioner not only to show
the character and extent of his injury, but also to show that the
result of the injury was to disable him permanently from following
any substantially gainful occupation.
Proechel v. United
States, 59 F.2d 648, 652;
United States v. McCreary,
61 F.2d 804, 808. Petitioner lost his right arm, and the proof
shows that he had been right-handed. Before the injury, he was a
practical engineer operating a surveying instrument, but, with the
loss of his right arm, he could not operate such an instrument. In
1919, he obtained employment in a packing house, but found himself
unable to retain the employment because it necessitated lifting
heavy quarters of meat, which he could not do with one arm. He was
also unable to take orders for the house because he could not hold
the receiver of the telephone and write orders at the same time.
After three weeks, he was obliged to give up this employment. From
time to time, he obtained other work which involved the use of both
hands and which he was obliged to abandon. On the other hand, it
appears that he worked for twenty-two months in the business of
Page 294 U. S. 441
selling stocks on commission, and for a few months in that of
selling goods, from neither of which he received much in the way of
income -- not because his injury incapacitated him for the work,
but because he lacked ability as a salesman. It does not appear
that he made any earnest endeavor to fit himself for this work, or
any effort to engage in other work which ordinarily a one-armed man
with one defective eye could do.
See United States v.
Thomas, 53 F.2d 192, 195. He testified that he had received an
average of $90 a month from the government as compensation since
his discharge. He also received $2,500 from the sale of a farm in
which he had an interest. He was therefore not without resources
with which to obtain proper training. It does not appear that he
undertook to do so. It is by no means infrequent for one-armed men
to make a good living and support others by performing work adapted
to their condition. It is clear from the evidence that the failure
of petitioner in some of the things he undertook to do was not
because of his crippled condition, but because of his general
inaptitude for the work. The mere fact that he was unable to follow
the occupation of surveyor or to do work of the kind he had been
accustomed to perform before his injury does not establish the
permanent and total character of his disability.
Lumbra v.
United States, 290 U. S. 551,
290 U. S. 559.
His long delay before bringing suit is wholly incompatible with a
belief on his part that he was totally and permanently disabled
during the period while his policy was in force.
Id., p.
290 U. S. 560;
United States v. Hairston, 55 F.2d 825, 827. If petitioner
thought himself totally and permanently disabled, it is difficult
to understand why he waited twelve years before attempting to
assert his rights. The only explanation he makes for his delay is
that he thought a man had to die to get the insurance. How he
discovered his error after the extraordinary lapse of time
indicated above we are not told. He was intelligent, had
Page 294 U. S. 442
completed the third grade at high school, and a year at military
school. It does not seem possible that he had never read the
policy, which so plainly insures against total permanent
disability. In the light of all the circumstances, his explanation
is not credible.
The court below, after reviewing the evidence and the decisions
of this and other courts, reached the conclusion that petitioner
had not sustained the burden of proof and that the trial court was
justified in directing a verdict for the government. That
conclusion is well supported by our recent decision in the
Lumbra case,
supra, and by other decisions.
See, e.g., Proechel v. United States, supra; United States v.
Thomas, supra; Hanagan v. United States, 57 F.2d 860, 861.
Judgment affirmed.