This is an appeal from a judgment on a War Risk insurance policy. The soldier, Grover Coehran, enlisted September 19, .1917, went overseas and was honorably discharged on February 14, 1919. His policy lapsed on March 31, 1919 because of non-payment of dues, unless on that date he was totally and permanently disabled so that he could not then and thereafter engage continuously in any substantially gainful occupation. After he returned he had a barber shop at Burkhurnett, Texas. Ilis brother, now his guardian, did not see him when he came home, hut saw him at the barber shop in the fall of 1919. His brother was there part of a day and thought the soldier did not look very well. next hear of him on a forty-acre farm in Oklahoma, in Jannai^y 1929. He bought maferial and improved it, paid for what he got, and the testimony of those with whom he dealt shows that he acted as an ordinary young man would act. There was nothing that showed he was montally unbalanced. One witness who knew him before he went to war testified he observed no' change m him on his retum_ Tbere wag no gllbstantial testimony o£ laymen to the contrary. He married, lived on t¿0 faxm and raiged eorn; cotto,n and h ^ 1920 and 1921. ffis brotller be did d wolfc But in the late summer or fall of 19al; Ms brofter wbo lived only a qnarter mile away learned he was doing strange things and that he was using intoxicants. He was taken to a hospital and in February 1923 110 was admitted to the Oklahoma Asylum for the insane where he was confined at the time of trial. Taking the testimony of all the lay-including the soldier’s brother, it wholly £ails in om, opinion to afford any basis £or a finding that he was totally and permanently disabled on March 31,1919 and for two and a half years thereafter, either in body or mind.
The pontiff offered two doctors, specialists jn mental diseases, one from each of the institutions to which the soldier was taken. *62Each testified the soldier was suffering from dementia praseox of the paranoid type, that it was withihim from birth; one of-them, that -outward indications of it appear “about 18 to 25 years of age, some of them later on in life than that,” and that if the soldier “had been allowed to follow his ordinary policy of life in the country- he might have gone through life without developing it,” that he thought the soldier was insane while he was in the military service. The other doctor first said the soldier had dementia praeeox when he entered the service, but he modified that by saying, “He had the foundation. He had the constitutional defect.” The first doctor also said there are lots of people on the street “today” who are praeeox. Taking this expert testimony with all the weight that can be possibly given to it and weigh it with all the oth•er testimony, and we think it wholly fails to sustain the indispensable conclusion that the soldier was on March 31,1919 or at any time thereafter for two years totally and perma^ nently disabled, unless we substitute for insanity in fact a predisposition to insanity. Total and permanent disability are plain, simple words; they must be accepted in their common, practical sense;" they mean that the disability of mind or body is such as to render it impossible for the sufferer to follow continuously any substantially gainful occupation. Here the proof affirmatively shows that on March 31,1919 the soldier’s mind and body were riot in that disabled condition, and that for more than two years thereafter he did continuously follow gainful occupations. See United States v. Harth (C. C. A.) 61 F.(2d) 541.
Reversed and remanded.