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Belva Lockwood Washington World article
Volume 9, number 11. Discusses issues with the U.S. Pension Office and laws involving it which Lockwood has encountered while helping clients claim pensions.
Lockwood, Belva Ann, 1830-1917
1884-01-19
2 pages
reformatted digital
Belva Ann Lockwood Papers, SCPC-DG-098
Belva Ann Lockwood Papers, SCPC-DG-098 --http://archives.tricolib.brynmawr.edu/resources/scpc-dg-098
Lockwood-0066
THE NABHINGTON WORLD, WASHIN!
fo “The U.S. Pension Office—No, 6. | rs
Ed. World:—I still write of the Pen-
sion Office because the subject is a com-
| plicated and vexatious one, and because
itis only by thoroughly understanding
the difficulties that we can approximate
the remedies.
The most fruitful source of complaint
ig the delay attending the settlement of
cases. Now, while delay in some cases
is inevitable and not the fault but the
misfortune of both. Commissioner and
pensioner, it is a fact that, both from
habit and from design, and oftentimes
from pure carelessness, cases are delayed
for years, during which time a large
number of claimants die from want and
despair. See for instance the following
letter in Navy invalid clains No. 5,388:
“Wasy., D. C. Nov. 10,
Madam ;—Relative to the claim of John E Wa
ters fora Navy Inv. pension, I have toi
you that, inasmuch as thee is filed in the ¢
declaration under date of Feb'y 20,1879, all
that the claimant received a fracture of ife
tibia by beivg thrown from his hammock, ifere-
by causing a chronic ulcer, and under date off Lug.
30th, 1879, there is filed in said caseagie; ya uon
alleging an injury to the shin-bone of ihe cla} + ant's
left leg, which has caused an ulcer, Weill ve" neces-
sary for the claimant to furnish this office with a
statement which will reconcile the two declara-
tions. Very Respectfully,
W. W. Depiey, Commissicner.
Mrs. Belva A. Lockwood. ™M.?
Now if there are clerks in the Pension
Office who do not know that the tibia is
the shyp-bone, the bead doctor‘of that
resohition Gineeting-the-Secretarpul the
Tuterior,.to..saspend-action -imedssuing
Office would better organize an ‘evening
school on comparative anatomy, and
give his first lesson from Gray,r 455,
edition of 1870. In the mean timelet
John E. Waters be paid his persion,
pending the education of these clerical
gentlemen.
But more serious difficulties than
this have arisen from other causes
which I will name, and which seriously
threaten to disrupt the whole pension
business. I have written up ina previ-
ous letter some of the ins and juts of
the secret special examinations,
the terrorism thus held over ti}
nesses of every grade who have fhe te-
merity to give honest testimony jm pen-
sion cases pending. Two reputable
physicians in Ohio state that they de-
cline to give further testimony-of any
sort. Ifthey give a complete djagnosis
of the condition of a claimant, tgy are
asked by the officials of the }Govern-
ment why they have told som: 3; and
wagary to be bestowed on a case, except ,
in “the claim of a recently discharged ;
man, where the disability is proved by
the record, or an increase on the disabil-
ity for which the soldier was originally
pensioned, In nearly every case of the
application of a dependent father or
motber,or of a soldier or soldier’s widow,
reaching back to 1861, 62, 63 and ’64,the
labor necessary to prove up a case and
procure this allowance is worth at least
$100. It requires a large amount of
time and skilled labor. That this labor
has been imposed by the Pension Bu-
reau, and might be lessened, we grant;
but I am speaking of the mattersas they
actually exist. Thus has anew disabil-
ity or disadvantage been thrown in the
way of the pensioner, in the raid made
upon the attorneys.
But this is not all. Some of the attor-
neys recently suspended had in their
hands many thousands of cases, in most
of which the fee of $10 bad been paid.
The disbarral of these attorneys would of
course compel their clients to employ
other attorneys, to whom they must also
pay $10, and, in the light of past devel-
opments, pay also in advance.
But this is notall. This change neces-
sitates delay. The first attorney has the
record of thecase. He may not be will-
ing to relinquish the papers, and may
not be called upon to do so. The new
evidence filed is very likely to differ
inextricable maze. So claimants and
attorneys suffer together from a condi-
tion of things forced upon them, and
from which neither class sees the way
out. The claimant suffers if he does
pay, and suffers more if he don’t, while
suspicion rests upon the attorney equally
with or without 4 fee.
acted a law to determine an attorney’s
fee in a pension case, any more than an
attorney’s fee before the Courts, it is
difficult to perceive; or why the fee
should have been made uniform, when
the cases are so various; or why a pen-
sioner has not as much sense ag any
other person inthe making oi a contract.
At all events the law seems to have de-
feated the end it was intended to serve;
for claimants are even more anxious than
attorneys to evade it, and more often
the aggressors. They see clearly that
the Pension Office will epend more time
and money, with its horde of well-fed
and well-paid clerks, to whom time is
nothing, than an attorney can affurd to
: . \
if they confine themselves to , 2 spe-
cific disease’ or wound, they al asked spend for ten dollars. One day spent
‘why they have not given a | uplete by an attorney 1m following through a
diagnosis of the case. They ¢ ot af- special examination, which has now be-
: t com- | Come the rule and not the exception,
ford_to give valuable time with
wat
would be all of the time, after the filing
N, D. C., SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 18*4.
from the first, and the claim get into an
Why Congress should bave ever en-
. ps
Yolo, Fu
ES:
| delivered. The poor pension attorney
seems to be agoose to be plucked. Con-
gress repealed the Jaw making it incum-
bant on the Agent to pay the attorney’s
fee, and reduced the fee below anything
like an adequate compensation; the
Pension Office has discouraged the pay-
ment of fees to attorneys, by telling
claimants, and encouraging them to
think, that attorneys are not necessary;
and the press has taken up the hue andj.
cry, and denounced them as frauds).
—but why, no one of them can tell. |
The raid has not only been senseless but
inbuman and unjust.
And yet all of thisis on a par with
the recent contempt case of ex-Senator |.
Geo. E. Spencer, which has occupied :
the Criminal Court of Washington for
many days past. Spencer was at-|.
tempted to be subpwenaed as a witness
in the star route trial something like
one year ago; and although the subpi-
na was informal, and the service with-
out authority of law, he voluntarily ap-
peared within the jurisdiction of the
Court, and remained for eight or ten
Jays, and then, not being called to tes-
tify, went about his business. When
wanted, he was not to be found; and
forthwith a bench warrant was issued
for him, as informal as the first pro-
cedure, for there was nothing upon
which to found the warrant. The case
dragged its weary and expensive length
along, and nobody was convicted of any-
thing, except the attorneys, who, with
the regularity of clock-work, drew their
fees until Jie appropriation was so de-
pleted that there was no longer money
to draw.
Months after the case had closed, and
the term of court expired in which a
contempt could have been laid, this):
gentleman, with a coarseness and rude- |!
ness worthy of the Middle Ages, was:
dragged into Court and insulted and
taunted and cross-questioned—one of
the attorneys for the Government ex-
claiming, with fiendish vindictiveness,
“Yer, I will purge him from the crown
of his head to the soles of his feet.”
It turned out that he knew nothing
aboatthe case;t at there had been no cor
tempt; that a reputable citizen had been
pursued, arrested, brought into Court
forcibly on a bench warrant, and put
under bonds, maligned and injured,
without the law in a single particular
having been complied with—not to
maintain the majesty of the Court, for
it wae satisfied; but, so tar as an outsider
is able to draw any conclusion, for ‘the
purpose of allowing these special at-
torneys for the Government to draw
their fees for a few days more—not a
fee of $10, hut of $100 and of $150 per
eloye
Lockwood-0066_1
reformatted digital
Belva Ann Lockwood Papers, SCPC-DG-098 --http://archives.tricolib.brynmawr.edu/resources/scpc-dg-098
Lockwood-0066_1