George: VA's erroneous interpretation of a statute is not CUE

George v. McDonough, 142 S.Ct. 1953 (2022)

HELD: VA’S FAILURE TO PROPERLY APPLY THE PRESUMPTION OF SOUNDNESS FOR DECADES WAS NOT CLEAR AND UNMISTAKABLE ERROR - BECAUSE THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT’S DECISION THAT INVALIDATED VA’S ERRONEOUS INTERPRETATION WAS A CHANGE IN THE INTERPRETATION OF THE LAW.

Summary: In 1977, the Board denied service connection for schizophrenia - finding that it pre-existed service. The Board made no finding as to whether the condition was also aggravated by service, as required by 38 USC § 1111. In 2003, VA amended its regulation to include the aggravation prong of the presumption of soundness. In 2004, the Federal Circuit held in Wagner v. Shinseki, that 38 USC § 1111 plainly includes an aggravation prong - meaning that the statute has always required VA to prove that a condition BOTH pre-existed service AND was NOT aggravated by service in order to rebut the presumption of soundness. In 2014, the veteran filed a motion to revise the 1977 decision on the basis of clear and unmistakable error (CUE) - arguing that VA misapplied the law.

The case goes all the way up to the Supreme Court, which determined that CUE did not include changes in law or changes in interpretation of the law - and that the Federal Circuit’s decision in Wagner was a change in the interpretation of the law.

Kisor: To be "relevant," under 38 C.F.R. § 3.156(c)(1), a record must relate to a disputed issue

Kisor v. Wilkiedocket no. 2016-1929 (Fed. Cir. August 12, 2020)

HELD: “[I]n the context of § 3.156(c), the term ‘relevant’ has only ‘one reasonable meaning’ … [and] under the regulation, in order to be ‘relevant’ a record must speak to a matter in issue, in other words, a matter in dispute.” 

SUMMARY: Mr. Kisor filed an initial claim for service connection for PTSD in 1982 and submitted a supporting medical opinion from his Vet Center counselor. VA obtained a negative medical opinion in which the examiner noted the veteran’s participation in “Operation Harvest Moon” in Vietnam, but determined that he did not have PTSD. Because there was no PTSD diagnosis, the RO denied the claim. In 2006, Mr. Kisor submitted a request to reopen and submitted new service records showing his receipt of the Combat Action Ribbon and documenting his participation in Operation Harvest Moon. The RO obtained a favorable medical opinion and granted service connection for PTSD, effective 2006. He appealed for an earlier effective date, which the Board denied, under 38 C.F.R. § 3.156(c), finding that the newly received service records were not “outcome determinative” because they did not relate to the relevant issue of the lack of a PTSD diagnosis.

Mr. Kisor appealed to the CAVC, the Federal Circuit, and the Supreme Court. In the Federal Circuit’s first decision, it found that the term “relevant” in the regulation was ambiguous and deferred to the agency’s reasonable interpretation, which was the Board’s interpretation that required the record to be “outcome determinative.” The Supreme Court held that the Federal Circuit was “too quick to extend Auer [v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452 (1997)] deference to the Board’s interpretation of ‘relevant’ as it appears in § 3.156(c)(1)” and remanded the appeal back to the Federal Circuit to “decide whether Auer deference ‘applies to the agency interpretation at issue’” and “‘whether the regulation really has more than one reasonable meaning.’” 

On remand, the same three-member panel of the Federal Circuit now determined that the term “relevant” in § 3.156(c)(1) “has only ‘one reasonable meaning,’ the meaning the Board attributed to it.” The Court first found that the term “relevant” in the regulation was “not genuinely ambiguous” – and agreed with the Secretary that “the term has only one reasonable meaning.” The Court held: “To be relevant, a record must address a dispositive issue and therefore affect the outcome of the case.” Because the reason for the prior denial was the lack of a PTSD diagnosis and the new service did not address that issue, the Court determined that they were not “relevant” under § 3.156(c)(1). 

In a thorough and thoughtful dissent, Judge Reyna outlined a strong argument for Mr. Kisor to deploy in appealing this decision. Specifically, Judge Reyna noted that there is nothing in the regulation that requires “relevant” records to “speak to the basis for the VA’s prior decision” or to “affect the outcome.” Rather, in the context of veterans’ benefits, records are relevant if they “help to establish unestablished facts that are necessary for substantiating the veteran’s claim.” 

Judge Reyna pointed out that the initial VA examiner who provided the negative medical opinion described Mr. Kisor’s combat experiences “with palpable skepticism” – something that the majority failed to address. This is particularly relevant to claims for service connection for PTSD because that diagnosis relies on the establishment of a stressor event or events. 

Judge Reyna argued that “when a veterans’ benefit provision is ambiguous on its face, the pro-veteran canon must be weighed alongside the other traditional tools in resolving interpretive doubt.” He stated that “while we have held that the pro-veteran canon applies only to ambiguous statutes and cannot override plain text, that rule does not render the canon a tool of last resort, subordinate to all others.” He added: “The majority wrongly assumes that the Supreme Court’s ‘genuine ambiguity’ criterion for Auer deference applies to the pro-veteran canon” and that if “we can set aside the pro-veteran canon unless and until all other considerations are tied, then the canon is dead because there is no such ‘equipoise’ in legal arguments.”

Kisor: Supreme Court grants certiorari

The Supreme Court added Kisor v. Wilkie to its docket.

LINK TO SCOTUS ORDER: https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/121018zor_f2ah.pdf

The Court will limit its review to the first question in the petition - whether the Court should overrule Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452 (1997) and Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co., 325 U.S. 410 (1945), with respect to deferring to VA’s interpretation of its own ambiguous regulations.

LINK TO PETITION: https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/18/18-15/51909/20180629164148460_Kisor.cert.pet.pdf

Mathis: PRESUMPTION OF VA MEDICAL EXAMINER'S COMPETENCE

Mathis v. Shulkin, 582 U.S. ___ (2017)

HELD: The Supreme Court declined to review the Federal Circuit’s decision that refused to disavow the presumption of competence afforded to VA examiners. The reason the Federal Circuit refused to disavow the presumption in this particular case was because the veteran did not challenge the VA examiner’s credentials or qualifications at the agency level.

Justices Sotomayor and Gorsuch wrote separate statements questioning the presumption. Justice Sotomayor stated that in order for a veteran to challenge an examiner’s qualifications, the veteran must know the examiner’s credentials. This can be difficult/impossible to get from VA – which creates a “Catch-22” for the veteran. She added: “A decision by the VA to deny benefits in reliance on an examiner’s opinion, while denying the veteran access to that examiner’s credentials, ensures that the presumption will work to the veteran’s disadvantage.” She left the door open to a future review, stating: “Full review would require a petition arising from a case in which the VA denied a veteran benefit after declining to provide the medical examiner’s credentials.”

Justice Gorsuch questioned the origin of the presumption – noting that it does not come from statute. He described how the presumption works in practice: “VA usually refuses to supply information that might allow a veteran to challenge the presumption without an order from the Board of Veterans’ Appeals” and the Board will not issue an order unless the veteran provides “a specific reason for thinking the examiner incompetent.” He further questioned how “an administrative agency may manufacture for itself or win from the courts a regime that has no basis in the relevant statutes and does nothing to assist, and much to impair, the interests of those the law says the agency is supposed to serve.” He recognized that several Federal Circuit judges have questioned the propriety of the presumption and stated that “this may well mean the presumption’s days are numbered.” However, he did not hold out hope – and concluded that the issue was worthy of the Supreme Court’s attention.

FULL DECISION