DONALD BUCHANAN, Claimant-Appellant, v. R. JAMES NICHOLSON, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Respondent-Appellee.
05-7174
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DECIDED: June 14, 2006
Before SCHALL, Circuit Judge, CLEVENGER, Senior Circuit Judge, and PROST, Circuit Judge.
Appealed from: United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. Retired Chief Judge Donald L. Ivers.
Michael J. Mooney, of Cincinnati, Ohio, argued for claimant-appellant.
Michael S. Dufault, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for respondent-appellee. With him on the brief were Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, David M. Cohen, Director, and Kathryn A. Bleecker, Assistant Director. Of counsel on the brief were David J. Barrans, Deputy Assistant General Counsel, and Martin J. Sendek, Attorney, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, of Washington, DC.
PROST, Circuit Judge.
Donald Buchanan appeals from the decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans
I. BACKGROUND
Mr. Buchanan served on active duty in the United States Army from January 1973 to December 1975 and also from May 1980 to June 1982. He was honorably discharged following his first period of service, but received an other than honorable discharge after his second. In 1986, he filed a claim for service connection for a psychiatric disorder. The Board denied his claim in 1987, finding that his service medical records were negative for any manifestations of psychiatric problems and that a psychiatric disability was not demonstrated until 1978, nearly three years after his first period of service had ended. Again, in June 1992, a Department of Veterans Affairs (“DVA“) regional office (“RO“) denied service connection for a nervous condition. Since that time, Mr. Buchanan‘s attempts to establish service connection have resulted in his claim being sent back and forth between the RO and the Board. Essentially, each remand or reopening of his claim by the Board was accompanied by a DVA medical examination. Thus, by the time the Board rendered its September 5, 2002 decision, which is the subject of this appeal, Mr. Buchanan had undergone three DVA medical examinations over a period of five years.
The first of such examinations occurred in July 1997 and resulted in a diagnosis of “[s]chizophrenia, chronic paranoid type, severe.” (R. at 225.) The opinion of the examiner was that “[i]t appears that this disorder first began while he was in the service, although there is no record in his C-file which would substantiate his claim of receiving counsel to seek psychiatric treatment while in the service.” (Id.)
The second DVA examination occurred in November 1999 and also reflects a diagnosis of “[s]chizophrenia, paranoid type, chronic, severe.” (Appellant App. 57). The examiner summarized his findings and concluded by stating: “While it is at least as likely as not that the veteran‘s symptoms predate his first documented treatment in 1978 for psychosis, it is not possible without prior records to determine when these symptoms first occurred.” (Appellant App. 57-58).
The third DVA examination in March 2002 resulted in a similar diagnosis, “[s]chizophrenia, paranoid type, chronic.” (Appellant App. 51.) This examiner likewise summarized her findings, in pertinent part, as follows:
Review of the Veteran‘s C-file revealed numerous layperson affidavits attesting to a change in the veteran‘s interpersonal style and presentation while the veteran was in the military between 1973 and 1975, and after his discharge from the military. However, there is no medical documentation within the veteran‘s C-file to substantiate the presence of any psychotic symptoms or treatment
for psychiatric conditions while the veteran was on active duty . . . . Thus, given the absence of any medical documentation from the veteran‘s period of active duty service from January 1973 to December 1975, and given the absence of any medical documentation of psychiatric symptoms or treatment within the one-year presumptive period, it is this clinician‘s clinical opinion that the veteran‘s onset of symptoms of schizophrenia did not occur during his first period of active service or during the one year presumptive period.
(Appellant App. 52.)
In support of his claim, Mr. Buchanan submitted several affidavits from lay witnesses, including his relatives, acquaintances, and a sergeant who led the unit to which Mr. Buchanan was assigned in 1973, describing their perceptions of the onset of his symptoms while in service or soon thereafter. Additionally, he submitted an August 2001 medical opinion from Dr. Kenneth Manges, who opined that Mr. Buchanan‘s signs and symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia first appeared in service and that his paranoid schizophrenia manifested itself to a compensable degree during the first year after his discharge from his first period of service. (R. at 448-63.)
In considering whether Mr. Buchanan established service connection, the Board focused on whether the evidence linked the veteran‘s psychiatric disability to a disease or injury that was incurred in, or was aggravated by, service from January 1973 to December 1975 or whether the evidence demonstrated the presence of that disability to a degree of ten percent within the first post-service year such that service connection would be presumed pursuant to
After discussing the four medical opinions, three from the DVA examiners and one from Dr. Manges, the Board found the opinion of the examiner who conducted the third DVA examination to be the most persuasive “because it relie[d] on the objective medical documents in the record rather that [sic] the slight probative recollections of the veteran, his relatives, acquaintances, and a service comrade.” (Appellant App. 22.) The Board indicated that it did not find Dr. Manges‘s opinion persuasive because it relied on the recollections expressed in the lay statements, and that the other two DVA examiner opinions did not “unequivocally state that the veteran‘s psychiatric disability began in service or within one year of his separation from service in December 1975.” (Id.) Thus, the Board found that the preponderance of the evidence was against Mr. Buchanan‘s claim for service connection for a psychiatric disability and denied his claim.
On appeal, the Veterans Court found that the Board‘s decision was not clearly erroneous and that it was supported by an adequate statement of reasons or bases.
Mr. Buchanan timely appealed to this court. We have jurisdiction pursuant to
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Pursuant to
This court reviews decisions by the Veterans Court deferentially. Under
This court reviews legal determinations of the Veterans Court under a de novo standard. Prenzler v. Derwinski, 928 F.2d 392, 393 (Fed. Cir. 1991). In doing so, this court may “affirm or, if the decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims is not in accordance with law, . . . modify or reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims or . . . remand the matter, as appropriate.”
B. Analysis
On appeal, Mr. Buchanan asserts that the Veterans Court committed legal error by improperly interpreting
In this case, Mr. Buchanan challenges the Veterans Court‘s endorsement of the Board‘s legal interpretation of the relevant statutory and regulatory provisions pertaining to the types of evidence which may support a claim for benefits. Contrary to the Secretary‘s assertion, Mr. Buchanan is not challenging the application of law to the particular facts of his case, nor asking us to re-weigh the relevant facts. Thus, we have jurisdiction under
Pursuant to
[t]he Secretary shall consider all information and lay and medical evidence of record in a case before the Secretary with respect to benefits under laws administered by the Secretary. When there is an approximate balance of positive and negative evidence regarding any issue material to the determination of a matter, the Secretary shall give the benefit of the doubt to the claimant.
(Emphases added.) In accordance with
As these provisions make clear, lay evidence is one type of evidence that must be considered, if submitted, when a veteran‘s claim seeks disability benefits. In fact,
The Board stated that “[r]ecollections of medical problems some 20 years after the veteran‘s separation from service have slight probative value and lack credibility absent confirmatory clinical records to substantiate such recollections.” (Appellant App. 21.) This statement reflects the Board‘s view that it considered the lay statements to be of slight probative value because of the significant time delay between the affiants’ observations of Mr. Buchanan‘s behavior and the date on which the statements were written. That determination by the Board is completely within the Board‘s discretion to weigh the evidence submitted by the veteran in support of a claim for benefits and it does not appear to be the subject of Mr. Buchanan‘s challenge here. The second portion of the Board‘s statement, that the lay statements lack credibility absent confirmatory clinical records to substantiate such recollections, however, is another matter. The second portion of the Board‘s statement reflects a legally untenable interpretation of the above enumerated statutory and regulatory provisions: that absent confirmatory medical evidence, lay evidence lacks credibility. While the lack of contemporaneous medical records may be a fact that the Board can consider and weigh against a veteran‘s lay evidence, the lack of such records does not, in and of itself,
render lay evidence not credible. Such an interpretation is unreasonable because it would render portions of the statutes and regulations meaningless as it would read out the option of establishing service connection based on competent lay evidence.
We also note that the Board found the opinion of the 2002 DVA examiner to be “the most persuasive evidence of record because it relies on the objective medical documents in the record rather that [sic] the slight probative recollections of the veteran, his relatives, acquaintances, and a service comrade.” (Appellant App. 22.) The examiner, however, ultimately relies not on the objective medical evidence, but rather the absence of such in reaching her opinion that the onset of Mr. Buchanan‘s psychiatric symptoms did not occur during his first period of service or within one year following that service.1 As the opinion summary states: “Thus, given the absence of any medical documentation from the veteran‘s [first] period of active duty service . . . and given the absence of any medical documentation of psychiatric symptoms or treatment within the one-year presumptive period, . . . the veteran‘s onset of symptoms of schizophrenia did not occur during his first period of active service or during the one year presumptive period.” (Appellant App. 52.)
This is not to say that the Board may not discount lay evidence when such discounting
the absence of contemporaneous medical evidence against the lay evidence of record. Under the correct interpretation of the relevant statutory and regulatory provisions, however, the Board cannot determine that lay evidence lacks credibility merely because it is unaccompanied by contemporaneous medical evidence. If the Board concludes that the lay evidence presented by a veteran is credible and ultimately competent, the lack of contemporaneous medical evidence should not be an absolute bar to the veteran‘s ability to prove his claim of entitlement to disability benefits based on that competent lay evidence.
III. CONCLUSION
The Veterans Court erred by affirming the Board‘s erroneous statutory and regulatory interpretation that lay evidence cannot be credible absent confirmatory clinical records to substantiate the facts described in that lay evidence. Accordingly, we vacate the Veterans Court decision and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
VACATED and REMANDED
