Catherine A. SHEPHARD, Appellant, v. Eric K. SHINSEKI, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Appellee.
No. 11-2074.
United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims.
Argued Jan. 15, 2013. Decided Feb. 27, 2013.
26 Vet. App. 159
Before KASOLD, Chief Judge, and SCHOELEN and PIETSCH, Judges.
Sarah W. Fusina, of Washington, D.C., argued for the appellee. Will A. Gunn, General Counsel; R. Randall Campbell, Assistant General Counsel; and Gayle E. Strommen, Deputy Assistant General Counsel; and Purnima G. Boominathan, Appellate Attorney, all of Washington, D.C., for the appellee.
SCHOELEN, Judge:
The appellant, Catherine A. Shephard, appeals through counsel a May 25, 2011, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board) decision in which the Board (1) found that, from January 12, 2003, until November 13, 2008, the appellant was entitled only to payment of compensation commensurate with a 10% disability rating; (2) decided that an overpayment of compensation benefits was properly created; and (3) remanded the matter of whether the appellant is entitled to a waiver of a recovery of overpaid benefits for additional development. Record of Proceedings (Record or R.) at 3-9. Because the issue has been remanded by the Board, the appellant’s eligibility for a waiver of recovery of overpaid benefits is not before the Court. See Breeden v. Principi, 17 Vet.App. 475, 478 (2004). This appeal is timely, and the
I. BACKGROUND
The appellant served on active duty in the U.S. Navy from December 1986 to January 1995. R. at 171. In July 1997, the VA regional office (RO) awarded the appellant a total disability rating effective November 1996 (R. 905-08), and, in April 2003, the RO revised the appellant’s monthly compensation to $2,399, effective June 2003. R. at 853.
In September 2003, upon a database search, VA learned that the appellant had been imprisoned on a felony conviction in November 2002. R. at 844. Nine months later, in June 2004, the RO proposed to reduce the appellant’s compensation to a monthly payment corresponding to a 10% disability rating pursuant to VA regulations governing compensation of incarcerated veterans. R. at 833; see also
On June 27, 2005, the RO reduced the appellant’s compensation to a monthly payment corresponding to a 10% disability rating, as it had proposed, effective January 12, 2003. R. at 816-17. Until the date it reduced the appellant’s benefit payment, VA electronically deposited the appellant’s payment into bank accounts held jointly by the appellant and her former husband.1 R. at 86-97, 102-119. Also on June 27, 2005, the RO advised the appellant that she may be entitled to apportion the reduced compensation to her dependents. R. at 816. There is no evidence, however, that the appellant requested any such apportionment. Finally, the RO promised the appellant further notice regarding the specific amount of the overpayment. Id.
In July 2005, the VA Debt Management Center advised the appellant that she owed VA $63,749.21. R. at 814. That same month, the appellant filed a Notice of Disagreement (NOD) with the RO’s June 2005 decision. R. at 472. Construing the appellant’s NOD as a request for waiver of indebtedness, the Committee on Waiver of Indebtedness (Committee) ruled that the appellant was “solely at fault in the creation of the overpayment.” R. at 456. The Committee reasoned that the overpay-
The appellant was released from incarceration in November 2008. R. at 477. Thereafter, the appellant sought reinstatement of her compensation, and she asked that VA withhold the “smallest amount possible” to pay back her overpaid benefits. R. at 348, 361. The appellant asserted that during her incarceration her former husband had withdrawn the overpaid benefits from their jointly held bank account and “kept using them” even though she “advised him several times that he was not entitled to these benefits.” R. at 361. She also asserted that, before VA reduced her benefit payment, she had “advised VA that [she] was in prison but checks were still being sent.” Id.
In January 2009, the appellant’s full monthly compensation was reinstated. R. at 344-46. In a December 2009 report of contact between an RO official and the appellant’s representative, the RO official noted that “the debt was too large because the file shows that [the RO] [k]new in 2004 that she was incarcerated and they should have stopped the award to minimize the debt.” R. at 218. The official also stated that the RO continued to make payments because a private attorney requested a personal hearing on the appellant’s behalf. Id. The official noted, however, that the attorney’s “request should have been ignored because the private attorney didn’t have [power of attorney] status [a]t that time.” Id. Despite these notations, the RO’s Statement of the Case affirmed the Committee’s earlier decision that the overpayment was properly created. R. at 199.
In a March 2010 hearing before a decision review officer, the appellant stated that VA was first notified of her incarceration in January 2003. R. at 202. The appellant asserted that her former husband “knowingly kept the benefits every month,” that she “never got any of that money,” that her name was taken off of the bank account when VA reduced her benefit payments, and that her former husband filed for bankruptcy protection soon thereafter. R. at 203-05, 209. The appellant stated that in the time between her incarceration and the date her benefit payments were reduced “[n]umerous calls were made” and “numerous letters” sent to VA to inform the Agency that her benefits payment was too high. Id.
The appellant’s representative stated that during the appellant’s incarceration a private attorney contacted VA asking that the VA benefits be continued and stating that the appellant would request a personal hearing. R. at 204. The appellant stated that she “was not aware of anything that went on with that.” Id. The appellant’s representative asserted that VA acted on the private attorney’s request and continued to make excessive benefit payments even though the private attorney had no power of attorney over her affairs. Id. The appellant argued that she properly notified VA about her incarceration and that she “shouldn’t be held responsible for something” over which she exercised no control. Id. Finally, she noted that she “could not go to hearings, because they, of course, were not court-ordered, as you are well aware,” but if there had been “court-ordered hearings, the prison could have taken care of me.” Id. She asserted, however, that she did “everything in her power” to notify VA that her benefits payments should be stopped, and that it is both not “my fault that they didn’t stop them” and that it is not “fair that I be held responsible for something my ex-husband took.” R. at 204-05.
On May 25, 2011, the Board remanded the waiver-of-indebtedness issue, but (1)
II. THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
The parties agree that the Board decision should be vacated and the matter remanded for failure to provide adequate reasons and bases for its determination that, because the appellant had knowledge that VA continued to deposit payments in a joint account, the $63,749.21 debt was properly created. See Appellant’s Brief (Br.) at 15; Secretary’s Br. at 21-22. The parties disagree as to whether the appellant is now entitled to payment of the difference between the appellant’s full monthly compensation and the amount to which her full compensation was reduced during her term of incarceration. See Appellant’s Br. at 10-14; Secretary’s Br. at 6-18.
The appellant maintains that the Secretary lacks the authority to retain the compensation withheld during her term of incarceration and that her entitlement to payment of all withheld funds upon release from incarceration is protected by statute. See Appellant’s Br. at 8. In particular, the appellant submits that, in Snyder v. Nicholson, 489 F.3d 1213, 1218 (Fed. Cir. 2007), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held that
The appellant also appears to argue, without support, that VA’s failure to restore the benefits reduced during incarceration amounts to an unconstitutional enhancement of the criminal penalty underlying her felony conviction and violates the Due Process and Takings Clauses of the
III. ANALYSIS
A. Legal Framework
The basic entitlement to disability compensation begins with a veteran’s service-connected disability. See
However, in the event that a veteran receiving monthly payments is incarcerated for a felony conviction, a portion of his or her monthly compensation “shall not be paid ... for the period beginning on the sixty-first day of such incarceration and ending on the day such incarceration ends.” See
B. Statutory Interpretation
1. Plain Language
The question presented requires the Court to interpret
any person who is entitled to compensation or to dependency and indemnity compensation and who is incarcerated in a Federal, State, local, or other penal institution or correctional facility for a period in excess of sixty days for conviction of a felony shall not be paid such compensation or dependency and indemnity compensation, for the period beginning on the sixty-first day of such incarceration and ending on the day such incarceration ends....
The appellant’s argument that the Secretary lacks authority to retain the withheld portion of her disability compensation even after her release from prison misunderstands the focus and direction of
Furthermore, the statute contains neither an implicit nor explicit command to pay, upon a veteran’s release from incarceration, those sums previously reduced. Rather,
2. The Snyder Decision
The appellant’s attempt to apply the Snyder court’s reasoning to the interpretive issue at bar is mistaken. As an initial matter, the Snyder court explicitly declined to reach the issue now before the Court. See Snyder, 489 F.3d at 1217 n.1 (“At oral argument, it was suggested that the amount of past-due benefits reduced under section 5313 is forever lost to [the veteran]. That issue is not before us, and we express no view on it.”). Indeed, the appellant in Snyder did not assert entitlement to payment of reduced compensation upon release from incarceration. Rather, the appellant there was an attorney who claimed entitlement to attorney fees arising from a retroactive award of benefits granted to his incarcerated client. See id. at 1214-18; see also
Moreover, the Snyder court’s reasoning does not support the interpretation of
The appellant’s interpretation also finds no refuge in the Snyder court’s statement that “a right to receive payment may accrue while a veteran is not presently able to enjoy actual complete receipt of the funds represented by the final award.” Id. at 1220. In this comment, the Snyder court merely acknowledged that, in particular instances, incarceration will not permanently preclude payment of the disability compensation slated for reduction, such as when a veteran has a “spouse qualifying for apportionment,” Snyder, 489 F.3d at 1219 (citing
Accordingly, the appellant fails to demonstrate that the Snyder court’s “accru[al]” comment is anything more than a careful restatement of the exceptions to
3. Legislative History
The appellant maintains that Congress’s initial purpose in enacting
Mr. Speaker, the purpose of compensation is to replace the lost earning capability of a disabled veteran where the impairment is caused by a service-connected condition. I do not consider it unreasonable to recognize that individuals who are confined by our judicial system for commission of a serious offense against society are no longer available to the labor market. An economic detriment caused by a disability is not felt by such individuals during long periods of confinement.
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I do not see the wisdom of providing hundreds and thousands of tax free benefits to such individuals [referring to individuals serving long sentences for the commission of felonies] when at the same time the taxpayers of this country are spending additional thousands of dollars to maintain these same individuals in penal institutions.
Bolton v. Brown, 8 Vet.App. 185, 192-93 (1995) (Ivers, J., concurring) (quoting 126 CONG. REC. 26,118 (1980) (statement of Rep. Montgomery)). Congressman Wylie, the ranking minority member of the Subcommittee on Compensation, Pension, Insurance, and Memorial Affairs stated:
In the case of imprisonment, when a prisoner is being fully supported by tax dollars that fund the penal institution, it becomes ludicrous to continue payment of benefits designed to help him maintain a standard of living. Thus, I believe the reduced stipend of $60 a month is reasonable and, indeed, generous. Personally, I would stop all compensation during incarceration for a felony. But, this is a good compromise.
Id. (quoting 126 CONG. REC. 26,122 (1980)).
Based upon these statements of congressional intent, it is clear, as the Court observed in Wanless, that “if the taxpayers are financing a veteran’s incarceration, it is contrary to the public good to also pay him full VA disability benefits.” Wanless, 23 Vet.App. at 148. If, after her release from prison, the appellant had a right to receive the VA disability compensation “withheld” during her prison term despite the fact that taxpayer dollars were expended to feed, clothe, and house her during that period,
4. Regulatory Framework
The appellant’s interpretation also departs from the logic of the VA regulations
As the Secretary reasons (Secretary’s Br. at 14-15), the appellant’s effort to grant the restoration of benefits to every veteran upon release from incarceration would moot the inquiry into the status of the conviction dictated by
C. Constitutional Arguments
In her brief and during oral argument, the appellant suggested that the permanent withholding of VA disability compensation withheld during her period of incarceration constitutes a violation of the Due Process and Takings Clauses of the
D. Reasons and Bases
The parties concur that a remand is in order for the Board to provide adequate reasons and bases for its conclusion that the $63,749.21 debt was properly created. See Appellant’s Br. at 15; Secretary’s Br. at 21-22; see also Allday v. Brown, 7 Vet.App. 517, 527 (1995). The Court agrees.
Citing to
The Board, however, failed to explain why a reduction in payment of disability compensation pursuant to
Additionally, at oral argument, and in her hearing before a decision review officer, the appellant stated that she could not exercise her right to a hearing prior to the reduction of her benefit payment because prison rules did not allow her to attend a VA hearing. R. at 204. She insinuated that had she been given a hearing, she would have told VA to immediately reduce her payment. Id. The Board’s failure to address this allegation, too, was a violation of its duty to provide adequate reasons and bases. See Robinson v. Peake, 21 Vet.App. 545, 552 (2008). A remand is therefore in order for the Board to review the legal and factual issues identified above and incorporate an analysis of such issues into a reconsideration of the propriety of the creation of the overpayment.5
On remand, the appellant is free to submit additional evidence and argument on the remanded matter, and the Board is required to consider any such relevant evidence and argument. See Kay v. Principi, 16 Vet.App. 529, 534 (2002) (stating that, on remand, the Board must consider additional evidence and argument in assessing entitlement to benefit sought); Kutscherousky v. West, 12 Vet.App. 369, 372-73 (1999) (per curiam order). The Court has held that “[a] remand is meant to entail a critical examination of the justification for the decision.” Fletcher v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 394, 397 (1991). The Board must proceed expeditiously, in accordance with
IV. CONCLUSION
After consideration of the appellant’s and the Secretary’s pleadings, and a review of the record, the May 25, 2011, Board decision is AFFIRMED IN PART and VACATED IN PART, and the vacated matter is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
