Homer L. Cook, Jr., appeals from a decision of the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (‘Veterans Court”) affirming the Board of Veterans’ Appeals’ (“Board’s”) denial of his claim for benefits under 38 U.S.C. § 1151(a) (2000).
Cook v. Principi,
No. 99-1544,
I. BACKGROUND
Mr. Cook underwent surgery at a Department of Veterans Affairs (‘VA”) facility in 1992 to remove a mass from his lower back. In the period following the removal of the mass, Mr. Cook suffered from various medical conditions that resulted in disability. Mr. Cook seeks benefits under § 1151(a), which provides that, in certain cases, a veteran is entitled to receive benefits for injuries incurred during medical treatment furnished by law (e.g., treatment at a VA hospital). A VA regional office (“RO”) denied Mr. Cook’s claim for benefits in February of 1995, and again in October of the same year. Mr. Cook appealed the decision to the Board, which remanded his claim to the RO to obtain treatment records and perform additional physical examinations. In 1999, the Board denied Mr. Cook’s claim for benefits, and Mr. Cook appealed the Board’s decision to the Veterans Court.
Before the Veterans Court, Mr. Cook argued that the Board failed to provide a “written statement of [its] findings and conclusions, and the reasons and bases for those findings and conclusions” as required by 38 U.S.C. § 7104(d)(1) (2000). Specifically, Mr. Cook pointed to the Board’s failure to address the informed consent form that is required prior to treatment at a VA facility by 38 C.F.R. § 17.32(c) (1997). According to Mr. Cook, the informed consent form was probative evidence that his condition was caused by the VA surgery because it warned of precisely the ailments with which he became afflicted. Consequently, Mr. Cook argues, the Board’s failure to address the form was error under § 7104(d)(1). Mr. Cook further argued that the Board also failed to address the internal inconsistencies of an examining physician’s medical report to the VA.
The Veterans Court rejected both of Mr. Cook’s assertions. As to the failure to address the informed consent form, the Veterans Court agreed that the Board did not address the form but disagreed that this failure violated the “reasons or bases” requirement of § 7104(d). The consent form, the Veterans Court explained, is a legal notice requirement, and is neither favorable nor unfavorable evidence regarding Mr. Cook’s claim. As to the argument regarding the internal inconsistency of the medical opinion, the Veterans Court found the inconsistency to be illusory. Mr. Cook timely appealed to this court.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
The jurisdiction of this court to review decisions of the Veterans Court is limited by statute. 38 U.S.C. § 7292;
Forshey v. Principi,
B. Analysis
Mr. Cook argues that the Veterans Court has abused its discretion under its own jurisdictional statute, 38 U.S.C. § 7252 (2000), by not remanding his ease to the Board for consideration of the consent form. Section 7252(a) authorizes the Veterans Court “to affirm, modify, or reverse a decision of the [Board] or to remand the matter, as appropriate.”
Id.
Mr. Cook thus describes the issue as a review of the Veterans Court’s compliance with its own jurisdictional statute, a question of statutory interpretation falling within the scope of our review. 38 U.S.C. § 7292(d)(1);
see also Ephraim v. Brown,
Both parties rely on
Maggitt v. West,
We do not read
Maggitt
and
Morris
as standing for a general proposition that this court has jurisdiction to review every disposition of an appeal by the Veterans Court under § 7252(a). Instead,
Maggitt
and
Morris
present situations in which this court has jurisdiction to review the correctness of the legal decision underlying the jurisdictional determination made by the Veterans Court under § 7252. Jurisdictional determinations are themselves legal issues that can be reviewed by this court. In
Maggitt,
the situation involved a decision issuing from this court revising the controlling legal standard at issue in the veteran’s claim.
In his reply brief, Mr. Cook also cites
Pierce v. Principi,
Mr. Cook’s claim involves no intervening change in law or request for statutory interpretation. Instead, his argument is premised on the basis that the Veterans Court erred by not remanding his case over an alleged failure by the Board to satisfy its statutory requirements under § 7104(d)(1). Although we have not addressed the full extent of this court’s jurisdiction to review the compliance of the Veterans Court with its jurisdictional statute, § 7252, our
Maggitt
and
Morris
decisions correctly indicate that our review is confined to legal determinations.
See Maggitt,
Our jurisdictional statute, § 7292, supports this conclusion. As we have often explained, § 7292(d)(2) precludes this court’s review of factual determinations and applications of the law to facts where no constitutional issues are involved.
See Halpern v. Principi,
(1) issues concerning the validity of statutes or regulations on which the decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims depended; (2) issues of interpretation if the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims elaborated the meaning of a statute or regulation and the decision depended on that interpretation; (3) issues of validity or interpretation raised before the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims but not explicitly decided, if the decision would have been altered by adopting the position that was urged; and (4) other “relevant” questions of law.
Forshey,
*941 Mr. Cook argued to the Veterans Court that the Board’s failure to consider his consent form was error under § 7104(d)(1). The Veterans Court considered this argument, and declined to remand the case for further consideration by the Board. Mr. Cook argues to this court that the Veterans Court abused its discretion under § 7252(a) by not remanding his case. To agree with Mr. Cook, we would first need to conclude that the Veterans Court’s application of law, in this case § 7104(d)(1), to the facts, here the failure to consider the consent form, was incorrect. While no express holding to that effect is required to give Mr. Cook the relief he requests, we certainly would be applying the law to the facts in order to find an abuse of discretion. In contrast, no such application of law to facts was necessary in Maggitt or Moms. The central thesis there was only a determination of whether the abuse of discretion, premised on the intervening legal changes, created a basis for this court to obtain jurisdiction to determine the correctness of the underlying legal decisions by the Veterans Court. Likewise, the review of the § 7104(d) issue in Morris involved only a review of the legal interpretation of that statute — again, with no corresponding review of factual matters.
While both in the situation presented by Mr. Cook and the situations in Maggitt and Morris, we would be reviewing the Veterans Court’s compliance with its jurisdictional statute, a seemingly legal question, that review cannot be performed in the present appeal without reviewing the application of the law to facts, a matter excluded from our jurisdiction by § 7292(d)(2). Thus, Mr. Cook presents us with a question outside of our jurisdiction and, no matter how many mattresses Mr. Cook stacks upon it, § 7292(d)(2) requires that we still feel the pea at the bottom of the stack. 3
III. CONCLUSION
Because we are without jurisdiction to review Mr. Cook’s appeal, it is
DISMISSED.
IV. COSTS
No costs.
Notes
. In 2002, Congress expanded our scope of review to "case” jurisdiction.
See Morgan
v.
Principi,
. While the appellant in Moms presented the alleged misinterpretation of § 7104(d) as an *941 abuse of discretion by the CAVC under § 7252, the appellant’s use of § 7252 as a vehicle for reviewing the issue seems to us to have been unnecessary-we could have reviewed the alleged misinterpretation directly pursuant to § 7292(c). Much as the form of the request made no difference in Morris, the same is true here. Requesting review of a factual dispute through the lens of an abuse of discretion under § 7252 does nothing to alter the prohibited character of that review under § 7292(d)(2).
. Hans Christian Andersen, The Princess and the Pea, in Fairy Tales 23 (Everyman's Library 1992).
