Dee W. KILPATRICK, Appellant, v. Anthony J. PRINCIPI, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Appellee.
No. 98-2247.
United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims.
Argued Dec. 13, 2001. Decided Feb. 8, 2002.
Richard Mayerick, with whom Leigh A. Bradley, General Counsel; Ron Garvin, Assistant General Counsel; and Carolyn F. Washington, Deputy Assistant General Counsel, all of Washington, DC, were on the pleadings, for appellee.
Before HOLDAWAY, STEINBERG, and GREENE, Judges.
STEINBERG, Judge:
The appellant, through counsel, seeks review of an October 24, 1998, Board of Veterans Appeals (Board or BVA) decision that denied his claim for Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) special adaptive housing or a special home-adaptation grant, under chapter 21 of title 38, U.S.Code, as well as his request for financial assistance for the purchase of an automobile and automobile adaptive equipment, or for adaptive equipment only, under chapter 39 of title 38. Record (R.) at 3. The appellant and the Secretary have both filed briefs, and, after two rounds of supplemental briefing ordered by the Court, the Court heard oral argument from the parties. This appeal is timely, and the Court has jurisdiction pursuant to
I. Background
The veteran served in the U.S. Army from September 1960 to September 1963. See R. at 2, 14. Around 1990, apparently, he received a gunshot wound from an accidental shooting. R. at 109. In that year, the bullet that caused his gunshot wound was removed by surgery at a VA medical center, after which the veteran was ambulatory and suffered no bowel, bladder, or sexual complications. Ibid. However, he was later readmitted to a VA medical center due to pain from a ruptured disc at L3-4. R. at 44. Shortly thereafter, he “underwent laminectomy L1, L2, and L3 together with foraminotomy and diskectomy” to repair his injuries (R. at 44); this surgery resulted in substantial medical complications (R. at 44-45, 109-10). In October 1995, a VA regional office (RO) awarded disability compensation to him under
In the August 1998 BVA decision here on appeal, the Board remanded to the RO the vocational rehabilitation claim (R. at 9-
[T]he [GC] opinion determined that a veteran with a disability that resulted from VA hospitalization ... who has been determined eligible for compensation ‘as if such injury were service-connected pursuant to [section] 1151 is not eligible for either a special housing adaption grant or a grant for acquiring an automobile and adaptive equipment as a result of the disability caused by VA medical care.
R. at 6-7; see also R. at 99-105 (text of the GC opinion). The Board concluded: “Essentially, the benefits [the veteran sought], as provided under chapters 21 and 39, are beyond the scope of the grant of benefits provided under [section] 1151.” R. at 7. The appellant then appealed to this Court in December 1998.
At oral argument and in their briefs, the appellant and the Secretary both rely on the language of section 1151 as dispositive, each claiming that the statute is plain on its face in allowing and limiting, respectively, ancillary benefits. Appellant‘s Brief (Br.) at 29; Secretary‘s Br. at 3. The appellant also spends a substantial portion of his brief attacking the validity of the GC opinion. Br. at 5-28, 32-37. Specifically, the appellant claims that the Board erred in relying on the GC opinion because it is procedurally invalid under
The Court in March 2000 ordered the Secretary to file a supplemental brief addressing all arguments raised by the appellant and not conceded by the Secretary and also to discuss the applicability of Maggitt v. West, 202 F.3d 1370 (Fed.Cir. 2000), and Stuckey v. West, 13 Vet.App. 163 (1999), “to the Secretary‘s argument that the Court should not address the arguments raised by the appellant to the Court but not to the Board in this case“. Kilpatrick v. West, 13 Vet.App. 403, 403-04 (2000) (per curiam order). The Court‘s order also permitted the appellant to file a response to the Secretary‘s supplemental brief. Id. at 404. In his supplemental brief, the Secretary contends, inter alia, that the APA does not apply to the GC opinion, because it is interpretive rather than substantive (Supplemental (Suppl.) Br. at 2-5) and because section 1151, under Mintz v. Brown, 6 Vet.App. 277 (1994), is “plain on its face” in clearly precluding non-chapters 11 and 13 ancillary benefits (Suppl. Br. at 10). The appellant argues in his supplemental reply brief that the GC opinion is unreasonable, and therefore invalid, because it does not give effect to the “service-connected” language of section 1151 as defined in
Subsequently, the Court determined that further supplemental briefing was necessary and issued a May 2001 order requiring the parties to discuss “(1) the legislative history of [section 1151] or of any other statutory provision relating to the appellant‘s claims for ancillary benefits under chapters 21, 23, and 39 ... in terms of any connection between section 1151 and such potential ancillary benefits ...; or (2) any pertinent regulatory history regarding those statutory provisions and any such connection.” Kilpatrick v. Principi, 15 Vet.App. 22, 22 (2001) (per curiam). In response, neither party has been able to refer to any significant legislative history to aid the Court. Notably, the parties do not discuss in their briefs and were not prepared to discuss at oral argument the specific provisions of chapters 21 and 39, the chapters under which the appellant seeks benefits.
II. Analysis
A. Section 1151(a) Benefits
Section 1151(a) provides, in pertinent part:
Where any veteran shall have suffered an injury, or an aggravation of an injury, as the result of hospitalization, medical or surgical treatment ... awarded under any of the laws administered by the Secretary, or as a result of having submitted to an examination under any such law, and not the result of such veteran‘s own willful misconduct, and such injury or aggravation results in additional disability to or death of such veteran, disability or death compensation under this chapter and dependency and indemnity compensation under chapter 13 of this title shall be awarded in the same manner as if such disability, aggravation, or death were service-connected.
Both parties argue that section 1151 is plain on its face. The appellant argues that section 1151(a) “states clearly” that “any disability a veteran sustains while receiving VA medical treatment is to be treated by VA ‘as if such disability’ is service-connected“. Br. at 29. The Secretary argues that the use of the word “compensation” in section 1151 refers only to “monthly payment[s]” under section 101(13), and therefore, “[p]otential awards under section 1151 [are] legislatively self-limiting to potential awards of compensation under chapters 11 and 13 of title 38 exclusively, to the exclusion of other benefits under other chapters.” Br. at 3. Both arguments are misplaced. Although section 1151(a) provides for the payment of compensation (disability compensation under chapter 11 or dependency and indemnity compensation under chapter 13) to the class of beneficiaries to which the appellant belongs, the parties seem to have forgotten that the appellant is seeking benefits under chapters 21 and 39 and that it is the benefits provisions of those chapters that must be examined in order to decide the questions before the Court. For the reasons that follow, the provisions of section 1151(a) and section 101(16), in and of themselves, neither allow for nor restrict eligibility for payments under other chapters of title 38 or under any non-
As to the Secretary‘s reliance on Mintz as authority for the proposition that section 1151 precludes non-chapter 11 and 13 ancillary benefits, the Court notes that Mintz related to service-connected burial benefits sought by a section 1151 beneficiary under section 2307, not chapters 21 and 39. Mintz, 6 Vet.App. at 282-83; see also
The appellant‘s contention that section 1151 “clearly” dictates that a section 1151 disability “is to be treated by VA ‘as if such disability’ is service connected” (Br. at 29 (emphasis added)) is equally unpersuasive. Section 1151 does not confer upon its beneficiaries the status of service connection; rather, section 1151 awards compensation as if the claimant were service connected. In other words, section 1151 nowhere provides that the disability is, as the appellant suggests (Br. at 29), to be treated generally as if it were service connected. Similarly unavailing is the appellant‘s attempt to isolate the definition of “service-connection” in section 101(16) as though it could somehow assume independent meaning outside section 1151‘s operative provisions. Instead, the definition must take its meaning from the language of section 1151, see Hamilton, supra, and that section‘s operative language relates only to providing for compensation payments under chapter 11 or 13 and not to the nature of disabilities in some generic sense. Accordingly, in order to determine the eligibility of a section 1151 beneficiary for benefits under chapters 21 and 39, the Court now turns to the chapter 21 and 39 provisions at issue.
B. Chapter 21 Ancillary Benefits
Section 2101(a) of title 38, U.S.Code, provides:
(a) The Secretary is authorized, under such regulations as the Secretary may prescribe, to assist any veteran who is entitled to compensation under chapter 11 of this title for permanent and total service-connected disability—
(1) due to the loss, or loss of use, of both lower extremities, such as to preclude locomotion without the aid of braces, crutches, canes, or a wheelchair, or
(2) which includes (A) blindness in both eyes, having only light percep-
tion, plus (B) loss or loss of use of one lower extremity, or (3) due to the loss or loss of use of one lower extremity together with (A) residuals of organic disease or injury, or (B) the loss or loss of use of one upper extremity, which so affect the functions of balance or propulsion as to preclude locomotion without the aid of braces, crutches, canes, or a wheelchair, in acquiring a suitable housing unit with special fixtures or movable facilities made necessary by the nature of the veteran‘s disability, and necessary land therefor. The regulations of the Secretary shall include, but not be limited to, provisions requiring findings that (1) it is medically feasible for such veteran to reside in the proposed housing unit and in the proposed locality; (2) the proposed housing unit bears a proper relation to the veteran‘s present and anticipated income and expenses; and (3) the nature and condition of the proposed housing unit are such as to be suitable to the veteran‘s needs for dwelling purposes.
Because the veteran is receiving section 1151 compensation benefits at a 100% rating due to the loss of use of both of his lower extremities (R. at 51), under the plain meaning of section 2101(a)(1) he is within the statutory eligibility criteria because he is “entitled to compensation under chapter 11“—specifically, under section 1151—“for permanent and total service-connected disability” for a listed disability, the loss of use of both legs. Moreover, even if the Court were to find section 2101(a) ambiguous, which it does not, as to the eligibility of section 1151 beneficiaries, under Brown v. Gardner any interpretive doubt in statutory interpretation is to be “resolved in the veteran‘s favor“. Gardner, 513 U.S. 115, 118, 115 S.Ct. 552, 130 L.Ed.2d 462 (1994) (citing King v. St. Vincent‘s Hospital, 502 U.S. 215, 220-221 n. 9, 112 S.Ct. 570, 116 L.Ed.2d 578 (1991)); see also Jones (Ethel) v. West, 136 F.3d 1296, 1299 n. 2 (Fed.Cir.1998) (same); Allen v. Brown, 7 Vet.App. 439, 446 (1995) (en banc) (same). The Court notes that section 2101(a)‘s permissive language that “[t]he Secretary is authorized, under such regulations as the Secretary may prescribe,” (emphasis added) might be read as establishing only a discretionary program and not an entitlement for those in the defined eligibility categories. But see Matter of Wick, 4 Vet.App. 487, 494 (1993) (holding as follows: “The provision of § 5904(d)(3) that the Secretary ‘may direct’ payment must be read in light of the ‘is to be paid to the attorney by the Secretary’ language of [38 U.S.C.] § 5904(d)(2)(A). There can be no question that Congress, in enacting § 5904(d), contemplated an obligatory rather than a discretionary direct payment by the Secretary to a claimant‘s attorney.“), rev‘d on other grounds, 40 F.3d 367 (Fed.Cir.1994).
The Court need not resolve that question, however. Even if it were to be assumed that section 2101(a) establishes a discretionary program, the Secretary‘s discretion would be only as to whether to implement or not the program for the beneficiaries prescribed by Congress. There is no reason to believe that Congress gave him leave to pick and choose
Although counsel for the Secretary conceded the preceding point at oral argument, this is, nonetheless, precisely what the regulation seems to do by adding a condition on chapter 21 eligibility, in addition to “entitle[ment] to compensation under chapter 11 of this title for permanent and total service-connected disability“,
Furthermore, an examination of the entire statutory scheme regarding ancillary benefits under chapter 21 demonstrates that any interpretation that would give the Secretary discretion in implementing its provisions (by virtue of the language “is authorized” to provide assistance and “may
In view of the foregoing analysis, the Court holds that
C. Chapter 39 Ancillary Benefits
In its decision, the BVA stated that the GC opinion “specifically addressed eligibility for ... chapter 39 benefits” (R. at 8) and “determined that a veteran [receiving benefits under section 1151] is not eligible for ... acquiring an automobile and adaptive equipment as a result of the disability caused by VA medical care” (R. at 7). However, the GC opinion specifically pertained to eligibility only “for a special housing adaptation grant as a result of the disability caused by VA medical care” and thus constituted a concrete BVA-binding opinion, rather than casual advice, that a section 1151 beneficiary is ineligible only under that chapter. The Court notes that in its discussion, the GC stated:
The rationale of this opinion would equally apply to other non-chapter 11 or 13 benefits such as automobiles and adaptive equipment under chapter 39 of title 38 where eligibility is conditioned on the veteran having a service-connected condition, unless the statute or legislative history clearly and unambiguously provided otherwise.
G.C. Prec. Opinion 24-97, at para. 23 (emphasis added). The discrepancy between the assertion by the BVA that the GC specifically addressed and reached a binding opinion regarding chapter 39 benefits and the conditional language of the opinion is substantial. The GC opinion did not examine the chapter 39 statutory provisions potentially awarding benefits under that chapter, nor did it provide any basis for a determination that eligibility thereunder is “conditioned on the veteran[‘s] having a service-connected condition“. Ibid. Moreover, the GC opinion cites no authority for requiring that veterans’ benefits eligibility must be “clearly and unambiguously provided” in “a statute or legislative history“. Ibid. Indeed, any such interpretive requirement would conflict with the interpretive rule set forth in Brown v. Gardner and the related cases cited in part II.B., above.
The Board is required to consider, and discuss in its decision, all “potentially applicable” provisions of law and regulation and to include in its decision a written statement of the reasons or bases for its findings and conclusions on all material issues of fact and law presented on the record; the statement must be adequate to enable an appellant to understand the precise basis for the Board‘s decision, as well as to facilitate review in this Court. See
As noted in part II.B., above, regarding chapter 21 benefits, the entire statutory scheme must be examined to determine eligibility under that program. See Reno, Bailey, Talley, Choice, Robbins, Meyers, Emery Mining Corp., and United Telecomm. Inc., all supra. The same is true regarding section 3902 of title 38, U.S.Code, “Assistance for providing automobile and adaptive equipment“, which provides, in pertinent part:
(a) The Secretary, under regulations which the Secretary shall prescribe, shall provide or assist in providing an automobile or other conveyance to each eligible person by paying....
(b)(1) The Secretary, under regulations which the Secretary shall prescribe, shall provide each eligible person the adaptive equipment deemed necessary....
“any veteran entitled to compensation under chapter 11 of this title for any of the disabilities described ... below, if the disability is the result of an injury incurred or disease contracted in or aggravated by active military, naval, or air service“, including “permanent loss of use of one or both feet....”
Under section 3902(b)(2), the beneficiaries described are not defined by reference to the “eligible person” standard as are those described in section 3901(a). As a result of this distinction, as long as a subsection (b)(2)-described veteran suffers from ankylosis, that veteran appears to have a clear entitlement (“the Secretary shall provide” (emphasis added)) to the
Therefore, in determining on remand the extent to which section 1151 recipients are entitled to chapter 39 benefits, the Secretary must reexamine this matter in the context of the entire statutory scheme, regarding ancillary benefits, including our holding today regarding chapter 21 entitlement, and the lack of reference to § 3.358 in the chapter 39 regulation (
III. Conclusion
Upon consideration of the parties’ pleadings, oral argument, and the forgoing analysis, the Court (1) reverses the October 1998 BVA decision as to the chapter 21 claim and remands that matter for expeditious award of chapter 21 benefits to the appellant, and (2) vacates the BVA decision as to the chapter 39 claim and remands that matter for expeditious further development and issuance of a readjudicated decision supported by an adequate statement of reasons or bases, see
REVERSED IN PART, VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED.
