Louis Richard asks us to reverse the Court of Veterans Appeals’ dismissal of his deceased brother’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Richard v. Gober,
I
In mid-1994, Philogene Richard, a World War II veteran and former prisoner of war, asked that his claim for service connection of ischemic heart disease, originally diagnosed in 1981, be reopened. The Department of Veterans Affairs denied this request in September 1994, and the Board of Veterans’ Appeals affirmed in a decision dated February 21, 1997. See In re Richard, No. 94-44 671 (Bd.Vet.App. Feb. 21, 1997). Richard filed a timely notice of appeal to the Court of Veterans Appeals (“CVA”) pursuant to 38 U.S.C. § 7252 (1994).
On June 30, 1997, while his appeal to the CVA was pending, Philogene Richard died. After requesting an extension of time, Louis Richard — the deceased’s brother and the estate’s representative — sought to have himself substituted as a party to continue the appeal under CVA Rule 43(a), which allows a “personal representative” of a deceased party to be substituted in a pending appeal. Ct. Vet. App. R. 43(a) (1994). The CVA dismissed the appeal
sua sponte
on September 22,1997, holding that the claim for service-connected benefits had become moot at the death of the veteran-claimant, and that therefore the CVA had lost jurisdiction over the action.
See Richard,
*721 Louis Richard, on behalf of the deceased’s estate, brings this appeal pursuant to 38 U.S.C. § 7292 (1994), requesting that this court order reinstatement of the CVA appeal.
II
Because appellant requests this court to interpret statutes relating to veterans’ benefits and the rules established for the Court of Veterans Appeals, this court has jurisdiction under 38 U.S.C. § 7292(c) (1994) (granting exclusive jurisdiction to the Federal Circuit “to review and decide any ... interpretation [of any statute or regulation under this section]”). Nevertheless, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs (“the Secretary”) asserts that jurisdiction is not proper with this court, arguing that Mr. Richard “challenges only factual findings or the application of established law to the facts.”
The Secretary’s argument ignores the nature of the questions placed before this court. To be sure, Mr. Richard endeavors to inform the court of the context of the appeal, including the basis upon which the 1994 claim for service connection was filed. He does not, however, present such issues as being ripe for review on this appeal. Merely painting the factual backdrop of a dispute over statutory interpretation clearly does not place an appeal beyond our jurisdiction. Our inquiry here considers the proper construction of statutory language contained in title 38 of the United States Code, and the import of CVA Rule 43(a). As such, jurisdiction is unquestionably proper. See 38 U.S.C. § 7292.
We review the statutory interpretation of the Court of Veterans Appeals de novo.
See Haines v. West,
III
It is well-established that the Court of Veterans Appeals, although not formally bound by the “case or controversy” requirement of Article III of the United States Constitution, does not decide cases that do not present an actual case or controversy.
See Zevalkink v. Brown,
Chapter 11 of title 38 makes no provision for the payment of disability compensation to survivors.
Haines,
Louis Richard’s principal argument is that the silence of the relevant statutes concerning disability payments to survivors, together with the CVA’s procedural rules expressly allowing substitution, compels the conclusion that a representative of a deceased veteran’s estate may be substituted for the (deceased) veteran in a pending appeal. In support of this proposition, Richard points to the language of CVA Rule 43(a), permitting the “personal representative of the deceased party’s estate” to be substituted for the deceased in a pending appeal. Further, Richard argues that the silence of chapter 11 of *722 title 38 regarding survivorship cannot lead to a conclusion that sections 5121 and 5112 were intended to prevent heirs of deceased veterans from pursuing pending claims for disability compensation. A conclusion of such “intent,” he argues, would contravene the broad remedial purposes of the veteran’s benefits statute. Finally, Richard argues that the pertinent legislative history of section 5121 is supportive of his position.
These arguments, however, fail on two grounds. First, arguments relying upon the language of CVA Rule 43(a) are inapposite, as they fail to recognize that the question of substitution is separate from that of standing.
See, e.g., Robertson v. Wegmann,
Second, Mr. Richard’s statutory arguments cannot overcome the clear intent expressed by the structure and language of the statutory scheme at issue — that a veteran’s claim to disability benefits terminates at death. As we noted recently in
Haines,
which concerned a spouse’s attempt to continue the appeal of a deceased veteran under 38 U.S.C. § 5109A (West Supp.1998) (allowing the Secretary to correct “clear and unmistakable errors”), the substantive compensation provisions found in chapter 11 of title 38 clearly distinguish between disability compensation, generally available only to veterans, and death and pension benefits, payable to survivors.
Richard recognizes that, because section 5121(a)(2) limits recovery to the veteran’s spouse, surviving children and dependent parents, a decedent’s estate is precluded from pursuing a claim under this section. However, Richard posits that section 5121 merely establishes an alternative yet nonexclusive means of recovering disability compensation due a veteran at death, and that the broad language of Haines declaring veterans’ disability claims extinguished at death does not apply to the case of a non-5121 claimant, as that case concerned a party authorized to pursue claims under 38 U.S.C. § 5121, in contrast to the case here.
We think, however, that the reasoning of our prior decisions is equally applicable here. Richard’s construction of section 5121, together with CVA Rule 43(a), would clearly swallow the “narrowly limited exception” of 5121 that we described in
Haines.
Although this case is the first to squarely present this court with the question of whether a non-section 5121 claimant may continue a deceased veteran’s appeal for disability compensation, nothing in the legislative history or the “remedial” nature of the veterans’ compensation statutes, see
Smith v. Brown,
IV
Richard’s final argument is that any construction of section 5121, section 5112(b) or other provision of title 38 that compels a conclusion that a veteran’s claim to disability compensation terminates at death brings the statute into conflict with the constitutional requirement of procedural due process. However, to raise a due process question the claimant must demonstrate a protected property interest entitled to such protections.
See Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
Conclusion
Because Philogene Richard’s claim under 38 U.S.C. § 1110 was extinguished at his death, his pending appeal before the Court of Veterans Appeals became moot. Having thus lost subject matter jurisdiction, the CVA acted properly in dismissing Mr. Richard’s appeal.
AFFIRMED.
