Case Information
*2 Before NEWMAN , PLAGER , AND LINN , Circuit Judges . N EWMAN , Circuit Judge .
Robert L. Washington appeals the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (“the Veterans Court”) affirming the decision of the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (“the Board”) that denied his requests for service connection for a left spermatocele. [1] The issue on appeal is whether Mr. Washington received an adequate medical examination, this is a question of fact, and is not within this court’s appellate jurisdiction. The appeal is dismissed.
D ISCUSSION
Mr. Washington served on active duty in the U.S. Army for two tours, the first between 1966 and 1968, and the second between 1970 and 1973. During his service Mr. Washington received various treatments for problems with his genitourinary system. His 1973 separation examination found his genitourinary system to be normal.
In January 2000, Mr. Washington filed a claim in the Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”) Regional Office (“RO”) in Atlanta, Georgia, seeking service connection for a lump in his left groin, which became the service-connection claim for a left spermatocele. Mr. Washington received various treatments, and proceedings before the VA included an appeal to the Board and remand to the RO for clarifica- tion of a 2003 medical examination. The Board observed that the 2003 “examiner did not specifically address whether it was at least as likely as not that [Mr. Washing- ton’s] current left spermatocele is etiologically related to his symptomatology in service.” No. 03-27 749, at 18, 2005 WL 3925095 (Bd. Vet. App. Dec. 30 2005); R.A. 46. The Board also observed that the “examiner did not discuss whether [Mr. Washington] had a preexisting disorder prior to his second period of active duty service, and if so, whether the preexisting service [sic] was permanently aggravated during that second period of service.” Id. The Board ordered a clarifying medical opinion to determine “the nature and etiology of [Mr. Washington’s] current left spermatocele.” Id.
The clarifying opinion, issued on March 8, 2006, found
that Mr. Washington’s in-service groin cyst “had absolutely
no connection or it is as unlikely as not that the cyst had
any connection with the spermatocele that developed on the
left side some time later; in actual fact, it developed some
thirty years after the initial event.”
On appeal to the Veteran’s Court Mr. Washington ar- gued that the Secretary violated his duty to assist under 38 U.S.C. §5103A by “failing to provide an adequate medical examination with respect to [his] spermatocele claim.” 2011 WL 1220370, at *2. Specifically, he asserted that the exam- iners failed to discuss the relationship between his sperma- tocele and the symptoms he experienced in service. The Veteran’s Court found no clear error in the Board’s analysis, and affirmed the Board’s decision.
On appeal to this court, Mr. Washington argues that the
Veterans Court erred by failing to order a proper and ade-
quate medical examination for his left spermatocele, and
violated the VA’s duty to assist defined in 38 U.S.C. §
5103A. This court possesses limited jurisdiction to review
decisions by the Veterans Court. Absent a constitutional
issue, this court “may not review (A) a challenge to a factual
determination, or (B) a challenge to a law or regulation as
applied to the facts of a particular case.” 38 U.S.C. §
7292(d)(2);
Bastien v. Shinseki
,
The adequacy of a medical examination is a question of
fact, as is compliance with the duty to assist.
See Nolen v.
Grober
,
Each party shall bear its own costs.
DISMISSED
Notes
[1]
Robert L. Washington v. Eric K. Shinseki, Secretary
of Veterans Affairs
, No. 09-2889,
[2] It is somewhat unclear as to what issues Mr. Wash- ington is asking this court to review. The government contends that Mr. Washington is no longer pursuing his claim for service connection with respect to diabetes melli- tus, and this court agrees. However, even if Mr. Washing- ton intended to contest his diabetes mellitus disability rating, this court would not have jurisdiction as that finding did not involve any legal determinations.
