Adam J. Natali, Claimant-Appellant v. Anthony J. Principi, Secretary of Veterans Affairs

375 F.3d 1375, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 14909, 2004 WL 1597637
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2004
Docket03-7227
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 375 F.3d 1375 (Adam J. Natali, Claimant-Appellant v. Anthony J. Principi, Secretary of Veterans Affairs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adam J. Natali, Claimant-Appellant v. Anthony J. Principi, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, 375 F.3d 1375, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 14909, 2004 WL 1597637 (Fed. Cir. 2004).

Opinion

BRYSON, Circuit Judge.

Adam J. Natali appeals from a decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (“the Veterans Court”). The court affirmed a decision of the Board of Veterans’ Appeals denying Mr. Natali’s claim that a 1945 Veterans Administration rating decision contained clear and unmistakable error (“CUE”). Because Mr. Natali has not shown that any error in the process leading to the 1945 rating decision would have altered the result in this case, we affirm the decision of the Veterans Court.

I

Mr. Natali served on active duty in the United States Army from November 1940 until November 1944. Upon his enrollment, Mr. Natali was given a physical examination that included an assessment of his vision. The report from the physical examination noted that Mr. Natali had 20/70 vision in both eyes, corrected to 20/20 in his left eye and 20/30 in his right eye. The report did not include any indication of further eye problems.

Sometime in 1944, Mr. Natali began experiencing additional vision problems. In September 1944, he was hospitalized for headaches, blurring of vision, and progressive bilateral loss of vision. A report from an ophthalmologic examination shortly thereafter noted that Mr. Natali had experienced residual headaches following a 1939 fall, that he had quit school at age 18 because he could not read well, and that his head had begun hurting again after a 1941 automobile accident that occurred during his period of service. The report noted that Mr. Natali’s vision had gradually declined following the automobile acci *1377 dent and that he had quit driving nine months before the examination because he could not see at night. Mr. Natali was diagnosed with astigmatism mixed, bilateral with diplopia (double vision). A Veterans Administration rating board in November 1944 granted Mr. Natali a service-connected disability rating of 60 percent pursuant to Veterans Regulation No. 1(a), Part I, Paragraph 1(a), for “defective vision, 20/200 bilateral (vision on induction, zero percent),” and stated that his vision was “[aggravated by service in the WW II.”

In December 1944, Mr. Natali was reexamined in connection with his discharge from service. The examination report indicated a diagnosis of “amblyopia, bilateral,” due to “astigmatism, myopic, bilateral, severe.” In February 1945, the rating board began reexamining the question whether Mr. Natali’s eye condition was service connected. A rating board memorandum indicated that the rating board’s action was “deferred pending receipt of additional clinical records hereinafter requested” because “[t]he evidence in file is insufficient to show whether or not veteran’s eye condition was aggravated by the accident which r occurred November ’ 2, 1941....” A May 1945 rating board memorandum noted that “[t]he veteran alleges an injury to his head in 1939 due to a fall, also that his head was injured in an auto-accident in 1941 and that his vision has gradually become less since the latter accident,” but that “[t]he clinical records covering hospitalization from November 2, 1941 until January 28, 1942 on account of injuries sustained in the auto-accident in November 1941 have been carefully checked” and that “[n]o head injury other than a laceration of the scalp is noted in the records.” The rating board memorandum concluded that “[a] check of the entire record fails to disclose any disease or injury during service to which an aggravation can be attributed,” and that “[t]he Board is inclined to the view that the increased impairment of vision noted at the time of the veteran’s discharge from service is due solely to Natural Progress and was not aggravated by military service.”

In an August 1945 letter, the rating board informed Mr. Natali that his claim had been “further reviewed based upon report of examination conducted of you at this facility on December 7, 1944 and a review of all the records in your case” and that “it has now been determined, that your defective vision is due to structural defects of the eye.” The letter explained that those defects were of “congenital or developmental origin,” that Mr. Natali was “not shown to have suffered from any disease or injury during service which may be considered as having aggravated that condition,” and that “[t]he increase in loss of vision in service is considered to be the result of natural progress and not the result of military service.” A contemporaneous rating board memorandum proposed severing service connection for Mr. Nata-li’s disability based on the December 1944 examination.

. In a decision dated October 8, 1945, the rating board severed service connection for Mr. Natali’s eye problems. The rating board based its ruling on a conclusion that the November 1944 decision contained CUE. The rating board determined that Mr. Natali had “amblyopia expanopsia, bilateral, due to high error refraction and astigmatism, mixed, bilateral” and that his “condition .. .• is due to a defect in the form and structure of the eye, held to be of a congenital or developmental origin and there is no evidence of any superimposed disability during service which could have caused or aggravated the congenital condition.” The rating board noted that its conclusion was based in part on the December 1944 discharge examination.

Since 1945, Mr. Natali has undergone several medical examinations in an effort *1378 to show that the rating determination of October 1945 was incorrect. He has offered evidence of examinations in February 1987, December 1997, and September 1998 to show that he did not have amblyo-pia.

In October 1998, Mr. Natali filed a claim with a regional office of the Department of Veterans Affairs in which he argued that the 1945 rating board decision contained clear and unmistakable error. The regional office denied Mr. Natali’s claim on the ground that the 1945 rating decision was “shown to have been proper based on the evidence of record available at that time and the rules in effect at that time.”

Mr. Natali appealed the regional office decision to the Board of Veterans’ Appeals, which upheld the regional office’s determination that the 1945 severance decision did not contain CUE. The Board found that the November 1944 medical evidence showed that Mr. Natali suffered from am-blyopia expanopsia, bilateral, due to a high error of refraction, that the condition had existed all of Mr. Natali’s life, and that it was not aggravated during his military service. The Board also found that the December 1944 medical examination showed that Mr. Natali “suffered from severe] astigmatism, myopic, with bilateral amblyopia due to this condition.” The Board noted that the 1945 rating board had before it evidence that Mr. Natali had injured his head in 1939; that the head injury had contributed to his automobile accident in 1941; and that no clinical records from November 1941 to January 1942 noted any head injury other than a laceration of the scalp. The Board concluded that based on that evidence, the 1945 rating board found that Mr. Natali’s eye condition was attributable to a congenital or developmental defect and that the increased impairment he experienced was due to the natural progression of that disorder, rather than aggravation during military service.

The Board then determined that although Mr.

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375 F.3d 1375, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 14909, 2004 WL 1597637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adam-j-natali-claimant-appellant-v-anthony-j-principi-secretary-of-cafc-2004.