Barney O. Padgett v. R. James Nicholson

19 Vet. App. 133, 2005 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 196, 2005 WL 900626
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedApril 19, 2005
Docket02-2259
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 19 Vet. App. 133 (Barney O. Padgett v. R. James Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barney O. Padgett v. R. James Nicholson, 19 Vet. App. 133, 2005 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 196, 2005 WL 900626 (Cal. 2005).

Opinions

KASOLD, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court. HAGEL, Judge, filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part. IVERS, Chief Judge, filed a dissenting opinion.

KASOLD, Judge:

World War II veteran Barney O. Pad-gett appeals through counsel an August 8, 2002, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board) decision that denied his claim for VA disability compensation for service-connected osteoarthritis of the right hip on direct, presumptive, and secondary bases. Record (R.) at 1-20. In a July 9, 2004, panel decision of this Court issued after oral argument, the Board’s decision was vacated and the matter remanded for readjudi-cation. On September 14, the Court granted motions by both parties for a full-Court decision and withdrew the panel decision. Padgett v. Principi, 18 Vet.App. 404 (2004) (en banc order). For the reasons stated below, the Board’s decision will be reversed in part and set aside in part, and the matter will be remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTS

Mr. Padgett served on active duty in the U.S. Army from January 1943 to July [135]*1351945. He is a combat veteran who served in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. R. at 22-23. In March 1943, he injured his left knee as a result of slipping on ice in Plattsburgh, New York. R. at 43. In July 1944, he reinjured his left knee during combat when he jumped into a ditch seeking cover from shell fire. R. at 54, 71. His service medical records indicate that he was diagnosed with having a sprained left knee, chronic, severe, and synovitis of the left knee, chronic, severe, secondary to the left-knee sprain. Id. In August 1945, a VA regional office (RO) awarded him service connection for residuals of a left-knee injury, rated at 30% disabling. R. at 92. That rating was reduced later to 10%. R. at 149.

In September 1975, Mr. Padgett filed claims seeking service connection for arthritis-related pain in his left leg, left hip, and the left side of his back. R. at 149. In a June 1976 decision, the RO assigned a 30% rating for traumatic arthritis of his left knee and for a residual sprain of the left knee with favorable ankylosis. R. at 185. The RO denied service connection for a lumbar-spine disorder and further determined that the evidence did not indicate the existence of a current left-hip disorder. R. at 185-87. Mr. Padgett appealed to the Board, claiming that all his arthritis had been caused by his service-connected left-knee injury. R. at 189-92, 201. In an April 1977 decision, the Board found that his multiple-joint arthritis, other than that of his left knee, was not incurred while in service, aggravated by service, or caused by an in-service disease or injury, and the Board denied his appeal. R. at 211-15.

In March 1993, Mr. Padgett filed a claim for service connection for a right-hip disorder on the basis that the need for a right-hip replacement was caused by his left-knee disability. R. at 218. The RO obtained treatment records from Dr. Charles H. Shaw, Mr. Padgett’s private orthopedic surgeon. In those records, Dr. Shaw noted that in 1982 Mr. Padgett was “morbidly obese” and suffered from degenerative arthritis in the neck, spine, and knees. R. at 226. In 1988, Dr. Shaw wrote that x-rays taken after an October 1988 automobile accident depicted, inter alia, severe degenerative arthritis of the left knee with lesser changes in the right knee and severe degenerative arthritis of the right hip with lesser changes in the left hip. R. at 230. Mr. Padgett underwent a right-total-hip arthroplasty in 1989. R. at 233-37. In 1991, Dr. Shaw also recommended a left-total-knee arthroplasty. R. at 237.

In May 1993, the RO found that there was no evidence that his right-hip condition had been caused by his left-knee disability and denied Mr. Padgett’s claim. R. at 240, 242. Mr. Padgett appealed to the Board. R. at 246, 260. In support of his appeal, he submitted the following additional medical statements from his private physicians indicating that the degenerative disease that he was experiencing in his right hip was related to his left-knee injury. In a December 1993 letter, Dr. Shaw stated:

Mr. Padgett historically sustained an injury to his left knee while in the [s]er-vice. This injury has resulted in severe endstage traumatic osteoarthritis of his knee. He also states that he thinks he sustained an injury to his hip as a result of that same incident. Over the years he has developed progressively increasing degenerative disease of both his left knee and right hip.
It is my feeling that the gait abnormalities associated with the severity of the disease involving his left knee ha[ve] adversely impacted the progression of the degenerative disease of his right hip [136]*136and have in fact aggravated his symptoms with it. It is my feeling that the degenerative disease that he has experienced in his right hip is related to his original injury.

R. at 262.

In a January 1994 letter, Dr. Robert Thoburn, a private specialist in internal medicine and rheumatology, stated:

[Mr. Padgett] had an injury to the left knee while in the service. This has progressed to severe osteoarthritis of the left knee secondary to trauma. He thinks he sustained an injury to the right hip and has progressive pain and stiffness of the right hip.
He has an endstage left knee that has resulted in weight shifting to the right side. It is likely that this has resulted in progression of osteoarthritis of the right hip. It is consistent that the osteoarthritis of the right hip and left knee are related to the original injury.
R. at 261.

Mr. Padgett also submitted an October 1993 letter from Dr. James A. Rawls, in which Dr. Rawls stated that he had treated Mr. Padgett for almost 30 years and noted that “a major problem most of this time has been osteoarthritis involving the weight-bearing joints, knees, hips, and low back.” R. at 263. Mr. Padgett also submitted a June 1979 letter from Dr. Rawls that noted Mr. Padgett’s left-knee pain, but Dr. Rawls did not comment specifically on Mr. Padgett’s gait or right-hip disability. R. at 265-67. In March 1994, after reviewing this newly submitted evidence, the RO continued to deny the claim. R. at 272-74.

In May 1994, Mr. Padgett filed a Notice of Disagreement with respect to the March 1994 RO decision and, in December 1994, he was afforded a hearing before the RO. At the hearing, Mr. Padgett testified under oath that he had injured his right hip while in service at the same time that he had reinjured his left knee in 1944. R. at 296-97. In January 1995, after finding that the evidence did not provide a sufficient basis for service connection on either a direct or secondary basis, the RO again denied Mr. Padgett’s claim R. at 303-04.

Mr. Padgett appealed that January 1995 RO decision to the Board (R. at 319) and submitted additional statements from Dr. Thoburn and Dr. Shaw (R. at 325, 340). In a November 1995 letter, Dr. Thoburn opined: “It is my feeling that a shift in weight [because of his altered gait] plus his size and obesity contributed to accelerated osteoarthritis of his right hip,” thereby leading to a total right-hip replacement. R. at 325. In an October 1996 statement, Dr. Shaw opined that Mr. Padgett’s irregular gait pattern resulting from his left-knee injury increased symptoms in his right hip, which ultimately required right-hip replacement. R. at 340. Dr.

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19 Vet. App. 133, 2005 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 196, 2005 WL 900626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barney-o-padgett-v-r-james-nicholson-cavc-2005.