Burdett Huston v. Anthony J. Principi

17 Vet. App. 195, 2003 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 533, 2003 WL 21571840
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedJuly 11, 2003
Docket01-575
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 Vet. App. 195 (Burdett Huston v. Anthony J. Principi) 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
Burdett Huston v. Anthony J. Principi, 17 Vet. App. 195, 2003 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 533, 2003 WL 21571840 (Cal. 2003).

Opinion

STEINBERG, Judge:

The appellant, through counsel, seeks review of a February 21, 2001, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board or BVA) decision that denied an effective date earlier than June 7, 1991, for his Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) service-connected bilateral hearing loss; that decision includ *197 ed the issue whether a May 15, 1981, VA regional office (RO) decision denying service connection for that condition contained clear and unmistakable error (CUE). Record (R.) at 1-3. The appellant and the Secretary each filed briefs, and the appellant filed a reply brief. This appeal is timely, and the Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(a) and 7266(a). For the reasons that follow, the Court will vacate the Board decision and remand the matter for readjudication.

I. Background

The veteran served honorably in the U.S. Army from June 1941 until September 1945. R. at 11. While serving in World War II, he was injured on March 11, 1945, when shrapnel from a hand grenade struck his left eye and left upper jaw; he was awarded a Purple Heart for his service. R. at 72, 63, 11. On May 15, 1981, the VARO denied, inter alia, the veteran’s initial claim for VA service connection for bilateral hearing loss (R. at 48-49); the following evidence was apparently then of record: March 1945 morning reports recording that the veteran was “slightly wounded”, a March 1977 VA report of medical examination for disability evaluation that recorded “partial deafness” (R. at 36), a note of “[pjartial deafness ... when the veteran was hospitalized by VA in June 1980”, and an April 1981 audiome-tric examination report revealing a history of noise exposure in service and recording the shrapnel wound to the left'jaw. See R. at 166 (November 6, 1995, BVA decision listing evidence before RO at time of its May 1981 decision). The RO sent to the veteran in June 1981 notice of that May 1981 decision. R. at 51-52. Also in June 1981, the veteran filed a Notice of Disagreement (NOD), but only as to a separate eye-disability claim (R. at 53-54), and the RO issued a Statement of the Case (SOC) only as to the eye condition (R. at 57-61). Ten years later, in June and December 1991, the veteran filed two VA Form l-9s (Substantive Appeal to BVA) (R. at 72-73 (referring to his hearing problem but expressing disagreement only as to RO eye-disability decision), 75-76 (stating veteran would present his case at hearing he requested)); it does not appear that those appeals were ever acted on by the Board.

In June 1993, the veteran filed a claim to reopen his previously and finally disallowed service-connection claim for bilateral hearing loss (R. at 90-91); the RO denied service connection in May 1994 (R. at 104-05) and sent notice of that decision to the veteran in June 1994 (R. at 107). The veteran filed an NOD in June 1994 (R. at 112), and in July 1994 the RO issued an SOC (R. at 115-21) and the veteran filed his Substantive Appeal to the Board (R. at 123-24). In November 1995, the Board reopened the veteran’s claim based on new and material evidence, including a February 1977 VA medical record noting that the veteran had told a physician that he had incurred “a grenade wound to the head” during World War II and suffered “subsequent hearing loss, most severe in the right ear”, a condition that “was confirmed during this hospitalization by impairment demonstrated on audiogram” (R. at 63). R. at 166-67. The Board granted service connection (R. at 168, 170), and on December 15,1995, the RO assigned a 30% rating for that disability, effective June 29, 1993, the date of the veteran’s claim to reopen. R. at 174-75. It is unclear from the record on appeal (ROA) when notice of that decision was sent to the veteran; there is no notice attached to the RO decision, although there is a January 10, 1996, letter from the RO notifying the veteran of the grant of service connection for his hearing loss and his amended disability award (taking account of his other service-connected disabilities). R. at 178. *198 On December 18,1996, the veteran filed an NOD as to the December 1995 RO decision’s assignment of the June 1993 effective date. R. at 181-82. In September 1998, the RO issued another decision in which it determined that there was CUE in the December 1995 RO decision and assigned an effective date of June 7, 1991, the date that “the veteran had reopened his claim.” R. at 185-87. That date corresponds to the receipt date of a VA Form 1-9 filed by the veteran that largely pertained to his eye claim but also stated that he was told during a 1981 examination that his “hearing loss could have been caused by a sharp blast and the shrapnel from the grenade.” R. at 73. Also received on that date (apparently with that form) were the 1977 VA hospital report (R. at 63-64); a letter from a private hearing-aid specialist, attesting to the veteran’s hearing loss (R. at 66-67); and a June 1991 statement by an individual identified as a “Veterans Service Officer” asserting that the veteran had made two prior applications for assistance in purchasing hearing aids (R. at 69-70). It appears that the Board considered at least one of these documents to be an informal claim to reopen. See R. at 185.

In October 1998, the veteran filed a statement-in-support-of-claim form in which he requested an earlier effective date (EED): “I ask that ... VA consider the previous final decision a product of [CUE], or that the [EED] should be established based on the old evidence as supplemented by the new and material evidence submitted with the reopened claim.” R. at 192. In June 1999, the RO denied an EED because “[n]o revision is warranted in the decision to grant service connection for a hearing loss effective 06-07-91.” R. at 195-97. In a December 1999 SOC, the RO framed the issue as “[w]hether the decision to grant service connection for a hearing loss effective 06-07-91 was [CUE].” R. at 202-18. The veteran then appealed to the Board (R. at 220-21), after which the RO issued in February 2000 a Supplemental SOC, which stated that the May 1981 decision had become final on June 1, 1982, one year after the date of notice of that decision. R. at 229-31. In response, the veteran filed a statement-in-support-of-claim form, requesting as an effective date the date of his injury, March 11,1945. R. at 223.

In the BVA decision here on appeal, the Board defined the issue before it as “[e]n-titlement to an effective date prior to June 7, 1991, for an award of service connection for bilateral hearing loss, to include whether the rating decision of May 15, 1981, was clearly and unmistakably erroneous.” R. at 1. The Board then determined that there was no CUE in the May 15, 1981, decision, despite the appellant’s contention that the RO had failed to consider 38 U.S.C. § 1154(b) in light of the veteran’s combat status, because “the May 1981[RO] decision contains a reference to the veteran’s Purple Heart award, and as such, it appears that the RO considered the veteran’s combat service.” R. at 5.

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17 Vet. App. 195, 2003 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 533, 2003 WL 21571840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burdett-huston-v-anthony-j-principi-cavc-2003.