Catherine A. Shephard v. Eric K. Shinseki

26 Vet. App. 159, 2013 WL 692781, 2013 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 277
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedFebruary 27, 2013
Docket11-2074
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Vet. App. 159 (Catherine A. Shephard v. Eric K. Shinseki) 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
Catherine A. Shephard v. Eric K. Shinseki, 26 Vet. App. 159, 2013 WL 692781, 2013 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 277 (Cal. 2013).

Opinion

SCHOELEN, Judge:

The appellant, Catherine A. Shephard, appeals through counsel a May 25, 2011, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board) decision in which the Board (1) found that, from January 12, 2003, until November 13, 2008, the appellant was entitled only to payment of compensation commensurate with a 10% disability rating; (2) decided that an overpayment of compensation benefits was properly created; and (3) remanded the matter of whether the appellant is entitled to a waiver of a recovery of overpaid benefits for additional development. Record of Proceedings (Record or R.) at 3-9. Because the issue has been remanded by the Board, the appellant’s eligibility for a waiver of recovery of overpaid benefits is not before the Court. See Breeden v. Principi, 17 Vet.App. 475, 478 (2004). This appeal is timely, and the *160 Court has jurisdiction to review the Board’s decision pursuant to 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(a) and 7266(a). For the reasons stated below, the Court will affirm the Board’s finding that the appellant was entitled only to payment of compensation commensurate with a 10% disability rating for the period from January 12, 2003 until November 13, 2008, because the appellant has failed to demonstrate that veterans subject to a reduction of compensation payments as a result of incarceration may, upon their release, recoup the amounts withheld during their incarceration. However, the Court will vacate that part of the Board’s decision that decided that an overpayment of compensation benefits was properly created, and remand the matter for further proceedings consistent with this decision.

I. BACKGROUND

The appellant served on active duty in the U.S. Navy from December 1986 to January 1995. R. at 171. In July 1997, the VA regional office (RO) awarded the appellant a total disability rating effective November 1996 (R. 905-08), and, in April 2003, the RO revised the appellant’s monthly compensation to $2,399, effective June 2003. R. at 853.

In September 2003, upon a database search, VA learned that the appellant had been imprisoned on a felony conviction in November 2002. R. at 844. Nine months later, in June 2004, the RO proposed to reduce the appellant’s compensation to a monthly payment corresponding to a 10% disability rating pursuant to VA regulations governing compensation of incarcerated veterans. R. at 833; see also 38 C.F.R. §. 3.665(a), (d)(1) (2004). The RO advised the appellant that the reduction in compensation “will result in an overpayment of benefits” and that the appellant would be provided “repayment information.” Id. The RO also informed the appellant that if she believed the proposed reduction was inappropriate, she could request a personal hearing and VA “w[ould] arrange a time and place for the hearing.” R. at 834. The appellant was not advised at this time that she could apportion any reduced compensation to her spouse or dependent.

On June 27, 2005, the RO reduced the appellant’s compensation to a monthly payment corresponding to a 10% disability rating, as it had proposed, effective January 12, 2003. R. at 816-17. Until the date it reduced the appellant’s benefit payment, VA electronically deposited the appellant’s payment into bank accounts held jointly by the appellant and her former husband. 1 R. at 86-97, 102-119. Also on June 27, 2005, the RO advised the appellant that she may be entitled to apportion the reduced compensation to her dependents. R. at 816. There is no evidence, however, that the appellant requested any such apportionment. Finally, the RO promised the appellant further notice regarding the specific amount of the overpayment. Id.

In July 2005, the VA Debt Management Center advised the appellant that she owed VA $63,749.21. R. at 814. That same month, the appellant filed a Notice of Disagreement (NOD) with the RO’s June 2005 decision. R. at 472. Construing the appellant’s NOD as a request for waiver of indebtedness, the Committee on Waiver of Indebtedness (Committee) ruled that the appellant was “solely at fault in the creation of the overpayment.” R. at 456. The Committee reasoned that the overpay *161 ment was the direct result of the appellant’s failure to report her felony conviction and incarceration in a timely manner. Id.

The appellant was released from incarceration in November 2008. R. at 477. Thereafter, the appellant sought reinstatement of her full compensation, and she asked that VA withhold the “smallest amount possible” to pay back her overpaid benefits. R. at 348, 361. The appellant asserted that during her incarceration her former husband had withdrawn the overpaid benefits from their jointly held bank account and “kept using them” even though she “advised him several times that he was not entitled to these benefits.” R. at 361. She also asserted that, before VA reduced her benefit payment, she had “advised VA that [she] was in prison but checks were still being sent.” Id.

In January 2009, the appellant’s full monthly compensation was reinstated. R. at 344-46. In a December 2009 report of contact between an RO official and the appellant’s representative, the RO official noted that “the debt was too large because the file shows that [the RO] [k]new in 2004 that she was incarcerated and they should have stopped the award to minimize the debt.” R. at 218. The official also stated that the RO continued to make payments because a private attorney requested a personal hearing on the appellant’s behalf. Id. The official noted, however, that the attorney’s “request should have been ignored because the private attorney didn’t have [power of attorney] status [a]t that time.” Id. Despite these notations, the RO’s Statement of the Case affirmed the Committee’s earlier decision that the overpayment was properly created. R. at 199.

In a March 2010 hearing before a decision review officer, the appellant stated that VA was first notified of her incarceration in January 2003. R. at 202. The appellant asserted that her former husband “knowingly kept the benefits every month,” that she “never got any of that money,” that her name was taken off of the bank account when VA reduced her benefit payments, and that her former husband filed for bankruptcy protection soon thereafter. R. at 203 -05, 209. The appellant stated that in the time between her incarceration and the date her benefit payments were reduced “[n]umerous calls were made” and “numerous letters” sent to VA to inform the Agency that her benefits payment was too high. Id.

The appellant’s representative stated that during the appellant’s incarceration a private attorney contacted VA asking that the VA benefits be continued and stating that the appellant would request a personal hearing. R. at 204. The appellant stated that she “was not aware of anything that went on with that.” Id. The appellant’s representative asserted that VA acted on the private attorney’s request and continued to make excessive benefit payments even though the private attorney had no power of attorney over her affairs. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Vet. App. 159, 2013 WL 692781, 2013 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catherine-a-shephard-v-eric-k-shinseki-cavc-2013.