David A. Hamill v. Denis McDonough

CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedDecember 18, 2023
Docket22-7344
StatusPublished

This text of David A. Hamill v. Denis McDonough (David A. Hamill v. Denis McDonough) 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
David A. Hamill v. Denis McDonough, (Cal. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS

No. 22-7344

DAVID A. HAMILL, PETITIONER,

V.

DENIS MCDONOUGH, SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, RESPONDENT.

Before TOTH, LAURER, and JAQUITH, Judges.

ORDER LAURER, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court. JAQUITH, Judge, filed a dissenting opinion.

On December 19, 2022, David A. Hamill, through counsel, petitioned the Court for extraordinary relief in the nature of a writ of mandamus. He argued that VA had refused to decide whether he’d submitted new and material evidence related to his other than honorable (OTH) character of discharge (COD). He relied on Harris v. McDonough1 to ask the Court to order VA to issue an appealable decision readjudicating his COD.

After the Secretary responded, Mr. Hamill filed a request for class certification and class action (RCA). He acknowledged that his request for relief had been satisfied because he’d received a new and material evidence determination after he filed his petition. But he argues that, even so, his petition isn’t moot, and his class action request isn’t either, based on certain exceptions to mootness. He urges the Court to certify a class of veterans who received OTH characters of discharge then applied for VA benefits but received decisions that adjudicated only healthcare eligibility, not COD. The Secretary opposes certification, arguing that the class Mr. Hamill describes has no live case or controversy. The Court convened a panel to decide the matter.2 As explained below, we dismiss Mr. Hamill’s petition and deny his RCA.

I. BACKGROUND Mr. Hamill served in the United States Marine Corps from January 2009 to March 2013. He was discharged from service under OTH conditions.3 Upon discharge, he filed a claim for disability compensation for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), other psychiatric issues, and back pain.4 VA denied his application in May 2014 because his OTH COD made him ineligible for “all benefits administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs under the provisions of 38

1 Harris v. McDonough, 33 Vet.App. 269 (2021) (per curiam order). 2 See U.S. VET. APP. INTERNAL OPERATING PROCEDURES XV. 3 Petition (Pet.) at Exhibit (Ex.) A. 4 Pet. at Ex. B. C.F.R. § 3.12(c)(6) and 38 U.S.C. § 5303(a).”5 VA noted that petitioner’s COD didn’t bar him from receiving healthcare under chapter 17 of title 38, U.S. Code, “for any disabilities determined to be service connected” for his period of service.6

In May 2017, Mr. Hamill filed a new claim for disability benefits based on PTSD, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, chronic depression, lower back pain, and hearing loss.7 VA responded in July 2017 and construed Mr. Hamill’s filing as an attempt to reopen the May 2014 decision that had concluded that his COD barred him from service connection except in limited circumstances under chapter 17. VA explained that it couldn’t reopen the May 2014 decision because (1) the time to appeal that decision had expired and (2) Mr. Hamill hadn’t submitted new and material evidence to warrant reopening his claim.8 VA included a notice of appellate rights with its July 2017 decision, and Mr. Hamill didn’t appeal.

Four years later, on March 12, 2021, Mr. Hamill submitted two new claims to VA.9 First, he filed a claim seeking compensation for the same disabilities he described in his 2017 claim, thereby implicitly seeking to reopen those claims.10 That same day, he also filed a new benefits application seeking compensation for several other disabilities.11 VA adjudicated both sets of claims in a May 19, 2021, decision and granted service connection for PTSD for treatment purposes only.12 VA denied service connection for the rest of the claimed disabilities and included a notice of appellate rights with its decision.13 Again, Mr. Hamill didn’t appeal.

In response to a July 2022 letter from Mr. Hamill’s attorney, asking VA to “make a decision regarding [Mr. Hamill’s] discharge characterization,” VA notified Mr. Hamill that he should contact his service department to upgrade his COD.14 Five months later, in December 2022, Mr. Hamill petitioned the Court, arguing that VA had violated Harris because it hadn’t adjudicated whether he’d submitted new and material evidence relevant to his COD when it granted chapter 17 benefits.

On March 6, 2023, the Secretary moved to dismiss the petition as moot and included a copy of a February 2023 letter that VA had sent to Mr. Hamill, explicitly finding that he hadn’t submitted new and material evidence to warrant reopening the May 2014 COD decision.15 Mr. Hamill filed his RCA that same day, recognizing that VA’s February 2023 letter had “satisfied” his request for an appealable decision, but contending that the Court should still certify a class of

5 Pet. at Ex. D. 6 Pet. at Ex. D. There seems to be a discrepancy within VA’s letter over whether petitioner was eligible for chapter 17 benefits since the May 2014 decision contains conflicting statements. Because petitioner was eventually granted chapter 17 benefits and neither party argues over the discrepancy in the May 2014 decision, the Court determines that the discrepancy is irrelevant, and the parties have waived any argument on that point. 7 Pet. at Ex. E. 8 Pet. at Ex. F. 9 The Court notes that Mr. Hamill submitted his claims on March 12, 2021, but VA didn’t mark them as uploaded into their system until May 10, 2021. 10 Pet. at Ex. G. 11 Pet. at Ex. G. 12 Pet. at Ex. H. 13 Pet. at Ex. H. 14 Pet. at Exs. I, J. 15 Secretary’s Response to Pet. at Attachment A.

2 veterans who hadn’t received explicit new and material evidence determinations like the one he’d received.16

The Secretary opposes the RCA because he believes the purported class has no live case or controversy. First, he argues that Mr. Hamill’s claim is moot since VA implicitly declined to reconsider its COD determination in the May 2021 decision that granted limited chapter 17 benefits for PTSD but denied all other claims. The Secretary reasons that the May 2021 decision mooted Mr. Hamill’s petition and satisfied Harris because it included a notice of appellate rights. Next, the Secretary maintains that the purported class is inherently moot because its members— by virtue of their membership—would’ve already received implicit new and material evidence adjudications from VA, with attached notices of appellate rights, so they haven’t suffered any harm under Harris. And last, the Secretary contends that Mr. Hamill hasn’t shown that proceeding by class action would be superior to proceeding by precedential decision, and since the implicit determination question is case specific, a class action would prove an unwieldy tool.

II. ANALYSIS A. The Petition Is Moot The Court adheres to Article III of the U.S. Constitution’s case-or-controversy jurisdictional requirements17—meaning that there must be a live issue for the Court to review a case.18 “‘[W]hen the issues presented are no longer “live” or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome,’” the case or controversy becomes moot.19 And when a petitioner receives the relief sought, the appropriate course is to dismiss the petitioner’s case as moot.20

Here, the parties essentially agree that there’s no case or controversy for the Court to rule on with respect to the petitioner. While Mr. Hamill contends that his petition isn’t moot, he admits that “his individual request for an appealable decision has been satisfied,” which amounts to acknowledging that his petition is moot since there’s no more relief that he could receive or that the Court could direct VA to provide.21 Putting that aside, the parties fundamentally disagree on why the petition is moot and where the relief that Mr. Hamill has received flows from.

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David A. Hamill v. Denis McDonough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-a-hamill-v-denis-mcdonough-cavc-2023.