Evans v. Brown

9 Vet. App. 273, 1996 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 540, 1996 WL 428992
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedAugust 1, 1996
DocketNo. 93-1220
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 9 Vet. App. 273 (Evans v. Brown) 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
Evans v. Brown, 9 Vet. App. 273, 1996 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 540, 1996 WL 428992 (Cal. 1996).

Opinions

STEINBERG, Judge:

The appellant, veteran Samuel R. Evans, appeals an August 27, 1993, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA or Board) decision denying reopening of claims for service connection of low back and neuropsychiatric disorders, and denying an increased (compensable) rating for scars, left hand. Record (R.) at 8-16. The appellant urges the Court to reverse the Board’s decision and to find that he is entitled to service connection for the neuropsy-chiatric and back conditions and an increased rating for left-hand scars. The Secretary proposes a remand as to the two claims to reopen and seeks affirmance on the rating-increase claim. For the reasons that follow, the Court will vacate the Board decision as to the rating-increase claim and remand that matter for further development and readjudi-cation, and will affirm the Board decision as to the two claims to reopen.

I. Background

The veteran served on active duty in the U.S. Army from January to September 1957. R. at 26. A November 1956 preinduction examination report indicated no abnormalities, illness, or disabilities, except for a scar on his left elbow. R. at 33-36. A service medical record (SMR) reported his complaint of pain in the lumbosacral spine after he had lifted a heavy duffel bag, and noted that there was “no previous history of back strain”. R. at 45. He had complaints of back pain with “slight tenderness to palpation at L1-L2” the following month. Ibid.

In July 1957, his company commander referred him for a neuropsychiatric examination because he was unable to read or write and the commander believed that he did not possess “adequate intelligence to assimilate instructions and training.” R. at 53-54. Pertinent history revealed longstanding episodic “fainting spells” causing unconsciousness for one to five minutes — occurring most recently about a week prior to enlistment. R. at 53. The examining psychiatrist con-[277]*277eluded that this history suggested that the veteran had “suffered from a form of petit mal epilepsy which he is apparently outgrowing”. Ibid. The examination revealed an IQ of 77 with a mental age of approximately 11 years and “no evidence of psychosis or neurosis”. Ibid. The report contained a diagnosis ■ of “inadequate personality, chronic, severe” (R. at 53), and recommended that the veteran be separated from service because he could not be satisfactorily rehabilitated (R. at 54),

The veteran’s SMRs also noted “multiple superficial lacerations [and] abrasions of dor-sum [ (upper surface) ] of left hand” (R. at 46) due to a jeep accident in July 1957 (R. at 47). An x-ray of his left hand showed “[n]o bony abnormalities”. R. at 308. Approximately ten days later, a clinical SMR reported “minimal edema and very slight limitation of motion of the ... joints of all fingers”. R. at 51. (Edema is “the presence of abnormally large amounts of fluid in the inter-cellular tissue spaces of the body”, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary 528 (28th ed.1994) [hereinafter Dorland’s].) Two days thereafter, a clinical SMR noted that “[e]dema of dorsum, right [sic] hand has subsided and range of motion of all joints is normal.” R. at 51. The veteran’s September 1957 separation medical examination report noted “[f]ull range of motion”, “[n]o abnormalities” with respect to “paraspinal muscles or reflexes”, and “[t]aenia vesieul[a]r, moderate”. R. at 23. (Taenia is “a flat band or strip of soft tissue”; vesicular is pertaining to or made up of vesicles (small saclike bodies containing liquid) on the skin, Dorland’s at 1656, 1821, 1820.) A corresponding report of medical history included the veteran’s notes of having had “swollen or painful joints”, “depression or excessive worry”, and “nervous trouble”, and a physician’s summary of “[j]eep accident [illegible] months ago — back and head hurt. Back hurt [with] lifting.” R. at 60-61.

In October 1957, the veteran filed with a Veterans’ Administration (now Department of Veterans Affairs) (VA) regional office (RO) a claim for, inter alia, “[i]njury, [left] [h]and ... ([g]rip [l]oss)” and a “[b]ack [i]njury ... ([p]ain on lying down)”, both of which he asserted were from the jeep accident in August 1957 (R. at 29; see also R. at 71-72); however, SMRs do not include the back as an area injured in the jeep accident. See R. at 46-56. A December 1957 VA medical examination' report related the veteran’s complaints as, inter alia: “Back hurts when lies down” and “[h]and is weak — left hand” (R. at 64), and included the following description of his musculoskeletal system:

All joints of both upper and lower extremities have full range of motion without pain. There is no tenderness, swelling, or crepi-tation on motion of any joints. The para-vertebral muscles are not tender or spastic. He can ... squat and rise from squatting position without difficulty. There are 2 small sears, less than 1 cm in diameter on the dorsum of the left hand. The grip is good and the scars are non-adherent.

R. at 66. As to the veteran’s psychiatric condition and personality, the examiner noted that the veteran “appeared] to have [a] low mental age[;] otherwise normal”. R. at 67. The diagnosis included, inter alia, “[s]ears, two, small less than 1 cm in diameter, dorsum left hand, non-adherent, non-symptomatic, non-disabling” and “[n]o abnormality of back — no evidence of back injury found”: Ibid.

A VA x-ray of the lumbar spine, lumbosa-cral region, sacrum, and major portion of the pelvis in January 1958 showed “no primary bone or joint abnormality”; “no sign of old fracture, congenital abnormalities and no sign of arthritis.” R. at 361. A June 1958 VARO decision denied service connection for, inter alia, residuals of a back injury and granted a 0% rating for left-hand scars. R. at 83,85.

In July 1958, the veteran requested that his “nervous condition be added to [his] claim for disability”. R. at 91. The next month, the RO denied his claim for, inter alia, a nervous disorder, noting that the evidence of record showed a diagnosis of an “inadequate personality”, which is a “[c]onstitutional or developmental abnormality” and thus “not a disability within the meaning of the law for which compensation is payable”. R. at 94-95. A February 1961 medical statement from Dr. Jarrell, a private physician, stated: “Some lumbo[s]acr[a]l pain on flexion and [278]*278palpation noted, [s]cars and some weakness noted of left hand”. R. at 99. The impression was, inter alia, “[l]umbo[s]acral sprain [with] [possible ... arthritic changes”, and “[weakness [in the] left hand grip”. Ibid.

The veteran sought to reopen his claim for a back disorder by submitting a January 1977 report from a private physician, Dr. Hadden, who noted an impression of “[postoperative HNP [herniated nucleus pulposus] with degeneration of L4[-]5 and S-l, mild.” Ibid. History included the excision of a herniated disc in 1970. Ibid. A medical statement from Dr. Thompson, a private orthopedic surgeon, noted in May 1977:

[The veteran] claims documented back injury in 1957 while in service. In 1962[, he] began having additional low back difficulty, eventuating in disk surgery (left L5/ SI) in 1971, after several attacks.
Based on retrospective reasoning, with history of back difficulty after a jeep upset in 1957, it appears that there is some service-connection of this man’s low back problem.

R. at 116. A July 1977 RO decision denied reopening of his back claim. In August 1977, the veteran appealed to the BVA (R.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Vet. App. 273, 1996 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 540, 1996 WL 428992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-brown-cavc-1996.