Glenn H. Jackson v. R. James Nicholson

19 Vet. App. 207, 2005 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 439, 2005 WL 1560280
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedJuly 1, 2005
Docket03-322
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 Vet. App. 207 (Glenn H. Jackson 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
Glenn H. Jackson v. R. James Nicholson, 19 Vet. App. 207, 2005 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 439, 2005 WL 1560280 (Cal. 2005).

Opinion

HAGEL, Judge:

Before the Court is Glenn H. Jackson’s appeal from a January 9, 2003, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board) decision in which the Board denied entitlement to an effective date earlier than October 18, 2000, for a grant of service connection for a low-back disability. Record (R.) at 7. The Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(a) and 7266(a) to review the January 2003 Board decision. For the following reasons, the Court will affirm the January 9, 2003, Board decision.

I. FACTS

Mr. Jackson served on active duty in the U.S. Army from June 1969 to December 1970. R. at 10. On September 10, 1996, he filed a claim to reopen his previously and finally disallowed claim for service connection for a low-back disability. R. at 34-36. A VA regional office denied his claim and, in a November 1998 decision, the Board did the same. R. at 41-42, 58-65. After this Court affirmed the Board’s decision, Mr. Jackson appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Federal Circuit), which, in a September 2001 decision, affirmed the Court’s decision. R. at 67-71,124-31.

Prior to the issuance of the Federal Circuit’s decision, Mr. Jackson, on October 17, 2000, had submitted additional evidence to the regional office in an attempt to reopen his low-back-disability claim. R. at 73-108. Based on that additional evidence, the regional office, in June 2001, reopened and granted his claim for service connection and assigned that grant an effective date of October 18, 2000. R. at 120-22. Mr. Jackson appealed the regional office’s decision to the Board, arguing that the proper effective date should have been September 10, 1996, the date on which he filed his claim to reopen. R. at 137-40,163-67.

The Board, in the decision now on appeal, denied entitlement to an earlier effective date. R. at 1-8. Although it acknowledged that under 38 C.F.R. § 3.156(b) (2002) new and material evidence submitted prior to the issuance of an “appellate decision” must be considered as having been filed in connection with the claim pending at the beginning of the appeal period, it determined that the phrase “appellate decision” referred only “to a decision of the Board and not to a decision by ... the Federal Circuit.” R. at 6. Therefore, it concluded that Mr. Jackson’s additional evidence, although submitted prior to the issuance of the Federal Circuit’s September 2001 decision, could not be considered as having been filed in conjunction with Mr. Jackson’s, September 10, 1996, claim to reopen. Instead, it -found that his submission of additional evidence was a second claim to reopen, dated October 17, 2000. Id. This appeal followed.

On appeal, Mr. Jackson argues that the phrase “appellate decision” as used in § 3.156(b) can mean a decision of the Federal Circuit and that the Board’s interpretation is “impermissible” because it is “narrow and restrictive.” Appellant’s Brief (Br.) at 8. He acknowledges that the phrase is not defined in the regulation and notes that the Secretary has chosen not to define the phrase each of the four times the regulation has been amended since the enactment of the Veterans’ Judicial Review Act, Pub.L. No. 100-687, § 301, 102 Stat. 4105, 4113-21 (1988). Id. at 7. At oral argument, Mr. Jackson conceded that *209 “appellate decision” is not used elsewhere in title 38, Code of Federal Regulations, to refer to a decision of the Federal Circuit. The Secretary argues that the Board’s interpretation is correct and that it is the only interpretation that is consistent with VA’s regulatory framework. Secretary’s Br. at 9-12.

II. ANALYSIS

Section 3.156(b) of title 38, Code of Federal Regulations, provides:

New and material evidence received pri- or to the expiration of the appeal period, or prior to the appellate decision if a timely appeal has been filed (including evidence received prior to an appellate decision and referred to the agency of original jurisdiction by the Board ... without consideration in that decision in accordance with the provisions of § 20.1304 of this chapter), will be considered as having been filed in connection with the claim which was pending at the beginning of the appeal period.

38 C.F.R. § 3.156(b) (2004); see Muehl v. West, 13 Vet.App. 159, 160 (1999). That language, in pertinent part, has remained unchanged since the regulation was promulgated by the Secretary in 1961. At the time it was promulgated, the only appeal available within the veterans benefits system was an appeal to the Board. See 26 Fed.Reg. 1561, 1570-71 (Feb. 24, 1961); see also 27 Fed.Reg. 11,886, 11,887 (Dec. 1, 1962). In 1988, when Congress enacted the Veterans’ Judicial Review Act, judicial review of Board decisions by this Court and of this Court’s decisions by the Federal Circuit became available. Section 3.156 was amended four times after the .enactment of the Veterans’ Judicial Review Act, but the phrase “appellate decision” was not defined in any of those amendments. See 55 Fed.Reg. 20,144 (May 15, 1990); 55 Fed.Reg. 52,274 (Dec. 21, 1990); 58 Fed. Reg. 32,442 (June 10, 1993); 66 Fed.Reg. 45,620, 45,630 (Aug. 29, 2001). Today, the phrase “appellate decision” is still not defined in § 3.156(b) or in any other part of title 38, Code of Federal Regulations.

What the regulation addresses and what we must determine is the following: When an appellant submits evidence regarding a previously submitted claim, how much time may pass before that evidence is no longer considered to have been filed along with the claim? In the instant case, under Mr. Jackson’s broad interpretation of the phrase “appellate decision,” the time period during which submitted evidence would have been considered as having been filed in connection with his September 1996 claim to reopen extended up until the issuance of the Federal Circuit’s September 2001 decision. Under the Secretary’s more narrow interpretation, that period lapsed in November 1998, when the Board issued its decision denying the claim to reopen. Because the correct interpretation of a regulation is a question of law, the Court will review the Board’s interpretation of § 3.156(b) de novo. See Lane v. Principi, 339 F.3d 1331, 1339 (Fed.Cir.2003); Hatch v. Principi, 18 Vet.App. 527, 531 (2004). Accordingly, to the extent that Mr. Jackson would instead have us defer to an asserted VA policy of interpreting the phrase “appellate decision” to encompass a Federal Circuit decision', we decline. In any event, he has provided no persuasive evidence that VA has ever had such a policy. Although he cites to the circumstances surrounding the appeal in Thayer v. Principi, 15 Vet.App.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

John F. Cameron v. Eric K. Shinseki
26 Vet. App. 109 (Veterans Claims, 2012)
Anthony J. Diorio v. R. James Nicholson
20 Vet. App. 193 (Veterans Claims, 2006)
Rita L. Dicarlo v. R. James Nicholson
20 Vet. App. 52 (Veterans Claims, 2006)
Robert L. Howell v. R. James Nicholson
19 Vet. App. 535 (Veterans Claims, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Vet. App. 207, 2005 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 439, 2005 WL 1560280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-h-jackson-v-r-james-nicholson-cavc-2005.