Goga v. Brown

6 Vet. App. 328, 1993 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 884, 1993 WL 610954
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedMay 21, 1993
DocketNo. 90-1585
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Vet. App. 328 (Goga 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
Goga v. Brown, 6 Vet. App. 328, 1993 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 884, 1993 WL 610954 (Cal. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

STEINBERG, Associate Judge:

The pro se appellant, World War II veteran Vincent E. Goga, appeals from a September 27, 1990, decision of the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA or Board) denying service-connected disability compensation for migraine headaches, arthritis and synovitis of the knees, gastritis, a ganglion cyst of the right hand, and bilateral Dupuytren’s cont-ractures. Vincent E. Goga, BVA 90-33228 (Sept. 27, 1990). The Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Secretary) has moved for summary affirmance. On August 5, 1992, in the interest of judicial economy, the Court entered an order staying further proceedings in this case pending the Court’s decision in Guerri-eri v. Brown, 4 Vet.App. 467 (1993) (then captioned Guerrieri v. Derwinski). The opinion in Guerrieri having issued, the Court now proceeds to decide the instant appeal. Summary disposition is appropriate because the case is one “of relative simplicity” and the outcome is controlled by the Court’s precedents and is “not reasonably debatable”. Frankel v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 23, 25-26 (1990). The Secretary’s motion will be granted, and the Board’s decision will be affirmed.

I. Background

The veteran served on active duty with the United States Army from April 1941 to February 1946. R. at 1, 7. He also served subsequently in active-duty-for-training periods in the Army Reserves. R. at 110-12. His physical examination upon enlistment noted that he had experienced periodic, irregular migraine headaches. R. at 4. Ser[330]*330vice medical records (SMRs) showed that he experienced sporadic migraine headaches throughout his active service. R. at 23, 87, 48. In its September 27, 1990, decision, the BVA held that the migraine headaches, which had existed prior to service, were not shown by the record to have been aggravated in service. Goga, BVA 90-33228, at 8.

In May 1941, shortly after his induction, the veteran experienced a great deal of pain in his left knee and was hospitalized for treatment of his knee condition from May 1941 until August 1941, except for a brief, three-day return to active duty in mid-May. R. at 10-80. The veteran reported to an Army physician that he had originally injured his left knee, prior to his enlistment, while playing football in 1933. R. at 10. After a number of physicians had explored potential causes of the knee condition, including arthritis, an orthopedist made a final diagnosis of “acute exacerbation of a chronic synovitis”. R. at 74. Although a diagnosis of chronic arthritis of undetermined cause appears in the veteran’s service medical records regarding his right knee, there is no further evidence in the record of a complaint about his right knee or treatment of the right knee for arthritis during active duty. R. at 52, 80. The veteran’s November 1945 separation examination was negative for any continuing disability in either knee. R. at 8-9. The first post-service reference in the record to discomfort in the veteran’s knees occurred in 1983. R. at 139-42. The Board concluded that the in-service diagnosis of arthritis in the right knee was an error, and that, thus, a right-knee disability was not incurred or aggravated in service. Goga, BVA 90-33228, at 7, 9. With regard to the veteran’s left knee, the Board held that the evidence established that the condition had clearly and unmistakably preexisted service, and that the disorder was not aggravated in service. Goga, BVA 90-33228, at 7-9.

In January 1943, the veteran was hospitalized for gastritis, hemorrhagic. R. at 81-98. According to the veteran’s service medical records, this was the only occurrence of gastritis he experienced during active duty, and the veteran presented no evidence that gastritis occurred after service. The Board held that the gastritis was transitory and, thus, not a chronic disability incurred in or aggravated by service. Goga, BVA 90-33228, at 8.

In May 1946, shortly after the veteran’s separation from service, a private physician removed a cyst from his right palm. R. at 100,108. The doctor diagnosed the condition as fibroma (ganglion cyst). R. at 108. In January 1947, the veteran filed a claim for service-connected disability compensation for this cyst, in addition to a dental condition. R. at 99-102. He alleged that he had brought the cyst to the attention of the medical officer conducting his separation physical examination but that the officer had neglected to note that condition on his examination report. R. at 100. After reviewing the evidence submitted in support of the claim, which consisted of the veteran’s SMRs, a Veterans’ Administration (now Department of Veterans Affairs) (VA) regional office (RO) denied service connection for the disability. R. at 104.

In his attempt to reopen this claim in July 1988, the veteran submitted private medical records of the initial 1946 surgery as well as medical records of his subsequent treatment for bilateral Dupuytren’s contractures (“a condition marked by fibrosis with shortening and thickening of the palmar aponeurosis resulting in flexion contracture of the fingers into the palm of the hand”, WebsteR’s Medical Desk DICTIONARY 195 (1986)). The veteran’s bilateral Dupuytren’s contractures were clinically diagnosed in 1966. R. at 184. He has had multiple surgeries to correct the recurring condition. R. at 120-36, 149-58, 168, 186-87. Although the veteran submitted both the evidence regarding his ganglion cyst and the evidence regarding his contrac-tures in order to reopen the ganglion cyst claim, it is not clear that the BVA considered, as part of the claim to reopen, the evidence of contractures. Although the BVA held that “the evidence” was not new and material, and declined to reopen the previous decision denying service connection for the ganglion cyst (Goga, BVA 90-33228, at 6-8), it reached a separate conclusion with regard to the veteran’s bilateral Dupuytren’s cont-ractures — that the contractures were not diagnosed until nearly two decades after the [331]*331veteran’s separation from service and that, therefore, they could not be considered to have been incurred in or aggravated by service. Goga, BVA 90-33228, at 6, 8.

II. Analysis

The Court reviews BVA factfinding under a “clearly erroneous” standard; “if there is a ‘plausible’ basis in the record for the factual determinations of the BVA, ... [the Court] cannot overturn them”. Gilbert v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 49, 53 (1990); 38 U.S.C.A. § 7261(a)(4) (West 1991). For the reasons set forth below, the Court holds that the Board’s findings of fact in this case have a plausible basis in the record and hence are not subject to reversal as being clearly erroneous.

The veteran’s SMRs indicate that both the migraine headaches (noted at entry, R. at 4) and the initial injury to his left knee (prior injury recounted by the veteran to his Army treating physician shortly after he entered service (R. at 10), as to which the Board found preexistence demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence) had existed prior to his enlistment. Those records do not reveal, moreover, that either of these conditions increased in severity during the veteran’s active service. “Aggravation may not be conceded where the disability underwent no increase in severity during service on the basis of all the evidence of record pertaining to the manifestations of the disability prior to, during and subsequent to service.” 38 C.F.R. § 3.306(b) (1992). See

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Related

Frankel v. Derwinski
1 Vet. App. 23 (Veterans Claims, 1990)
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1 Vet. App. 49 (Veterans Claims, 1990)
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Kehoskie v. Derwinski
2 Vet. App. 31 (Veterans Claims, 1991)
Masors v. Derwinski
2 Vet. App. 181 (Veterans Claims, 1992)
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Bluebook (online)
6 Vet. App. 328, 1993 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 884, 1993 WL 610954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goga-v-brown-cavc-1993.