Hanlin v. Nicholson

474 F.3d 1355, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 1717, 2007 WL 188681
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 2007
Docket2006-7075
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 474 F.3d 1355 (Hanlin v. Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanlin v. Nicholson, 474 F.3d 1355, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 1717, 2007 WL 188681 (Fed. Cir. 2007).

Opinion

PROST, Circuit Judge.

William M. Hanlin appeals a September 23, 2005 decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims that found him not entitled to attorney fees from past-due benefits awarded to the adult helpless child of a deceased veteran. Because Mr. Hanlin did not have a fee agreement with the claimant for helpless child benefits as required by 38 U.S.C. § 5904, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

I.

Upon a veteran’s death due to a service-connected or compensable disability, dependency and indemnity compensation (“DIC”) may be paid to the veteran’s surviving spouse, children, and parents. 38 U.S.C. § 1310 (2006). The applicable statutes that provide benefits to children of a deceased veteran are different depending *1357 on whether the veteran leaves a surviving spouse.

If at any time while the deceased veteran’s children are minors there is no surviving spouse, the children receive DIC as provided in § 1313. If such a child becomes “permanently incapable of self-support” before reaching majority, that child will receive enhanced benefits as provided in § 1314(a).

If a veteran does leave a surviving spouse, the DIC payable to the surviving spouse is provided by § 1311. The surviving spouse receives a fixed amount of benefits solely by virtue of being a surviving spouse, § 1311(a)(1), and receives an additional fixed monthly benefit so long as he or she has a minor child of the deceased veteran. Id. § 1311(b), (f)(3). In such situations, the child is not independently entitled to DIC — rather, the surviving spouse collects an additional benefit until all children reach majority. After the child of a surviving spouse reaches majority, however, that child may qualify for his or her own DIC under certain circumstances. In the provision pertinent in this appeal, benefits are payable to an adult child who becomes permanently incapable of self-support prior to reaching majority age. Id. § 1314(b). The provision states:

If dependency and indemnity compensation is payable monthly to a person as a surviving spouse and there is a child (of such person’s deceased spouse), who has attained the age of eighteen and who, while under such age, became permanently incapable of self-support, dependency and indemnity compensation shall be paid monthly to each such child, concurrently with the payment of dependency and indemnity compensation to the surviving spouse....

Id. Such a child, known as a “helpless child” under the parlance of veteran’s law, is entitled to his own DIC separate from any benefits paid to a surviving spouse.

II

After Robert P. Stoner’s (“Mr. Stoner I”) death at a veteran’s hospital on March 19, 1990, his widow Lois Stoner applied to the Department of Veterans Affairs ("VA”) for DIC. The VA denied the claim in July 1990, based on a finding that her husband’s death was not a result of a service connected disability. In April 1991, the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (“Board”) affirmed the denial.

Subsequently, Mrs. Stoner retained the law firm of Clark & James to represent her in her appeal of the Board’s denial to the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, executing a fee agreement dated July 31, 1991. With Mrs. Stoner represented by counsel, the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims issued an opinion vacating and remanding to the Board to determine whether a service connection finding should have been made under 38 U.S.C. § 1151. 1 Stoner v. Brown, 5 VetApp. 488 (1993).

Prior to further adjudication before the Board, on October 24, 1993, Mrs. Stoner signed another fee agreement specifically with Mr. Hanlin of the Clark & James law firm. This agreement included the provision:

I hereby agree to pay an attorney’s fee of twenty percent (20%) of the past-due Veteran’s benefits payable to me or to my dependents by reason of a determination of my being entitled to such benefits.
I specifically authorize the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to make direct pay *1358 ment of the attorney’s fee to my attorney in the event of a favorable decision.

On August 14, 1996, the Board issued a decision on remand from the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, finding that Mr. Stoner I developed an additional disability because of treatment he received at the VA hospital and that this disability led to his death. Therefore the Board held that

[entitlement to benefits under 38 U.S.C. § 1151 for the cause of the veteran’s death in a Department of Veterans Affairs medical facility, including dependency and indemnity compensation, is granted.

Based on the Board’s grant of DIC, on August 29, 1996, the VA remitted to Mrs. Stoner the amount of past-due DIC owed to her. The VA withheld 20% of the remittance, or $10,959.53, which it paid directly to Mrs. Stoner’s attorney, Mr. Han-lin, pursuant to her fee agreement.

An application was made on October 16, 1996, to the VA for DIC for Mrs. Stoner’s twenty-four year old disabled son, Robert P. Stoner (“Mr. Stoner II”). On May 30, 1997, the VA issued a rating decision finding that Mr. Stoner II met the qualifications for receiving DIC as an adult under § 1314(b) because he had become permanently incapable of self-support prior to July 11, 1990, his eighteenth birthday. The VA sent a letter dated June 26, 1997, to Mr. Stoner II detailing the past-due benefits owed to him as an adult helpless child, which the VA computed to total $21,184.00. The letter also stated that, based on a fee agreement in the VA’s records for the case, the VA was withholding $5,296.00, or 20%, of the past-due benefits and transferring his case to the Board for a determination of the case’s eligibility for payment of attorney fees. The letter detailed the procedures by which Mr. Stoner II or Mr. Hanlin could submit evidence to the Board regarding the fee award.

Mr. Stoner II submitted a letter to the Board, dated September 22, 2001, in which he disputed Mr. Hanlin’s entitlement to any of his past-due benefits as an attorney fee. Mr. Hanlin submitted a letter to the Board, dated October 11, 2001, explaining his entitlement to the withheld attorney fee award based on compliance with the applicable statutes.

The Board issued its decision on January 12, 2004, denying Mr. Hanlin’s entitlement to an attorney fee from the past-due benefits paid to Mr. Stoner II. First, the Board held that an attorney can only charge fees under 38 U.S.C. § 5904(c)(1) if there is a qualifying fee agreement between the claimant and the attorney. Here, there was no qualifying fee agreement between the claimant, Mr. Stoner II, and the attorney, Mr. Hanlin. Second, the Board held that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
474 F.3d 1355, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 1717, 2007 WL 188681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanlin-v-nicholson-cafc-2007.