Holmes v. United States of America

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 8, 2019
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-1674
StatusPublished

This text of Holmes v. United States of America (Holmes v. United States of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. United States of America, (D.D.C. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

CHRISTOPHER T. HOLMES, Plaintiff, v. Civil Action No. 17-1674 (JDB)

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Former Sergeant First Class Christopher Holmes claims that the United States improperly

denied him benefits under the Servicemembers’ Group Life Insurance Traumatic Injury Protection

(“TSGLI”) program for injuries he suffered in a motorcycle accident. As a covered service

member, Holmes is entitled to TSGLI benefits if his injuries caused an inability to independently

perform at least two enumerated “activities of daily living,” such as bathing or dressing, for a

minimum of thirty consecutive days. After the United States Army denied his claim and appeals

six times over the last eight years, Holmes filed suit under the Administrative Procedure Act

(“APA”) to challenge the final decision as arbitrary and capricious. In cross-motions for summary

judgment, the parties dispute whether the Army appropriately concluded that Holmes failed to

establish his inability to independently perform at least two activities of daily living within the

meaning of TSGLI. For the reasons that follow, the Court will deny Holmes’s motion for summary

judgment and grant the government’s cross-motion.

1 BACKGROUND

I. Statutory and Regulatory Background

Congress established the TSGLI program to provide short-term financial assistance to

uniformed service members who have suffered certain qualifying traumatic injuries. See 38 U.S.C.

§ 1980A et seq. The Secretary of Veterans Affairs (“VA”) is authorized to define the scope of

qualifying losses within certain statutory limits. 38 U.S.C. § 1980A(b)(1). As relevant here, the

VA has defined qualifying losses to include injuries resulting in the inability to “independently

perform” two or more activities of daily living (“ADLs”) for at least 30 consecutive days. 38

C.F.R. § 9.20(e)(6)(vi), (f)(20). Qualifying ADLs are bathing, continence, dressing, eating,

toileting, and transferring in and out of a bed or chair with or without equipment. Id.

§ 9.20(e)(6)(vi)(A)–(F). An ADL loss of thirty consecutive days entitles service members to

$25,000 (with an additional $25,000 at each of the 60, 90, and 120 consecutive-day marks, for a

maximum of $100,000). Id. § 9.20(f)(20).

Although the term “independently perform” is not defined by statute or regulation, the VA

has issued guidance stating that “[a] member is considered to have a loss of ADL if the member

REQUIRES assistance to perform” ADLs. Traumatic Injury Protection Under Servicemembers’

Group Life Insurance (TSGLI): A Procedural Guide (“TSGLI Procedures Guide”), Ex. 2 to

Administrative Record [ECF No. 23-3] at 18. And if the member “is able to perform the activity

by using accommodating equipment . . . or adaptive behavior,” the Guide states, he or she is

“considered able to independently perform the activity.” Id.

Members submit TSGLI claims to their branch of uniformed service—here, the Army—

which is in turn responsible for “certify[ing] to the [VA] whether” members have “sustained a

qualifying loss.” 38 U.S.C. § 1980A(f); see 38 C.F.R. § 9.20(g). If a TSGLI claim is denied,

2 members may first request the Army’s TSGLI Program Office to reconsider, then appeal to the

Army Human Resources Command (“HRC”) Special Compensations Branch of the TSGLI

Appeals Board, and then to the Army Review Board Agency (“ARBA”), which will make a final

determination through the Army Board for Correction of Military Records (“ABCMR” or

“Board”). See TSGLI Procedures Guide at 73; Administrative Record [ECF No. 22-2] 1178–80.1

On review, the ABCMR is charged with entering a correction only if it concludes, by a

“preponderance of the evidence,” that a “material error or injustice exists.” 32 C.F.R. §

581.3(b)(4)(ii), (e)(2).

II. Facts

On April 16, 2010, Christopher Terrill Holmes, then a thirty-six-year-old Sergeant First

Class (“SFC”) in the United States Army, lost control of his motorcycle, hit a ditch, and was thrown

onto the pavement. A.R. 72–73, 164, 1292. Holmes was taken to a Virginia hospital where he

was diagnosed with a “comminuted” “intra-articular fracture” of the scapula—a shoulder

fracture—and scheduled for surgery. A.R. 72–74. Holmes’s arm was placed in a sling, he spent

the night at the hospital, and he was discharged the next day. A.R. 72–74, 173. Hospital records

from his stay recorded Holmes’s “ADLs” as “Independent,” and described his “Activity Level” as

“Minimal ADL Assistance needed.” A.R. 568–70. Under the heading “Activity Instructions,”

discharge documents recommended that Holmes refrain only from “strenuous exercise,” “heavy

lifting,” and “heavy housework for 1 month.” A.R. 173.

Seven days after the accident, notes from an appointment with Holmes’s treating

orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Vivek Sharma, record Holmes’s complaints of “moderate to severe”

The administrative record is located across multiple docket entries: A.R. 1–255 [ECF No. 20-1]; A.R. 256- 1

530 [ECF No. 20-2]; A.R. 531–750 [ECF No. 20-3]; A.R. 751–850 [ECF No. 21-1]; A.R. 851–950 [ECF No. 21-2]; A.R. 951–1025 [ECF No. 21-3]; A.R. 1026–1078 [ECF No. 22-1]; A.R. 1079–1232 [ECF No. 22-2]; A.R. 1233–1332 [ECF No. 22-3]; and A.R. 1333-1426 [ECF No. 23-1]. The Court will refer to these documents collectively as “A.R.”

3 shoulder pain that “is aggravated by physical activity and any movement,” resulting in “painful

[range of motion], decreased [range of motion], difficulty [with] overhead activities, difficulty

dressing [him]self, difficulty with pushing, difficult with pulling and difficulty with lifting.” A.R.

75, 103.

Holmes had shoulder surgery twelve days after the accident. A.R. 75, 106. Holmes

remained in recovery for three days, during which time nurses helped him travel “to [the bathroom]

and back,” “to dress,” and to “sit up for dressing removal.” A.R. 76. Holmes was then discharged

with a sling, which doctors estimated he would need for six weeks, and was instructed to start

“passive range of motion” physical therapy. A.R. 75–76.

Records from twenty-four days after the accident note no postoperative complications,

“slightly improved” symptoms, “mild” post-operative pain, and an “improvement in activity

level.” A.R. 653. Holmes’s gait and posture were recorded as “normal” and it was recommended

that the rehabilitation plan, including physical therapy exercises, continue as planned. Id. Upon

discharge, Dr. Sharma signed a “Certificate to Return to Work or School” form, on which he

marked as applicable the statement: “He will be totally incapacitated for approximately 6 weeks

pending follow up.” A.R. 91.

Fifty-six days after the accident, clinic notes state Holmes’s surgical incisions had “healed

well,” that his left shoulder’s “range of motion [was] limited” and “passive . . . with minimal

discomfort,” that rehabilitation should be continued with “aggressive range of motion exercises,”

and that the shoulder sling should be “discontinued.” A.R. 652, 1151. Dr. Sharma signed a second

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