John A. Cooper v. Denis McDonough

CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedSeptember 18, 2024
Docket23-5963
StatusPublished

This text of John A. Cooper v. Denis McDonough (John A. Cooper v. Denis McDonough) 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
John A. Cooper v. Denis McDonough, (Cal. 2024).

Opinion

Case: 23-5963 Page: 1 of 8 Filed: 09/18/2024

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS

NO. 23-5963

JOHN A. COOPER, APPELLANT,

V.

DENIS MCDONOUGH, SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, APPELLEE.

Before GREENBERG, TOTH, and LAURER, Judges.

ORDER

TOTH, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court.

This Court has exclusive jurisdiction to review decisions from the Board of Veterans Appeals (Board) that are adverse to the appellant and are final—that is, they are not tentative or interlocutory in nature but represent the culmination of the Agency's consideration of an issue. 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(a); 7266(a). VA regulations have long specified that a remand order from the Board stands "in the nature of a preliminary order" and so "does not constitute a final decision of the Board." 38 C.F.R. § 20.1100(b) (2024). Likewise, there stands a long line of caselaw recognizing that Board remands constitute interlocutory rulings that fall outside the Court's jurisdiction. See Gardner-Dickson v. Wilkie, 33 Vet.App. 50, 56 (2020) (discussing cases), aff'd sub nom. Gardner-Dickson v. McDonough, No. 2021-1462, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 33000 (Fed. Cir. Nov. 5, 2021).

Contending that the passage of the Veterans Appeals Improvement and Modernization Act (AMA), Pub. L. No. 115-55, 131 Stat. 1105 (Aug 23, 2017), so altered the legal landscape that a remand from the Board now constitutes a "final decision" sufficient to confer jurisdiction onto this Court, Air Force veteran John A. Cooper seeks to appeal a Board decision that remanded four claims. Mr. Cooper theorizes that the changes introduced by the AMA fundamentally transformed the procedures governing Board remands to such degree that they can no longer be deemed preliminary orders; instead, he contends that a remand serves as the "terminal event" to the veterans "one review on appeal" per 38 U.S.C. § 7104(a) because the remanded claim no longer returns automatically to the Board. Based on these new procedural dynamics, he asserts that a Board remand now represents a final decision in the administrative appeal over which the Court has jurisdiction. Appellant's April 24, 2024, Response at 2, 11.

Although Congress, via the AMA, effected sweeping change to VA's claims processing rules, it left conspicuously unchanged sections 7252(a) and 7266(a)—the statutory provisions setting out this Court's jurisdiction. And absent any change to the Court's jurisdictional statutes, there is no warrant to cast aside longstanding precedent instructing that remands are not final decisions and so lay beyond this Court's jurisdiction. For this reason, the Court dismisses Mr. Cooper's appeal. Case: 23-5963 Page: 2 of 8 Filed: 09/18/2024

I. BACKGROUND

Mr. Cooper served in the Air Force from 1963 to 1967, including service at a Royal Thai Air Force base during the Vietnam War era. In July 2023, this Court granted a joint motion for remand (JMR) stipulating that the Board provided inadequate reasons or bases for denying four claims—an increased initial rating for prostate cancer, earlier effective dates for the grants of service connection for prostate cancer and type 2 diabetes, and an earlier effective date for special monthly compensation for the loss of use of a creative organ. In the JMR, the parties agreed that, because declassified records (specifically, a Department of Defense report from 1973 titled Project CHECO Southeast Asia Report: Base Defense in Thailand 1968-1972, which referenced the use of herbicides on the perimeters of military bases in Thailand) were associated with Mr. Cooper's file after his claims were first denied, "remand of the earlier effective date issues was warranted because the Board did not analyze the applicability of section 3.156(c)." June 28, 2023, JMR, docket number 23-1092, at 3 (cleaned up). Additionally, they agreed that the Board failed to reconcile "what appear to be inconsistent findings" in a 2018 VA medical exam report regarding the veteran's voiding dysfunction and use of absorbent materials (related to his increased rating claim for prostate cancer). Id.

When the claims returned to the Board, it remanded them so that the first-line adjudicator (the agency of original jurisdiction or "AOJ" in VA parlance) could obtain an addendum opinion from the same 2018 medical examiner to reconcile the contradictory information about the veteran's voiding dysfunction and use of absorbent materials related to his prostate cancer, as well as to "complete whatever work is deemed necessary to determine the date of declassification for 'Base Defense in Thailand' the 1973 report prepared by the Air Force as part of Project CHECO." September 11, 2023, Board Decision at 4. Mr. Cooper now appeals that remand order.

The Secretary moved to dismiss the appeal on grounds that our caselaw has long held that a Board remand is interlocutory in nature and so is not reviewable by the Court. Gardner-Dickson, 33 Vet.App. at 56. ("[A] nonfinal Board remand order is not a decision for purposes of section 7252"). However, Mr. Cooper argues that the cases identified by the Secretary are holdovers from the legacy system and are inapplicable to AMA cases such as his. He maintains that the AMA fundamentally altered the nature of Board remands such that they are no longer preliminary orders under § 20.1100(b). And because an AMA Board remand to the AOJ does not automatically return the disputed claims to the Board, he says that a remand acts as the terminal event to his "one review on appeal" (38 U.S.C. § 7104(a)) and constitutes a final Agency decision consistent with Maggitt v. West, 202 F.3d 1370, 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Adding all this together, he asserts that the Court has jurisdiction to review the Board's remand order.

II. ANALYSIS

In 2017, Congress overhauled VA's administrative appeals process through the passage of the AMA. The changes to VA's claims processing regime proved so sweeping that, once operative, claims adjudicated under the previous statutory scheme became known as "legacy" appeals, as distinct from claims administered under the AMA procedures.

2 Case: 23-5963 Page: 3 of 8 Filed: 09/18/2024

We begin our analysis by examining one provision that Congress did not alter, namely 38 U.S.C. § 511(a), which serves as the touchstone for all jurisdictional questions relating to veterans benefits. That provision grants jurisdiction to the Secretary to "decide all questions of law and fact necessary to a decision by the Secretary under a law that affects the provision of benefits." Id. In plain terms, section 511 essentially strips jurisdiction from all tribunals—with this Court among the notable exceptions—and instead reserves to the Secretary subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate matters related to veterans benefits. By leaving section 511 unchanged, Congress clearly signaled that, notwithstanding the sweeping changes, the AMA neither expanded nor limited the subject matter the Secretary is authorized to adjudicate.

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

Related

Goodyear Atomic Corp. v. Miller
486 U.S. 174 (Supreme Court, 1988)
Bennett v. Spear
520 U.S. 154 (Supreme Court, 1997)
Kirkpatrick v. Nicholson
417 F.3d 1361 (Federal Circuit, 2005)
Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency
132 S. Ct. 1367 (Supreme Court, 2012)
William R. Young v. Eric K. Shinseki
25 Vet. App. 201 (Veterans Claims, 2012)
Adams v. West
13 Vet. App. 453 (Veterans Claims, 2000)
Shoffner v. Principi
16 Vet. App. 208 (Veterans Claims, 2002)
Segundo Mariano v. Anthony J. Principi
17 Vet. App. 305 (Veterans Claims, 2003)
Mark W. Breeden v. Anthony J. Principi
17 Vet. App. 475 (Veterans Claims, 2004)
Raymond E. Douglas v. Eric K. Shinseki
23 Vet. App. 19 (Veterans Claims, 2009)
Smith v. Berryhill
587 U.S. 471 (Supreme Court, 2019)
Talley v. Derwinski
2 Vet. App. 282 (Veterans Claims, 1992)
Hampton v. Gober
10 Vet. App. 481 (Veterans Claims, 1997)
Love v. McDonough
100 F.4th 1388 (Federal Circuit, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
John A. Cooper v. Denis McDonough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-a-cooper-v-denis-mcdonough-cavc-2024.