Kernz v. Collins

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 2026
Docket24-1171
StatusPublished

This text of Kernz v. Collins (Kernz v. Collins) 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
Kernz v. Collins, (Fed. Cir. 2026).

Opinion

Case: 24-1171 Document: 58 Page: 1 Filed: 04/03/2026

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

JAMES PERCIAVALLE, Claimant-Appellant

v.

DOUGLAS A. COLLINS, SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, Respondent-Appellee ______________________

2024-1152 ______________________

Appeal from the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in No. 22-425, Judge Coral Wong Pietsch.

------------------------------------

JAMES M. KERNZ, Claimant-Appellant

DOUGLAS A. COLLINS, SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, Respondent-Appellee ______________________

2024-1171 ______________________ Case: 24-1171 Document: 58 Page: 2 Filed: 04/03/2026

Appeal from the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in No. 20-2365, Chief Judge Michael P. Allen, Judge Amanda L. Meredith, Judge Coral Wong Pi- etsch, Judge Grant Jaquith, Judge Joseph L. Falvey, Jr, Judge Joseph L. Toth, Judge Margaret C. Bartley, Judge Scott Laurer, Judge William S. Greenberg.

______________________

Decided: April 3, 2026 ______________________

JOHN D. NILES, Carpenter Chartered, Topeka, KS, ar- gued for claimant-appellant James J. Perciavalle.

ADAM R. LUCK, GloverLuck, LLP, Dallas, TX, argued for claimant-appellant James M. Kernz.

MEREDYTH COHEN HAVASY, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Jus- tice, Washington, DC, argued for respondent-appellees. Also represented by PATRICIA M. MCCARTHY; BRIAN M. BOYNTON, LOREN MISHA PREHEIM in 24-1152; ERIC P. BRUSKIN, YAAKOV ROTH in 24-1171; BRIAN D. GRIFFIN, ANDREW J. STEINBERG, Office of General Counsel, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Washington, DC. ______________________.

Before DYK, HUGHES, and STARK, Circuit Judges. STARK, Circuit Judge. We address here two appeals involving slight varia- tions of a generally shared scenario. Each appellant-claim- ant sought review by the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (“Board”) of an unfavorable action by a Veterans Affairs (“VA”) regional office (“RO”). The Board initially dismissed the appeals as untimely, but did so based on a clearly Case: 24-1171 Document: 58 Page: 3 Filed: 04/03/2026

PERCIAVALLE v. COLLINS 3

erroneous miscalculation of a filing deadline. After the af- fected claimants filed notices of appeal in the Court of Ap- peals for Veterans Claims (“Veterans Court”), seeking to reverse the erroneous dismissals and have their cases re- stored to the Board’s active review docket, the Board rec- ognized its error and unilaterally restored the claimants’ cases to its docket, thereby providing the full extent of the relief the claimants were then seeking in their pending Veterans Court appeals. The question these appeals present is whether, in such circumstances, the Veterans Court may dismiss the ap- peals before it as moot based on the Board’s sua sponte grant of the entirety of the claimants’ requested relief. A divided Veterans Court held that it could do so. The claim- ants appeal that determination, arguing that the filing of a notice of appeal to the Veterans Court immediately divests the Board of jurisdiction, thereby rendering void the ac- tions taken by the Board during the pendency of the Veter- ans Court appeals. For the reasons stated below, the claimants lack stand- ing to pursue these appeals before this court. We therefore lack jurisdiction and, accordingly, dismiss. I A James M. Kernz served in the United States Army from 1968 until 1970. In December 2016, a VA RO denied Mr. Kernz’s claims for compensation for an aneurysm he alleged was caused by purportedly negligent VA medical care and for service connection disability benefits for de- pression, kidney failure, and residuals of a stroke. On Au- gust 9, 2017, Mr. Kernz filed a notice of disagreement, thereby seeking Board review of the RO decision. The RO issued a Statement of the Case (“SOC”) maintaining its de- nial on December 18, 2019. On January 17, 2020, Mr. Kernz timely appealed the RO decision to the Board via VA Case: 24-1171 Document: 58 Page: 4 Filed: 04/03/2026

Form 10182 (“10182 NOD”), which served as an election to opt-in to the Appeals Modernization Act (“AMA”) system. See 38 CFR. § 3.2400(c)(2). 1 Mr. Kernz chose the evidence- submission option for his appeal, which provided him 90 days from the date his 10182 NOD was received by the Board to submit new evidence. See 38 U.S.C. § 7113(c)(2). On March 24, 2020, the Board issued a letter stating that Mr. Kernz’s appeal was untimely and dismissing it. According to the letter, Mr. Kernz needed to opt into the AMA system within either (1) 60 days of the date of the SOC or (2) one year of the date of the VA decision he was challenging, which the letter stated he failed to do. The Board was obviously incorrect, as Mr. Kernz satisfied the first of these options: he opted into the AMA system by sub- mitting VA Form 10182 on January 17, 2020, which was less than 60 days after the December 18, 2019 SOC. See 38 C.F.R. § 3.2400(c)(2). Mr. Kernz filed a timely notice of appeal (“NOA”) to the Veterans Court. In his NOA, Mr. Kernz made clear that he was appealing the Board’s March 24, 2020 letter order, which dismissed his Board appeal as untimely. This meant the only relief he was, or could be, seeking from the Veter- ans Court – and the only relief the Veterans Court could grant – was to remand his case to the Board and allow him to proceed there with his appeal from the adverse RO deci- sion. While Mr. Kernz’s appeal of the Board’s erroneous

1 Congress passed the AMA in 2017 to streamline the

VA claims and appeals process, while also maintaining (for appeals filed prior to February 19, 2019) what are referred to as “legacy appeals.” Pub. Law 115-55, 131 Stat. 1105 (Aug. 23, 2017). The AMA provides a veteran seeking to challenge a determination by an RO three options for Board review: docket review, evidence submission, and hearing. Case: 24-1171 Document: 58 Page: 5 Filed: 04/03/2026

PERCIAVALLE v. COLLINS 5

dismissal of his appeal from the RO decision was pending in the Veterans Court, the Board acted sua sponte and, in two May 2020 letters, restored Mr. Kernz’s case to the Board’s active docket. In the meantime, Mr. Kernz’s Veterans Court appeal also proceeded. In particular, the government filed a mo- tion asking the Veterans Court to dismiss the appeal be- cause, in its view, the Board’s March 2020 dismissal letter was not a final appealable decision. A three-judge panel of the Veterans Court heard oral argument on the govern- ment’s motion on March 29, 2022. Thereafter, the motion was submitted to the en banc court, which heard argument on June 15, 2023. On September 7, 2023, after the en banc hearing in the Veterans Court but before that court resolved the govern- ment’s motion to dismiss, the Board remanded Mr. Kernz’s claims to the RO. On October 4, 2023, while the RO was still processing the remand from the Board, the en banc Veterans Court issued a split decision dismissing Mr. Kernz’s appeal as moot. The six-judge majority (Judges Pi- etsch, Allen, Meredith, Toth, Falvey, and Laurer) reasoned that, under the Article III framework the Veterans Court, an Article I tribunal, adopted in Mokal v. Derwinski, 1 Vet. App. 12, 15 (1990), Mr. Kernz’s appeal was mooted by the Board’s correction of its erroneous dismissal in May 2020. The Veterans Court did not, therefore, decide whether the Board’s March 2020 letter was a final appealable order. 2

2 As the Veterans Court did not decide this issue, and

because Mr.

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