Meyer v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJanuary 7, 2026
Docket24-480
StatusPublished

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

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Meyer v. United States, (uscfc 2026).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 24-480 Filed: January 7, 2026

) MICHAEL G. MEYER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) THE UNITED STATES, ) ) Defendant. ) )

Brian D. Schenk, Midwest Military & Veterans Law, PLLC, Minneapolis, Minn., for plaintiff.

Natalee Allenbaugh, United States Department of Justice, Civil Division, Washington, D.C., for defendant.

ORDER AND OPINION

SMITH, Senior Judge

In the United States military, service members injured to the point of disability are supposed to be entered into the Disability Evaluation System (“DES”). The DES is an objective, multistep process in which the service branch determines whether the member is fit or unfit for duty; if unfit, whether the Service member is meant to receive a disability retirement; and whether the Service member’s injuries are combat related. The relevant criteria for entering a service member into DES is simple: he must be injured to the point he cannot perform his military specialty for one year.

Lieutenant Colonel Meyer was injured to the point he could not perform his military specialty for a year; however, the United States Air Force did not send him to DES. Lieutenant Colonel Meyer had to retire on his own accord and petition the Air Force Board for the Correction of Military Records (“AFBCMR”) to correct his status to disability retired. The AFBCMR refused and Lt. Col. Meyer then filed this suit in the Court of Federal Claims. The AFBCMR decision to deny Lt. Col. Meyer disability retirement was arbitrary, capricious and unsupported by substantial evidence. Lieutenant Colonel Meyer’s motion for judgment on the administrative record is GRANTED. See ECF No. 12. Defendant’s cross-motion for judgment on the administrative record is DENIED. See ECF No. 17. The case is REMANDED to the AFBCMR for further proceedings not inconsistent with this decision. I. Factual History

Lieutenant Colonel Meyer was a fighter pilot for the United States Air Force Reserve. See Admin. Rec. [hereinafter AR] 43, 106, 126, ECF No. 9. His Air Force Specialty Code (“AFSC”) through his entire career was 11F3H, F-16 pilot. AR at 43. An 11F3H “[p]ilots aircraft and commands crew. Operates aircraft and controls equipment. Performs, supervises, or directs navigation, inflight refueling [], and weapons delivery.” Air Force Classification Directory, 29, Fighter Pilot ¶ 2.2, AR App’x at 32. During a training mission, Lt. Col. Meyer sustained injuries and was disabled, resulting in the loss of his flying status. AR at 40. At the time of his injury, Lt. Col. Meyer was with the 69th Fighter Squadron, 994th Fighter Wing. Id.

The DES is the United States Department of Defense’s (“DoD”) policy and procedure to determine “whether a service member is fit for duty or should be retired or separated due to disability. Keltner v. United States, 165 Fed. Cl. 484, 487 (2023); See generally, Dep’t of Def. Instruction (DoDI) 1332.18 (Aug. 5, 2014) (incorporating May 17, 2018, changes), Admin. Rec. App’x [hereinafter AR App’x] at 1523–80, ECF No. 22. The DES is a complex collection of rules, directives, instructions, and manuals promulgated by the Secretary of Defense and the secretaries of the military departments. See Keltner, 165 Fed. Cl. at 488 (“describing the DES as byzantine is an understatement that may be unkind even to that ancient empire”).

Service members proceed through either the Legacy DES or the Integrated DES (“IDES”). DoDI 1332.18 ¶ 3(b), AR App’x at 1523–24. Though each military department writes its DES policy, the standards “for all determinations related to disability evaluation will be consistently and equitably applied, … to all Service members, and be uniform within the components of the Military Departments.” DoDI 1332.18 ¶ 3(c), AR App’x at 1524.

Military medical authorities will refer eligible service members to the DES who “[h]ave one or more medical conditions that may, individually or collectively, prevent the Service member from reasonably performing the duties of their office, grade, rank, or rating, including those duties remaining on a Reserve obligation for more than 1 year after diagnosis.” DoDI 1332.18, encl. 3, app’x 1 ¶ 2(1), AR App’x at 1548. See also 10 U.S.C. §§ 1201–03. In DES, the service member will appear before a Medical Evaluation Board (“MEB”) review, undergo a disability evaluation including a Physical Evaluation Board (“PEB”) review, counseling, case management and a final disposition on the member’s fitness or unfitness. DoDI 1332.18, encl. 3, AR App’x at 1537–47. The process runs concurrently with the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”). DoDI 1332.18 ¶ 3(g), AR App’x at 1524. If the member served at least twenty years and has a VA disability rating of 30% or more, he is entitled to disability retirement status and pay. 10 U.S.C. § 1201.

The Air Force employs a two-step IDES prescreening process for all referrals. Air Force Manual (AFMAN) 41-210, TRICARE Operations and Patient Admin. [hereinafter AFMAN 41- 210] ¶ 4.48.1.2, AR App’x at 1148. The first step an evaluation by the Deployment Availability Working Group (“DAWG”), the second step is accomplished by a referral by the Air Force

2 Personnel Center or Air Reserve Component Surgeon General to a MEB and IDES. Id. If an airman has a condition rendering him unable to deploy or causing him a mobility restriction for 365 days or longer, he must undergo an initial review-in-lieu-of (“IRILO”), which serves as his IDES pre-screen. Id. An IRILO is triggered when an airman receives a diagnosis “which does not meet retention standards for continued military service.” AFMAN 41-210 ¶ 4.49.1.1, AR App’x at 1149. The trigger event is reviewed by the DAWG, which will either order an IRILO if it finds the airman is fit for restricted duty or needs to go before a MEB, or it will find the airman is fit for duty and dismiss the case. AFMAN 41-210 ¶ 4.49.2, AR App’x at 1150.

Lieutenant Colonel Meyer received a diagnosis inconsistent with retention standards, but the Air Force failed to follow its procedures. Broken down, Lt. Col. Meyer’s claim arises from five key events.

A. Lt. Col. Meyer is Injured in the Line of Duty

On February 5, 2018, while undertaking a “solo Air Combat maneuvering sortie” under a heavy gravitational load, Lt. Col. Meyer felt a pop in his neck and a “feeling of fire” that started in the back of his neck and traveled down his right arm to his hand. Id. at 38–39. Suffering intense pain and numbness, Lt. Col. Meyer was able to recover his aircraft and land safely. Id. at 39–40. His squadron commander, Lt. Col. Killeen, immediately placed Lt. Col. Meyer on Duties Not Including Flying (“DNIF”) status. Id. at 41. The Air Force determined that Lt. Col. Meyer suffered a Line of Duty (“ILOD”) injury. Id. at 40–42.

Between February and April 2018, Air Force and civilian medical personnel evaluated and treated Lt. Col. Meyer’s injuries. Id. at 45–58. Doctors diagnosed Lt. Col. Meyer with dynamic instability and moderate to severe spinal stenoses at the C4/C5 level. Id. He had a disc protrusion at C4/C5 and could not rotate his neck to the left without causing pain. Id. at 47–48. He had cervical radiculopathy and spondylosis at C4/C5. Id. at 51. The Air Force prohibited him from flying for a year and he was in physical therapy until the following January. Id. at 129–30.

B. Lt. Col. Meyer is Moved to a Staff Position and Referred to Disability Processing

On February 10, 2019, the Air Force medically disqualified Lt. Col. Meyer and terminated him from the aviation service. Id. at 3, 104. Three months later, Lt. Col.

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