Price v. Shinseki

346 F. App'x 597
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedOctober 8, 2009
Docket2009-7034
StatusUnpublished

This text of 346 F. App'x 597 (Price v. Shinseki) 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
Price v. Shinseki, 346 F. App'x 597 (Fed. Cir. 2009).

Opinion

DECISION

PER CURIAM.

Daniel Price appeals from a decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (“the Veterans Court”), in which that court upheld a decision by the Board of Veterans’ Appeals holding that an earlier decision by the Board did not contain clear and unmistakable error. We affirm.

*598 BACKGROUND

Mr. Price served in the U.S. Army from 1961 to 1968. In 1982, he filed a claim with the Veterans Administration seeking service connection for “readjustment problems,” a condition later classified as post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”). The regional office denied his claim in October 1982 but failed to notify him of the denial, so the claim remained open. In 1989, he requested that his claim be reopened. The regional office denied the request in November 1989, finding that “the weight of the evidence fails to establish the criteria for a diagnosis of PTSD was met.” The regional office added that the evidence “does not present a new factual basis to establish service connection for PTSD, previously denied.” Mr. Price did not appeal that denial, and it became final.

In 1992, Mr. Price again sought to reopen his claim. After further development, the regional office granted the claim and assigned him a 30% disability rating with an effective date of April 1992. Mr. Price, however, contended that because he had never been notified of the denial of his 1982 claim, the effective date of his disability rating should have been 1982. In a 2003 decision, the Board of Veterans’ Appeals denied Mr. Price’s claim for a 1982 effective date and held, instead, that the effective date for his disability rating was the date of his renewed claim in 1992.

In 2005, Mr. Price filed a motion alleging that the Board’s 2003 decision contained clear and unmistakable error. The error, according to Mr. Price, was treating the November 1989 regional office decision as rendering final the regional office’s October 1982 decision that denied his original claim. The Board denied relief in a decision issued in 2006. In its 2006 opinion, the Board acknowledged that the regional office in November 1989 had advised Mr. Price that he needed to submit new and material evidence in support of his claim in light of the fact that the claim had previously been denied. However, the Board found that “it is clear from a reading of the November 1989 rating decision that the issue of entitlement to service connection for PTSD was decided on the merits.” In light of the fact that the November 1989 rating decision addressed and decided the issue of entitlement to service connection for PTSD on the merits, the Board concluded that “the October 1982 rating decision was subsumed by the November 1989 decision, as it adjudicated the same exact issue.” Because Mr. Price was notified of the November 1989 rating decision but did not appeal that decision before it became final, the Board concluded that “neither the October 1982 nor the November 1989 rating decisions remains ‘open and pending’ as argued by the veteran.”

Mr. Price appealed to the Veterans Court, which affirmed. The court held that the Board was correct to hold, both in 2003 and 2006, that the 1989 regional office decision had the effect of subsuming his 1982 claim and that both the 1982 decision and the 1989 decision became final when Mr. Price did not appeal the 1989 regional office decision. The court also rejected Mr. Price’s argument that the Board in 2006 erred by concluding that the regional office in 1989 had decided and denied Mr. Price’s service connection claim on the merits. The court explained that although the Board in 2003 had assumed that the regional office in 1989 had denied Mr. Price’s claim based on the failure to present new and material evidence, it was not improper for the Board in 2006 to reexamine the question of what the regional office actually did in 1989. The court explained that the Board in 2006 simply “delved further into the actual determinations made in [the November 1989] adjudication,” and that it was within the Board’s *599 authority to do. The court added that even if the November 1989 regional office decision were treated as having denied a claim to reopen rather than having denied Mr. Price’s claim for service connection on the merits, the regional office’s action would have constituted sufficient notice that his overall claim for service connection for PTSD was denied. Accordingly, the Board concluded, Mr. Price’s failure to appeal from the November 1989 regional office decision rendered both his 1982 and 1989 claims final. Mr. Price now appeals to this court.

DISCUSSION

We uphold the decision of the Veterans Court. The government contends that this appeal is not within our jurisdiction because it raises only a challenge to a law or regulation as applied to the facts of a particular case. 38 U.S.C. § 7292(d)(2). While it is true that Mr. Price’s challenge to the decisions below is largely factual in nature, his appeal raises one legal issue that falls within this court’s jurisdiction: whether, under the state of the law at the time of the Board’s decision in 2003, an earlier claim that was still open because the veteran had not been notified of its denial was rendered final by a later decision denying a claim for service connection for the same disability.

As to that issue, Mr. Price argues that the Board’s 2003 decision was clearly wrong in light of legal principles in effect at that time. According to Mr. Price, the decision of the Veterans Court upholding the Board’s 2006 decision was based on a post-2003 change in the law that the court should not have considered in determining whether the Board committed clear and unmistakable error in its 2003 decision. The change in the law, Mr. Price argues, came in the form of decisions of the Veterans Court in 2007 and 2008 that held, for the first time, that a decision denying reopening of a claim for lack of new and material evidence had the effect of rendering final an earlier regional office decision on the same claim that was still open. According to Mr. Price, precedents of the Veterans Court that were in effect as of 2003 made clear that a decision denying a claim based on the absence of new and material evidence would not have the effect of denying an earlier claim relating to the same disability that was still open. For that reason, he argues, the Board in 2003 committed clear and unmistakable error by failing to rule that the effective date for the ultimate award of benefits for his PTSD claim was the filing date of his original 1982 claim.

The first flaw in that argument, as explained by the Veterans Court, is that the Board in 2006 examined the 1989 regional office decision and concluded that the regional office had denied Mr. Price’s claim on the merits, not simply for failure to submit new and material evidence. There is no room for dispute that, if the 1989 regional office decision was on the merits, the 1982 regional office decision was subsumed in the 1989 decision, and the 1982 decision became final when Mr. Price failed to appeal the 1989 decision. See Williams v. Peake, 521 F.3d 1348

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Related

Adams v. Shinseki
568 F.3d 956 (Federal Circuit, 2009)
Williams v. Peake
521 F.3d 1348 (Federal Circuit, 2008)
Woods v. Gober
14 Vet. App. 214 (Veterans Claims, 2000)
Myers v. Principi
16 Vet. App. 228 (Veterans Claims, 2002)
Robert J. Ingram v. R. James Nicholson
21 Vet. App. 232 (Veterans Claims, 2007)
Santiago M. Juarez v. James B. Peake
21 Vet. App. 537 (Veterans Claims, 2008)

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346 F. App'x 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-shinseki-cafc-2009.