Sanders v. Nicholson

487 F.3d 881, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 11413, 2007 WL 1427720
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 2007
Docket2006-7001
StatusPublished
Cited by265 cases

This text of 487 F.3d 881 (Sanders v. Nicholson) 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
Sanders v. Nicholson, 487 F.3d 881, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 11413, 2007 WL 1427720 (Fed. Cir. 2007).

Opinion

PROST, Circuit Judge.

Woodrow F. Sanders appeals an August 25, 2005, decision by the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (“Veterans Court”) that affirmed a decision by the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (“Board”) denying Mr. Sanders’s claim for service connection for choroidoretinitis of his right eye. Sanders v. Nicholson, 20 Vet.App. 143 (2005). Because the Veterans Court incorrectly required Mr. Sanders to establish that an error in a notice the Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”) is required to give claimants was prejudicial, we reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

Mr. Sanders served in the United States Army from May 1942 to September 1945. Although his service medical records do not indicate that he suffered an eye trauma or abnormality and no eye abnormali *883 ties were recorded in his separation medical examination, Mr. Sanders asserts that on September 12, 1944, while serving in France, a bazooka exploded near him, burning the right side of his face. In December 1948, Mr. Sanders was diagnosed with chronic, right-eye choroidore-tinitis, an inflammation of the choroids and retina. Believing his choroidoretinitis was caused by his injury in 1944, Mr. Sanders submitted a claim for service connection for a right-eye disability to the VA. The VA regional office (“VARO”) denied his claim in February 1949.

Approximately forty years later, Mr. Sanders filed a statement attempting to reopen his claim for service connection for his choroidoretinitis. In support of his claim, Mr. Sanders submitted a statement from a VA ophthalmologist, dated December 1992, and a statement from a private ophthalmologist, dated September 1993. The VA ophthalmologist reported that Mr. Sanders stated that he was injured in a bridge explosion, rather than a bazooka explosion, and that he had experienced vision loss in his right eye ever since. The VA ophthalmologist went on to diagnose right and left macular chorioretinal scars and stated that “[i]t is not inconceivable that these macular and retinal lesions in each [eye] and particularly the right could have occurred secondary to trauma.”

Mr. Sanders’s private ophthalmologist also reported that Mr. Sanders indicated that his injury occurred during a bridge explosion and that he had experienced vision loss in his right eye since then. The ophthalmologist diagnosed large choriore-tinal scars in both eyes and opined that “[t]his type of macular injury in his right eye can certainly be concussive in character and his history supports the visual acuity loss from his injury in World War II.”

Mr. Sanders later stated that both the VA ophthalmologist and his private ophthalmologist were incorrect in reporting that his eye injury occurred during a bridge explosion. Instead, Mr. Sanders reiterated that his injury occurred when the right side of his face was burned by a bazooka explosion. According to Mr. Sanders, this injury went unreported because there were no medics to whom he could report his injury and because most of his fellow soldiers were wounded or killed. Nonetheless, in July 1994 the VARO found Mr. Sanders had failed to present new and material evidence to reopen his claim. Mr. Sanders appealed to the Board, but the Board denied his claim for service connection in a decision dated November 27, 1998. In January 1999, however, the Veterans Court remanded Mr. Sanders’s case for further development and adjudication.

In June 2000, the Board found that new and material evidence had been presented to reopen Mr. Sanders’s claim for service connection and remanded Mr. Sanders’s claim for a VA ophthalmologic examination to determine the etiology of his right-eye condition.

In December 2000, Mr. Sanders had a comprehensive eye examination by a VA optometrist. The optometrist diagnosed decreased vision in the right eye due to a macular scar and a small chorioretinal scar in the left eye, but stated that, based on the fact that Mr. Sanders’s visual acuity in the right eye was 20/20 on May 15, 1942, and 20/25 on September 25, 1945, when he was discharged from the Army, it is unlikely that the decrease in vision was related to Mr. Sanders’s September 1944 trauma. The optometrist also noted that there was no documented evidence of reduced vision until 1948. According to the optometrist, “[i]t is certainly possible for there to have been damage to the retina in 1944 *884 that then hemorrhaged in 1948, ... but there are no other signs of ocular trauma.” The optometrist concluded that “[t]he cho-rioretinitis is most likely infectious in nature, although the etiology at this point is impossible to determine.” Although he noted it was possible Mr. Sanders contracted some infection during his military service, the optometrist stated that “there is no way to prove this either.”

In August 2001, Mr. Sanders was also examined by another VA ophthalmologist, who diagnosed dense macular scarring of the right eye and early macular degeneration of the left eye. The ophthalmologist stated that Mr. Sanders’s decreased vision was consistent with these clinical findings, but that the etiology of Mr. Sanders’s ma-cular scar “is more difficult to ascertain.” According to the ophthalmologist, “[i]f [Mr. Sanders’s] vision had been normal in the right eye prior to the reported injury, then it is possible that the macular scar could be related to the injury.” The ophthalmologist further stated that “[d]ue to the fact that [Mr. Sanders] does have the additional punched out chorioretinal sears in both eyes, the possibility of [an infection] as the etiology of the macular scar could also be entertained.”

The VARO issued Supplemental Statements of the Case in 2001 and 2002 discussing this additional medical evidence. The VARO also sent Mr. Sanders a letter stating that it had all the information it needed to decide his claim, but that he could submit any additional evidence he wanted considered.

In October 2003, the Board denied Mr. Sanders’s claim for service connection for his right-eye choroidoretinitis. The Board found that the opinion of the VA optometrist was more probative on the issue of whether Mr. Sanders’s choroidoretinitis was service-related and concluded that the preponderance of the evidence weighed against the claim. Mr. Sanders appealed to the Veterans Court.

On appeal to the Veterans Court, Mr. Sanders argued that the VA failed to provide notice as to who was responsible for obtaining the evidence necessary to substantiate his claim, as required by the notice provision of the Veterans Claims Assistance Act of 2000 (“VCAA”), 38 U.S.C. § 5103(a), and failed to provide this notice prior to the initial denial of his claim.

In a decision dated August 25, 2005, the Veterans Court found that there was a plausible basis in the record for the Board’s decision denying service connection. The Veterans Court also found that Mr. Sanders did not allege any specific prejudice resulting from the VA’s alleged failure to notify him about who would ultimately be responsible for obtaining the evidence necessary to substantiate his claim, and to provide notice before the initial unfavorable decision by the VARO. Because Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
487 F.3d 881, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 11413, 2007 WL 1427720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-nicholson-cafc-2007.