Stuckey v. West

13 Vet. App. 163, 1999 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 1276, 1999 WL 1038323
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedNovember 17, 1999
DocketNo. 96-1373
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 Vet. App. 163 (Stuckey v. West) 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
Stuckey v. West, 13 Vet. App. 163, 1999 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 1276, 1999 WL 1038323 (Cal. 1999).

Opinion

HOLDAWAY, Judge:

The appellant, Harold Stuckey, appeals a June 1996 decision of the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA or Board) which denied service connection for a back disability and for residuals of a forehead injury. On appeal, the appellant has contested only the Board’s denial of his claim for service connection for a back disability. Consequently, his claim for residuals of a forehead injury will be considered abandoned. Bucklinger v. Brown, 5 Vet.App. 435 (1993). There are no issues before the Court as to the merits of the appellant’s claim. In fact, the appellant has conceded that his claim is not well grounded. The issues before the Court concern whether or not the appellant may raise issues of procedure for the first time before this Court which were not raised before the Board and, hence, were not part of the decision below. For the following reasons, the Court will affirm the decision of the BVA.

I. FACTS

The appellant had active service in the U.S. Navy from May 1946 to March 1948. His induction examination found no physical defects. His service medical records do not reflect that he received treatment for any condition relevant to this appeal. In March 1948, a physical examination found the appellant physically qualified for transfer, and no defects were noted. Four days later, the appellant was examined again and found physically qualified for discharge and his spine and extremities were found to be normal.

In June 1992, the appellant claimed service-connected disability benefits for a back injury and a laceration to his forehead. In September 1992, a VA regional office (VARO) wrote the appellant a letter stating:

We are working on your claim. However, we need more information before we can finish our action.
Please send us evidence showing that your claimed disabilities have been treated since your discharge from service.
The best types of evidence to give us are statements from doctors who have treated you since your discharge. The statements should show dates of examination or treatment, findings, and diagnoses. [166]*166Please send us this evidence as soon as possible, preferably within 60 days.

Later that month, the appellant responded in a letter to his veterans service organization, the Disabled American Veterans (DAV). Throughout the administrative process, the appellant was actively represented by the DAV through an accredited service representative. See generally 38 U.S.C. § 5902. DAV then apparently forwarded the letter to the VARO. This letter stated that he was on the U.S.S. Missouri in the fall of 1946 when the ship was hit by a round fired from another ship during training. He said he “was knock[ed] out of my bunk about ten feet hight [sic] from the steel floor and hit on my back, I was treated in sick bay and returned to duty.” Id. He added that “my disk was injured quite awhile [sic] ago as it shows rather advanced [illegible] and degenerative arthritis, LS [lumbosacral] spine.” Id.

In October 1992, the RO denied the appellant’s claims and explained:

Service medical records show no complaint, treatment or diagnosis of a back injury or laceration to the right forehead. Discharge examination from service is negative for any such claimed condition. The veteran’s statement is noted. No additional evidence has been presented. The veteran has not presented any medical evidence demonstrating the claimed conditions from the time of service to the present.

The accompanying cover letter further indicated that the “evidence does not establish service connection” for the claimed disabilities, and added that “YOUR SERVICE MEDICAL RECORDS WERE REVIEWED. EVIDENCE DOES NOT SHOW A BACK INJURY AND LACERATION OF THE RIGHT FOREHEAD.” In December 1992, the VARO received a change of address announcement from Dr. Wallace E. Johnson, an orthopedic surgeon, with the handwritten note: “Mr. Stuckey’s Doctor.”

In February 1993, the appellant filed a timely Notice of Disagreement (NOD) to initiate his appeal to the Board. In his NOD, the appellant stated:

Please accept this as a notice of disagreement in regard to the rating decision of 10-22-92 denying me service connection for a back condition and residuals of trauma to the head.
When my claim[s] folder was reviewed by my representative, it was noted that the records of my visits to sick bay for these conditions are not included in my service medical records. To assist me in my claim, I am requesting that your office do what is necessary to obtain these records either from the service or [from the National Personnel Records Center].

After receiving the appellant’s NOD, the VARO sent the appellant and his representative a Statement of the Case (SOC). The SOC instructed: “This is not a decision on the appeal you have initiated. It is a ‘Statement of the Case’ which the law requires us to furnish to help you in completing your appeal. Please read the forwarding letter carefully, as well as the instructions on the enclosed appeal form.” The SOC then characterized the issue on appeal as “Service connection for back injury and laceration right forehead.” The SOC then provided the appellant and his accredited representative with some basic tenets of veterans law regarding this issue such as:

Service connection may be granted for disability resulting from disease or injury incurred or aggravated by service. (38 U.S.C. § 310)
Service connection may be granted for any disease diagnosed after discharge when all the evidence, including that pertinent to service, established that the disease was incurred in service. (38 C.F.R. § 3.303(d))
[167]*167To establish service connection for a condition, symptoms during service, or within a reasonable time thereafter, must be identifiable as manifestations of a chronic disease or permanent effects of an injury. Further, a present disability must exist and it must be shown that the present disabihty is the same disease or injury, or is the result of disease or injury incurred in or made worse by the veteran’s military service. (38 C.F.R. § 3.303)

Finally, the SOC provided the reasons behind the VARO’s decision, “Service medical records, and the record itself are entirely absent of evidence of claimed back injury or laceration of the right forehead. There is no evidence of record to demonstrate the claimed conditions in service.”

In his substantive appeal, filed in March 1993, the appellant stated that a medic told him during service that if his back injury was bad he would be transferred to a facility on land, but the appellant “did not want to leave the USS Missouri in 1946[,] the best ship in the fleet.” Since he did not want to leave his ship, the appellant stated that the medic advised him to participate in certain rehabilitative exercises, such as swimming. At the end of his Substantive Appeal, the appellant wrote:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Vet. App. 163, 1999 U.S. Vet. App. LEXIS 1276, 1999 WL 1038323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuckey-v-west-cavc-1999.