Willie O. Sanders v. Anthony J. Principi

17 Vet. App. 232, 2003 WL 21980359
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
DecidedSeptember 20, 2003
Docket01-813
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Vet. App. 232 (Willie O. Sanders v. Anthony J. Principi) 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
Willie O. Sanders v. Anthony J. Principi, 17 Vet. App. 232, 2003 WL 21980359 (Cal. 2003).

Opinions

GREENE, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court. KRAMER, Chief Judge, filed a concurring opinion.

GREENE, Judge:

Veteran Willie O. Sanders appeals, through counsel, an April 9, 2001, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board) decision denying his claim for a compensable rating for his service-connected hepatitis. Record (R.) at 2-3. Mr. Sanders argues that VA has committed error by rendering a decision denying his claim without providing him a medical examination as promised by a VA hearing officer during the development and adjudication of that claim. This appeal is timely, and the Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(a) and 7266(a). For the reasons that follow, the Court will vacate the Board decision and remand the matter.

I. FACTS

Mr. Sanders served on active duty in the U.S. Army from September 1944 to November 1946. R. at 29, 30, 43-45. In 1977 he filed a claim for service connection for hepatitis that was denied by a VA regional office (RO). R. at 32-35. He did not appeal that decision and it became final. In February 2000, VA reopened the previously and finally disallowed claim and [234]*234found that Mr. Sanders had contracted hepatitis in service and awarded him service connection, effective July 28, 1999, the date that he had filed his claim to reopen. R. at 96-98. However, the RO determined that the existing medical evidence revealed that he did not have any residuals of hepatitis and thus assigned Mr. Sanders a non-compensable rating. R. at 62-63, 95-99. Mr. Sanders filed a Notice of Disagreement (NOD) (R. at 100), and the RO issued a Statement of the Case (SOC) in which it continued the noncompensable rating (R. at 102-13). Mr. Sanders then filed a Substantive Appeal and requested a hearing before the RO. R. at 115-18.

At a personal hearing held in May 2000, he testified under oath and described symptoms that he believed were caused by his hepatitis. R. at 157-62. He reported that for the previous eight or nine months he had been under the medical care of Dr. James Beasley, whom he had last seen approximately one month before the hearing. R. at 158-59. Dr. Beasley’s medical report was given to the hearing officer. R. at 159. The hearing officer indicated that the medical evidence then of record did not support a compensable disability rating. R. at 163, 168. She told Mr. Sanders that VA needed medical evidence in order to grant his claim for an increased rating. R. at 165, 168-69. Mr. Sanders’ representative requested that the hearing officer suspend the matter for 60 days so that Mr. Sanders could obtain a medical opinion from Dr. Beasley or a gastroenterologist, and the hearing officer agreed. R. at 166.

During that same hearing, Mr. Sanders’ son questioned why VA was requiring his father to produce the medical opinion, and asked: “Why can’t ... VA produce a gas-troenterologist? We have done everything that we’ve been asked to do?” R. at 169. In response, the hearing officer asked whether Mr. Sanders’ son was requesting that VA schedule Mr. Sanders for a medical examination by a VA gastroenterologist at the VA medical center. Id. Mr. Sanders’ son then stated: “If we went to one of your doctors as opposed to his doctor, it would speed [the decision process] up,” and the hearing officer responded, ‘Tes, sir. It would speed it up.” R. at 171. She then added: “I’m willing to do that.... I’m going to go ahead and request the opinion rather than asking you to submit it. So, yes, that will speed it up.” R. at 172. The following dialogue between Mr. Sanders’ accredited representative and the hearing officer ensued:

[Representative]: Okay. Okay, ma’am. Once the exam is scheduled and you get the results from the exam, if the evidence comes out in favor of Mr. Sanders for an increase, you can grant it.
Hearing Officer: Okay. Mr. Sanders, what I’m going to do is, following the hearing [I will] issue an examination request to the VA Medical Center here in Jackson requesting that they have a gastroenterologist review your records and examine you and give me an opinion as to whether the current gastrointestinal problems that you’re having are related to your hepatitis A infection in service. If they tell me it’s not related, I will ask — or I will ask when I issue the examination report the diagnosis of the disability which is causing your symptoms, if it’s not related. Okay? When I get that information back, if they tell me that the symptoms are related, then I will be able to grant an increase. A com-pensable evaluation for your disability back to the date of the claim.

R. at 175 (emphasis added).

In June 2000, the RO received Mr. Sanders’ November 1999 medical records for his treatment for his gastrointestinal [235]*235problems. R. at 187-90. Based on this evidence, the RO, in August 2000, rendered a decision denying Mr. Sanders’ claim for a compensable rating and issued a Supplemental SOC. R. at 198-204. The RO found that the November 1999 medical records did not reveal that Mr. Sanders had any diagnoses for active hepatitis residuals, and that, therefore, “another VA examination [was] not medically indicated in this case.” R. at 204. In October 2000, Mr. Sanders appealed to the Board. R. at 220. In the decision here on appeal, the Board found that Mr. Sanders’ hepatitis A, although contracted in service, was asymptomatic and the Board affirmed the non-compensable rating awarded by the RO. R. at 2, 6. The Board did not address the hearing officer’s statement regarding VA providing Mr. Sanders with a medical examination. Mr. Sanders then appealed to this Court.

On appeal, Mr. Sanders does not argue that he is entitled to a compensable rating. Rather, he argues that VA’s representation that it would provide him with a gastrointestinal examination constitutes an “express stipulation,” and that VA should be required to comply with that stipulation. Appellant’s Brief (Br.) at 3. He contends that VA’s failure to provide the examination after promising to do so violates basic principles of fundamental fairness and is counter to the uniquely paternalistic nature of the VA claims process. The Secretary responds that the Board’s determination that Mr. Sanders’ hepatitis was asymptomatic and thus noncompensable has a plausible basis based on the record and is therefore not clearly erroneous. As to Mr. Sanders’ specific argument, the Secretary maintains that the hearing officer’s representation “did not create ... any right to additional development not otherwise warranted by this case.” Secretary’s Br. at 12. He argues that the government should not bear any obligation to obtain an otherwise unwarranted examination “simply because a government employee incorrectly indicated that such an examination appeared to be in order, though it was later found not to be warranted.” Id. at 12-13. By analogy, the Secretary cites McTighe v. Brown, 7 Vet.App. 29 (1994), for the proposition that erroneous advice given by a government employee cannot be used to estop the government from denying benefits. Thus, the Secretary urges the Court to affirm the Board decision.

II. ANALYSIS

The Board’s decision must include a written statement of the reasons or bases for the findings and conclusions on all material issues of fact and law presented on the record. See

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Bluebook (online)
17 Vet. App. 232, 2003 WL 21980359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willie-o-sanders-v-anthony-j-principi-cavc-2003.