"It is the duty of the people to care for him who shall have borne the battle, his widow, and orphan."
-Abraham Lincoln

Monday, November 26, 2018

Cook II: Right to a Board Hearing After Remand from the Court


Cook v. Wilkie, Case Number 2017-2181, decided November 13, 2018 is an appeal to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals from a prior published CAVC (Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims) decision, Cook v. Snyder, 28 Vet. App. 330 (2017), previously summarized on this blog on February 27, 2017. 
The CAVC previously refused to defer to the VA and stated a veteran has the right to another Board hearing after remand of his claim from the CAVC.  The veteran received a remand from the CAVC and asked for a hearing from the Board specifically stating he wished the opportunity to address certain points through his testimony.  The Board noted he had previously had a hearing (actually two) and denied the request and the claim. 
The CAVC determined 38 USC 7107(b) was ambiguous as to this point, but determined Chevron deference was not owed for two reasons.  First, no VA regulation resolves the statutory ambiguity—
Here, the regulations cited by the Secretary all contain the same basic ambiguous language that, although not phrased identically to the statute, do nothing to clarify the ambiguity … as to whether a VA claimant who has had a personal hearing before the Board on an appeal is entitled upon request to another Board hearing following a Court remand.  Therefore, the Court is under no obligation to accord deference to the Secretary’s interpretation under Chevron step two.
Secondly, the CAVC noted that the VA regulation preexisted the statute and that because Chevron deference is appropriate only where Congress has delegated authority to the agency to make rules carrying the force of law.  The Court determined the VA has not actually used that delegated authority but simply relies on a regulation predating the statute, which could not have possible been promulgated to interpret the statute. 
The CAVC then relied heavily on the pro-veteran nature of the VA adjudicatory process as well as the fact the nature of a claim may change through the process to determine barring a post-remand personal hearing “would be neither solicitous of a claimant not productive of informed Board decisionmaking.”  The CAVC also pulled out the Brown v. Gardner trump card, which states any doubt in the interpretation of a VA statutes or regulations must be resolved in favor of a veteran.
The VA could not stomach the CAVC’s decision and appealed, arguing “that § 7107(b) does not entitle a claimant to a Board hearing after remand from the Veterans Court if the Board has already given the claimant a hearing earlier in the case. According to the Secretary, the word “appeal” only refers to the submission of certain forms for the Board’s initial review and does not encompass subsequent adjudications on remand.”  Id. at *8.
The Federal Circuit turned to the text of 7107 which states “[t]he Board shall decide any appeal only after affording the appellant an opportunity for a hearing.”  First, the Court noted the word “any” should be read expansively “[a]ccordingly, the phrase “any appeal” indicates that the Board is not free to curate which appeals are entitled to “an opportunity for a hearing.” The Board must provide such an opportunity before it decides every appeal.”  Id. at *9. 
The Court also noted the Veteran’s Court vacated the prior decision, which nullified or cancelled that decision.  Therefore, on remand the Board had to review the claim anew in accord with remand instructions.  “In other words, the Board must again decide the appeal, or a “proceeding undertaken to have a decision reconsidered by a higher
authority.” Because the Board must decide the appeal on remand, we conclude that § 7107(b) requires the Board to afford the appellant an opportunity for another hearing.”  Id. at *10.
The Court summarized by stating “In sum, the text of § 7107(b) better supports Cook’s
argument that the Board must provide a claimant an opportunity for a hearing before it decides every appeal, including after remand from the Veterans Court. We therefore affirm the Veterans Court’s decision.”  Id. at *10-11.  Interestingly the Court includes a footnote stating certain remands from the CAVC involving ministerial remands may not trigger the opportunity for a hearing.
This case is important as it promises the opportunity to be heard to veterans by guaranteeing the right to a hearing on remand.  It also actually amplifies the prior Cook decision.  I had been concerned that Cook I as written may have allowed the VA to rewrite the regulations to try to gain agency deference under Chevron.  However, the way the Federal Circuit relied on the text of 7107 to render its decision, I believe such a regulatory change would be in doubt.

Decision by Judge Lourie and joined in by Judges Newman and Clevenger.

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Monday, November 19, 2018

Hedgepeth: An Incorrect Reduction and Severance of TDIU and PTSD


Hedgepeth v. Wilkie, Opinion No. 17-0794, decided November 7, 2018 concerns the reduction of a PTSD rating from 70% to 0% and concerns law related to rating reductions in general, reduction of TDIU, and severance of service connection.

The veteran had been service connected and granted a rating of 70% for PTSD as well as entitlement to TDIU, but the VA subsequently reduced the 70% PTSD rating to 0% due to a change in diagnosis from PTSD to personality disorder and also reduced the veteran’s TDIU. 

This case reveals several areas of law related to reductions.  First, it discusses simple rating reductions.  Second, reductions of TDIU.  Third, severance of service connection.

Regarding simple ratings reductions, the Court noted “the Board must determine whether the reduction of the veteran's disability rating was proper and must not phrase the issue in terms of whether the veteran was entitled to an increased rating, including whether the veteran was entitled to restoration of a previous rating.”  Id. at *6.  The Court also discussed protections under 38 C.F.R. § 3.344(a) including the fact that the relied upon examinations cannot be less full and complete than the examinations resulting in the rating to be reduced and that the VA must be aware of disease subject to temporary or episodic improvement and not base reduction on any one examination.  Section 3.344 also discussed a change of diagnosis and states caution must be exercised as to whether the change is based on progression, error, or possible a new disease independent of the service connected disability.  Id.  The Court also noted that the VA must prove reductions by a preponderance of the evidence and the evidence must show an actual improvement in the veteran’s ability to function under the ordinary conditions of life and work.  Id. at *7. 

The Court then focused on TDIU reductions and referred to Section 3.343, which states TDIU will not be reduced:

in the absence of clear error, without examination showing material improvement in physical or mental condition.  Examination reports showing material improvement must be evaluated in conjunction with all the facts of record, and consideration must be given particularly to whether the veteran attained improvement under the ordinary conditions of life, i.e., while working or actively seeking work or whether the symptoms have been brought under control by prolonged rest, or generally, by following a regimen which
precludes work, and, if the latter, reduction from total disability ratings will not be considered pending reexamination after a period of employment (3 to 6 months).
. . . .
(c) Individual unemployability. (1) In reducing a rating of 100 percent serviceconnected disability based on individual unemployability . . . caution must be exercised in such a determination that actual employability is established by clear and convincing evidence. . . . (2) If a veteran with a total disability rating for compensation purposes based on
individual unemployability begins to engage in a substantially gainful occupation . . . the veteran's rating may not be reduced solely on the basis of having secured and followed such substantially gainful occupation unless the veteran maintains the occupation for a period of 12 consecutive months.

Id. at *7

The Court then focused on the law related to severance of service connection beginning by stating it “will be severed only where evidence establishes that it is clearly and unmistakably erroneous (the burden of proof being on the Government)." 38 C.F.R. § 3.105(d) (2018).”  Id. at*8.  The Court further notes a change in diagnosis may be lead to severance if the “proper medical authority certifies that, in the light of all accumulated evidence, the diagnosis on which service connection was predicated is clearly erroneous. This certification must be accompanied by a summary of the facts, findings, and reasons
supporting the conclusion.”  Id. at *8.

Here, the VA argued the law on reductions and severance did not apply because it “reattributed” the veteran’s psychological symptoms to a non-service connected disability. Id. at *5.  The Court rejected this argument saying:

The applicable laws and regulations do not provide, as the Secretary attempts to argue, for an avenue of "reattribution" of symptoms from a service-connected condition to a non-service connected condition in order to reduce or eliminate VA benefits, and, significantly, in his brief, the Secretary cites to no such laws, regulations, or caselaw supporting his "reattribution" argument. Finding that the avenue for elimination of service-connected benefits of "reattribution" of symptoms exists would allow for the Board to circumvent the protections set up by Congress and VA to safeguard against the very thing that has occurred in this case – VA's elimination of a longstanding award of benefits without following the proper procedural steps and overcoming the heightened burden on the government to ensure that the elimination of benefits was warranted.

Id. at *9.

The Court continued to explain that

the Board chose the avenue of a rating reduction to eliminate the veteran's award of benefits by reducing his protected rating from 70% to 0%, and discontinuing his TDIU award effective after April 1, 2016. In doing so, the Board committed two separate errors. First, the Board failed to properly apply §§ 3.343 and 3.344, which, respectively, require VA to find clear and convincing evidence of employability before discontinuing TDIU and "material improvement" of symptoms before reducing a disability rating.  Second, the Board failed to apply to the appellant's case the statutes, regulations, and caselaw
governing severance of service connection.

Id. at *10.

Regarding the reduction of the PTSD rating, the Court first noted all medical evidence showed the veteran’s mental health symptoms had not improved and explained that “although the Board attempted to frame its decision in terms of the § 3.344 requirement of "material improvement," a review of the Board's reasoning reveals that, actually, the Board's "reduction" of the appellant's rating from 70% to 0% was based on the medical evidence of record showing a change of diagnosis from PTSD to a personality disorder.”  Id. at *10.  It then explained the Board should have discussed whether the veteran’s change in diagnosis was related to a progression of an earlier diagnosis, error, or a new disease.  Id. at *11. 

Regarding TDIU, the Court stated the Board failed to consider or apply Section 3.343.  It noted the  

Board improperly framed the issue on appeal as "entitlement" to non-schedular TDIU after April 1, 2016, since "the [v]eteran did not satisfy the schedular requirements for TDIU beginning April 1, 2016, because of the RO's rating reduction for the [v]eteran's psychiatric disability." R. at 14. A review of the record shows that the issue on appeal should have properly been framed as discontinuance of TDIU effective from April 1, 2016.  VA's framing the issue as one of entitlement to TDIU rather than discontinuance of benefits is significant because, by doing so, VA wrongly shifted the burden of proof from VA to the appellant.

Id. at *11.

The Court also considered whether the VA should have applied laws related to severance of service connection and answered affirmatively that the VA had failed.  The Court explained:

the Board clearly based the elimination of VA benefits in this case on medical evidence showing a change of diagnosis from PTSD to personality disorder.  Under these circumstances, the applicable law and regulations require VA to initiate and conduct severance of service connection proceedings before eliminating service-connected VA benefits.  The Board may not, without going through the proper channels of severance, perform a de facto severance by attempting to apply the regulations governing rating reductions while also finding that the "reduction" is based upon a change of diagnosis rather than material improvement of symptoms.

Id. at *13.

The Court further found the reductions were void and remanded for reinstatement of the ratings.  It further stated “If VA wishes to pursue the matter of severance of benefits for service-connected PTSD, it must initiate a proper severance proceeding through the proper procedural channels and meet the high standard of proof placed upon VA in such proceedings.”  Id. at *14.

This case shows the increasing tendency of the VA to reduce ratings and how they will defend this mistaken reductions to extreme lengths.

The opinion was by Senior Judge Moorman and joined in by Judges Greenberg and Toth. 

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Thursday, November 15, 2018

Moody: How to Combined Ratings to Determine Entitlement to Schedular


Moody v. Wilkie, Opinion No. 16-1707, decided November 8, 2018 relies heavily on Gazelle v. Shulkin, 868 F.3d 1006 (Fed. Cir. 2017) to discuss how ratings are combined to determine entitlement to scheduler TDIU and determine that the VA’s combined ratings table is used.

The Court explained:

Under § 4.16(a), the Board may award schedular TDIU in the first instance when a veteran meets specified rating criteria, such as having a single service-connected disability rated 60% or higher. This regulation also provides that certain kinds of disabilities—for example, those originating from the same event—"will be considered as one disability." 38 C.F.R. § 4.16(a) (2018). The issue here is whether the quoted language directs the method by which multiple disability ratings are aggregated to determine whether a claimant exceeds the 60% threshold necessary to claim schedular TDIU.

We conclude that § 4.16(a) unambiguously requires VA to use its combined ratings table when aggregating disabilities for the purpose of considering them "as one disability" and that the Board, therefore, correctly concluded that it could not consider schedular TDIU at that time.

Id. at *1-2.

It this case, the Board determined the veteran’s disabilities shared a common origin and should be deemed a single disability for TDIU purposes.  Specifically, they involved a 40% lumbar disability and two 10% disabilities for the sciatic nerve.  Using the combined rating table, these would add up to a 50% rating whereas simply adding them would result in a 60% rating.  The Board used the combined rating table and determined the veteran did not qualify for scheduler TDIU.  Id. at *5.  On appeal, the veteran argued the combined rating table should not be used and if added, he would qualify for scheduler TDIU.  This was particularly important as the Board actually determined the veteran was unemployable due to his service connected disabilities.

The Court focused on a statutory interpretation of the term in 4.16(a) “will be considered as one disability” for scheduler TDIU purposes.  The Court noted the language of the specific regulation does not identify the method by which disabilities are to be combined or aggregated into one disability.  Id. at *8.  However, the Court then looked at the overall regulatory scheme and was informed by the Gazelle decision.  Gazelle involved the special monthly compensation (SMC) statute and there the Federal Circuit determined the regulation did not identify the method on how to rate multiple disabilities and instead turned to the overall scheme relevant to SMC.  The Federal Circuit said the only method of rating multiple disabilities was to use the combine ratings table.  In this case, the Court concluded:

A similar analysis here leads to the same conclusion. As already noted, the phrase "will be considered as one disability" initially appeared in a 1941 promulgation from VA and has remained unaltered through the current version of § 4.16(a). Yet, the combined ratings table has an even earlier origin. In 1917, Congress instructed VA to set up a schedule for evaluating reductions in earning capacity resulting from "injuries or combinations of injuries," and the agency responded with the first combined ratings table in 1925. Gazelle II, 868 F.3d at 1011. Since then, a combined ratings table has been continuously reauthorized by Congress and employed by VA to aggregate multiple service-connected disabilities. Thus, in the regulatory context in which VA first used the phrase "will be considered as one disability," the combined ratings table was plainly and unambiguously the only method for combining disabilities to determine whether they qualified as one 60% or one 40% disability for schedular TDIU purposes.

Id. at *9 (internal citations omitted).

The Court addressed the veteran’s arguments, principally that (1) Gazelle concerned with a statute as opposed to a regulation and (2) the combined ratings table is only relevant to aggregating service connected disabilities when calculating the amount of compensation to be paid.  Id. at *9.  The Court thought the first argument was a difference without distinction.  Regarding the second, it determined the combined rating table is

meant to capture the dynamic where additional disabilities accrue in a person already functioning at less than 100% earning capacity.  In such circumstances, the sum is not simply the combination of each isolated part, as if those parts presented themselves alone in a person of otherwise optimal ability.  Rather, each additional disability further limits the earning capacity of a person already functioning at less than 100% by virtue of other disabilities. Once the reasoning behind the approach of the combined ratings table is understood, it is clear why simply adding multiple disability ratings in any VA context—not simply when calculating VA compensation payments—would likely overstate a
veteran's actual disability level and could even result in disability assessments greater than 100%.

Id. at *10 (emphasis added).

However, it appears there was evidence of a higher sciatic rating that might push the veteran over the 60% required rating and the Board committed a reasons and bases error by not addressing it and that there was evidence the service connected disabilities might cause or aggravate the veteran’s depression and the Board should have considered whether a medical opinion was necessary to answer the question.  Id. at *11-14.  Therefore, the Court remanded the case to the Board.

The panel included Judges Schoelen, Pietsch, and Toth and the opinion was by signed per curiam.  However, Judges Pietsch and Toth wrote concurrences and dissents.  Judge Pietsch agreed with the reasoning regarding the use of the combined ratings table, but thought the remand essentially mooted the need to discuss this issue and it was perhaps not the best use of judicial resources to render the opinion. 

Judge Toth wrote to state he agreed with the discussion regarding the use of the combined ratings table, but that the reasoning regarding the possible need for a medical examination for depression was incorrect.  He argued the Board’s findings are reviewed under a clear error standard but that the Court essentially conducted its own review of the record.  He focused on the majority view that the general lay statements made to a medical practitioner were enough to require a full discussion by the Board, but believes the Board addressed them plausibly and there was nothing to determine its conclusion was clearly erroneous.  Judge Toth is clearly arguing for more practical deference to the factual findings of the Board. 

This is an issue that has been in play for years and now appears to be settled.  The result in Gazelle probably made this foreordained and I do not believe review by the Federal Circuit will result in any change.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Garcia: A Second CUE Claim is Not Allowed


Garcia v. Wilkie, Opinion Number 2018-1038 is a Federal Circuit decision that concerns what happens when a veteran seeks to file a second CUE claim.

The veteran submitted a claim in 2002 which was denied by the Board in 2006, appealed to the Veterans Court, but then dismissed by the veteran—at which time the decision became final.

The veteran then filed a CUE claim attacking the 2006 Board decision.  This resulted in a Board denial in 2010.  In filings to the Board and Veterans Court, new allegations of CUE were raised after the 2010 decision denying CUE.  The Veterans Court found those new allegations of CUE made in the subsequent filings were barred by the regulation. 

The veteran focused on a 2005 C&P examination which was initially positive.  However, the VA’s Appeals Management Center sent a second request to the physician essentially pointing out problems with the positive opinion.  The examiner then issued a one sentence addendum which did not support service connection.  This resulted in a Supplemental Statement of the Case again denying service connection.  This was appealed and the American Legion argued on behalf of the veteran that the medical opinion did not take into account evidence that would support the claim for benefits.  However, the brief did not challenge the AMC’s request to the physician for an addendum. 

In the veteran’s 2007 CUE claim and subsequent 2008 CUE motion to the Board, he argued:

the record supported “several independent medical conclusions” of service connection, that he was entitled to more assistance from the VA in light of the loss of his medical records in the 1973 fire, and that he was entitled to the benefit of the doubt on the issue of service connection “[g]iven the evidence available at the time, including the testimony of [Mr. Garcia] and the reports of various medical providers.” J.A. 63–65. He did not argue that the Appeals Management Center had improperly pressured Dr. Greene to change her service-connection conclusion or that his right to constitutional due process had been violated. Nor did he point to or rely on the testimony that Mrs. Garcia gave at the 2004 Board hearing.

Id. at *6.

The CUE claim was denied in April 2010.  A July 2010 motion to reconsider argued “‘counsel [in earlier filings] may have not adequately notified the Board of portions of the record which bear directly upon the C.U.E. issue at bar,’—specifically, Mrs. Garcia’s 2004 Board testimony, which he claimed indicated the existence of a paranoia disorder when the two began dating soon after he returned from service.”  Id. at *6.  The Board denied saying the testimony may have impacted the weighing of evidence, but any failure to consider the testimony did not constitute clear and unmistakable error.

The veteran appealed to the Veterans Court arguing the AMC’s second request denied him due process. The Veterans Court denied on that ground saying the due process allegation was not presented to the Board.  However, the Court did grant a remand based on the motion to reconsider in light of the wife’s testimony.  On remand, the Board ruled against the veteran.  A motion to reconsider again addressed the due process argument, the motion was denied.  The veteran again appealed to the Veterans Court arguing

the Appeals Management Center’s actions regarding Dr. Greene violated her late husband’s right to due process and that the Board’s failure to consider her testimony was clear and unmistakable error. The Veterans Court again found that the allegation of a due process violation had not been properly presented to the Board. And it again remanded the matter of Mrs. Garcia’s testimony for further consideration.

Id. at *8.

The Board again denied and she again appealed to the Veterans Court on both issues. 
The Veterans Court found neither allegation had been presented to the Board in Mr. Garcia’s CUE motion or before the Board issued its decision on that CUE motion in 2010. Therefore, the Veterans Court ruled 38 C.F.R. § 20.1409(c) “requires that all possible errors in a final Board decision be raised at the time a motion for revision of that Board decision based on CUE is filed,” barring “later CUE challenges to [that] Board decision.” Id. at *8-9.

The Federal Circuit began its analysis by noting a veteran can revise a Board denial after final by either presenting new and material evidence to reopen the claim or showing clear and unmistakable error.  It then lays out the basic law to CUE claims. 

First, the standard for relief is high--“Clear and unmistakable error is a very specific and rare kind of error. It is the kind of error, of fact or of law, that when called to the attention of later reviewers compels the conclusion, to which reasonable minds could not differ, that the result would have been manifestly different but for the error.”  Id. at *10.  Second, the pleading requirements are demand, and place the onus on the veteran to specifically raise each issue.  Third, a veteran is permitted only one CUE challenge to a Board decision on any given disability claim.

The Court stated:

Regarding the alleged due process violation, we limit our ruling to the situation presented here: undisputed facts demonstrate that the allegation could have been, but was not, presented in the 2008 CUE motion. The parties agree, and the record clearly shows, that Dr. Greene’s initial examination report, the Appeals Management Center’s follow-up request, and Dr. Greene’s addendum were provided or were available to Mr. Garcia in 2006, at the time he submitted his brief to the Board in support of his claim for benefits.
The parties also do not dispute that Mr. Garcia first alleged the constitutional due process
violation in 2011 in his appeal to the Veterans Court of the Board’s 2010 decision denying his CUE motion. In these circumstances, the Veterans Court properly found
that Mr. Garcia did not raise a due process challenge in his initial CUE motion or, indeed, until after the Board ruled on that motion.

Id. at *14.

While limiting its ruling to, the Court also was careful to leave the door open to including the arguments made as amendments to the initial motion if a decision on the CUE claim has not actually been made.  Id. at *13.

The Court also notes the Veteran Court found the due process violation argument was no longer permitted at the time the veteran presented it because of the bar on presenting multiple CUE motions.  The veteran argued a constitutional challenge is special and simply not subject to the rule against successive allegations of CUE.  The Court rejected this argument stating “The particular due process challenge at issue here was readily available to Mr. Garcia at the time of the 2008 CUE challenge. We see no constitutional difficulty in the regulation’s channeling of an available CUE challenge on this basis to the initial CUE motion, with CUE relief on this basis not thereafter available.”  Id. at *16.

This case reveals the need to include with specificity all allegations to be made in a CUE motion.  It also reveals that repeated attacks on a final Board or Court decision are unlikely to prevail.  While the result is harsh, the decision leaves open the door to other issues that might tilt the equities toward the veteran.

Decision by Judge Taranto and joined by Judge O’Malley and Reyna.

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Monday, November 12, 2018

English: Lay Evidence, Medical Evidence and Knee Instability


English v. Wilkie, Case Number 17-2083, decided November 1, 2018 considers a rating of knee instability when there are statements by the veteran complaining of knee istability but the medical examinations do not find such instability.

The Court determined:

As to lateral instability under DC 5257, as discussed below, we find significant that in Petitti v. McDonald, the Court held that when a "regulation does not speak to the type of evidence required . . . [it] certainly does not, by its terms, restrict evidence to 'objective' evidence." 27 Vet.App. 415, 427 (2015). DC 5257 doesn't speak to the type of evidence required and, thus, objective medical evidence isn't required to establish lateral knee instability under that DC. The Board can't categorically find objective medical evidence more probative than lay evidence with respect to this DC without supporting its conclusion with an adequate statement of reasons or bases.

Id. at *1-2.

In this case, the Board’s analysis stated  it had “reviewed all of the evidence in the [v]eteran's claims file, with an emphasis on the medical evidence for the issue on appeal." Id. at *4.  The Court then explained:

The most natural reading of the decision on appeal is that the Board was working under the impression that objective medical evidence of lateral knee instability is required. The Board began its analysis section with the statement that it put "emphasis" on the medical evidence of record. R. at 8. The Board didn't explain why it did so. At other points, it appears that the Board determined that objective medical evidence is categorically more probative than lay evidence under DC 5257 with respect to lateral instability of the knee. And its statement, that "even if the [v]eteran sincerely believes that his knee experiences instability, instability itself, can be clinically tested for and diagnosed," only augments this suggestion that the Board didn't consider—or at least didn't consider fully—the lay evidence of lateral knee instability. R. at 10. To the extent the Board may have favored objective medical evidence over lay evidence, without any supporting reasons or bases for that finding, the Board erred.

In that regard, nothing in DC 5257 provides that objective medical evidence is required or is to be favored over lay evidence. 38 C.F.R. § 4.71a, DC 5257. Thus, under Petitti, "[it] certainly does not, by its terms, restrict evidence to 'objective' evidence." 27 Vet.App. at 427. The Board appears to have read a requirement into DC 5257 that's not there.

Id. at *5-6.

The Court then considered if the Board simply determined lay evidence of instability was not competent and determined that would also be error because:

the Board didn't explain on what basis it may have implicitly concluded that, on the question of lateral instability, medical evidence is categorically more probative than lay evidence or that lay evidence is not competent at all. If the Board decides that lay evidence isn't competent on this question, it must do so clearly and with an appropriate supporting rationale. We caution the Board on remand that, when assessing whether lateral knee instability is the type of symptom about which a lay person is competent to testify, it must remain cognizant of the prohibition on making independent medical judgments.

Id. at *6.

The Court also considered functional loss should have resulted in a higher rating that frequent flare-ups that limited his mobility and standing and resulted in the use of a brace and cane resulted in a disability picture best approximating a higher rating.  The agreed the Board did not adequate explain its conclusion when the Board simply stated: “limited mobility/decrease[d] range of motion is appropriately contemplated within the criteria. As such, the Board does not find that an increased rating is warranted for the [v]eteran's noted functional loss in excess of the provided 10 percent already granted for painful and limited motion.”  Id. at *8.  The Court noted the Board did not address whether functional loss during flare-ups limited motion equivalent to the next higher rating and did not address some favorable evidence.  Id. at *8. 

This is a helpful decision to veterans as it is not unusual for veterans to have many complaints of instability in the records and yet the C&P examiner still does not record that instability.  This case will provide a roadmap toward winning those cases.  The case also shows that the VA really is required to drill down into the result of functional loss on flare-ups, something they rarely do well.

The decision was by Judge Allen, joined in by Judges Schoelen and Meredith.

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