Noah v. McDonald, Case Number 2015-0334, decided June
10, 2016 is a decision involving the request for an earlier effective date
based on a misleading VA letter to the veteran and the related constitutional Due Process arguments implicated.
The veteran applied for service connection of PTSD in 1981
and sent a misleading notice of the time required to submit evidence necessary
to complete his PTSD application. The letter stated more information was needed about his
Vietnam experiences and that the VA “must have postservice medical evidence to
support your claim.” It also stated
“Please reply within 30 days. If we have
no reply within 60 days, we will assume that you have withdrawn your claim.”
The veteran did not respond to the VA’s letter. He submitted a new claim in 2007, was granted
service connection for PTSD, and assigned a rating of 2007. He appealed the effective date. He argued he understand the 1982 letter has
requiring him to send in medical evidence showing he had PTSD and that if he
didn’t within 60 days they would close his file. Due to financial issues, he was unable to
find and submit the “required” evidence within 60 days. He stated if he had known he really had 1
year, he could have gotten the required evidence by using a medical
clinic. A 2011 private psychologist
opined he had PTSD in 1981 and 1982.
The veteran argued the Court should find the Board erred in
not considering whether his claim should be equitably tolled. He also, after urging by the Court, that
there was a due process failure by the government.
The Court found it lacked authority to equitably toll the
deadline to submit evidence by the veteran, but they reached farther and issued
a decision that did consider the Constitutional due process implications of the
VA’s misleading notice to the veteran.
Initially, the Court reiterated that a veteran’s entitlement
to disability benefits is a property interest protected by the Due Process
Clause. The Court then considered
whether Due Process Clause factors enunciated in Matthews v. Eldridge by the U.S. Supreme Court applied to this
case. First, the Court found the “special
beneficence afforded to our nation’s veterans cannot tolerate notice that
misleads the potential receipt of benefits”.
Second, the Court found the the erroneous deprivation of the veteran’s
right to benefits was great as a result of the VA’s practices. The Court noted, “This is not a matter of
whether a claimant is properly charged with knowledge of the relevant law. Rather, VA provided Mr. Noah inaccurate and
misleading notice that gave him significantly less time than the law allowed to
respond to VA’s request for information.”
Finally, the Court noted the government’s interest and burdens and
stated “once VA assumed the responsibility of providing notice of the time to
submit evidence, it is unclear to the Court how any requirement that VA provide
accurate information imposes a fiscal or claimant with accurate information.”
The Court then considered whether the veteran detrimentally
relied on the VA’s misleading notice. The
Court noted the Board disregarded the evidence on detrimental reliance because they
found the veteran was subject to the one year abandonment provision in statute
38 CFR 3.158. The Court found because
the 1982 notice letter failed to satisfy procedural due process requirements
and thus if the veteran was successful in demonstrating he relied to his
detriment on the notice, his December 1981 claim remained pending and
unadjudicated. As a result, the Court
vacated the Board’s decision and remanded the case to the Board to weigh the
evidence and assess the evidence and determine whether the veteran relied to
his detriment on the misleading notice.
Judge Lance wrote a concurring opinion stating he agreed the
case should be remanded for assessment of detrimental reliance, but stated he
would exercise judicial restraint and not discuss the Due Process arguments
until further appeal.
This case is a nice explication and application of a
Constitutional Due Process argument to a misleading notice by the VA. It is likely many such old notices exist and
can be used to argue an earlier effective date.
Special review of the veteran’s efforts to show detrimental reliance
should be used as a template for future advocates.
Decision written by Judge Schoelen and joined in by C.J.
Hagel. Concurring opinion by J. Lance.
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