National Organization of Veterans Advocates, Inc. v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs ( 2013 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF VETERANS
    ADVOCATES, INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS,
    Respondent.
    ______________________
    2011-7191
    ______________________
    On petition for review pursuant to 38 U.S.C. Section
    502.
    ______________________
    ROMAN MARTINEZ, Latham & Watkins, LLP, of Wash-
    ington, DC, argued for petitioner.
    JOHN J. TODOR, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation
    Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of
    Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for respondent. With
    him on the brief were STUART F. DELERY, Acting Assistant
    Attorney General, JEANNE E. DAVIDSON, Director, and
    TODD M. HUGHES, Deputy Director. Of counsel on the
    brief were MICHAEL J. TIMINSKI, Deputy Assistant Gen-
    eral Counsel, and JONATHAN TAYLOR, Attorney, United
    States Department of Veterans Affairs, of Washington,
    DC,
    2                      NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI
    Before O’MALLEY, PLAGER, AND REYNA, Circuit Judges.
    PLAGER, Circuit Judge.
    ______________________
    ORDER
    ______________________
    The National Organization of Veterans’ Advocates,
    Inc. (NOVA) petitioned us to review a rule promulgated
    by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The rule
    eliminated certain procedural and appellate rights for
    veterans appearing before the agency’s Board of Veterans’
    Appeals (Board). During the briefing process before this
    court, it became clear to all parties involved that the
    promulgated rule was invalid. In spite of this—and
    contrary to express promises from VA to NOVA and this
    court—the Board in subsequent decisions was allowed to
    continue to follow the invalid rule.
    Because we find the Government’s conduct in this
    case to be potentially sanctionable, this is an Order for
    the Government to show cause why sanctions should not
    be imposed on the responsible officials. So there will be
    no misunderstanding, we explain in detail the conduct we
    consider sanctionable. We also identify the harms we
    consider to have resulted from the Government’s conduct,
    and suggest ways these harms could be alleviated; the
    Government’s showing in response to this Order will bear
    on whether sanctions are imposed, and the nature and
    extent of any such sanctions.
    BACKGROUND
    The Department of Veterans Affairs administers the
    laws providing benefits and other services to veterans.
    See 
    38 U.S.C. § 301
     (2006); see also Henderson v. Shinseki,
    
    131 S. Ct. 1197
    , 1200 (2011). A veteran seeking benefits
    NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI                  3
    may submit a claim to a VA regional office, which pro-
    cesses the claim and decides whether to grant benefits to
    the veteran. If the veteran disagrees with the regional
    office’s decision, the veteran may request that the Board
    of Veterans’ Appeals review the regional office’s determi-
    nation. See 
    38 U.S.C. § 7104
    .
    The veterans’ benefits system has been calibrated
    with uniquely pro-claimant principles. Hodge v. West, 
    155 F.3d 1356
    , 1362 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“This court and the
    Supreme Court both have long recognized that the char-
    acter of the veterans’ benefits statutes is strongly and
    uniquely pro-claimant.”). Consistent with these pro-
    claimant principles, and pursuant to statute, the VA
    regulations in 
    38 C.F.R. § 3.103
     provide for certain proce-
    dural due process and appellate rights for veterans in-
    volved in VA adjudications.
    These procedural and appellate rights require VA offi-
    cials to “explain fully the issues and suggest the submis-
    sion of evidence which the claimant may have overlooked
    and which would be of advantage to the claimant’s posi-
    tion.” § 3.103(c)(2). They also require the VA “to assist a
    claimant in developing the facts pertinent to [his or her]
    claim” and “to render a decision which grants every
    benefit that can be supported in law while protecting the
    interests of the Government.” § 3.103(a). Importantly,
    the VA has consistently applied the § 3.103 rights both to
    hearings conducted at the regional offices level and in
    appellate hearings conducted before the Board of Veter-
    ans’ Appeals. See, e.g., Douglas v. Derwinski, 
    2 Vet. App. 435
    , 440–42 (1992), aff’g on this ground Douglas v. Der-
    winski, 
    2 Vet. App. 103
    , 110 (1992); Costantino v. West, 
    12 Vet. App. 517
    , 520 (1999).
    On August 23, 2011, VA issued an immediately-
    effective new rule (the “2011 Rule”) that eliminated some
    of the rights previously provided under § 3.103. See Rules
    Governing Hearings Before the Agency of Original Juris-
    4                      NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI
    diction and the Board of Veterans’ Appeals, Clarification,
    
    76 Fed. Reg. 52,572
    -01 (Aug. 23, 2011). The 2011 Rule
    limited the provisions governing hearings under § 3.103
    so that they applied “only to hearings conducted before
    the VA office having original jurisdiction over the claim.”
    Id. at 52,574 (emphasis added). In other words, veterans
    would no longer have the previously available procedural
    due process and appellate rights during board appeals.
    Despite this significant departure from the pro-claimant
    procedures espoused by § 3.103, VA stated that the
    change “merely clarifie[d] current procedures” and there-
    fore was excepted from the notice-and-comment and
    delayed effective date requirements of the Administrative
    Procedure Act, 
    5 U.S.C. § 500
     et seq. (APA). 
    Id. at 52,573
    .
    On September 9, 2011, NOVA petitioned us to review
    the 2011 Rule, arguing that VA promulgated the 2011
    Rule without following the mandatory notice-and-
    comment requirements of the APA set forth in 
    5 U.S.C. § 553
    . NOVA subsequently argued that VA’s written
    explanation for the 2011 Rule also contained significant
    errors of fact and logic, rendering it arbitrary and capri-
    cious under 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A).
    While NOVA initially petitioned us to review the va-
    lidity of the 2011 Rule, VA’s conduct during the briefing
    process before this court quickly generated another dis-
    pute. NOVA submitted its opening brief to us on Decem-
    ber 22, 2011. Several days before VA’s responsive brief
    was due, VA petitioned for a first enlargement of time to
    file its brief due to “other important matters.” Resp’t’s
    Mot. at 2, January 27, 2012. We granted VA’s petition,
    stating that no further extensions should be expected.
    On March 5, 2012, VA petitioned for a second en-
    largement of time. VA stated in its petition that it
    planned to publish a repeal of the 2011 Rule in the Feder-
    al Register. In discussions with VA regarding the peti-
    tion, NOVA had indicated that it would not oppose VA’s
    NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI                    5
    petition, but only if VA promised not to apply the invalid
    2011 Rule moving forward. VA agreed. VA represented
    to both NOVA and to this court that “the Department of
    Veterans Affairs (including the Board of Veterans’ Ap-
    peals) will not apply the provisions of the August 23, 2011
    amendment between now and when the repeal of that
    amendment takes effect,” and thus, “the requested exten-
    sion would not create any prejudice to petitioner.”
    Resp’t’s Second Mot. at 3. In light of these representa-
    tions, we once again granted VA’s petition, indicating that
    no further extensions should be anticipated.
    Having already received two extensions of time, on
    April 27, 2012, VA petitioned for a third enlargement of
    time. VA stated that it wanted to allow the then pub-
    lished repeal to become effective prior to submitting its
    brief. 1 VA’s third petition was prefaced upon and recon-
    firmed the Government’s commitment not to apply the
    provisions of the 2011 Rule—which VA by that point had
    publicly admitted was a violation of the APA. NOVA
    opposed the extension of time with well-founded concerns
    that any additional delay would result in more cases
    becoming final—making it significantly harder, and
    perhaps impossible, for some veterans harmed by the
    invalid rule to obtain relief. In response, VA stated that it
    was not aware of “any instances” in which the 2011 Rule
    was applied after March 5, 2012, but if NOVA identified
    any cases, the cases would be “investigated and dealt with
    by the VA Office of the General Counsel.” Reply Supp.
    Resp’t’s Third Mot. at 5, May 3, 2012. In light of these
    1   The VA issued a repeal on April 18, 2012, stating
    that the VA “should have followed the notice-and-
    comment procedure of the Administrative Procedure Act
    (APA).” Rules Governing Hearings Before the Agency of
    Original Jurisdiction and the Board of Veterans’ Appeals;
    Repeal of Prior Rule Change, 
    77 Fed. Reg. 23,128
    -01,
    23,128 (April 18, 2012).
    6                      NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI
    representations, we ignored our twice stated unwilling-
    ness to allow further extensions and granted this third
    extension of time.
    Despite VA’s repeated commitment not to apply the
    invalid 2011 Rule, NOVA has submitted papers to this
    court indicating that the Board relied upon the 2011 Rule
    in a substantial number of cases after March 5, 2012.
    NOVA provided a list of the cases to VA in hopes that the
    VA would live up to its word to investigate and deal with
    the cases; VA has declined to do so.
    Jurisdiction to review this case arose under 
    38 U.S.C. § 502
    . We also have jurisdiction to review the Govern-
    ment’s misconduct as a collateral issue, regardless of any
    concession VA now makes regarding the continued vitali-
    ty of the 2011 Rule. See Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
    
    496 U.S. 384
    , 395–96 (1990) (noting that proceedings
    relating to costs, attorneys’ fees, contempt(s), and other
    sanctions are collateral to the original proceeding and
    may be heard even after the original proceeding has been
    terminated).
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    We first address the validity of the 2011 Rule. In its
    brief, NOVA argued that VA promulgated the 2011 Rule
    without following the mandatory notice-and-comment
    requirements set forth in 
    5 U.S.C. § 553
     of the APA.
    NOVA argued that the 2011 Rule was a substantive rule
    and VA’s actions ran afoul of our decision in Military
    Order of Purple Heart of USA v. Sec’y of Veterans Affairs,
    
    580 F.3d 1293
     (Fed. Cir. 2009).
    We find NOVA’s arguments regarding VA’s violations
    of the APA compelling, and ultimately, so did the Gov-
    ernment. In fact, to its credit the Department of Justice
    refused to defend the procedural validity of the 2011 Rule,
    and VA issued a repeal of the Rule. This court also noted
    NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI                  7
    from the bench at oral argument—and Government
    counsel agreed—that the 2011 Rule was void ab initio.
    After oral argument, VA issued an addendum to its repeal
    of the 2011 Rule confirming that the repeal is retroactive
    and “appl[ies] to decisions issued by the Board on or after
    August 23, 2011,” the date that the Rule at issue was first
    promulgated.     Rules Governing Hearings Before the
    Agency of Original Jurisdiction and the Board of Veter-
    ans’ Appeals; Repeal of Prior Rule Change, 
    77 Fed. Reg. 70,686
    -01, 70,686 (November 27, 2012). The official
    repeal of the 2011 Rule and the concessions made at oral
    argument confirm the invalidity of the 2011 Rule, and
    render any further discussion regarding the validity of the
    Rule unnecessary.
    II.
    The issue remaining before us is what action we
    should take in response to VA’s conduct, including its
    failure to abide by its commitments. We first address why
    we believe that action on our part is appropriate.
    A.
    The VA’s conduct in this matter troubles the court on
    multiple levels. First, VA’s conduct did not involve an
    isolated mistake. Starting on March 5, 2012, VA began
    representing in court filings and in other communications
    with NOVA that it would immediately stop applying the
    2011 Rule. VA also made various representations imply-
    ing that the Board was not applying the Rule. In spite of
    these representations, NOVA identified sixty cases in
    which the invalid 2011 Rule may have been applied—and
    that was just in the month of March. Thirty of these
    cases expressly refer to the invalid 2011 Rule, and many
    if not all of these thirty cases declare that the Rule ren-
    ders § 3.103 inapplicable. 2 We are only left to wonder
    2    For purposes of this Order we accept NOVA’s da-
    ta, although the Government is entitled to challenge the
    8                      NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI
    how VA was able to represent to us in its May Supple-
    mental Reply that it was not aware of “any instances” in
    which the Board applied the 2011 Rule after March 5th.
    In more than one instance, VA said that it would in-
    vestigate and rectify or deal with any application of the
    invalid 2011 Rule that occurred after March 5, 2012.
    Indeed, the Government concedes that it “repeatedly” told
    NOVA that if NOVA found any mistakes, then the Gov-
    ernment would “inform the VA Office of the General
    Counsel to rectify the matter.” Reply Supp. Resp’t’s Third
    Mot. at 5, May 3, 2012. NOVA identified cases to VA, and
    from the record before us, it appears that VA has failed to
    honor its commitments. 3
    As a consequence, VA’s conduct resulted in harm to
    NOVA, its attorneys, and this court. Each has been
    required to divert resources from other important activi-
    ties in order to address conduct that should never have
    occurred in the first place. Worse yet, VA’s conduct has
    potentially harmed not just plaintiff NOVA’s organization
    but the very individuals it represents and that VA is
    tasked with assisting. At least as early as March 5, 2012,
    the Government acknowledged that the 2011 Rule was
    invalid under the APA, but VA allowed the Rule to be
    applied well beyond that date. Applying the invalid 2011
    Rule stripped veterans of assistance that the Board would
    have otherwise been required to provide. Given this
    context, VA’s failure promptly to stop the Board from
    using the 2011 Rule is entirely unacceptable.
    numbers in its response. We are mindful that the exact
    number of affected veterans is not the issue—if one of the
    injured veterans represented by NOVA was denied the
    benefits the law provides, it would be one too many.
    3   Apparently VA started analyzing cases but that
    effort was not carried out.
    NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI                  9
    Finally, VA’s conduct troubles the court because, ra-
    ther than remedy harm caused by its broken promises,
    VA attempted to shift the burden to others such as
    NOVA, attorneys assisting veterans (oftentimes on a pro-
    bono basis), or to the harmed veterans themselves. In
    particular, VA indicated in a letter to NOVA dated No-
    vember 5, 2012, 4 that the routine appellate (or post-
    decisional, in the case of Board reconsiderations) process
    was the most appropriate venue for resolving affected
    cases. VA indicated in its 2011 Rule addendum that
    motions for reconsideration and appeals provided “ade-
    quate avenues of relief to any claimants who may have
    been adversely affected by the repealed rule.” Rules
    Governing Hearings Before the Agency of Original Juris-
    diction and the Board of Veterans’ Appeals; Repeal of
    Prior Rule Change, 
    77 Fed. Reg. 70,686
    -01, 70,687 (No-
    vember 27, 2012). The usual procedural processes, initi-
    ated by the claimant, for relief from erroneous decisions
    may be appropriate under usual circumstances; here they
    are not.
    VA attempted to justify its conduct at oral argument,
    arguing that it did not intentionally violate its commit-
    ments and that its actions were not in bad faith. But the
    petitions for extension of time were not based upon repre-
    sentations of intent to perform certain actions, but rather
    were based upon representations that those actions were
    actually being performed. VA’s commitments required
    VA to ensure that its statements to NOVA and this court
    were true and that the invalid Rule was not being ap-
    plied; only by doing so could VA avoid harming the parties
    involved. The unwarranted denial of benefits means real-
    4   Letter from John J. Todor, Senior Trial Counsel,
    U.S. Dep’t of Justice, to Roman Martinez, Esq., counsel
    for NOVA (November 5, 2012) (submitted in Notice of
    Supplemental Authority Pursuant to Rule 28(j)).
    10                      NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI
    world consequences to veterans. Promises of hypothetical
    relief do not pay for food or provide needed medical care.
    Additionally, VA’s conduct and written communica-
    tions refute its assertions that its violations were unin-
    tentional. For example, VA effectively stated that it
    would not investigate and deal with illegal application of
    the 2011 Rule because it would burdensome. 5 In other
    words, VA was well aware of this commitment and inten-
    tionally elected not to fulfill it.
    VA also alleges that it instructed the Board to cease
    applying the Rule. VA went as far as to label NOVA’s
    concerns unfounded because the Board had supposedly
    been instructed to cease applying the rule on March 5,
    2012. See Reply Supp. Resp’t’s Third Mot. at 5, May 3,
    2012. However, the only communication that VA con-
    firms actually reached the Board members and their staff
    was a memorandum circulated on April 4, 2012, one
    month after the promised date. VA also alleged that the
    Board’s Principal Deputy Vice Chairman had stated that
    her office would instruct the Board to cease applying the
    amendments to § 3.103. 6 The record VA presented to the
    court, however, never confirms if (or when) this instruc-
    tion actually occurred. And the Board’s extensive reliance
    on the invalid 2011 Rule throughout the month of March
    2012 confirms that—irrespective of what VA alleges that
    it did—VA failed to ensure that the 2011 Rule was not
    being applied by the Board.
    5  “Upon review, the VA Office of General Counsel
    concluded that your request that VA identify and remedy
    any cases of prejudice due to the Board’s application of
    the August 23 amendments since March 5, 2012, would
    involve extensive review and would be likely to identify
    very few, if any, cases of specific and remediable preju-
    dice.” Letter from John J. Todor, supra note 4.
    6   See Letter from John J. Todor, supra note 4.
    NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI                   11
    B.
    VA’s failure to abide by its commitments to this court
    and opposing counsel raises the question of whether we
    should exercise our inherent or statutory powers to issue
    sanctions against the agency and the responsible officials.
    Courts of justice are vested by their very creation with
    power “to impose silence, respect, and decorum, in their
    presence, and submission to their lawful mandates.”
    Anderson v. Dunn, 
    19 U.S. 204
    , 227 (1821). These powers
    include the power to “manage their own affairs so as to
    achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of cases.”
    Link v. Wabash R. Co., 
    370 U.S. 626
    , 630–31 (1962). A
    court may rely on its inherent powers to award monetary
    sanctions when a party has acted in “bad faith, vexatious-
    ly, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons.” Chambers v.
    NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 45–46 (1991).
    Courts of justice also have the ability to “fashion an
    appropriate sanction for conduct which abuses the judicial
    process.” 
    Id.
     at 44–45. And while sanctions must be
    fashioned with restraint and discretion, courts of justice
    can fashion appropriate monetary and nonmonetary
    sanctions to rectify misbehavior. Examples of sanctions
    fashioned by courts include: awarding attorneys’ fees (see
    
    id.
     at 55–58); barring a criminal defendant who disrupts a
    trial from the courtroom (see Illinois v. Allen, 
    397 U.S. 337
    (1970)); ordering a new trial on all issues (see Schreiber
    Foods, Inc. v. Beatrice Cheese, Inc., 
    402 F.3d 1198
    , 1206
    (Fed. Cir. 2005)); and issuing reprimands (see In re Bailey,
    
    182 F.3d 860
    , 864–65 (Fed. Cir. 1999)).
    Given the Government’s conduct in this case, the
    court orders the Government to show cause why it should
    not be sanctioned under this court’s inherent authority. It
    seems that sanctions may be needed to motivate VA in
    the future to treat its commitments and representations
    to this court and opposing counsel with the seriousness to
    which they are entitled.
    12                     NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI
    While the court is prepared to consider sanctions for
    misconduct by the Government and its responsible offi-
    cials, we recognize that doing so imposes additional
    burdens on all the parties as well as this court. As an
    alternative to entering into sanctions proceedings, we are
    willing to first receive and review a submission from the
    Government that 1) provides a plan for how VA intends to
    identify and rectify harms caused by VA’s failure to abide
    by its representations, and 2) explains why VA’s plan
    renders sanctions proceedings unnecessary. VA may
    already be undertaking such a plan due to VA’s emphasis
    on accountability. 7
    In preparing a plan for submission to this court, the
    Government may wish to address the following concerns:
    1. Does the VA propose to provide individual notice
    of the problem to every veteran who, during the
    relevant time period, may have had a case affect-
    ed by the Board’s erroneous application of the
    2011 Rule? 8
    7  VA proclaims to “perform in a manner at all times
    that makes [VA] accountable, responsible, and answera-
    ble to veterans and their families . . . .” Mission, Vision,
    Core Values & Goals, U.S. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs
    (October 3, 2011) http://www.va.gov/about va/mission.asp.
    8  The relevant time period ends the last date the
    Board may have applied the invalid Rule to cases before
    it. At a minimum it includes all cases heard or acted
    upon beginning March 5, 2012. Further, VA may wish to
    explain its intentions with regard to cases heard or acted
    upon from the date the invalid Rule was first promulgat-
    ed, August 2011; the Government has acknowledged that
    the Rule was void ab initio, and has publically declared
    that the repeal of the Rule “appl[ies] to decisions issued
    by the Board on or after August 23, 2011.” See supra.
    NATIONAL ORG OF VET ADV   v. SHINSEKI                  13
    2. Does the VA intend to conduct reviews of the cas-
    es heard or decided by the Board during the rele-
    vant time period, and take appropriate corrective
    action?
    3. Does the VA’s proposed plan satisfy or remedy
    each of its broken commitments to this court and
    to NOVA, including its commitments not to apply
    the 2011 Rule and to rectify harm caused thereby?
    4. Does the plan address any procedural and timeli-
    ness hurdles that may impact affected veterans
    who seek redress for the harms caused by the in-
    valid Rule, including those who seek redress di-
    rectly from the VA?
    We expect that the Government will choose to confer
    with NOVA regarding its proposed plan so that any plan
    submitted to the court fully addresses the harms caused
    by the Government’s conduct and minimizes the need for
    further orders by this court.
    CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we grant the Government a period of six-
    ty (60) days to respond to this Order To Show Cause. If
    necessary, NOVA will have a period of thirty (30) days
    following the Government’s submission in which to file a
    formal response with its comments and recommendations.
    SO ORDERED
    FOR THE COURT
    March 21, 2013                    /s/ S. Jay Plager
    Date                          S. Jay Plager
    Circuit Judge