Virginia T. Mayfield v. Denis McDonough ( 2023 )


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  •            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS
    NO. 21-8176
    VIRGINIA T. MAYFIELD, APPELLANT,
    V.
    DENIS MCDONOUGH,
    SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, APPELLEE.
    Before MEREDITH, TOTH, and LAURER, Judges.
    ORDER
    TOTH, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court.
    In Breedlove v. Shinseki, 
    24 Vet.App. 7
    , 20–21 (2010) (per curiam order), we concluded
    that we have the discretion to permit a movant to be substituted for an appellant who dies during
    the pendency of an appeal in this Court, provided that there is either a determination by VA or a
    concession by the Secretary that the movant is an eligible accrued-benefits claimant. Typically,
    the Secretary conditions his position regarding a substitution motion filed in this Court on how the
    regional office (RO) rules on a movant's parallel request for substitution filed with the Agency. As
    a consequence, the RO's ruling is usually dispositive on the factual question of a movant's status
    as an eligible—and thus proper—accrued-benefits claimant. Breedlove outlined some of the
    actions the Court may take when that status "legitimately is in dispute." 
    Id. at 21
    .
    In this case, we consider an issue that Breedlove did not explicitly address: Whether a
    movant dissatisfied with the RO's denial of a request for substitution may seek to have this Court
    directly review the propriety of the RO's ruling. We answer that question in the negative and
    reaffirm that the Court generally will not grant a motion for substitution unless the Agency
    determines that the movant is the appropriate party to step into the appellant's shoes. A would-be
    substitute dissatisfied with the RO's determination must challenge it through the administrative
    appeals process.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. Legal Landscape
    As a general rule in VA law, when a claimant dies, the "claim for benefits also terminates."
    Crews v. McDonough, 
    63 F.4th 37
    , 39 (Fed. Cir. 2023). But by statute, "certain successors acquire
    an interest in . . . benefits" that "were due and unpaid at the time of the [claimant's] death." Phillips
    v. Shinseki, 
    581 F.3d 1358
    , 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (quotation marks omitted). Such "accrued
    benefits" are ones to which the claimant "was entitled at death under existing ratings or decisions
    or those based on evidence in the file at date of death." 
    38 U.S.C. § 5121
    (a). For a very long time,
    an accrued-benefits claimant "could, with limited exceptions, pursue those claims only by
    restarting from the beginning and filing a new accrued benefits claim." Crews, 63 F.4th at 39. In
    this process, as with all new VA claims, the initial adjudication of an accrued-benefits claim is
    undertaken by the agency of original jurisdiction, typically the RO. Zevalkink v. Brown, 
    102 F.3d 1236
    , 1243 (Fed. Cir. 1996). And this adjudication includes determining whether the person
    pursuing accrued benefits is an appropriate claimant. That is because "[s]ection 5121 lists a number
    of potential accrued benefits claimants" and "delineates the order of preference in paying out such
    benefits." 
    Id. at 1244, 1241
    . A person in a preferred category of claimant cannot forfeit or waive
    the right to request substitution in favor of a person in a lower category of claimant. 
    38 C.F.R. § 3.1010
    (g)(4) (2023). "Thus, the determination of whether a party qualifies as an accrued benefits
    claimant necessarily involves fact finding." Zevalkink, 
    102 F.3d at 1244
    .
    But because this Court "is not a trier of fact and is not in a position to make such factual
    determination," we declined in Zevalkink to allow a surviving spouse, upon a veteran's death, to
    be substituted in his pending appeal here when her status as an accrued-benefits claimant had not
    been adjudicated by the Agency. 
    Id.
     The Federal Circuit found no error in our decision to deny
    substitution, observing that a limited remand for an accrued-benefits eligibility determination was
    permissible but not "require[d]." 
    Id.
     If the RO's determination regarding a person's status as an
    accrued-benefits claimant is adverse, "it can be appealed with a full record to the [Board] and to
    the courts." 
    Id.
    As noted above, some "limited exceptions" to this Court's general no-substitution rule later
    developed. Crews, 63 F.4th at 39. For example, Padgett v. Nicholson, 
    473 F.3d 1364
    , 1368–72
    (Fed. Cir. 2007), held that substitution could be granted nunc pro tunc in this Court when a veteran
    died after the case was submitted but before our decision issued. Yet Padgett did not disturb the
    rule that this Court "had the authority" to grant substitution to an eligible accrued-benefits
    claimant, "provided that VA made the eligibility determination in the first instance." Pekular
    v. Mansfield, 
    21 Vet.App. 495
    , 501 (2007) (emphasis added) (citing Zevalkink, 
    102 F.3d at 1244
    ).
    Then, in 2008, Congress enacted 38 U.S.C. § 5121A. Veterans' Benefits Improvement Act
    of 2008 (VBIA), 
    Pub. L. No. 110-389, § 212
    (a), 
    122 Stat. 4145
    , 4151. "[T]o remedy the
    inefficiencies and delays from restarting the process," this provision permits an accrued-benefits
    claimant to be substituted in the place of a deceased claimant. Crews, 63 F.4th at 39. It reads:
    If a claimant dies while a claim for any benefit under a law administered by the
    Secretary, or an appeal of a decision with respect to such a claim, is pending, a
    living person who would be eligible to receive accrued benefits due to the claimant
    under section 5121(a) of this title may, not later than one year after the date of the
    death of such claimant, file a request to be substituted as the claimant for the
    purposes of processing the claim to completion.
    38 U.S.C. § 5121A(a)(1). VA has promulgated rules to implement section 5121A. Among other
    things, those rules provide that a request to substitute must be filed with the agency of original
    jurisdiction, that the would-be substitute must provide evidence of eligibility to do so—that is,
    evidence showing that the person is a qualified accrued-benefits claimant—and that a denial of a
    request to substitute is appealable to the Board. See 
    38 C.F.R. § 3.1010
    (b), (d), (e)(2).
    2
    In Breedlove, the surviving spouse of a veteran who died while his appeal was pending at
    the Court (but before briefing had begun) filed a motion to substitute under the auspices of section
    5121A, and we had to determine whether the statute permitted substitution. Our analysis proceeded
    in two stages. First, we examined section 5121A's text, overall structure, and placement within
    title 38—as well as § 212(a)'s placement within the VBIA—to conclude that Congress intended
    the provision to apply only to administrative appeals before VA and not to judicial appeals before
    this Court. 24 Vet.App. at 10–14. Second, however, we reasoned that the legislation required
    reconsideration of our substitution caselaw and concluded that there was no longer a rationale "for
    foreclosing the opportunity for substitution on appeal at this Court based on the timing of the death
    of the [appellant]." Id. at 19. Accordingly, the Court spelled out the substitution procedure it would
    follow moving forward to eliminate the "potential 'zone of no substitution'" that would occur when
    a claimant dies after the issuance of a Board decision but before the submission of an appealed
    case to the Court. Id.
    Initially, consistent with Zevalkink and Pekular, there must be a determination by the RO—
    or a concession from the Secretary—with regard to "whether a particular movant is an eligible
    accrued-benefits claimant."1 Id. at 20. "This is a factual determination that . . . must be made by
    VA in the first instance" and "determined in accordance with section 5121." Id. at 20–21. To obtain
    this, the "Court may remand the question . . . , stay the appeal until a determination by VA is made,
    or direct the Secretary to inform the Court of his determination within a set period of time." Id. at
    21. And "when accrued-benefits status is established by decision below or concession by the
    Secretary, standing is established." Id. Though substitution will generally be allowed in these
    circumstances, the Court retains the discretion to deny substitution based "on considerations of
    delay, unfairness, and inefficiency." Id. But if "no one seeks substitution or the person seeking
    substitution is not an eligible accrued-benefits claimant, then . . . vacatur [of the Board decision]
    and dismissal of the appeal would be the appropriate action." Id. Later decisions from this Court
    and the Federal Circuit have filled in details, but this is the basic judicial substitution scheme
    governing the present case.
    B. Proceedings
    This case originates with veteran Jerry C. Mayfield. Following his death in July 2020, VA
    granted the request of his surviving spouse, Virginia T. Mayfield, to be substituted in his pending
    claim for special monthly (that is, non-service-connected) pension. She also filed two claims on
    her own behalf as his widow: dependency and indemnity compensation and death pension benefits.
    The Board denied all three claims in a November 2021 decision. The next month, Mrs. Mayfield
    filed a Notice of Appeal with the Court. While briefing was underway, however, counsel for Mrs.
    Mayfield informed the Court that she had passed away four months earlier in January 2022.
    Counsel promptly filed a motion of behalf of Jacquelyn W. Covington, Mrs. Mayfield's
    granddaughter, to be substituted as the appellant here. Ms. Covington asserted that she is a proper
    substitute because—having paid $640 toward her grandmother's burial expenses—she qualifies as
    an accrued-benefits claimant. See 
    38 U.S.C. § 5121
    (a)(6) (permitting a person to claim accrued
    1
    At oral argument, counsel for the Secretary said it is his understanding that, as a practical matter, the
    Secretary always conditions his position on a motion for substitution filed in this Court on the RO's accrued-benefits
    eligibility determination. Oral Argument at 31:32–32:02, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEYPNJIk3w8.
    3
    benefits up to the amount "necessary to reimburse the person who bore the expense of last sickness
    and burial"). The Court stayed normal appellate proceedings and ordered the Secretary to respond
    to the motion. He advised that the RO had not yet reached a determination on the substitution
    request Ms. Covington had filed with VA and that, consequently, he wasn't yet able to take a
    position on her motion. The Court ordered him to file an additional update within 30 days.
    At this point, substitution proceedings became increasingly fraught. On September 5, 2022,
    the Court received the first of several submissions from the movant. In this initial Solze notice, she
    informed the Court that her counsel had uncovered a VA letter stating that it had not received
    evidence that she incurred expenses related to Mrs. Mayfield's last sickness or burial. This letter,
    she maintained, reflected either oversight of the evidence she had submitted or erroneous rejection
    of that evidence. When the Secretary's next update reiterated the status quo, Ms. Covington filed
    an opposed motion for leave to submit a reply, essentially charging the RO with either
    incompetence or bad faith. On October 19, 2022, the Court issued an order holding the motion for
    leave in abeyance and instructing the Secretary within 30 days to have the Agency reach a
    determination on Ms. Covington's substitution request and to inform the Court of his position on
    the substitution motion pending here.
    Unfortunately, matters did not resolve following the Court's order. A few weeks later, Ms.
    Covington filed a second Solze notice, in which she advised that the RO informed her, before it
    could rule on her substitution request, that she would have to file Form 21-601 ("Application for
    Accrued Amounts Due a Deceased Beneficiary") instead of Form 21-0847 ("Request for
    Substitution of Claimant"), which she had already filed. She believed that this requirement was
    legally erroneous. A week after that, she filed a third Solze notice pointing out what she considered
    additional VA missteps. Then the Secretary filed his response to the Court's October 19 order, the
    gist of which was that, because Ms. Covington hadn't filed the proper form, the RO couldn't rule
    on her substitution request; and because the RO hadn't ruled on her request, the Secretary wouldn't
    take a position on the substitution motion in this Court. The Secretary also observed that the
    statutory one-year deadline for seeking substitution (January 27, 2023) was approaching. This
    elicited another opposed motion from Ms. Covington for leave to file a reply.
    Attempting to resolve this impasse, the Court issued another order in December 2022. The
    order reminded the Secretary that compliance with Court deadlines was not optional and instructed
    him within 30 days to have the RO rule on Ms. Covington's substitution request—whether on
    substantive or procedural grounds—and to inform the Court of his position on the substitution
    motion pending in this Court. The order also denied Ms. Covington's motion for leave and
    reminded her that, because "the burden for demonstrating qualification as an accrued-benefits
    claimant rests primarily with the person seeking substitution," it was her "responsibility, in
    consultation with counsel, to take appropriate action to best ensure the success of her substitution
    request pending before VA." Dec. 6, 2022, Order at 2.
    Six days later, the Secretary informed the Court that the RO had denied Ms. Covington's
    request for substitution because she had not returned Form 21P-601 and that the RO had advised
    her of the right to seek higher-level or Board review of the denial. Given the RO's resolution, the
    Secretary opposed her motion to substitute filed here. The Court granted Ms. Covington's motions
    4
    to file a reply and for initial review by a panel to resolve the substitution motion in light of the
    parties' dispute.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Although Ms. Covington seeks to litigate the propriety of the RO's denial of her substitution
    request, the central issue is whether the Court may directly review—and potentially reject—that
    RO determination when resolving a disputed substitution motion pending here. The answer is no.
    This is apparent from Breedlove and the caselaw preceding it. That the RO might deny a
    request to substitute based on its resolution of the factual issue of eligibility was clearly foreseen
    by this Court. And if "the person seeking substitution is not an eligible accrued-benefits claimant,"
    Breedlove concluded, then vacating the Board decision and dismissing the appeal "would be the
    appropriate action." Breedlove, 24 Vet.App. at 21. We never suggested that the RO's adverse ruling
    on a substitution request could be reviewed immediately in this Court. The reason for that omission
    is obvious. The Court's jurisdiction is confined to review of final Board decisions. 
    38 U.S.C. § 7266
    (a). The consequence of which is that the Court has "no authority to review RO adjudicative
    determinations" directly. Hayre v. Principi, 
    15 Vet.App. 48
    , 51 (2001), aff'd, 
    78 F. App'x 120
     (Fed.
    Cir. 2003). As Zevalkink explained, before the advent of the current substitution regime, a person
    dissatisfied with the RO's adverse determination regarding her eligibility as an accrued-benefits
    claimant could appeal that determination to the Board and, if necessary, to this Court. 
    102 F.3d at 1244
    . Breedlove did not break with this established rule. We concluded that the enactment of
    section 5121A eliminated the underpinnings of the timing-based rule against substitution in this
    Court, but our decision did not short-circuit the administrative adjudication process.2 Thus, it is
    clear from Breedlove's reasoning that the Court may not directly review the RO's adverse
    substitution determination. That being so, the Court is not permitted to address the propriety of the
    RO's reasons for denying substitution at this time.
    Ms. Covington seeks to avoid this conclusion, but her arguments are not persuasive.
    She first argues that Breedlove should be "overturned"—or at least not regarded as
    binding—in light of (what she maintains are) its conflict with Hayre v. Principi and its own internal
    contradictions. Movant's Supp. Memo. of Law at 6–7. It goes without saying that, absent
    intervening higher authority, when a precedent of this Court is on point, a panel is bound to follow
    it. See Bethea v. Derwinski, 
    2 Vet.App. 252
    , 254 (1992). No higher authority has disturbed
    Breedlove. So we may not "overturn" it. In any event, Breedlove is not in tension with other cases
    or itself.
    Hayre concerned the Court's jurisdiction and our obligation to assure ourselves that we
    have it before taking action in a case. Ms. Covington seems to rely primarily on our statement that
    "[w]e cannot accept jurisdiction simply because the parties conceded it." Hayre, 15 Vet.App. at
    2
    The Court has the discretion to stay its proceedings while the RO determines a would-be substitute's
    accrued-benefits eligibility. 24 Vet.App. at 21. Nothing in Breedlove prevents the Court, in the sound exercise of that
    discretion, from extending a stay in appropriate circumstances while a would-be substitute seeks redress before the
    Agency (such as an appeal of the RO's denial to the Board). Of course, the Court is not obliged to grant such relief
    simply because it is requested. In any event, Ms. Covington did not request a stay for appeal purposes in this case.
    5
    50. From this statement she appears to reason that, because the Court has an independent duty to
    ensure its jurisdiction, we are as entitled to dismiss a party's jurisdictional objections as we are to
    dismiss a party's jurisdictional concessions. In other words, she contends that the Court cannot
    reject jurisdiction here simply because the Secretary has not conceded that she is an eligible
    accrued-benefits claimant and thus has standing to pursue the appealed claims. Accordingly, she
    continues, the Court must conduct "a de novo review" of the RO's denial of substitution, a review
    that includes "the relevant factual determinations." Movant's Supp. Memo. of Law at 6.
    The problem with this reasoning is that it invites the Court to exercise the duty to ensure
    our jurisdiction to act by violating other jurisdictional limitations placed upon us. "Congress vested
    [this] Court with limited jurisdiction, and even the weighty interests of judicial economy cannot
    enlarge that which a statute has directly limited." Kyhn v. Shinseki, 
    716 F.3d 572
    , 578 (Fed. Cir.
    2013). In the appeals context, that "statutorily-granted jurisdiction" limits us to review of a
    "Board[ ] decision based upon the record before the Board." 
    Id.
     The RO's adjudication of a person's
    status as an accrued-benefits claimant for purposes of permitting substitution is a factual
    determination appealable to the Board. Zevalkink, 
    102 F.3d at 1244
    ; 
    38 C.F.R. § 3.1010
    (e)(2).
    Congress did not authorize this Court to review and settle a dispute over this fact-bound issue
    before the Board has made a decision on it. Hayre warned that the Court must be confident in its
    authority to act before doing so; that warning cannot be understood as a license to transgress
    statutory limits placed on such authority. See 15 Vet.App. at 56 (Kramer, C.J., concurring in part
    and dissenting in part as to dismissal) ("This Court's appellate jurisdiction derives exclusively from
    the statutory grant of authority provided by Congress and may not be extended beyond that
    permitted by law."); see also Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp., 
    486 U.S. 800
    , 818
    (1988) ("The age-old rule that a court may not in any case, even in the interest of justice, extend
    its jurisdiction where none exists has always worked injustice in particular cases."). In Hayre, our
    jurisdiction turned on whether a document constituted a valid Notice of Disagreement. 15 Vet.App.
    at 52. Because that is a legal question, Phillips v. Brown, 
    10 Vet.App. 25
    , 33–34 (1997), the Court
    could resolve it de novo without transgressing statutory limits. The same cannot be said of Ms.
    Covington's eligibility for substitution, which is a factual question committed to the RO for initial
    resolution.
    Nor is there a contradiction between Breedlove's statements that, on the one hand, the Court
    "must first obtain from the Secretary a determination as to whether a particular movant is an
    eligible accrued-benefits claimant" and, on the other, that "it remains within the Court's discretion
    to permit substitution." 24 Vet.App. at 20. A court exercises discretion not according "'to its
    inclination, but to its judgment; and its judgment is to be guided by sound legal principles.'" Martin
    v. Franklin Capital Corp., 
    546 U.S. 132
    , 139 (2005) (quoting United States v. Burr, 
    25 F. Cas. 30
    ,
    35 (CC Va. 1807) (Marshall, C. J.)). So Breedlove's reference to the Court's discretion must be
    read as cabined by the legal prerequisite that the Agency have found that "a particular movant is
    an eligible accrued-benefits claimant." 24 Vet.App. at 20. And that, in fact, is the most reasonable
    reading: Even when eligibility (and therefore standing) has been established, the Court may still
    decline to permit substitution based on relevant "considerations of delay, unfairness, and
    inefficiency." Breedlove, 24 Vet.App. at 21.
    At oral argument, Ms. Covington took a novel position. She asserted that the portion of
    Breedlove reiterating the prohibition on the Court undertaking initial factfinding regarding a
    6
    would-be substitute's eligibility for accrued benefits was dictum. Although the Court is not obliged
    to consider such a belated assertion, Overton v. Wilkie, 
    30 Vet.App. 257
    , 265 (2018), we will
    address it here lest our silence be misconstrued. Dictum is language in an opinion that is
    unnecessary to the decision in a case and therefore nonbinding in future cases. Williams v. Wilkie,
    
    32 Vet.App. 46
    , 55 n.5 (2019), aff'd, 
    828 F. App'x 721
     (Fed. Cir. 2020). In contrast, an opinion's
    "holding consists of those propositions along the chosen decisional path or paths of reasoning that
    (1) are actually decided, (2) are based upon the facts of the case, and (3) lead to the judgment."
    Michael Abramowicz & Maxwell Stearns, Defining Dicta, 57 STAN. L. REV. 953, 1065 (2005).
    The limitation on the Court's authority to undertake initial factfinding regarding a would-be
    substitute's eligibility for accrued benefits was a critical component of this Court's reasoning on
    the way toward granting Mrs. Breedlove's motion for substitution, especially given our preliminary
    determination that section 5121A does not apply directly to this Court. We are not free to disregard
    this portion of Breedlove's analysis.
    Changing tack, Ms. Covington contends that Breedlove and its discussion of sections 5121
    and 5121A are immaterial because Rule 43 of our Rules of Practice and Procedure gives the Court
    authority to grant substitution independent of any determination by VA regarding her eligibility
    for accrued benefits. That is not so. Rule 43 specifies: "If a party dies after a Notice of Appeal is
    filed or while a proceeding is pending in the Court, the personal representative of the deceased
    party's estate or any other appropriate person may, to the extent permitted by law, be substituted
    as a party on motion by such person." U.S. VET. APP. R. 43(a)(2) (emphasis added). "Rule 43 is
    simply a procedural mechanism for substitution" that—as the italicized language makes clear—
    "explicitly leaves the substantive standard for substitution to be filled in by other authorities."
    Smith v. McDonough, 
    35 Vet.App. 454
    , 463 (2022). Statutes and the caselaw interpreting them are
    those authorities. See Merritt v. Wilkie, 
    965 F.3d 1357
    , 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2020).
    At bottom, Ms. Covington's arguments seem to stem from the view that a grant of
    substitution in this Court is an end unto itself that Breedlove mistakenly tied to substitution
    proceedings before the Agency. That view misunderstands not only the role substitution at the
    Court plays in the VA adjudicative process but also the relationship between substitution and the
    accrued-benefits claim. A claimant's entitlement to benefit payments ends on the last day of the
    month before the claimant's death. 
    38 U.S.C. § 5112
    (b)(1). As already noted, section 5121 permits
    certain survivors to seek unpaid benefits owed to the claimant at the time of her death. See Crews,
    63 F.4th at 39. "[T]he enactment of section 5121A provided eligible survivors a faster, fairer, and
    more efficient way to process their accrued-benefits claims through substitution." Reliford
    v. McDonald, 
    27 Vet.App. 297
    , 303 (2015). But whether a survivor chooses to pursue substitution
    or a traditional accrued-benefits claim, the survivor's object is the same: accrued benefits—those
    benefits due and unpaid to a claimant at the time of her death. In other words, "both section 5121
    and section 5121A provide separate and distinct procedural paths for pursuing accrued benefits."
    Id. at 302; see 38 U.S.C. § 5121A(a) (tying the right to request substitution to eligibility for accrued
    benefits under section 5121(a)). Substitution does not lead to a different kind of benefit.
    Recognizing this connection between substitution and accrued benefits may help the
    dubious reader understand why Breedlove conditions a grant of substitution at the Court on the
    favorable resolution of a substitution request at the Agency. A would-be substitute, even for a
    claimant who dies while her case is pending here, will eventually have to be recognized as an
    7
    eligible accrued beneficiary by VA. After all, it is VA—not this Court—that will pay any accrued
    benefits ultimately granted. Cf. Merritt, 965 F.3d at 1360 (finding it unnecessary to settle the
    propriety of a surviving spouse's substitution when her failure to take appropriate steps with VA
    foreclosed recovery of accrued benefits). "Requiring the prospective substitute to provide evidence
    of eligibility to substitute is thus a reasonable measure to ensure that [VA] has the current and
    accurate information it needs to promptly process substitution requests" in accordance with the
    priority established in section 5121(a). Nat'l Org. of Veterans Advocates, Inc. (NOVA) v. Sec'y of
    VA, 
    809 F.3d 1359
    , 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2016). Evidence of eligibility must be presented to, and a
    request for substitution initially adjudicated by, the RO—including in cases where the claimant
    dies with a claim pending before the Board. See 
    38 C.F.R. § 3.1010
    (e). This requirement is
    reasonable, the Federal Circuit concluded, because "the Board is an appellate tribunal and is not
    well equipped to conduct the fact-gathering that may be necessary to determine eligibility for
    substitution," and because "there would be no appellate recourse for the claimant within [VA]"
    "[i]f the Board were to decide the substitution issue in the first instance." NOVA, 
    809 F.3d at 1364
    .
    These same concerns about appellate tribunals' competence to make fact-bound eligibility
    determinations and about shortchanging would-be substitutes on their appellate rights likewise
    counsel against a process that would task this Court with making initial substitution decisions.
    Both law and policy support Breedlove's reasoning and the outcome here.
    We have considered the movant's remaining arguments and find them unpersuasive.
    Whether the RO committed any error in its resolution of Ms. Covington's request to substitute is
    not an issue the Court may consider at present. To the extent that she wishes to challenge the RO's
    denial, her remedy lies in the administrative appeal process. Because she has not been determined
    to be an eligible accrued-benefits claimant, and thus not an eligible substitute in this case, vacatur
    of the Board's decision and dismissal of the appeal are the proper disposition. See Breedlove,
    24 Vet.App. at 21.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, it is
    ORDERED that the June 6, 2022, motion for substitution is denied. It is further
    ORDERED that the November 24, 2021, Board decision is VACATED. It is further
    ORDERED that this appeal is DISMISSED for lack of jurisdiction.
    DATED: July 28, 2023
    8