Malcolm v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •            In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 20-505C
    (Filed: May 12, 2021)
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    ***************************************
    RICHARD RALPH MALCOLM,                *
    *
    Plaintiff,          *
    *
    v.                                    *
    *
    THE UNITED STATES,                    *
    *
    Defendant.          *
    *
    ***************************************
    ORDER
    Richard Ralph Malcolm is a former member of the United States Navy. He
    requests that this Court direct the Navy to (1) find him retroactively unfit to serve
    and retire him as disabled, (2) remove all negative remarks from his record, and
    (3) pay him $1,000,000 in compensation. The parties have filed cross-motions for
    judgment on the administrative record.1 Mr. Malcolm has also moved for leave to
    serve subpoenas.2
    Neither party has shown a basis for judgment on the record. It appears,
    however, that the Board for Correction of Naval Records (BCNR) failed to consider
    all of Mr. Malcolm’s evidence. The Court therefore DENIES each pending motion.
    The Court will remand to the BCNR for further consideration of Mr. Malcolm’s
    claims.
    Mr. Malcolm has represented himself in this case and prior similar matters.
    Further proceedings may benefit from participation of counsel on his behalf. The
    Court therefore STAYS the case for 60 days for potential referral to pro bono
    representation. If Mr. Malcolm wishes to be referred for pro bono representation, he
    is ORDERED to file his written consent.
    BACKGROUND
    Mr. Malcolm enlisted in the Navy on February 7, 2002, served briefly aboard
    the USS Abraham Lincoln, and separated from active duty on December 5, 2002.
    Administrative Record (AR) 3–4. During his short service Mr. Malcolm was diagnosed
    1 Mot. for Judgment on the AR (ECF 12); Pl.’s Resp. & Cross Mot. for Judgment on the AR (ECF 16);
    Def.’s Reply & Resp. (ECF 22); Pl.’s Reply (ECF 25).
    2 Def.’s Mot. to Subpoena (ECF 28).
    with “occupational problems” and “adjustment disorder.” Id. While aboard the
    Abraham Lincoln, he repeatedly visited the ship’s medical providers for vague
    physical and mental ailments and was twice disciplined for violations of the Uniform
    Code of Military Justice. AR 3–4, 268, 313–17. As a result of those violations and his
    otherwise poor performance, Mr. Malcolm was separated from the Navy for
    “misconduct,” with his service characterized as “Other than Honorable.” AR 4, 324.
    In 2013, Mr. Malcolm was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. AR 4. Two civilian
    psychiatrists wrote short diagnostic statements on his behalf at the time. See AR 48,
    337, 195. Mr. Malcolm has contended ever since — in administrative proceedings and
    before this Court — that his mental health rendered him unfit for service and caused
    his misconduct, entitling him to correction of his medical records and other forms of
    relief.
    Mr. Malcolm first requested that the Naval Discharge Review Board (NDRB)
    upgrade his discharge to “honorable.” AR 212. Mr. Malcolm attached one brief
    diagnostic statement dated April 15, 2013. AR 212, 337. The NDRB discounted that
    evidence as “too far removed in time from his active service to be relevant to his
    mental health during his enlistment in 2002.” AR 212. The NDRB denied relief in
    2014. AR 211.
    He next submitted a similar request to the BCNR, attaching a second cursory
    psychiatrist letter and further requesting that the discipline he incurred in the Navy
    be expunged from his record. AR 199. The BCNR denied his request in 2015, finding
    “no evidence in the record … that [Mr. Malcolm was] diagnosed with, or denied
    treatment for, bipolar I condition while in the service.” AR 200.
    Mr. Malcolm then filed his first pro se suit in this Court, seeking correction of
    his naval records to reflect an “honorable” discharge, back pay, and disability
    retirement pay. Malcolm v. United States, No. 16-545C, 
    2017 WL 105946
     (Fed. Cl.
    Jan. 11, 2017), aff’d, 690 F. App’x 687 (Fed. Cir. 2017). The Court dismissed his back-
    pay claim as untimely. Id. at *1. Because Mr. Malcolm had not presented his claim
    for disability retirement to the BCNR, the Court dismissed that claim as unripe. Id.
    In the absence of a justiciable claim for money, his claim for correction of his record
    was dismissed as well. Id.
    After this Court’s dismissal, Mr. Malcolm filed a new petition with the BCNR
    seeking disability benefits. AR 28. The BCNR, after obtaining advisory opinions from
    the Council of Review Boards, denied that request in 2017. AR 30. Regarding his 2013
    bipolar disorder diagnoses, the BCNR found insufficient evidence that the condition
    existed during Mr. Malcolm’s naval service:
    The Board considered your 2013 medical diagnosis of Bi-Polar disorder
    but was unable to draw a nexus between the 2013 diagnosis and your
    symptoms in 2002. … In the Board’s opinion, the severity of the
    symptoms that led to your 2013 diagnoses did not exist in 2002 prior to
    your discharge and the Board was unwilling to make that connection
    -2-
    without medical evidence that substantiates your Bi-Polar condition
    existed in 2002.
    AR 29. The BCNR also found that even if Mr. Malcolm had bipolar disorder in 2002,
    he was “mentally responsible” for his misconduct. AR 29–30.
    Mr. Malcolm challenged the BCNR’s denial of his petition for disability benefits
    in a second pro se suit before this Court. Malcolm v. United States, No. 17-1417C,
    
    2018 WL 1770525
     (Fed. Cl. Apr. 12, 2018), aff’d, 752 F. App’x 973 (Fed. Cir. 2018).
    This Court held that “the BCNR was not arbitrary or capricious in its decision to deny
    relief based on the lack of evidence of plaintiff having suffered from his disability at
    or prior to his discharge.” Id. at *4. The 2013 diagnostic statements, the Court agreed,
    “do not provide the missing link.” Id.
    That brings us to the present case. Mr. Malcolm returned to the BCNR in 2018,
    again requesting a medical disability discharge upgrade, and further requesting that
    all negative remarks and non-judicial punishments be removed from his record. AR
    8. In his renewed claim, Mr. Malcolm asserted that his discipline and discharge were
    unjust because he was “under psychosis due to on the job stress which triggered
    bipolar I, rapid cycling.” Id.
    In support of his claim, Mr. Malcolm submitted — for the first time — a new
    psychological evaluation performed by U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
    doctors in 2018. AR 9–24. The 2018 VA evaluation involved discussions with both Mr.
    Malcolm and his mother regarding his adolescence, adulthood, time in the Navy, and
    life after his discharge. In line with the 2013 diagnosis, the VA evaluators determined
    that Mr. Malcolm suffered from “Bipolar I Disorder with mood-congruent psychotic
    features.” AR 23. But the VA evaluation also detailed a longer history of psychological
    symptoms that existed during the time of his military service and before. The
    evaluation disclosed that beginning around the age of 19, Mr. Malcolm suffered from
    “depressive episodes” involving “depressed mood, anhedonia, social withdrawal, low
    energy and fatigue, concentration problems, sleep disturbance and not leaving his
    bed for long period of time, appetite disturbance, and thoughts of death with no active
    suicidal ideation.” AR 21. The VA evaluation also noted that Mr. Malcolm “describe[d]
    a history of mood fluctuations, decreased need for sleep, paranoid ideation, and non-
    command auditory and visual hallucinations that initially developed during his
    military deployment at age 24.” AR 22; see also, e.g., AR 13, 14–15. Those findings of
    the VA evaluation did not appear in Mr. Malcolm’s previous medical records or
    administrative submissions.
    The BCNR reviewed Mr. Malcolm’s latest petition and granted him partial
    relief, upgrading him from an “Other than Honorable” discharge to a general
    discharge and changing his discharge authority from a misconduct discharge to
    secretarial authority. AR 4. The BCNR stated that Mr. Malcolm “should have been
    administratively separated during basic training after being diagnosed with
    occupational problems … and, by placing him in an operational environment, the
    Navy likely exacerbated his adjustment disorder contributing to his misconduct.” Id.
    -3-
    The BCNR, however, denied Mr. Malcolm’s requests for disability retirement
    and for removal of negative remarks and non-judicial punishments from his record.
    In so doing, the BCNR stated that it had “considered his 2013 bipolar diagnosis” but
    “felt [that it] was too distant in time from his discharge date to be probative” and that
    “too many potential intervening factors exist[ed] to be able to rely on the 2013
    diagnosis as a basis to overturn the 2002 adjustment disorder diagnosis.” AR 4–5.
    The BCNR stated that it “substantially concurred” with the advisory opinions
    connected to the 2017 BCNR decision, id., but did not obtain new ones. The BCNR
    did not discuss the 2018 VA evaluation at all.
    Mr. Malcolm finally filed the present lawsuit before the Court, representing
    himself pro se as he has done before.
    DISCUSSION
    When this Court reviews BCNR decisions on motions for judgment on the
    administrative record, it looks only to “whether the Board’s decision is arbitrary and
    capricious, unsupported by substantial evidence, or contrary to law.” Walls v. United
    States, 
    582 F.3d 1358
    , 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (quoting Metz v. United States, 
    466 F.3d 991
    , 998 (Fed. Cir. 2006)); see also Johnson v. United States, 
    93 Fed. Cl. 666
    , 672
    (2010). The BCNR’s denial of an applicant’s request must articulate “the reasons for
    the determination that relief should not be granted, including the applicant's claims
    of constitutional, statutory, and/or regulatory violations that were rejected, together
    with all the essential facts upon which the denial is based.” Bolton v. Dep’t of the Navy
    Bd. for Corr. of Naval Recs., 
    914 F.3d 401
    , 407 (6th Cir. 2019) (emphasis added)
    (quoting 
    32 C.F.R. § 723.3
    (e)). While correction boards are afforded deference, they
    must address the facts in the record and connect the facts to their decisions —
    otherwise the decisions are arbitrary and capricious. See Jackson v. Mabus, 
    919 F. Supp. 2d 117
    , 121 (D.D.C. 2013); see also Dickson v. Sec’y of Def., 
    68 F.3d 1396
    , 1404
    (D.C. Cir. 1995) (“[A]n agency’s explanation must minimally contain ‘a rational
    connection between the facts found and the choice made.’”) (citations omitted);
    Morrison v. Sec’y of Def., 
    760 F. Supp. 2d 15
    , 20 (D.D.C. 2011) (“Although not an
    investigative body, the BCNR is required to review ‘all pertinent evidence of record’
    when it examines applications to correct naval records.”) (citations omitted) (citing
    
    32 C.F.R. §§ 723.2
    (b), 723.3(e)(1)).
    The BCNR did not meet that standard because it failed to address the evidence
    Mr. Malcolm presented — in particular, the 2018 VA evaluation. Instead, the BCNR
    repeated its earlier conclusions based on Mr. Malcolm’s previous petition, which
    included only his 2013 diagnoses. That omission matters because the 2018 VA
    evaluation could be read to contain precisely the information that the NDRB and
    BCNR previously found lacking: a connection between Mr. Malcolm’s mental health
    diagnosis and the time of his naval service. It may be that the 2013 diagnoses are too
    remote to bear on Mr. Malcolm’s condition in 2002, but it does not follow that the
    2018 VA evaluation is too. When Mr. Malcolm returned to the BCNR with new
    information intended to bridge the gap between his service and his diagnosis, the
    BCNR was not at liberty to ignore it altogether.
    -4-
    Defendant contends that the VA evaluation “does little to add to the picture of
    Mr. Malcolm’s 2002 mental health condition.” See Mot. for Judgment on the AR at 17
    (ECF 12). That may ultimately be correct, but it is attorney argument, not the
    considered opinion of the BCNR — which, again, did not mention the VA evaluation
    at all. See Verbeck v. United States, 
    97 Fed. Cl. 443
    , 460 n. 25 (2011) (explaining that
    post hoc justifications of attorneys do not substitute for the agency’s own reasoning).
    Because neither party has shown entitlement to judgment on the
    administrative record, the best course is for the BCNR to consider the VA evaluation
    in the first instance. The Court expresses no opinion on the document’s ultimate
    significance or the merits of Mr. Malcolm’s claims.
    CONCLUSION
    The parties’ motions for judgment on the administrative record (ECF 12; ECF
    16) are DENIED without prejudice.
    Future proceedings in this case may benefit from participation of counsel on
    Mr. Malcolm’s behalf. The Court of Federal Claims Bar Association maintains a
    program for referral of consenting plaintiffs to volunteer pro bono representation. Mr.
    Malcolm is ORDERED to file a notice no later than June 11, 2021 indicating
    whether he consents to such referral. If Mr. Malcolm provides consent, this Court will
    refer the case to the Bar Association. The Court emphasizes that all decisions
    concerning representation, if any, will be by mutual agreement between Mr. Malcolm
    and an attorney. The Court makes no guarantee that the Bar Association will be
    successful in identifying possible counsel, and the Court does not endorse
    representation by any individual attorney. No attorney is obligated to represent Mr.
    Malcolm, and Mr. Malcolm is not obligated to engage any particular attorney.
    This case is STAYED until July 12, 2021. When the stay lifts, the case will
    be remanded to the BCNR pursuant to RCFC 52.2. The terms of the remand will be
    ordered at that time. In light of the remand, and because any questions about the
    scope of the record on remand should be addressed by the BCNR, Mr. Malcolm’s
    motion for subpoenas (ECF 28) is DENIED AS MOOT.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    s/ Stephen S. Schwartz
    STEPHEN S. SCHWARTZ
    Judge
    -5-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20-505

Judges: Stephen S. Schwartz

Filed Date: 5/12/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/13/2021