United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
______________________
OWEN M. BOZEMAN, JR.,
Claimant-Appellant
v.
ROBERT A. MCDONALD, SECRETARY OF
VETERANS AFFAIRS,
Respondent-Appellee
______________________
2015-7020
______________________
Appeal from the United States Court of Appeals for
Veterans Claims in No. 13-1992, Judge William A. Moor-
man.
______________________
Decided: March 1, 2016
______________________
MATTHEW J. ILACQUA, Chisholm Chisholm & Kilpat-
rick, Providence, RI, argued for claimant-appellant. Also
represented by ROBERT VINCENT CHISHOLM, ZACHARY
STOLZ, NICHOLAS L. PHINNEY; CHRISTOPHER J. CLAY,
Disabled American Veterans, Cold Spring, KY; BARBARA
J. COOK, Cincinnati, OH.
MARTIN F. HOCKEY, JR., Commercial Litigation
Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of
Justice, Washington, DC, argued for respondent-appellee.
Also represented by BENJAMIN C. MIZER, ROBERT E.
2 BOZEMAN v. MCDONALD
KIRSCHMAN, JR.; Y. KEN LEE, MEGHAN ALPHONSO, Office of
General Counsel, United States Department of Veterans
Affairs, Washington, DC.
______________________
Before LOURIE, SCHALL, and HUGHES, Circuit Judges.
HUGHES, Circuit Judge.
Owen M. Bozeman appeals from a final judgment of
the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
affirming a Board of Veterans’ Appeals decision denying
Mr. Bozeman entitlement to an earlier effective date. The
Veterans Court invoked the doctrine of issue exhaustion
and refused to consider Mr. Bozeman’s argument that the
Board failed to consider relevant evidence contained in
the record. Because Mr. Bozeman’s argument was not a
new legal argument raised for the first time on appeal,
the use of issue exhaustion was improper. Therefore, we
vacate and remand.
I
Mr. Bozeman served on active duty in the United
States Army from July 1967 until August 1970, including
a one-year tour of duty in Vietnam. In January 1993,
Mr. Bozeman filed a claim for disability benefits with the
United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) after
spending six weeks at a VA Medical Center for treatment
related to substance abuse. In August 1993, the VA
awarded Mr. Bozeman service-connected benefits for Post-
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), rated as 10 percent
disabling, effective January 5, 1993.
From 1998 to 2000, Mr. Bozeman’s condition deterio-
rated, at least in part due to his PTSD. In 1998, Mr.
Bozeman was awarded a 30 percent disability rating,
which was increased to a 50 percent disability rating in
1999. In 2000, the VA denied Mr. Bozeman’s claim for an
increased rating.
BOZEMAN v. MCDONALD 3
Mr. Bozeman underwent a VA Compensation and
Pension Examination (C&P Exam) in 2002. The examin-
er found that Mr. Bozeman’s PTSD symptoms “were not
reported as problematic or numerous, or severe.” J.A. 63.
Rather, the examiner diagnosed Mr. Bozeman with pol-
ysubstance abuse and opined that “his impairments are,
at least currently or recently, due to polysubstance
abuse.” Id. Based on this examination, the Regional
Office (RO) found Mr. Bozeman’s PTSD unchanged and
denied an increase in rating. Mr. Bozeman submitted a
timely Notice of Disagreement (NOD) in March 2003.
Mr. Bozeman was hospitalized from February 2003 to
March 2003, and again from April 2004 to May 2004, due
to “suicidal and homicidal thoughts[,] . . . nightmares,
social isolation, mistrust of others and sleep disturbances
with severe depression.” Id. at 79. In April 2004, the RO
requested another C&P Exam, which was conducted in
August 2005. The examiner concluded that Mr. Bozeman
suffered from “chronic PTSD symptomatology off and on
for the last 25 years”; that his “history of substance abuse
may be a secondary way of coping with stress related to
Vietnam”; and that he would have “difficul-
ty . . . work[ing] in gainful employment, because of his
PTSD symptoms as well as the underlying anger and
hostility.” Id. at 77.
In February 2006, Mr. Bozeman’s disability rating for
PTSD was increased to 70 percent, effective July 1, 2004.
Mr. Bozeman appealed, seeking an earlier effective date.
The RO issued a rating decision in August 2006, assign-
ing a 70 percent rating for PTSD effective February 24,
2003, awarding a temporary 100 percent disability rating
for the hospitalization from April 2004 to July 2004,
assigning a 70 percent disability rating from July 2004,
and awarding Mr. Bozeman entitlement to individual
unemployability, effective February 24, 2003.
Mr. Bozeman appealed, and in January 2012, the Board
denied his claims for entitlement to a rating in excess of
4 BOZEMAN v. MCDONALD
50 percent prior to February 24, 2003, and entitlement to
a rating in excess of 70 percent after February 24, 2003,
but granted a disability rating of 100 percent, effective
November 22, 2010.
Mr. Bozeman appealed to the Veterans Court, and in
January 2013 the parties entered into a joint motion for
remand (JMR) after agreeing that the Board failed to
provide an adequate statement of its reasons and bases
for its decision. The JMR instructed that “[o]n remand,
Appellant is entitled to submit additional evidence and
argument in support of his claim . . . and VA is obligated
to conduct a critical examination of the justification for its
decision.” J.A. 105. On remand, Mr. Bozeman’s repre-
sentative submitted a brief on his behalf reiterating the
terms of the JMR and asking the Board, “based upon the
previously advanced arguments, and cumulative weight of
the evidence[,]” to comply with the Veterans Court’s order
“and for further action consistent with the discussion
contained in the [JMR].” Id. at 5.
In May 2013, the Board again denied entitlement to a
rating in excess of 50 percent for PTSD prior to February
24, 2003, finding that “[t]he most competent and credible
evidence of record indicates that [Mr. Bozeman’s] service-
connected PTSD was not producing or nearly approximat-
ing occupational and social impairment with deficiencies
in most areas, or total occupational and social impairment
prior to February 24, 2003.” Id. at 120.
Mr. Bozeman again appealed to the Veterans Court,
arguing that the Board failed to address relevant, materi-
al evidence contained in the 2005 examination report—
i.e., that Mr. Bozeman’s history of substance abuse may
be a way of coping with his PTSD—which contradicts the
2002 examination report relied upon by the Board in its
decision. The Veterans Court, after finding that the JMR
did not limit the scope of the Board’s review on remand,
invoked the doctrine of issue exhaustion because
BOZEMAN v. MCDONALD 5
Mr. Bozeman failed to raise this argument on the previ-
ous appeal, in connection with the JMR, or before the
Board on remand. Specifically, the court concluded that
the “VA’s interest in having a fair and full opportunity to
consider all theories relevant to Mr. Bozeman’s appeal
outweighs his interest in having his argument heard for
the first time on appeal,” therefore, “the interest of judi-
cial efficiency weighs in favor of invoking the exhaustion
doctrine in this matter.” J.A. 7. On October 29, 2014, the
Veterans Court denied Mr. Bozeman’s motion for single
judge reconsideration, and entered judgment.
Mr. Bozeman appeals. We have jurisdiction under 38
U.S.C. § 7292(a), (c).
II
We may set aside a Veterans Court decision only
when it is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or
otherwise not in accordance with the law.” Id. at
§ 7292(d)(1)(A).
As we explained in Maggitt v. West, when Congress
has not mandated the exhaustion of administrative
remedies, exhaustion is generally a matter of judicial
discretion. 202 F.3d 1370, 1377 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Thus,
the Veterans Court may hear arguments raised for the
first time, but “it is not compelled to do so in every in-
stance.” Id. Because the decision to invoke the doctrine
of issue exhaustion is a discretionary one, its application
is largely a matter of application of law to fact, a question
over which we lack jurisdiction. Cook v. Principi, 353
F.3d 937, 939 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (“This court is limited by its
jurisdictional statute and, absent a constitutional issue,
may not review challenges to factual determinations or
challenges to the application of a law or regulation to
facts.”). But to the extent that the issue raised involves
solely a legal interpretation, we possess jurisdiction.
6 BOZEMAN v. MCDONALD
In Scott v. McDonald, we outlined the three scenarios
in which the invocation of issue exhaustion is appropriate:
(1) the veteran, on an appeal from the RO to the Board,
fails to identify errors made by the RO either by stating
that all issues in the statements of the case are being
appealed or by specifically identifying the issues being
appealed; (2) the veteran raises an argument for the first
time on appeal to the Veterans Court and the Veterans
Court determines that the VA’s institutional interests
outweigh the interests of the veteran under the balancing
test set forth in Maggitt; and (3) the veteran raises an
argument for the first time on appeal to this court and we
do not consider it because we lack jurisdiction to hear
arguments that have not been addressed by or presented
to the Veterans Court. 789 F.3d 1375, 1378–80 (Fed. Cir.
2015). We affirmed the Veterans Court’s invocation of
issue exhaustion under the second scenario. Id. at 1381.
Here, the Veterans Court found that Mr. Bozeman
raised an argument for the first time on appeal and thus
invoked issue exhaustion under the second scenario
outlined above. However, we conclude that the Veterans
Court has erroneously expanded the legal definition of
issue exhaustion to apply to a claimant’s citation of addi-
tional record evidence in support of his previously raised
claim for an earlier effective date. There is no dispute
that Mr. Bozeman sufficiently preserved his claim of
entitlement to an earlier effective date for his PTSD
claim. The mere citation of evidence already contained in
the record to further support that claim is not a new legal
argument for purposes of issue exhaustion. Thus, the
Court’s decision to invoke issue exhaustion rested on an
erroneous legal interpretation of the doctrine.
Mr. Bozeman continuously argued that, based on the
record, he was entitled to an earlier effective date. That
he did not specifically cite the 2005 examination report
until the second appeal does not transform his earlier
effective date claim into a new legal argument. This is
BOZEMAN v. MCDONALD 7
particularly true because the joint motion for remand did
not limit the Board’s review on remand but specifically
instructed the Board to “conduct a critical examination of
the justification for its decision.” J.A. 105. And, on
remand, Mr. Bozeman requested that the Board consider
the “cumulative weight of the evidence.” Id. at 5. Conse-
quently, an argument that the Board failed to consider
evidence contained in the record, which supports a veter-
an’s established legal claim, should not be considered a
new legal argument raised for the first time on appeal. 1
Of course, just because an argument is based on evi-
dence already in the record does not mean that it can
never be subject to the doctrine of issue exhaustion. A
new legal argument raised for the first time on appeal,
even if based on already established evidence, can be
subject to the issue exhaustion requirement. That is
largely a decision for the Veterans Court. Here, however,
we narrowly conclude that issue exhaustion cannot be
invoked to bar citation of record evidence in support of a
legal argument that has been properly preserved for
appeal.
Accordingly, we vacate the decision of the Veterans
Court and remand for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED
1 We offer no opinion as to whether or not the Board
did, in fact, fail to consider relevant evidence contained in
the record.