Sudranski v. Derwinski

KRAMER, Associate Judge,

concurring in the result:

I agree that this Court should not “assume jurisdiction on the basis of a purported NOD which could not have been filed until the BVA review which an NOD was intended to generate already had ended in a final decision.” Nevertheless, I do not believe we can reach this result without creating an exception to the rule announced in Chadwick v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 74 (1990), and as summarized in Judge Stein-berg’s separate opinion.

STEINBERG, Associate Judge,

filed the following separate opinion:

The Court’s per curiam order and statement rejects, prematurely and in summary fashion, the appellant’s contention that the post-BVA-decision receipt by the Regional Office (RO) of his Notice of Disagreement (NOD) is a valid basis for this Court’s jurisdiction. I could agree with the result (although not the reasoning underlying it) because of my position that Whitt v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 40 (1990), was wrongly decided by the Court since it is a contradiction of the statutory scheme to hold that there can be more than one NOD for each separate claim. (See the analysis in my December 21, 1990, dissenting opinion to the Court’s December 6, 1990, order deny*459ing rehearing en banc in Whitt.) Here, Sudranski filed on October 6, 1986, the NOD initiating his appeal to the Board of Veterans’ Appeals on his underlying claim.

The Court’s statement accurately recites that the Court has “held that subsequent adjudications along the path to an appeal may give rise [to] supplemental NODs”, and concludes that “it would be a non sequitur, as well as legal error, for this Court to assume jurisdiction on the basis of a purported NOD which could not have been filed until the BVA review which an NOD was intended to generate already had ended in a final decision.” (Emphasis added.) These two sentences highlight the folly of Whitt in pulling out of statutory context a regulatory definition of an NOD in a way that ignores the function assigned to an NOD by the statute (the initiation of an administrative appeal within the Department of Veterans Affairs) and then woodenly applying that definition.

On the other hand, Whitt is the law which the Court purports to be applying and following. Assuming the rectitude of Whitt, I cannot agree with the Court’s disposition in summary fashion of the NOD issue in this case. First, we do not know what the jurisdictional facts are. Second, assuming that the “purported NOD” was in fact received by the RO within a year of the RO decision appealed to the BVA, the order fails to address the principle applied in Chadwick v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 74 (1990) that when a document is filed with the wrong entity but nevertheless is received by the correct entity within the requisite time frame, the document is deemed to be timely filed at the correct entity.

Although the Court’s disposition of the appellant’s contention may ultimately be justified, the issue is not ripe for decision and, when decided, requires more scrutiny than it has received from the Court in connection with the Court’s precedents.