Soyini v. Derwinski

IVERS, Associate Judge, filed the opinion of the Court, in which MANKIN, Associate Judge, concurred. STEINBERG, Associate Judge, dissenting, filed separately.

IVERS, Associate Judge:

Appellant, Kunta K. Soyini, a.k.a. Stanley Rich, has noted an appeal from a January 30, 1990, Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA or Board) decision which denied service connection for an acquired psychiatric disorder. Although the reasons and bases provided by the Board, and as required under 38 U.S.C. § 7104(d)(1) (formerly § 4004(d)(1)) and Gilbert v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 49 (1990), lack the comprehensiveness and precision contemplated by the statute, based upon the evidence in this case, we find, as a matter of law, that the absence of comprehensiveness and precision in stating reasons or bases is not prejudicial error. See 38 U.S.C. § 7261(b) (formerly § 4061(b)). Accordingly, the decision of the Board is affirmed.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellant’s initial active service was in the U.S. Marine Corps from April 8, 1969, to May 19, 1969. On his Report of Medical History, appellant answered “yes” to the question “[d]id you have difficulty with school studies or teachers?” R. at 2. Appellant added the comment “[I] just didn’t *542get along with teachers.” Id. Less than two months later, he was discharged as “unsuitable for service” because of a character and behavior disorder and a defective attitude. R. at 19. The record stated that appellant’s deficiencies “existed prior to entry into naval service and ha[d] not been aggravated by service.” R. at 8. Appellant’s mental examination revealed no psychosis, neurosis, significant depression or organic brain impairment. R. at 15.

Appellant entered active service again, this time with the U.S. Army. He served from April 24, 1972 to June 19, 1973. When filling out the Report of Medical History, dated April 24, 1972, appellant wrote “excellent” in response to the Statement of Examinee’s Present Health and Medications Currently Used section. R. at 20. Appellant also marked “no” to the following questions, “[h]ave you ever been rejected for military service because of physical, mental, or other reasons?,” and “[h]ave you ever been discharged from military service because of physical, mental or other reasons?” Appellant had been discharged from the Marine Corps in 1969 for such reasons. R. at 21.

While at Fort Dix, New Jersey, from October 1972 until his discharge in June of 1973, appellant received counseling and treatment as a chronic heroin addict. R. at 23, 43, and 50. His Medical Profile Record, dated January 23, 1973, reflected his treatment with its duty restrictions. R. at 31. From January 27, 1973, to February 2, 1973, appellant was hospitalized for a drug overdose. R. at 52. In a revised Report of Medical History, taken at the 540th General Dispensary on February 12, 1973, appellant changed his answers to “yes” when answering the questions regarding previous discharge due to mental health problems. R. at 30. From April 17 to 20,1973, appellant was hospitalized for an antisocial personality disorder. R. at 54. On June 19, 1973, appellant was granted an honorable discharge based upon “unfitness — drug abuse.” R. at 60.

According to Veterans’ Administration (now Department of Veterans Affairs) (VA) records, appellant first filed a claim for benefits on June 20, 1973, but his claim was administratively disallowed for failure to report for a scheduled examination. R. at 65. On May 25, 1977, appellant sought to reopen his claim, seeking service connection for a nervous condition and residuals of a leg injury. R. at 65. He had a VA examination on August 15, 1977. The examining physician recorded that he had no hallucinations and no suicidal thoughts. Id. The final diagnosis was chronic anxiety. R. at 64. The VA Regional Office denied both claims on September 27, 1977. The current appeal deals only with possible service connection for appellant’s mental disorder. No further discussion of injury to appellant’s leg is necessary. The rating board denied service connection for a nervous condition because there was no evidence of treatment for a nervous condition in service. Appellant was hospitalized and diagnosed as having a personality disorder in April 1973. R. at 65. A personality disorder is not recognized as a disability under the law. See 38 C.F.R. § 4.127 (1990).

The next record of any type of medical treatment found in appellant's VA records is an intake report, dated April 4, 1979, prepared by Dr. William P. Shea, located in Hartford, Connecticut. R. at 67. Appellant was referred to Dr. Shea by an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. John O’Brien. Appellant saw Dr. Shea intermittently from April 4, 1979, to February 8, 1980. Dr. Shea made a preliminary diagnosis of a conversion reaction along with possible schizophrenia, latent type. Dr. Shea wanted to wait until a Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) could be done before making a final diagnosis, (R. at 68), however, a final diagnosis is absent from the record. In a progress note, dated January 25, 1980, Dr. Shea referred to appellant’s problems as a schizophrenic disorder with a chronic pain problem. R. at 75. Dr. Shea’s treatment consisted of psychotherapy combined with drugs.

Appellant began to see other doctors because he became offended that he was being treated for psychological causes instead of physical causes for his pain. R. at 74. *543While seeing Dr. Shea, appellant also consulted Dr. A. Rangel, on October 22, 1979. Dr. Rangel diagnosed appellant as having a functional psychotic disorder. R. at 72.

Appellant did not see another physician until November 22, 1980, when he saw Dr. Yunus Pothiawala. Dr. Pothiawala noted that while employed by the City of Hartford, Connecticut, sometime in 1978, appellant injured his back. R. at 79. Appellant told Dr. Pothiawala that he was seen by a orthopedic surgeon, who referred him for a psychological evaluation. R. at 78, 93. The psychological evaluation appears to be the one done by Dr. Shea. Dr. Pothiawala diagnosed appellant as having schizophrenia, paranoid type. R. at 79. Appellant also saw Dr. Robert Berland in December, 1980. Dr. Berland stated that appellant told him that his “psychosomatic pain and possible schizophrenia” were “secondary to an accident he sustained in 1978.” R. at 84. Appellant further told Dr. Berland that in that same accident, he injured his head, neck, back and left arm and leg. Id. He diagnosed appellant as having no significant neurological disorder. R. at 85.

Appellant attempted to reopen his claim on April 18, 1984, by submitting reports of his treatment in 1979 and 1980 for schizophrenia. The rating board found that the evidence was new but not material since it did not tend to support the conclusion that appellant’s current condition was incurred in or that it was aggravated while he was in service or that it had manifested itself within one year after appellant was discharged. R. at 89. The rating board, on April 30, 1984, denied the claim and stated that there was no evidence of treatment for an active psychosis within two years of appellant’s discharge. Id.

From September 8 to 24, 1986, appellant received treatment at the Hartford Hospital Outpatient Psychiatric Clinic (Hartford Clinic). Appellant went to the Hartford Clinic “seeking a psychological evaluation of himself in order to determine (or prove) whether his current emotional disability [was] caused by incidents which took place during his basic training.” R. at 92. The “incidents” centered around alleged mistreatment of appellant by his drill instructors during basic training as a Marine. Id. Appellant was told that the clinic could only provide him with psychotherapy. He was diagnosed as having chronic schizophrenia, paranoid type and an antisocial personality disorder. R. at 90. In making his analysis of appellant, Mr. James Dod, a Psychology Intern at the Hartford Clinic who also made the above diagnosis, noted:

Mr. Soyini’s presentation and reported history of illness is consistent with diagnosis of schizophrenia, paranoid type. However, his obsfiscation [sic] of history that predates his time in the marines makes it difficult to assess the degree to which his early development contributed to his condition. The reported arrests and drug related behavior along with his destructive rages suggests earlier problems of impulse control. It is likely that this antisocial behavior existed prior to the psychotic break (precipitated by the “incident”) and therefore should be classified in its own right.

R. at 94. Mr. Dod suggested that appellant participate in group therapy and that medication should be sought. Id.

Appellant again attempted to reopen his claim in September 1986 by submitting the above described reports of treatment at the Hartford Clinic. A rating decision issued on December 18, 1986, determined that appellant had not offered any new and material evidence. The rating board determined that the reports were “cumulative in nature, and only confirm[ed] the presence of a nervous condition,” and that “they [did] not establish a new factual basis warranting reconsideration of s[ervice] connection] for the nervous condition.” R. at 95. Although the rating board used language which, if used today, would be held to be incorrect, it is clear that the rating board did not reopen veteran’s claim. See Thompson v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 251, 253-54 (1988) (in affirming the BVA’s denial to reopen the claim, the Court found that the BVA committed error when the Board treated evidence submitted by appellant as new and material when it concluded that the evidence was cumulative).

*544Appellant received treatment from the VA Medical Center in Newington, Connecticut from December 18, 1986, to April 8, 1987. Appellant attempted to reopen his claim with records of that treatment. The rating board determined on June 9, 1987, that the records did constitute new, but not material evidence sufficient to reopen the claim because “they merely relate[d] to treatment 13 to 14 years after service.” R. at 109. Appellant filed a Notice of Disagreement with the VA on July 6, 1987. The BVA denied appellant’s claim on February 25, 1988, stating that entitlement to service connection for an acquired psychiatric disorder was not established. Stanley K. Rich (a.k.a. Kunta Kinte Soyini, Sr.), BVA 88-0300133 (Feb. 25, 1988).

Appellant attempted to reopen his claim on June 29, 1988. R. at 180. In further support of his claim appellant submitted medical records from the VA Medical Center at Newington, Connecticut, for the period June 1987 to April 1988 and a “buddy letter” from Raymond Thomas, dated March 29, 1984. R. at 126-138, 140. On September 12, 1988, the VA, by deferred or confirmed rating decision, again denied appellant’s claim. R. at 142.

Appellant filed a Notice of Disagreement as to the September rating decision and then tried to reopen his claim by submitting medical records from the Connecticut Department of Corrections, for the period of May 17, 1974, to March 14, 1975, where several doctors prescribed various medications. As the dissent points out in its discussion, the entry for May 17, 1974 was “Plan Haldol 1 mg B/D x 3 D.” R. at 149. However, there was no definite diagnosis made for appellant while he was incarcerated. The treating physician merely stated “Manipulative Individual] — (not impressed by depressive [symptoms]) will however take his word for it [and] [prescribe] for depression [and] Borderline Schizophrenia.” R. at 150. In that same notation, the physician also wrote “d[is]c[ontinue] Thorazine.” Id. This was not a diagnosis. Even if the “plan” suggested by the dissent was carried out, on November 29, 1974, presumably the same doctor that prescribed the “plan,” noted in the record “d[is]c[ontinue] all medication because he’s faking symptoms.” R. at 152. Then in January, appellant attempted suicide on the 9th and 13th. R. at 165. On January 15th, appellant claimed he drank a chemical cleaner and on January 24th, he claimed that he ingested a bed spring. Appellant was examined and x-rayed, but nothing was found. Appellant stated he ingested some more bed springs on January 29th. R. at 162-164.

Based on the above new evidence, the VA Regional Office, by a rating decision dated February 24, 1989, found that the “newly submitted evidence raise[d] a reasonable doubt that the early manifestations of the veteran’s schizophrenia occurred in 1974.” R. at 173. The rating board granted service connection under 38 U.S.C. § 1702 (formerly § 602) for treatment purposes only. Service connection for compensation purposes remained denied, since there was no evidence of treatment for a compensable psychosis which manifested to a degree of ten percent within one year of the veteran’s service discharge. Id.

Appellant filed a Notice of Disagreement on February 27, 1989. R. at 174-175. A Statement of the Case was sent to appellant on March 8, 1989. Service connection was denied for compensation purposes because:

the evidence [did] not establish the existence of an acquired psychiatric disorder either in service or within one year of the veteran’s service discharges. The veteran was seen for a personality disorder while on active duty and service connection for that condition remain[ed] denied because it [was] in the nature of a congenital/developmental abnormality which [was] not recognized as a disability under the law. There [was] no evidence of aggravation within the meaning of 38 C.F.R. § 3.306.

R. at 183. Appellant had a personal hearing before a hearing officer at the VA Regional Office in Hartford, Connecticut on June 1,1989. The hearing officer determined that the evidence presented at appellant’s personal hearing was not new and material. R. at 196. The BVA issued a *545decision on January 30, 1990, denying service connection for an acquired psychiatric disorder for compensation purposes. Appellant made a timely appeal to this Court. Oral argument was held on April 16, 1991. The Court has jurisdiction to hear this appeal pursuant to 38 U.S.C. § 7252 (formerly § 4052).

II. ANALYSIS

The VA Regional Office determined that the medical records from the Connecticut Department of Correction, which were not before the hearing examiner, were new and material. As such, under Manio v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 140, 145-46 (1991), once the new evidence is determined to be “new and material”, the new evidence must be evaluated along with the old evidence to determine if a new factual basis exists upon which to award the claim. An examination of the Board decision shows that this occurred. The Board stated in its opening comments made under Items Relating to Present Appellate Status, “[a] reopened claim for service connection for an acquired psychiatric disorder has been received.” Kunta K. Soyini, Sr., BVA 90-02483, at 2 (Jan. 30, 1990). In the Board’s Discussion and Evaluation section of the decision, the Board stated:

Since the Board’s earlier decision, evidence has been obtained to the effect that the veteran has problems in 1974 stemming from his severe personality and character disorder and his drug abuse. No final diagnosis was made. However, decompensation seemed to begin in November 1974, although this was more than one year after discharge from service.
The veteran has been afforded a hearing, and a statement has been received from a friend who was with him in service. However, it has still not been demonstrated that any acquired psychiatric disorder was in evidence during service, nor was shown within one hear [sic] post service. Accordingly, the evidentiary foundation upon which the prior decision was predicated has not been materially altered by the additional evidence.

Soyini, BVA 90-02483, at 6 (emphasis added). Thus, it appears that while evaluating the new evidence, the Board did consider the evidence of the entire record. As a result, the Board determined that the new evidence evaluated with the old evidence did not present a new factual basis upon which to base the claim. See Jones v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 210, 213-15 (1991).

The Board correctly determined that the guidelines of 38 U.S.C. § 1702, found in Chapter 17, Hospital, Nursing Home, Domiciliary, and Medical Care are not applicable to Chapter 11 benefits, Compensation for Service-Connected Disability or Death. Since “treatment compensation” is discussed in Chapter 17 and “service-connected compensation” in a separate chapter, Chapter 11, appellant cannot apply the rules for service connection for treatment only and thereby gain service connection for compensation under 38 U.S.C. § 312 and 38 C.F.R. §§ 3.307, and 3.309(a) (1990).

The rating board did not err in applying the benefit of the doubt doctrine in determining that the early manifestations of appellant’s schizophrenia occurred within two years after his discharge from service based upon prescriptions for psychotropic medication during that period. See 38 C.F.R. § 3.102 (1990). The dissent points out the treatment plan, i.e.: Haldol, and uses that to “bootstrap” appellant into the one year presumption found in 38 C.F.R. § 3.307. Such a determination is a finding of fact. As this Court expressed in Gilbert v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 49, 53 (1990):

It is not the function of this Court to decide whether a veteran was injured or whether any such injury occurred in or was aggravated during military service; rather, it is the function of this Court to decide whether such factual determinations made by the BVA in a particular case constituted clear error. Although this distinction may seem trivial, its significance cannot be overstated. In practical terms, under the “clearly erroneous” rule this Court is not permitted to substitute its judgment for that of the BVA on issues of material fact; if there *546is a “plausible” basis in the record for the factual determinations of the BVA, even if this Court might not have reached the same factual determinations, we cannot overturn them.

(Emphasis in original).

Here, the Board determined that “[a] chronic acquired psychiatric disorder was not present during service, nor was a psychosis manifested to a compensable degree within one year after service” and that “[t]he additional evidence obtained since the Board of Veterans’ Appeals decision in February 1988 [did] not establish the onset of a chronic acquired psychiatric disorder during service, or manifestations of a psychosis within a year following separation from service.” Soyini, BVA 90-02483, at 7. The cancellation of appellant’s medication because he was faking his symptoms along with other evidence discussed in this opinion, presents a plausible basis in the record to uphold the BVA decision. There was no evidence of treatment for a compen-sable psychosis which manifested to a degree of ten-percent or more within one year of the veteran’s discharge from service as required by 38 C.F.R. § 3.307(a)(3) (1990). The record shows that in August 1977, the date of the next chronological treatment after appellant’s incarceration, the examining VA physician only diagnosed appellant as having chronic anxiety. No psychosis was diagnosed. R. at 64. There is no clear diagnosis of an active psychosis in the record until the October, 1979 diagnosis, by Dr. Rangel. Not one of the several physicians who treated appellant from 1974 to the present has linked his condition at the time of treatment to his condition on active duty or within one year after discharge. Therefore, the dissent’s reliance on 38 C.F.R. § 3.307(c) (1990) is misplaced. Although the prescriptions and the suicide attempts could be categorized as “manifestations of the disease,” clearly, from the record, there was not a definite diagnosis made within a reasonable span of time between the “manifestations” and the diagnosis.

III. CONCLUSION

Although the BVA did not articulate the “reasons or bases” for its decision as distinctively or as clearly as contemplated under 38 U.S.C. § 7104(d)(1) (formerly § 4004(d)(1)), the Court is able to rule on the merits of the appeal based upon a review of the record. It is true, as ably pointed out by the dissent, that the reasons or bases requirement set forth in 38 U.S.C. § 7104(d)(1) and more fully discussed in Gilbert, at 56-57, is one requiring strict adherence. However, strict adherence does not dictate an unquestioning, blind adherence in the face of overwhelming evidence in support of the result in a particular case. Such adherence would result in this Court’s unnecessarily imposing additional burdens on the BVA and DVA with no benefit flowing to the veteran. This we cannot do. See 38 U.S.C. § 7261(b).

The record clearly contains evidence that appellant is currently suffering from schizophrenia. However there is no evidence that the in-service diagnosis of personality disorder was a misdiagnosis or that he was suffering from a compensable psychosis within the requisite period. Therefore, appellant may not be granted service connection for compensation for his psychosis. The decision of the BVA is AFFIRMED.