UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS
NO. 21-4168
MARK FREUND AND MARY S. MATHEWSON, PETITIONERS,
V.
DENIS MCDONOUGH,
SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, RESPONDENT.
Before ALLEN, MEREDITH, and LAURER, Judges.
ORDER
ALLEN, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court.
Mark Freund is the brother of J. Roni Freund, who served the Nation in the United States
1
Army. Mary S. Mathewson is the surviving spouse of Marvin Mathewson, who also served the
Nation in the Army. While there is no relationship between Ms. Freund and Mrs. Mathewson, they
do have something in common. Each had an appeal pending before VA concerning a claim for
benefits. Each timely sought review before the Board of Veterans' Appeals. And each had their
appeals closed because VA mistakenly thought they had not perfected their appeals to the Board.2
So, they joined together to petition the Court to rectify the Agency's errors. And they sought to
represent a class of similarly situated claimants.
A bit more context is useful at this point to set the stage. There are currently two types of
adjudicatory systems for claims within VA: Claims that are subject to the legacy appeals system
and claims that are subject to the Veterans Appeals Improvement and Modernization Act of 2017
(AMA). The legacy appeals system applies to cases in which a VA agency of original jurisdiction
(AOJ) issued the initial decision before February 19, 2019.3 The appeals that led to the petition in
1
Ms. Freund was one of the two original petitioners in this action. Unfortunately, she passed away on July 7, 2022,
after this matter had been submitted for decision. Ms. Freund's brother, Mark Freund, moved to be substituted as a
petitioner in his sister's place. The Secretary recognized Mr. Freund as a proper substitute to continue his sister's
pending claims at the Agency and thus did not oppose the motion. On October 12, 2022, the Court granted Mr. Freund's
motion to be substituted as a petitioner. For ease of reference, we will generally refer to Ms. Freund as a petitioner,
although, as we have explained, Mr. Freund has been substituted in her place.
2
As we will explain below, technically Mrs. Mathewson did not have her own appeal closed. Rather, she substituted
into an administrative appeal of her husband after he passed away. It was his appeal that was closed. This distinction
is not material to our consideration or decision of this matter. So, for the sake of readability, we will generally refer to
Mrs. Mathewson as if she had been in the position of her husband before his death (as we have done in the paragraph
above).
3
38 C.F.R. § 3.2400(b) (2022).
this case are subject to the legacy appeals system because each petitioner's administrative appeal
originated from an AOJ decision that was issued before that date.4
Under the legacy system, when a claimant is dissatisfied with some aspect of a decision
rendered by a VA AOJ, he or she may initiate appellate review of that decision by submitting a
Notice of Disagreement (NOD) within one year of the decision at issue.5 If a claimant submits a
timely NOD, VA prepares a Statement of the Case (SOC) that provides information to the claimant
concerning the arguments, evidence, issues, applicable laws and regulations, and AOJ
determinations of the claimant's claim(s) so that the claimant can prepare an effective appeal before
the Board.6 If a claimant wishes to perfect an appeal to the Board, he or she must submit a VA
Form 9, the "Substantive Appeal," within 60 days after the date on which VA transmits the SOC
or within one year of the date of mailing of the notification of the VA decision being appealed,
whichever is later.7 And when a claimant submits a timely Substantive Appeal, VA must certify
the case to the Board.8
The Veterans Appeals Control and Locator System (VACOLS) is an automated electronic
database that tracks and monitors VA legacy appeals and records details of those appeals, such as
the filing date of appellate documents and issuances of decisional documents.9 VACOLS has a
"sweeping" function through which VA automatically closes legacy appeals on the first day of the
month following 65 days after an SOC has been mailed or following one year after notice of the
AOJ decision was mailed if VACOLS does not reflect that a claimant has submitted a Substantive
Appeal.10 When VA sends a claimant an SOC, VA also informs the claimant of the 60-day deadline
to file a Substantive Appeal to perfect an appeal and that if the claimant does not file a Substantive
Appeal, the appeal will be closed.11 However, VA does not give notice to a claimant when his or
her appeal is closed "for failure to respond to [an SOC] within the period allowed" as a result of
the VACOLS sweep.12
4
Petition (Pet.) at 15 (Ms. Freund received a rating decision for her claim in March 2017), 16 (Mrs. Mathewson's
rating decision was issued in June 2016).
5
38 U.S.C. § 7105(b)(1).
6
38 C.F.R. § 19.29 (2022).
7
38 C.F.R. § 19.52(b)(1) (2022) ("[A] Substantive Appeal must be filed within 60 days from the date that the [AOJ]
mails the [SOC] to the appellant, or within the remainder of the 1-year period from the date of mailing of the
notification of the determination being appealed, whichever period ends later."); see 38 C.F.R. § 19.22 (2022) ("A
Substantive Appeal consists of a properly completed VA Form 9, 'Appeal to Board of Veterans' Appeals,' or
correspondence containing the necessary information.").
8
See 38 C.F.R. §§ 19.35 (2022), 19.52(b)(1).
9
68 Fed. Reg. 69,062, 69,064 (Dec. 11, 2003) (proposed rule); VA APPEALS AND REVIEWS MANUAL (M21-5), ch. 6,
sec. A.
10
M21-5, ch. 6, sec. B.4.b; Secretary's (Sec'y's) Response (Resp.) to Pet. at 17 (citing Sec'y's Resp. to Pet., Exhibit
(Ex.) 16).
11
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 17 (citing Sec'y's Resp. to Pet., Ex. 16); see M21-5, ch. 6, sec. B.3.c; M21-5 ch. 7, sec. D.3.h.
12
38 C.F.R. § 19.32 (2022).
2
Petitioners allege that VA inappropriately closed their legacy appeals—for which they
submitted timely Substantive Appeals—without notice, due to VACOLS's automated closure
function. On behalf of themselves and a class of similarly situated claimants, petitioners request
that the Court, among other things, order VA to reopen the closed appeals and (1) declare VA's
actions concerning the erroneous closures of appeals with timely filed Substantive Appeals as
agency action "unlawfully withheld" within the meaning of 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(2); and (2) declare
that the no-notice element of VA's closures of such appeals violates 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and
principles of fair process.
There is much about this case that we find troubling. To be clear, the issue is not that VA
has leveraged technology by using VACOLS to manage the appeals process. Done right, such an
approach is laudable. The problem is that it became clear during the course of these proceedings
that VA knew that there were claimants whose claims had been erroneously closed through the
use of the VACOLS sweeping function. VA maintained that this was not really a problem because
as soon as VA learned of an erroneous closing, it would automatically reactivate the appeal at
issue. But there did not appear to be any comprehensive plan for identifying such claimants, a
problem magnified by the lack of notice of the closing in the first place. And, as we will discuss
below, the Secretary came perilously close to misleading the Court by suggesting that he was
engaged in proactive steps to address the problem such that it negated any need for the Court's
intervention. That was clearly not so, but it took the Court's sustained efforts over many months
of inquiries as to whether this action is moot to have the Secretary admit as much. To the
Secretary's credit, and as we also describe below, after oral argument the Secretary informed the
Court of plans to address the issue, suggesting that the Agency had finally begun to meaningfully
grapple with the serious problem this action had brought to light. We trust the Secretary will
continue to follow through with the plans he presented to the Court.
Despite our concerns about the issues petitioners raise and the significance of the matters
before the Court, we conclude that we must dismiss this action. As a roadmap, the order proceeds
as follows: First, we provide background information about petitioners' claims at the Agency and
before the Court as well as the course of proceedings in this matter. Second, we briefly discuss our
statutory jurisdiction to act. Third, we address standing and mootness as applicable to the facts
before us. With respect to the petitioners' individual claims, we explain why they are largely moot
and otherwise that petitioners lack standing to seek the individual relief they ask the Court to
award. We then explain that it would be possible for this action to continue under an exception to
the mootness analysis concerning class action claims—the inherently transitory exception to
mootness. However, finally, we conclude that the inherently transitory exception does not prevent
dismissal here because it is inappropriate to certify the class petitioners have proposed. Therefore,
we will deny class certification and also dismiss this action.
3
I. BACKGROUND
A. Petitioners' Procedural History Before VA
As we noted, petitioners were two unrelated individuals who both timely submitted
Substantive Appeals for their legacy appeals that VA did not promptly certify to the Board.13
Ms. Freund was an Army veteran who had filed a disability claim for entitlement to service
connection for PTSD; an RO denied her claim in March 2017, and Ms. Freund timely filed an
NOD.14 This led to a January 25, 2020, SOC that continued the denial of Ms. Freund's claim for
service connection for PTSD.15 In response to the SOC, Ms. Freund timely filed a Substantive
Appeal on March 13, 2020.16 VA received the Substantive Appeal on the same date.17 As we will
explore in a moment, Ms. Freund's appeal was deactivated when VACOLS determined
(erroneously) that she had not submitted a Substantive Appeal.18 As we noted above, after her
death, we granted Mark Freund's motion to be substituted in his sister's place as a petitioner in this
action.
Mrs. Mathewson is the surviving spouse of Army veteran Marvin Mathewson.
Mr. Mathewson filed a claim in the legacy appeals system for special monthly compensation based
on the need for aid and attendance.19 An RO denied his claim in a June 2016 rating decision.20 In
January 2017, Mr. Mathewson timely filed an NOD concerning the June 2016 rating decision.21
In response, VA issued an SOC on October 11, 2017, continuing the denial of the claim.22 On
December 4, 2017, Mr. Mathewson timely filed a Substantive Appeal.23 Unfortunately, he passed
away in December 2020.24 In June 2021, Mrs. Mathewson sought to be substituted into her late
husband's administrative appeal.25 VA granted the request in July 2021.26 As with Ms. Freund's
13
As noted earlier, in cases in which a VA AOJ, such as a regional office (RO), issued the initial decision that led to
an administrative appeal before February 19, 2019, the legacy appeals system applies. 38 C.F.R. § 3.2400(b).
14
Pet. at 15; see Pet. Ex. P-3, Appendix (App.) at 14.
15
Pet. at 15 (citing Pet. Ex. P-3, App. at 10-38).
16
Id. (citing Pet. Ex. P-4, App. at 39-41).
17
Id.
18
Pet. at 15 (citing Pet. Ex. P-5, App. at 42-44); Oral Argument (O.A.) at 39:39-43:34, Freund v. McDonough, U.S.
Vet. App. No. 21-4168 (oral argument held Feb. 10, 2022), http://www.uscourts.cavc.gov/documents/Freund.MP3.
19
Pet. at 16 (citing Pet. Ex. P-10, App. at 55-67).
20
Id. (citing Pet. Ex. P-11, App. at 70-71, 77-84).
21
Id. (citing Pet. Ex. P-12, App. at 96-118).
22
Id. (citing Pet. Ex. P-13, App. at 119-34).
23
Id. (citing Pet. Ex. P-15, App. at 145, 147-49).
24
Id. (citing Pet. Ex. P-9, App. at 53-54).
25
Pet. at 17 (citing Pet. Ex. P-17, App. at 160-61).
26
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 3 n.1 (citing Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. Ex. 10).
4
appeal, the appeal into which Mrs. Mathewson had been substituted had also been erroneously
closed when VACOLS determined that the veteran had not submitted a Substantive Appeal.27
B. VACOLS and Petitioners' Claims
VACOLS is a computerized, automated system in which VA tracks and monitors activity
within legacy appeals. 28 Certain status codes are used to reflect a corresponding action in
VACOLS,29 and VA employees must "update all applicable VACOLS fields when action is taken
on an appeal."30 When an RO receives a valid and timely NOD from a claimant, VA will create an
appeal record within VACOLS.31 In response to the NOD, VA will issue an SOC if VA decides to
continue a denial on a claim.32 Under procedures the Agency has adopted, if VA receives a timely
Substantive Appeal in response to the SOC from the claimant, VA must record the receipt of the
Substantive Appeal in VACOLS.33 VA must also update VACOLS for the subsequent tracking
activity of a Substantive Appeal.34 Once VA enters the date it receives the Substantive Appeal into
VACOLS, this action is supposed to officially place the appeal on the Board's docket.35 This
information is also recorded in the Veterans Benefits Management System (VBMS) where an end
product is established for the Substantive Appeal.36 If VA does not receive a Substantive Appeal,
at all or on time, VA will automatically close an appeal in VACOLS on the first day of the month
27
Pet. at 16 (citing Pet. Ex. P-16, App. at 155-57).
28
M21-5, ch. 6, sec. A.1.a ("[ROs] use VACOLS to track legacy appeals, i.e. disagreements to RO decisions made
before February 19, 2019.").
29
See, e.g., M21-5, ch. 6, sec. A.1.c ("When . . . the Board has completed action on an appeal[,] [t]hen VACOLS
shows . . . history status (HIS).").
30
M21-5, ch. 6, sec. A.1.d. VACOLS fields that must be updated include items such as dates, Board hearing options,
and diaries for pending actions. Id.
31
VA OFF. OF INSPECTOR GEN., OFF. OF AUDITS & EVALUATIONS, VETERANS BENEFITS ADMINISTRATION REVIEW OF
TIMELINESS OF THE APPEALS PROCESS 1-2 (Mar. 28, 2018),
https://www.oversight.gov/sites/default/files/oigreports/VAOIG-16-01750-79.pdf.
32
Id. at 2.
33
M21-5, ch. 6, sec. B.4.a.
34
Id., ch. 6, sec. B.4.d.
35
VA OFF. OF INSPECTOR GEN., OFF. OF AUDITS & EVALUATIONS, VETERANS BENEFITS ADMINISTRATION REVIEW OF
TIMELINESS OF THE APPEALS PROCESS 2 (Mar. 28, 2018),
https://www.oversight.gov/sites/default/files/oigreports/VAOIG-16-01750-79.pdf.
36
M21-5, ch. 6, sec. B.4.c. VA has described an end product as "the primary workload monitoring and management
tool for the [Veterans Service Center]." VA OFF. OF INSPECTOR GEN., OFF. OF AUDITS & EVALUATIONS, INSPECTION
OF THE VA REGIONAL OFFICE NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA 11 (Aug. 17, 2017),
https://www.oversight.gov/report/va/inspection-va-regional-office-new-orleans-louisiana (last visited June 4, 2022).
It is a tool to track claims. An RO inputs claims and issues under end product controls when those claims or issues are
received. VA MANPOWER CONTROL AND UTILIZATION IN ADJUDICATIVE DIVISIONS MANUAL (M21-4), ch. 4, sec.
4.3.a. End products are associated with claim labels, which "provide a more specific description of the claim type that
a corresponding end product . . . represents." M21-4, App. C, sec. C.1.a.
5
following 65 days after an SOC is issued or one year following the notification date of an AOJ
decision, whichever is later.37
It is undisputed that petitioners timely filed their Substantive Appeals; yet VACOLS did
not capture the timely filing of their Substantive Appeals.38 Thus, petitioners' appeals were closed
in the VACOLS system and not certified to the Board. The Secretary characterizes the premature
or erroneous closure of these appeals as "human error," but we don't know exactly what human
error happened that led to VA "not properly identif[ying]" the Substantive Appeals at the time they
were received by VA.39 However, we do know that the closings were based on the running of the
VACOLS sweeping function.40 As a result of these erroneous closings, VA took no action on
petitioners' appeals until VA reactivated them in July 2021.41 The Secretary's counsel stated at oral
argument that petitioners' appeals were reactivated as a result of "VA's established policy to
reactivate" appeals VA learns were wrongly closed.42 Of course, absent further explanation from
the Secretary, it appears that VA only learned of the wrongful closure of petitioners' appeals as the
result of the filing of this action.
C. Petition and Request for Class Action
In their petition, petitioners argue that VA inappropriately closed their legacy appeals due
to the automated sweeping function in VACOLS. They request that the Court: (1) declare VA's
withholding of action regarding petitioners' timely filed legacy appeals as agency action
"unlawfully withheld" within the meaning of 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(2); (2) declare that VA's closures
of petitioners' appeals without notice violate 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and fair process; (3) order the
Secretary to reactivate petitioners' appeals within 30 days; (4) retain jurisdiction over this case
until the Secretary complies with the Court's order; and (5) order any such other relief as
appropriate.43
We pause to address a procedural wrinkle concerning the petition. Petitioners filed this
petition jointly. They recognized the Court's rules did not expressly allow such joint filings, but
argued that we should allow them to proceed together.44 In a November 2021 order, the Court
directed the Secretary to address whether he opposed the joint filing of the petition.45 The Secretary
37
M21-5, ch. 6, sec. B.4.b; Sec'y's Resp. to Pet., Ex. 17.
38
See Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 2 (noting that Ms. Freund and Mr. Mathewson had each perfected their appeals prior to
the closure in VACOLS).
39
Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Nov. 29, 2021, Order at 12; see Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 19.
40
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 2; O.A. at 39:39-43:34.
41
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 2-3; id., Ex. at 3, 11.
42
O.A. at 1:17:04-:23.
43
Pet. at 2-3.
44
Id. at 2 n.1.
45
Nov. 29, 2021, Court Order at 1-2.
6
responded that he did not oppose petitioners' joint filing of their claims.46 Given the Secretary's
acquiescence in petitioners' joint filing, as well as our resolution of this matter in this order, we
will proceed on the basis that joinder was proper here. We stress, however, that nothing in this
order should be taken as adopting a particular test for determining when joinder is appropriate.
Along with their joint petition, petitioners also filed a request for class action and class
certification (RCA). They sought certification of a proposed class consisting of:
All claimants with a timely perfected legacy appeal: (1) that is an original appeal,[47]
(2) that the Secretary has closed, (3) that remains closed, (4) that appears in
VACOLS, (5) for which a copy of the [S]ubstantive [A]ppeal appears in VBMS,[48]
and (6) for which VA has not issued a rating decision regarding the [S]ubstantive
[A]ppeal's timeliness.[49]
In support of the RCA, petitioners assert that they are seeking resolution of common legal
issues, including whether "(1) by erroneously closing a timely perfected legacy appeal—and in
turn withholding all action on it—the Secretary is unlawful[ly] withholding agency action; and
(2) withholding [N]otice of the [A]ppeals' closures[] violates 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and [f]air
[p]rocess."50 They requested on behalf of the class in part that the Court "deem the Secretary's
withholding of action on the proposed [c]lass members' timely perfected legacy appeals to
constitute agency action 'unlawfully withheld'" and declare that "the no-notice element of the
Secretary's closure of the proposed [c]lass members' timely perfected legacy appeals violates
38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and [f]air [p]rocess."51
We ordered the Secretary to respond to both the petition and the RCA and allowed
petitioners to file replies as to both matters. Based on the Secretary's initial responses to the petition
and RCA it was unclear to the Court what actions the Secretary had taken to identify other
administrative appeals, aside from petitioners', in which legacy appeals were prematurely closed.
In that regard, the Secretary's response to the petition seemed to suggest that he was engaged in
such efforts by asserting that he had "been proactively and successfully working to identify cases
46
Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Nov. 29, 2021, Order at 1, 3-4 (explaining that petitioners meet the standards described in
Rule 20 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Monk v. Shulkin, 2018 U.S. App. Vet. Claims LEXIS 61,
No. 15-1280 (Jan. 23, 2018) (en banc order), because petitioners' claims arise out of the same transaction of VA
closing their appeals in VACOLS, and petitioners share the common question of whether VA wrongfully closed their
appeals despite timely submission of their Substantive Appeals).
47
RCA at 8. Petitioners refer to original claimants or, if the original claimant is deceased, an individual eligible to
substitute for the original claimant under 38 U.S.C. § 5121A. Id. at 9. They also specify that "original appeal" is one
that the Board has not previously remanded. Id.
48
Petitioners indicate "closed" to mean that VACOLS designates that the appeal's status is "HIS" meaning "history."
Id. at 9. M21-5, ch. 6, sec. B.4.b explains that "[i]f a [S]ubstantive [A]ppeal is not timely input, the VACOLS record
will automatically close and show a status of history (HIS)."
49
RCA at 8.
50
Id. at 13.
51
Id. at 28.
7
where an appeal was prematurely closed despite a timely VA Form 9 having been filed, and to
reactivate those appeals."52
On November 29, 2021, we ordered the Secretary to provide additional information and a
more detailed explanation concerning his alleged identification of cases that were prematurely
closed despite a timely Substantive Appeal being filed. We specifically asked the Secretary to
explain what he meant when he stated that he has been "proactively" working to identify such
appeals.53
In response to the Court's November 2021 order, the Secretary stated that VA "proactively
and successfully identifies VA Form 9s and activates appeals in VACOLS if they are prematurely
closed" through various procedures implemented within VACOLS and VBMS.54 The Secretary
explained that since the findings of a March 2018 VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) report,
VA has amended its procedures to improve its identification and tracking of timely filed
Substantive Appeals. First, the Secretary laid out the end product framework that he implemented
during the investigation that led to the March 2018 OIG report.55 This revised framework was
effective May 15, 2017. 56 VA established end product and claim label schemes to track and
monitor legacy appeals through both VACOLS and VBMS.57 Second, the Secretary described the
initial mail intake process in which VA identifies Substantive Appeals and updates VACOLS and
VBMS thereafter,58 noting the different possible reasons an appeal may be improperly closed
despite a timely Substantive Appeal submission.59 Third, and distinct from the initial mail intake
process, the Secretary explained that a multiple-review process takes place at certain points of VA
claims adjudication: (1) a veterans service representative reviews a claims folder when developing
evidence, (2) a rating veterans service representative reviews the claims folder when rendering a
decision, and (3) another veterans service representative reviews the claims folder when
authorizing an award.60 Finally, the Secretary explained that VA routinely administers monthly
and annual national-level quality control reviews of a sample size of claims to identify errors
52
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 19; see Secretary's Response to Request for Class Action at 10 ("[T]he Secretary already has
an established process in place for proactively and successfully identifying prematurely closed appeals and
reactivating those appeals."), 13 ("[T]he Secretary has been proactive in correcting each case where an appeal was
prematurely closed.").
53
Nov. 29, 2021, Court Order at 2.
54
Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Nov. 29, 2021, Order at 12.
55
Id. at 7.
56
Id.
57
Id.
58
Id. at 8-9.
59
See id. at 9-10. The Secretary asserts that delays in processing a timely VA Form 9 may be due to: submission of
the VA Form 9 close to expiration of the 60-day period for perfecting an appeal, delays in the physical mailing of a
timely post-marked VA Form 9, a VA Form 9 being sent to the wrong VA office before being rerouted to the correct
VA office, and human error.
60
Id. at 11.
8
within those individual claims.61 The Secretary stated that these procedures constitute the steps
VA has taken to "proactively and successfully [identify] VA Form 9s and [reactivate] appeals in
VACOLS if they are prematurely closed."62
The Court held oral argument on February 10, 2022. During oral argument, the Court posed
several questions to the Secretary's counsel for which counsel either did not have a response or
provided responses that were unclear.
First, the Court asked the Secretary's counsel to clarify VA's "proactive" actions concerning
identification of inappropriately closed Substantive Appeals. 63 He stated that "the term
'proactively' in [his] initial response" refers to "VA's normal operating procedures" to identify
Substantive Appeals that were previously filed with which a prematurely closed appeal is
associated. 64 Then, the Secretary's counsel answered in the affirmative that VA was doing
something independent of addressing this petition to identify cases in which claimants had their
appeals inappropriately closed.65 However, when asked again whether VA had been investigating
whether other appeals were inappropriately closed and had not been reactivated, the Secretary's
counsel responded that VA does not have procedures "for the sole purpose of identifying, if in a
claims file, a missed VA Form 9 is present."66 The Secretary's counsel stated that VA's intake
procedures are designed to ensure that appeals are not deactivated in error and that the Agency
reactivates appeals on an ongoing basis when it comes to VA's attention that an appeal has been
inappropriately closed.67 After all of this, however, it was still unclear to the Court whether the
Secretary was, at that time, doing anything with respect to the reactivation of prematurely closed
appeals that could legitimately be termed "proactive" or if he had any plans to do so and it was
thus equally unclear whether the RCA was moot, as the Secretary suggested at oral argument.68
Next, during oral argument, the Court referenced a statement in a March 2018 OIG report
concerning VA's anticipated future actions related to the issues the OIG had identified about VA's
appeals processing procedures. Specifically, the Court asked the Secretary's counsel to explain,
with respect to VA's response to a recommendation by the OIG concerning error reduction in
closing VACOLS records, what VA meant by the language "[VA] [was] in the process of updating
the pre-site visit protocol, to include a review of closed appeals." 69 The Secretary's counsel
61
Id. at 12.
62
Id.
63
O.A. at 43:37-45:40.
64
Id. at 47:47-48:19.
65
Id. at 48:59-50:19.
66
Id. at 52:54-53:22.
67
Id. at 59:26-:49.
68
"Proactive" is "acting in anticipation of future problems, needs, or changes." MERRIAM-WEBSTER,
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/proactive (last visited July 26, 2022).
69
O.A. at 53:22-:50; see Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Nov. 29, 2021, Order, Ex. 1 (Mar. 2018 OIG report) at 37 ("[OIG's]
Recommendation 3: . . . implement a plan to amend Veterans Benefits Administration's procedures for closing appeals
records to prevent appeals being closed prematurely.").
9
forthrightly responded that he did not know what the quoted statement referred to,70 but he offered
to provide a supplemental response to explain VA's efforts concerning this portion of the March
2018 OIG report.71 Relatedly, when asked whether VA has done any research to determine the
potential number of people whose appeals were erroneously closed, the Secretary's counsel
responded that VA had not done so.72
Finally, the Secretary's counsel asserted that the "vast majority" of closed legacy appeals
are properly closed because VA did not receive a Substantive Appeal.73 Counsel did not explain
the bases for this statement given that VA had not attempted to identify the appeals that have been
closed in the first place.74 The Court was unsure how VA could so assuredly say that the vast
majority of closed legacy appeals were related to a lack of filing a Substantive Appeal if VA had
not determined the quantity or scope of appeals that were improperly closed and remain closed.75
D. The Secretary's Post-Argument Actions
Following oral argument, the Court ordered the Secretary to file an affidavit or affidavits
from senior VA officials addressing several matters that had been the subject of questioning at
argument, particularly regarding the possible size of the proposed class and whether the RCA is
moot. We largely quote our requests for information in full to provide some context for the true
lack of clarity the Secretary provided at argument (as well as in his pre-argument submissions)
about the scope of the problem at the heart of this petition:
1. Other than the estimates the Secretary provided in his previous briefing, what is the
number of appeals, as of January 31, 2022, that remained closed in VACOLS and
that had been closed since May 15, 2017, (i.e., the effective date in which VA
revised its procedures by implementing a new end product structure [in VACOLS]
according to the March 2018 OIG report) due to the alleged failure to file a
Substantive Appeal, regardless of whether such an appeal ultimately is determined
to be appropriately or inappropriately closed?
2. Of the appeals identified in response to Question 1 above, how many of those
appeals do not show any activity associated with the claims file after the date of
closure of the appeal?
3. Has VA sent a notice letter to either or both groups identified in response to
Questions 1 and 2 above? If not, why is the Secretary contending that the request
for class action is moot if VA has not taken steps to notify claimants that their
appeals may have been prematurely closed?
70
O.A. at 53:51-:56.
71
Id. at 55:00-:12.
72
O.A. at 55:46-56:22.
73
O.A. at 1:01:34-:42.
74
O.A. at 1:00:27-:48.
75
O.A. at 55:45-56:22.
10
4. [Omitted]
5. In reference to Recommendation #3 of the March 2018 OIG report, VA explicitly
stated that, with respect to error reduction in prematurely closed appeals through
VACOLS, it "[was] in the process of updating the pre-site visit protocol, to include
a review of closed appeals records." Other than the end product framework
referenced in VA's response to Recommendation #3 and the procedures the
Secretary previously provided in his briefings, precisely what programs,
procedures, or other actions has VA implemented regarding reviewing closed
appeals records based on VA's response to Recommendation #3 in the March 2018
OIG report? The response to this question must specifically address what is referred
to as "a review of closed appeals records" in the OIG report.
6. In light of the petition and given the Secretary's knowledge of the appeals closure
errors in this case, has the Secretary undertaken any actions, other than the
procedures the Secretary provided previously in both his initial and supplemental
briefings, to identify legacy appeals that have been inappropriately closed due to
the failure to file a Substantive Appeal? Describe those actions in detail, including
whether they were implemented before or after oral argument in this matter. If the
Secretary has undertaken no actions to identify such appeals, explain why he is
contending that the request for class action is moot. If he has undertaken any action
to identify such appeals, what remedial plans does the Secretary have to address the
issue concerning the inappropriately closed appeals of the identified claimants?[76]
The Secretary responded to our post-argument order on April 11, 2022. To begin with, the
Secretary provided the Court with information concerning the number of inappropriately closed
legacy appeals in the period between May 15, 2017, and January 31, 2022. From the pool of closed
legacy appeals records during that time period, VA identified 5,456 legacy appeals in VACOLS
and VBMS that were both closed and showed possible receipt of a Substantive Appeal.77 And of
those identified appeals, VA found that 3,806 of them were associated with a timely filed
Substantive Appeal. 78 In other words, 69.8% of 5,456 closed legacy appeals with which a
Substantive Appeal was filed were improperly closed.79
The Secretary also, really for the first time, fully acknowledged that his purportedly
"proactive" steps to address the problem at the heart of this petition amounted to adopting certain
procedures in response to the 2018 OIG report and reactivating appeals when VA learned of an
inappropriate closure.80 Indeed, the Secretary stated clearly that "following oral argument before
76
Mar. 10, 2022, Court Order at 4-5 (emphasis in original; internal citations and footnotes omitted). Request #4
concerns a Freedom of Information Act request that is not relevant to the issues discussed in this order.
77
Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Mar. 10, 2022, Order at 5, Ex. 1.
78
Id.
79
Id.
80
Id. at 6-7, Ex. 1 ¶ VI.
11
the Court on February 10, 2022, on March 18, 2022, [the Veterans Benefits Administration] began
a focused review of legacy appeals that had been closed for failure to file a Substantive Appeal."81
The Secretary also stated that, while VA did not plan to notify claimants whose legacy appeals
were improperly closed, it would execute a plan to reactivate those closed appeals by the end of
fiscal year 2022, and he continued to assert that the RCA is moot.82
As we alluded to above, the Court is grateful that the Secretary developed a plan to address
the serious problem of having administrative appeals inappropriately closed, especially when no
notice is provided of such closures. But we can't help but wonder what took the Secretary and his
counsel so long to clearly explain what had been done to address the problem and, more
importantly, what had not been done. Quite simply, it should not have taken multiple orders and
the lengthy questioning of three Federal Judges at oral argument to have learned what the Secretary
eventually told us in his April 11, 2022, submission.
With the background out of the way, we can turn to the substance of the petition and RCA.
II. JURISDICTION
We begin with jurisdiction. Of course, we must always assure ourselves that we have
jurisdiction to act,83 even though no one seriously questions that we have jurisdiction to consider
the petition—or at least some aspect of it. Rather, the parties have jousted about the various bases
on which our jurisdiction is based. Because the nature of the relief sought is critical to assessing
our jurisdiction, we repeat what petitioners seek in this action. They ask the Court to: (1) declare
VA's withholding of action regarding petitioners' timely filed legacy appeals as agency action
"unlawfully withheld" within the meaning of 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(2); (2) declare that VA's closures
of petitioners' appeals without notice violate 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and fair process; (3) order the
Secretary to reactivate petitioners' appeals within 30 days; (4) retain jurisdiction over this case
until the Secretary complies with the Court's order; and (5) order any such other relief as
appropriate.84
There is no doubt that we may consider this matter under the rubric of the All Writs Act
(AWA) with respect to petitioners' claims that VA had (at the time of the filing of the action)
81
Id. at 5 (emphasis added).
82
Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Mar. 10, 2022, Order at 4-6, Ex. 1. For completeness sake, we note that we granted
petitioners' motion to file a reply to the Secretary's response to our order. Petitioners took issue with the Secretary's
assertion that VA's actions since March 10, 2022 (e.g., VA's review and subsequent identification of legacy appeals
closed between May 15, 2017, and January 31, 2022) renders petitioners' RCA moot. Specifically, petitioners argue
that despite VA's actions since March 2022 in connection with the Court's March 2022 order, the Secretary still has
not provided relief to the proposed class members VA identified and therefore petitioners' RCA is not moot.
Petitioners' Resp. to Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Mar. 10, 2022, Order at 2-8. We will return to the question of mootness
of the RCA given the Secretary's post-argument actions below. To preview, the Secretary's actions have not mooted
our consideration of the RCA.
83
See Foster v. McDonough, 34 Vet.App. 338, 351 (2021); Demery v. Wilkie, 30 Vet.App. 430, 434 (2019) (per curiam
order); see also Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env't, 523 U.S. 83, 94-95 (1998).
84
Pet. at 2-3.
12
wrongfully closed their appeals. The AWA provides that "all courts established by Act of Congress
may issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable
to the usages and principles of law."85 Our jurisdiction is tied to final Board decisions.86 It is well
established that, functionally, a writ would be in aid of our jurisdiction if it is "to remove obstacles
to appeal."87 Also, the AWA "'extends to the potential jurisdiction of the appellate court where an
appeal is not then pending but may be later perfected.'"88 Or as the Court recently characterized
the issue, the AWA provides the authority to act "in aid of our prospective jurisdiction, where 'an
alleged refusal to act would forever frustrate the ability of [this Court] to exercise its appellate
jurisdiction.'"89
Here, petitioners' claims concerning the inappropriate closing of their administrative
appeals fall comfortably within the ambit of the AWA. Considering that their appeals were closed
in the VACOLS system despite the timely filing of their Substantive Appeals, the Board would
not render a decision on those appeals. And if that were so, we could never exercise our jurisdiction
because there would be no final Board decision for us to review. This is a far cry from arguments
amounting to mere speculation or proposed hypothetical situations that would not support
proceeding under the AWA.90 In fact, the scenario before us concerning the erroneously closed
appeals is precisely the type of situation the AWA was designed to rectify.
There are two requests for relief that, at least in part, don't fit so comfortably within the
AWA framework: petitioners' request for the Court to (1) declare VA's withholding of action
regarding petitioners' timely filed legacy appeals as agency action "unlawfully withheld" within
the meaning of 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(2); and (2) declare that VA's closures of petitioners' appeals
without notice violate 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and fair process. 91 As to the first request, it too is
comfortably within the AWA if petitioners meant it to support their claim that the Court should
order their appeals reactivated. However, to the extent petitioners seek an order concerning the
future consequences of any past inappropriate closure,92 we will explain below that this claim is
speculative and, therefore, they lack standing to seek this relief. As to the second request
concerning the "no notice" feature of the closings, petitioners also lack standing to bring this claim
for relief because, at the time they filed this action, they had notice of the closing of their appeals
and, to the extent they claim they might be harmed in the future because of the lack of notice, that
claim is as speculative as the first one concerning harm from the inappropriate closings. The
85
28 U.S.C. § 1651(a); see Monk v. Shulkin, 855 F.3d 1312, 1318 (Fed. Cir. 2017); Gardner-Dickson v. Wilkie,
33 Vet.App. 50, 54-55 (2020), aff'd without opinion sub nom. Gardner-Dickson v. McDonough, 2021 U.S. App.
LEXIS 33000 (Fed. Cir. Nov. 5, 2021).
86
See 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(a), 7266(a).
87
Roche v. Evaporated Milk Ass'n, 319 U.S. 21, 26 (1943).
88
Erspamer v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 3, 8 (1990) (quoting FTC v. Dean Foods Co., 384 U.S. 597, 603-04 (1966)).
89
Love v. McDonough, 35 Vet.App. 336, 342 (2022) (per curiam order) (emphasis in original) (quoting Erspamer,
1 Vet.App. at 8).
90
See id.
91
Pet. at 2-3.
92
See Petitioners' Reply in Support of Pet. at 5-7 (discussing possible future harms related to loss of evidence).
13
bottom line is that we need not wrestle with a jurisdictional basis for these requests for relief
because they are not properly before the Court based on a lack of standing.
As we said, the parties don't dispute that we could proceed under the AWA at least with
respect to the request for reinstatement of the petitioners' appeals. And we agree. But in the interest
of completeness, we acknowledge certain additional arguments petitioners advance concerning
jurisdiction. Petitioners contend first that the Court has jurisdiction over their petition under
38 U.S.C. § 7252(c) in purported aid of the Federal Circuit's jurisdiction pursuant to 38 U.S.C.
§ 7292.93 The Court recently expressly rejected this argument as a basis for our jurisdiction in the
context of a petition.94 So, we need say no more on that point. And petitioners argue that our
authority under 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(2) to "compel action of the Secretary unlawfully withheld or
unreasonably delayed" also has jurisdictional implications.95 But, as we noted above and explain
below, either the petitioners lack standing to make the remaining requests for relief, or those
requests are moot. Moreover, even as to the claim properly asserted under the AWA, we'll explain
why petitioners' requests for reinstatement of their appeals are moot as well, even though they
presented a live controversy at the time the action was filed. Therefore, we need not resolve
petitioners' arguments about the meaning of section 7261(a)(2) in the context of AWA petitions,
and we leave them for another day.
III. MOOTNESS AND STANDING
Just because we have subject matter jurisdiction to consider some aspect of the petition
does not mean that we can necessarily reach the merits of any of petitioners' allegations. Before
we can do so, we must address whether there are any claims that continue to present a live
controversy over which we may exercise jurisdiction and, if there are such claims, whether
petitioners can seek the relief they ask the Court to award.
This Court has adopted the case-or-controversy requirements of Article III of the
Constitution of the United States.96 These requirements include both standing and mootness.97 To
have standing, a party must demonstrate an injury in fact that is "concrete, particularized, and
actual or imminent; fairly traceable to the challenged action; and redressable by a favorable
ruling."98 In terms of mootness, as relevant here, when VA has provided the relief sought in a
petition for extraordinary relief, the petition is moot as to that request for relief under case-or-
controversy principles.99 In that situation, the Court lacks jurisdiction and we must dismiss the
93
Pet. at 3-11.
94
See Love, 35 Vet.App. at 349-53.
95
Pet. at 12-13.
96
Cardona v. Shinseki, 26 Vet.App. 472, 474 (2014) (per curiam order); Aronson v. Brown, 7 Vet.App. 153, 155
(1994); Mokal v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 12, 13 (1990).
97
See Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Env't Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 180 (2000).
98
Clapper v. Amnesty Int'l USA, 568 U.S. 398, 409 (2013) (quoting Monsanto Co. v. Geertson Seed Farms, 561 U.S.
139, 149 (2010)).
99
See Monk v. Wilkie, 32 Vet.App. 87, 97 (2019) (en banc order), aff'd in part, dismissed in part sub nom. Monk
v. Tran, 843 F. App'x 275 (Fed. Cir. 2021); Godsey v. Wilkie, 31 Vet.App. 207, 218 (2019) (per curiam order); Thomas
14
action with respect to the relief VA has provided.100 Petitioners can avoid dismissal under these
circumstances only if there is some exception to mootness that would preserve the Court's
jurisdiction to entertain a matter.
In this section, we first address petitioners' individual claims for relief in their petition. We
conclude that petitioners' principal requests for relief are moot because VA has reactivated their
administrative appeals. As to the other forms of individual relief petitioners request, to the extent
they are not moot, we conclude petitioners lack standing to seek such relief. Second, we briefly
explain why the Secretary's post-argument actions have not mooted the class claims and our
consideration of the RCA. And finally, we turn to whether there is an exception to the mootness
doctrine that would allow us to proceed to address the merits of the petition concerning the
inappropriate closing of administrative appeals for the proposed class members despite the
mootness of the named petitioners' individual claims. We conclude that there is such an
exception—the "inherently transitory" exception to mootness that can apply in the context of a
request for relief from the Court on a class action basis. However, that exception can only assist
petitioners if certification of a class were appropriate here. The final section of this order explains
why certification is not appropriate, thereby making the inherently transitory exception to
mootness unhelpful to petitioners here.
A. Petitioners' Individual Claims for Relief: Mootness and Standing
In his October 2021 response to the petition, the Secretary argues that petitioners' claims
are moot because VA has reactivated petitioners' administrative appeals.101 Petitioners counter that
their petition is not moot because they did not limit their requested relief to a reactivation of their
appeals—pointing out that they also requested that the Court declare VA's actions of prematurely
closing their appeals as agency action unlawfully withheld within the meaning of 38 U.S.C.
§ 7261(a)(2) and that VA's closure of their legacy appeals without notice violates 38 C.F.R.
§ 19.32 and fair process principles.102
Here, it is undisputed that VA has reactivated the administrative appeals of both
petitioners.103 Given this fact, petitioners have received the principal relief they sought: ordering
the Secretary to reactivate their appeals within 30 days and our retaining jurisdiction until the
Secretary does so.104 Under these circumstances, the petition is moot as to these matters.105
v. Brown, 9 Vet.App. 269, 270 (1996) (per curiam order); Mokal, 1 Vet.App. at 15.
100
See, e.g., Monk v. Wilkie, 32 Vet.App. at 98; Long v. Principi, 17 Vet.App. 555, 556-57 (2004) (per curiam order);
Thomas, 9 Vet.App. at 270.
101
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 3-4, 11-12.
102
Petitioners' Reply in Support of Pet. at 5.
103
Sec'y's Resp. to Pet. at 2, 3.
104
See Pet. at 2-3.
105
See Monk v. Wilkie, 32 Vet.App. at 101; Godsey, 31 Vet.App. at 218; Thomas, 9 Vet.App. at 270; Mokal, 1 Vet.App.
at 15.
15
That being said, petitioners are correct to the extent they point out that they have not
received all the relief they sought. Specifically, petitioners also asked that we declare that the
closing of their appeals was agency action unlawfully withheld under 38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(2) and
that the no-notice aspect of the closures violated 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and fair process principles.106
But, while not moot, because petitioners lack standing to seek this relief, the fact that VA has not
provided such relief does not save their claims.
We conclude that petitioners lack standing to seek these unawarded remedies because they
have not alleged a sufficient injury in fact in that the harms petitioners posit might occur in the
future are speculative. Petitioners maintain that, as to them, the Court should declare that the
closing of their appeals amounted to Agency action unlawfully withheld and that the no-notice
aspect of the closures is unlawful because making these declarations could prevent prejudice in
the adjudication of their administrative appeals in the future.107 This type of hypothetical, future
injury is insufficient to establish standing. As the Supreme Court has said, "we have repeatedly
reiterated that 'threatened injury must be certainly impending to constitute injury in fact' and that
'[a]llegations of possible future injury' are not sufficient."108 Indeed, that petitioner Mathewson has
requested in her merits submissions that VA provide these heightened duties further buttresses that
the alleged potential harm—possible difficulties in obtaining benefits due to VA's potential refusal
to provide those duties—has not yet occurred.109 Petitioners' request for us to address speculative
harms runs afoul of the clear guidance from the Supreme Court. We reject their invitation to answer
the hypothetical questions they pose.
B. Alleged Mootness of RCA
As we discussed above, following oral argument in this matter, the Court ordered the
Secretary to provide additional information about VA's practice of closing and not reactivating
timely appeals that is at the heart of petitioners' claims. In response, the Secretary reported that he
had undertaken (although belatedly) efforts to identify claimants who had been affected by the
inappropriate closings of their administrative appeals.110 And he also informed the Court that VA
planned to "reactivate the legacy appeals records in VACOLS and take the appropriate next steps,
106
See Pet. at 2. As we noted above, to the extent that petitioners' reference to agency action unlawfully withheld was
merely to provide a legal basis upon which they argued the Court should order their administrative appeals reopened,
the request for relief is moot because their appeals have been reactivated.
107
See Petitioners' Reply in Support of Pet. at 5-7 (contending that such declarations could unlock heightened duties
to assist and to consider the benefit of the doubt when VA adjudicates their appeals on the merits, which in turn could
potentially assist them in obtaining benefits).
108
Clapper, 568 U.S. at 409 (emphasis added and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Whitmore v. Arkansas,
495 U.S. 149, 158 (1990)); see Skaar v. Wilkie, 32 Vet.App. 156, 173 (2019) (en banc order) ("Claimants cannot
simply 'allege a bare procedural violation, divorced from any concrete harm' to satisfy the injury requirement."
(quoting Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 341 (2016)), vacated on other grounds sub nom. Skaar v. McDonough,
48 F.4th 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2022).
109
See Petitioners' Reply in Support of Pet., Ex. P-18 at App. 177-78.
110
See Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Mar. 10, 2022, Order at 5.
16
to include notifying each appellant that their appeal was added to the Board's docket."111 The
Secretary then added that he "anticipates that these actions will be completed no later than the end
of this fiscal year."112
In addition to providing the Court with the information about VA's planned approach to
dealing with the inappropriately closed appeals, the Secretary also argued that his plan rendered
consideration of the RCA moot.113 The Secretary's position is puzzling. He seems to be suggesting
that because he committed to addressing a problem, the Court is deprived of jurisdiction to consider
the issue. But that is not how mootness works. As we discussed above with respect to the individual
claims, when a defendant provides all the relief sought in an action, a court may lose adjudicative
power due to mootness.114 But that has not happened here with respect to the putative class. The
Secretary has promised to act with respect to all those whose appeals have been inappropriately
closed. But a promise to act and actually acting are different things. After all, in the mootness
context, even when a defendant voluntarily ceases wrongful conduct—the equivalent of "fixing"
a problem—a case is not moot unless there is no reasonable expectation that the wrongful conduct
could resume.115 And the Supreme Court has made clear, showing that is the case is a "formidable
burden."116 In sum, we reject the Secretary's suggestion that his promise to act with respect to the
class moots our consideration of the RCA.
C. The Inherently Transitory Exception to Mootness
Although mootness of a named party's claims generally bars Federal courts from reaching
the merits of claims, the U.S. Supreme Court has applied certain exceptions to mootness in
situations where a class representative's personal interest may have become moot but putative class
members have live claims. In this regard, a plaintiff in a civil action who brings a purported class
action presents two separate issues for judicial resolution: (1) "the claim on the merits" and (2) "the
claim that [the plaintiff] is entitled to represent [as] a class."117 So, a class representative may have
her claim become moot, but the claim concerning the class may remain. Courts have referred to
this doctrine in class actions as the "inherently transitory" exception to mootness.118
The Court in Godsey adopted the inherently transitory exception to mootness. We
explained that an "inherently transitory" claim is one that is "unavoidably time-sensitive" and
111
Id.
112
Id.
113
Id. at 4.
114
See, e.g., Monk v. Wilkie, 32 Vet.App. at 98; Long, 17 Vet.App. at 556-57; Thomas, 9 Vet.App. at 270.
115
See Friends of the Earth, 528 U.S. at 189-90; United States v. W.T. Grant Co., 345 U.S. 629, 632 (1953).
116
See Friends of the Earth, 528 U.S. at 190.
117
Pitts v. Terrible Herbst, Inc., 653 F.3d 1081, 1089 (9th Cir. 2011) (quoting U.S. Parole Comm'n v. Geraghty,
445 U.S. 388, 402 (1980)).
118
Cnty. of Riverside v. McLaughlin, 500 U.S. 44, 51-52 (1991); Pitts, 653 F.3d at 1091.
17
"'acutely susceptible to mootness'"119 because a "trial court will not have enough time to rule on a
motion for class certification before the proposed representative's individual interest expires."120
The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has noted that the standard of certainty
for determining whether a claim is inherently transitory is relatively low; a "reasoned supposition"
that a claim will not survive before a district court can reasonably be expected to rule on class
certification makes that claim inherently transitory.121
Of course, we are bound by Godsey, which means that the inherently transitory exception
to mootness could possibly allow us to reach the merits of the petition on a class basis if we could
certify a class. And we will assume, without deciding, the class-claims here would qualify as ones
that are inherently transitory. But we stress that petitioners can only benefit from this exception to
mootness if the Court certifies a class. That is, if a class is not appropriate, an exception to
mootness based on the existence of a class is irrelevant. As we explain next, certification of a class
here is not appropriate and so the inherently transitory exception does not assist petitioners.
IV. CLASS CERTIFICATION
Finally, we address petitioners' RCA. The "[p]rerequisites" for proceeding as a class action
in this Court are:
(1) the class is so numerous that consolidating individual actions in the Court is
impracticable;
(2) there are questions of law or fact common to the class;
(3) the legal issue or issues being raised by the representative parties on the merits
are typical of the legal issues that could be raised by the class;
(4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the
class; and
(5) the Secretary or one or more official(s), agent(s), or employee(s) of the
Department of Veterans Affairs has acted or failed to act on grounds that apply
generally to the class, so that final injunctive or other appropriate relief is
appropriate respecting the class as a whole.[122]
119
Godsey, 31 Vet.App. at 219 (citing Pitts, 653 F.3d at 1091).
120
Godsey, 31 Vet.App. at 219 (quoting Cnty. of Riverside, 500 U.S. at 51-52).
121
J.D. v. Azar, 925 F.3d 1291, 1310 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
122
U.S. VET. APP. R. 23(a).
18
In addition to these five prerequisites, the Court also considers whether class-wide relief is
"superior" to the resolution of a matter through a precedential decision.123 In that regard, we have
held that we "will presume classes should not be certified because our ability to render binding
precedential decisions ordinarily will be adequate."124
Recall that petitioners propose representing a class they defined as follows:
All claimants with a timely perfected legacy appeal: (1) that is an original appeal,
(2) that the Secretary has closed, (3) that remains closed, (4) that appears in
VACOLS, (5) for which a copy of the [S]ubstantive [A]ppeal appears in VBMS,
and (6) for which VA has not issued a rating decision regarding the [S]ubstantive
[A]ppeal's timeliness.[125]
We conclude that certification of a class action in this matter is not appropriate on two
alternate grounds. The first proceeds on the basis that petitioners' proposed class definition
includes an implicit requirement that a class member have been subject to the closure of an
administrative appeal without notice. In that case, the Court concludes that the named petitioners
are not members of the class they seek to represent and are therefore inadequate representatives of
such a class. The second ground takes the class definition literally—meaning there is no
requirement that class members have been subject to no-notice closure. Proceeding under that
assumption, the Court concludes that petitioners have not met their burden to present common
questions capable of class-wide resolution. Under either view of the class definition, certification
is not appropriate.126 We will discuss each ground in turn.
A. Class Definition Implicitly Including No-Notice Requirement: The Named Petitioners are Not
Adequate Class Representatives
While not expressly stated in the class definition, petitioners' briefing has made clear that
their claims for class-wide relief are predicated, in part, on the fact that VA does not provide notice
to claimants when their administrative appeals are closed because the VACOLS sweep indicates
that no timely Substantive Appeal has been filed. Indeed, the RCA refers to that fact on no fewer
than 12 pages.127 As a prime example of the way in which the no-notice concept is woven into the
fabric of petitioners' class claims, the heading petitioners used to argue that there are common
issues among the class reads: "this action, which seeks relief from the erroneous, no-notice closure
of timely perfected appeals, presents questions common to the class."128 And, of course, one of
petitioners' specific requests for class-wide relief is based on the unlawfulness of VA's no-notice
123
U.S. VET. APP. R. 22(a)(3).
124
Skaar, 32 Vet.App. at 196.
125
RCA at 8.
126
Thompson v. Wilkie, 30 Vet.App. 345, 346 (2018) (per curiam order) (stating that each of the Rule 23 elements
must be met in order to justify class action certification).
127
See RCA at 1, 6-7, 10, 13-17, 19, 26, 28; see also Petitioners' Reply in Support of RCA at 1, 4-5, 10, 12.
128
RCA at 13 (capitalization altered; emphasis added).
19
policy.129 So, it is difficult to see how the no-notice aspect of petitioners' claims is not part of the
definition of the proposed class, even if implicitly so.130
Proceeding on this assumption concerning the implicit requirement of a lack of notice, a
class action is not appropriate here. As discussed above, to the extent petitioners seek on behalf of
the class a declaration that VA's no-notice policy violates § 19.32 or fair process, petitioners lack
standing. Additionally, to the extent that they may have standing as to the additional relief
sought—namely, reinstating the erroneously closed appeals and finding that VA is unlawfully
withholding action—because petitioners are not members of the class they seek to represent, they
are not adequate representatives of the class. The difficulty with any of petitioners' proposed
pathways to relief is that both petitioners were made aware in 2020 that their appeals were
closed.131 So, at the time they filed this action, both petitioners knew of the erroneous closures of
their respective timely filed legacy appeals. The fact that, at that time, they knew their legacy
appeals were inappropriately closed in VACOLS is at odds with their class definition as we have
construed it because once petitioners found out their legacy appeals were closed, they were no
longer part of the class they sought to represent. Stated somewhat differently, the scope of the class
is overbroad in the sense that for one to be a class member, a lack of notice of their closed appeal
is implicitly required. And the definition that petitioners propose, as construed by the Court, is
problematic because once a claimant does discover that his or her appeal has been closed, they
have notice, and therefore, could not adequately represent a class seeking redress for lack of notice.
What's more, the problem with petitioners' proposed class does not result from the Secretary's
actions or the transitory nature of their claims. Petitioners simply were never members of the class
they seek to represent because of the nature and implicit definition of the proposed class.
Our conclusion today on this point breaks no new ground in terms of class actions in
Federal courts. The Supreme Court has made clear that when a putative class representative is not
a member of the proposed class, and when, by the very definition of the class itself, there can be
no class representative, certification is not appropriate.
In Amchem Products, Inc. v. Windsor, 132 the Supreme Court established that named
representatives of an asbestos-litigation settlement class "'must be part of the class and possess the
same interest and suffer the same injury as the class members.'"133 The named representatives in
Amchem could not be adequate class representatives due to two primary reasons. First, the class
members had varying settlement interests from one another (e.g., based on the severity and/or
presence of their injury, some class members desired immediate payments while others wanted
129
See RCA at 28-29 (requesting that the Court find that the "no-notice element of the Secretary's closure of the
proposed [c]lass members' timely perfected legacy appeals violates 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and [f]air [p]rocess" and that
notice be provided to the members of the class).
130
See Nehmer v. U.S Dep't of Veterans Affairs, No. CV-86-06160, 2020 WL 6508529, at *5-6 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 5,
2020) (concluding that veterans who served off the shores of Vietnam were part of the class and entitled to class-wide
relief even though the class definition and consent decree did not explicitly reference those veterans).
131
O.A. at 18:56-19:22.
132
521 U.S. 591, 625-26 (1997).
133
Id. at 625-26 (quoting E. Tex. Motor Freight Sys., Inc. v. Rodriguez, 431 U.S. 395, 403 (1977) (emphasis added)).
20
inflation-protected future payments).134 Second, the named representatives were an undivided set
of individuals that sought to represent a class that not only had differing interests in the settlement,
but also, unlike the named representatives, the class members hadn't yet filed a lawsuit against the
defendants.135 The Supreme Court in Amchem found it was necessary for the class to be divided
into discrete subclasses. 136 And because no subclasses were established 137 and the undivided
named representatives sought to represent "a single giant class" instead of discrete subclasses, the
representatives could not adequately represent the class as a whole.138 Put simply, the Amchem
Court found that the representatives did not have the same injury or interests as the class they
wished to represent because they did not share the same injuries or interests of the diverse class
members.
As it did in Amchem, the Supreme Court in Ortiz v. Fibreboard Corp. 139 also found
applicable the need for division of a class into subclasses and corresponding, separate
representation for class representation in a settlement action under a limited fund theory.140 Like
in Amchem, an undivided group of named representatives sought to represent a class of individuals
whose members differed in certain important respects. The class consisted of people who had
incurred current asbestos-related injuries and those who hadn't yet sustained injuries but were
exposed to asbestos.141 The Supreme Court in Ortiz found that the varying presence of injuries (or
lack thereof) within the class meant the members had differing interests in the settlement, and thus,
separate representation among the class representatives as well as separate subclasses were
necessary to eliminate conflicting interests of counsel.142
Of course, our case is distinguishable from Amchem and Ortiz for many reasons. But the
fundamental logic of these decisions makes clear the basic, common-sense principle that class
representatives must be members of the class they seek to represent when filing a request for class
action. In addition, these decisions show that when the party proposing a class crafts a definition
that makes it functionally impossible for anyone to serve as a class representative, class
proceedings are not appropriate.143 That is what we have here. As Amchem and Ortiz make clear,
there are some problems that simply are beyond the scope of class consideration. This conclusion
provides a basis upon which to deny petitioners' request to proceed on a class basis in this matter,
based on a class definition that includes an implicit, no-notice requirement.
134
Id. at 626.
135
Id. at 602.
136
Id. at 627.
137
Id. at 603.
138
Id. at 626-27.
139
527 U.S. 815 (1999).
140
Id. at 856 (citing Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627).
141
Id. at 856-87.
142
Id. at 856 (citing Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627).
143
See Amchem, 521 U.S. at 627 (upholding the Third Circuit's holding that class certification by the district court was
improper, in part, because it failed the adequacy-of-representation requirements of Rule 23(a)).
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B. Class Definition Not Including No-Notice Requirement: Lack of Commonality
Even if we approached the question of class certification by assuming that the proposed
class does not include an implicit requirement of a lack of notice of the closing of an appeal and
that petitioners could satisfy the prerequisite of adequacy, we would still find certification here
unwarranted. This is so because that proposed class fails the requirement that "there are questions
of law or fact common to the class."144 We need not wade too deeply into the somewhat murky
waters of assessing commonality.145 As we will explain, we do not see this as a close case.
The Court's Rule 23(a)(2) is identical to the commonality requirement applicable to class
actions in Federal district courts under Rule 23(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.146
The Supreme Court has held that Rule 23(a)(2) under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires
a "common contention . . . of such a nature that it is capable of classwide resolution—which means
that determination of its truth or falsity will resolve an issue that is central to the validity of each
one of the claims in one stroke."147 Importantly for operationalizing this significant requirement,
the Supreme Court emphasized that "'[w]hat matters to class certification . . . is not the raising of
common 'questions'—even in droves—but rather, the capacity of a class-wide proceeding to
generate common answers apt to drive the resolution of the litigation.'" 148 Factual and legal
differences among putative class members' claims are fatal to establishing commonality when
those differences "'have the potential to impede the generation of common answers'" to the
common questions said to unite the proposed class.149
Petitioners have failed to meet their burden to show that there are common answers to
common questions going to the resolution of the action across the board.150 They posit that the
common questions here are whether "(1) by erroneously closing a timely perfected legacy appeal—
and in turn withholding all action on it—the Secretary is unlawful[ly] withholding agency action;
and (2) withholding notice of the appeals' closures[] violates 38 C.F.R. § 19.32 and [f]air
[p]rocess."151 However, we held above that the individual petitioners lack standing to seek Court
declarations as to those two questions. And, "'standing cannot be acquired through the back door
of a class action.'"152 So, there must be something else that shows commonality. But petitioners
have posed no other common question capable of class-wide resolution.
144
U.S. VET. APP. R. 23(a)(2).
145
See, e.g., Monk v. Wilkie, 30 Vet.App. 167 (2018) (en banc) (competing opinions concerning application of
commonality standard), aff'd, 978 F.3d 1273 (Fed. Cir. 2020).
146
Compare U.S. VET. APP. R. 23(a)(2), with FED. R. CIV. P. 23(a)(2).
147
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 564 U.S. 338, 350 (2011); see Monk v. Wilkie, 978 F.3d 1273, 1277 (Fed. Cir.
2020).
148
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 564 U.S. at 350 (quoting Richard A. Nagareda, Class Certification in the Age of Aggregate
Proof, 84 N.Y.U. L. REV. 97, 132 (2009)).
149
Id. (quoting Nagareda, supra note 148, at 132).
150
See Thompson, 30 Vet.App. at 346.
151
RCA at 13.
152
Skaar, 32 Vet.App. at 173 (quoting Allee v. Medrano, 416 U.S. 802, 829 (1974) (Burger, C.J., concurring in part
22
Moreover, the fact that all the proposed class members would have to have had an
administrative appeal closed due to a VACOLS sweep and have a timely Substantive Appeal on
file is not enough to show commonality. That state of affairs may show that class members share
a common characteristic. However, that feature does not establish that there is any common answer
to a common question that will allow the Court to resolve the dispute "in one stroke."153 Indeed, it
is undisputed here that, if a claimant identifies a timely Substantive Appeal, VA will without
further action by the claimant or the Court reactivate the appeal. In other words, there is no
common question the common answer to which will allow the Court to grant or deny the precise
relief petitioners seek—reopening of class members' appeals because the Agency has withheld
action.154 And because there is no such answer, there is no commonality.
*****
The bottom line is that no matter how we assess the class petitioners seek to represent in
this action, certification is inappropriate. Either petitioners lack standing or they are not members
of the class they seek to represent or, if they are, the class does not meet the commonality
requirement. Either way of approaching this issue leads to the same result, our denial of the RCA.
V. A CONCLUDING THOUGHT
As we noted at the beginning of our order, this is a troubling case. Perhaps with the best of
intentions, VA has adopted a procedure utilizing technology to streamline the process of managing
a crushing appeals workload. A byproduct of that procedure is that claimants who have validly
perfected an administrative appeal have had their appeals inappropriately closed. And the Agency
has not told these claimants about the closures so they could protest. Although we are unable to
certify the class and are precluded from providing the relief petitioners seek given the limits on
judicial authority, we are heartened that the Secretary appears to have recognized the seriousness
of the situation and has undertaken steps to address the issues that led to the filing of this action.155
As we noted, however, we are also deeply disappointed that it took the Secretary so long to
acknowledge the problem this petition highlighted. But, as the saying goes, better late than never.
We trust that the Secretary will proceed in executing the plan he proposed to correct the situation
that has come to light through this proceeding. The Nation's veterans (and their dependents)
deserve no less.
and dissenting in part)); see id. (holding that Mr. Skaar did not have standing to seek on behalf of the class an order
that VA recognize Palomares as a radiation-risk activity where he argued that such relief would allow him to register
for VA's Ionizing Radiation Registry but denial of such enrollment was not part of the proposed class definition).
153
Wal-Mart, 564 U.S. at 350.
154
Again, the no-notice arguments can't carry the day because we are assuming that the no-notice argument is not
implicit in terms of class membership.
155
Sec'y's Resp. to Court's Mar. 10, 2022, Order at 2-3.
23
VI. CONCLUSION
Upon consideration of the foregoing, it is
ORDERED that petitioners' Request for Class Action and Class Certification is DENIED.
And it is further
ORDERED that the petition is DISMISSED.
DATED: October 20, 2022
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