Summary of Precedent Opinions of the General Counsel, 11229-11230 [2010-5008]

Download as PDF Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 10, 2010 / Notices (see 31 CFR part 223). A list of qualified companies is published annually as of July 1st in the Circular, which outlines details as to the underwriting limitations, areas in which companies are licensed to transact surety business, and other information. The Circular may be viewed and downloaded through the Internet at https://www.fms.treas.gov/c570. Questions concerning this Notice may be directed to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Financial Management Service, Financial Accounting and Services Division, Surety Bond Branch, 3700 East-West Highway, Room 6F01, Hyattsville, MD 20782. Dated: February 25, 2010. Vivian L. Cooper, Director, Financial Accounting and Services Division. [FR Doc. 2010–4939 Filed 3–9–10; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4810–35–M prior to that date. The Certificates are subject to subsequent annual renewal as long as the companies remain qualified (see 31 CFR part 223). A list of qualified companies is published annually as of July l in the Circular, which outlines details as to the underwriting limitations, areas in which companies are licensed to transact surety business, and other information. The Circular may be viewed and downloaded through the Internet at https://www.fms.treas.gov/c570. Questions concerning this Notice may be directed to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Financial Management Service, Financial Accounting and Services Division, Surety Bond Branch, 3700 East-West Highway, Room 6F01, Hyattsville, MD 20782. Dated: February 25, 2010. Vivian L. Cooper, Director, Financial Accounting and Services Division. [FR Doc. 2010–4941 Filed 3–9–10; 8:45 am] DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY BILLING CODE 4810–35–M Fiscal Service Surety Companies Acceptable on Federal Bonds: Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Insurance Company UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE Financial Management Service, Fiscal Service, Department of the Treasury. ACTION: Notice. Date/Time: Tuesday, March 16, 2010. 11 a.m.–12 p.m. Location: 1200 17th Street, NW., Suite 200, Washington, DC 20036–3011. Status: Board Executive Session— Portions may be closed pursuant to Subsection (c) of section 552(b) of Title 5, United States Code, as provided in subsection I 706(h)(3) of the United States Institute of Peace Act, Public Law 98–525. Agenda: March 16, 2010 Board Executive Session. Approval of Board Resolutions; Transition discussions. Contact: Tessie F. Higgs, Executive Assistant, Telephone: (202) 429–3836. erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES AGENCY: SUMMARY: This is Supplement No. 8 to the Treasury Department Circular 570, 2009 Revision, published July 1, 2009, at 74 FR 31536. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Surety Bond Branch at (202) 874–6850. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A Certificate of Authority as an acceptable surety on Federal bonds is hereby issued under 31 U.S.C. 9305 to the following company: Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Insurance Company (NAIC # 12262). Business Address: P.O. Box 3031, Blue Bell, PA. 19422–0754. Phone:(610) 397–5000. Underwriting Limitation b/: $20,193,000. SURETY LICENSES C/: AL, AK, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OK, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV. Incorporated In: Pennsylvania. Federal bond-approving officers should annotate their reference copies of the Treasury Circular 570 (‘‘Circular’’), 2009 Revision, to reflect this addition. Certificates of Authority expire on June 30th each year, unless revoked VerDate Nov<24>2008 15:07 Mar 09, 2010 Jkt 220001 Notice of Meeting Dated: March 3, 2010. Tara Sonenshine, Executive Vice President, United States Institute of Peace. [FR Doc. 2010–4958 Filed 3–9–10; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 6820–AR–P 11229 Memorials will be held April 28–29, 2010, at the Houston Airport Marriott, 18700 John F. Kennedy Boulevard, Houston, Texas, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. The meeting is open to the public. The purpose of the Committee is to advise the Secretary of Veterans Affairs on the administration of national cemeteries, soldiers’ lots and plots, the selection of new national cemetery sites, the erection of appropriate memorials, and the adequacy of Federal burial benefits. On April 28, the Committee will receive updates on National Cemetery Administration issues. On April 29, the Committee will tour Houston National Cemetery, located at 10410 Veterans Memorial Drive, Houston, Texas, and then reconvene at the hotel for a business session in the afternoon. On April 29, the Committee will discuss Committee recommendations, future meeting sites, and potential agenda topics at future meetings. Time will be allocated for receiving public comments at 1 p.m. Public comments will be limited to three minutes each. Individuals wishing to make oral statements before the Committee will be accommodated on a first-come, firstserved basis. Individuals who speak are invited to submit 1–2 page summaries of their comments at the time of the meeting for inclusion in the official meeting record. Members of the public may direct questions or submit written statements for review by the Committee in advance of the meeting to Mr. Michael Nacincik, Designated Federal Officer, Department of Veterans Affairs, National Cemetery Administration (41C2), 810 Vermont Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20420, or by e-mail at Michael.n@va.gov. In the public’s communications with the Committee, the writers must identify themselves and state the organizations, associations, or persons they represent. Any member of the public wishing to attend the meeting should contact Mr. Nacincik at (202) 461–6240. Dated: March 5, 2010. By Direction of the Secretary. Vivian Drake, Acting Committee Management Officer. [FR Doc. 2010–5118 Filed 3–9–10; 8:45 am] DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS BILLING CODE P Advisory Committee on Cemeteries and Memorials; Notice of Meeting DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) gives notice under Public Law 92– 463 (Federal Advisory Committee Act) that a meeting of the Advisory Committee on Cemeteries and Summary of Precedent Opinions of the General Counsel PO 00000 Frm 00126 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 Department of Veterans Affairs. Notice. AGENCY: ACTION: E:\FR\FM\10MRN1.SGM 10MRN1 11230 Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 10, 2010 / Notices SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is publishing a summary of legal interpretations issued by the Office of General Counsel involving Veterans’ benefits under laws administered by VA. These interpretations are considered precedential by VA and will be followed by VA officials and employees in future claim matters involving the same legal issues. The summary is published to provide the public, and, in particular, Veterans’ benefits claimants and their representatives, with notice of VA’s interpretations regarding the legal matters at issue. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Susan P. Sokoll, Law Librarian, Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue, N.W. (026H), Washington, DC 20420, (202) 461–7623. A VA regulation at 38 CFR 2.6(e)(8) delegates to the General Counsel the power to designate an opinion as precedential and 38 CFR 14.507(b) specifies that precedential opinions involving Veterans’ benefits are binding on VA officials and employees in subsequent matters involving the legal issue decided in the precedent opinion. The interpretation of the General Counsel on legal matters, contained in such opinions, is conclusive as to all VA officials and employees, not only in the matter at issue, but also in future adjudications and appeals involving the same legal issues, in the absence of a change in controlling statute or regulation or a superseding written legal opinion of the General Counsel. VA publishes summaries of such opinions in order to provide the public with notice of those interpretations of the General Counsel that must be followed in future benefit matters and to assist Veterans’ benefits claimants and their representatives in the prosecution of benefit claims. The full text of such opinions, with personal identifiers deleted, may be obtained by contacting the VA official named above or by accessing the opinions on the internet at https://www.va.gov/ogc/ precedentopinions.asp. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: VAOPGCPREC 1–2010 erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES Questions Presented May the amount of a tort claim settlement required to be offset from 38 U.S.C. 1151 disability compensation be reduced by the amount of an overpayment of such compensation, due to untimely discontinuance of VerDate Nov<24>2008 15:07 Mar 09, 2010 Jkt 220001 compensation, that does not result in the creation of a debt or is waived?’ Held If a veteran who has established entitlement to compensation for a disability under 38 U.S.C. 1151(a) is awarded a judgment or enters into a settlement or compromise under the Federal Tort Claims Act based on the same disability, section 1151(b)(1) prohibits the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) from paying compensation for that disability for any month beginning after the judgment, settlement, or compromise becomes final until the aggregate amount of compensation that would otherwise have been paid equals the amount of the judgment, settlement, or compromise. If VA erroneously continues to pay compensation to the veteran and the resulting overpayment does not result in establishment of a debt or VA waives recovery of the overpayment, VA may not apply the amount of the overpayment or the waived amount to reduce the amount required to be offset from future compensation payments. Effective Date: January 4, 2010. VAOPGCPREC 2–2007 Withdrawn VAOPGCPREC 2–2007 is not applicable to claims in which the claimant dies on or after October 10, 2008. Subsequent to the issuance of that opinion, Congress enacted Public Law 110–389, section 212 of which added a new section 5121A to title 38, U.S. Code, providing that, if a claimant dies while a claim or an appeal of a decision on a claim is pending, a person who would be eligible for accrued benefits under 38 U.S.C. 5121(a) may, within one year of the claimant’s death, request to be substituted as the claimant for purposes of processing the claim to completion. Furthermore, section 212(c) of Public Law 110–389 specifies that section 5121A shall apply with respect to the claim of any claimant who dies on or after the date of enactment, October 10, 2008. Id. Therefore, VAOPGCPREC 2–2007 is obsolete as to pending claims in which the claimant dies on or after that date. Effective Date: September 14, 2009 VAOPGCPREC 6–1999 Withdrawn VAOPGCPREC 6–99 is withdrawn in light of the subsequent decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in Bradley v. Peake, 22 Vet. App. 280 (2010). In VAOPGCPREC 6–99, we explained that section 1114(s) excludes total disability based upon individual PO 00000 Frm 00127 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 9990 unemployability (TDIU) as a basis for establishing a total rating under that section because a TDIU rating takes into account all of a Veteran’s serviceconnected disabilities and that, therefore, considering a TDIU rating and a schedular rating in determining eligibility for SMC would conflict with the statutory requirement for ‘‘additional’’ disability of 60 percent or more by counting the same disability twice. The exclusion of TDIU as a basis for satisfying the total-rating requirement under section 1114(s) holds true in the specific circumstance where a disability relied upon in establishing the TDIU rating would also be relied upon, at least in part, in meeting the statutory requirement for ‘‘additional’’ disability of 60 percent or more. In such a case, consideration of a TDIU rating for purposes of awarding SMC would result in duplicate counting of a disability in awarding additional; compensation. However, the Veterans Court found there are other circumstances in which a TDIU rating may satisfy the totalrating requirement without resulting in duplicate counting of a disability. The court concluded that it is possible for a Veteran to be awarded TDIU based on a single disability and receive schedular disability ratings for other conditions. Under that circumstance, the court concluded there would be no duplicate counting of disabilities in awarding SMC based on the TDIU rating and schedular rating(s) and read the General Counsel opinion as not barring the TDIU rating where the same disability need not be counted twice, i.e., as a basis for TDIU and as a separate disability rated 60-percent or more disabling. Furthermore, the logic of Bradley suggests that if a Veteran has a schedular total rating for a particular service-connected disability and subsequently claims TDIU for a separate disability, VA must consider the TDIU claim despite the existence of the schedular total rating and award SMC under section 114(s) if VA finds the separate disability supports a TDIU rating independent of the other 100-percent disability rating. This would directly conflict with the holdings of VAOPGCPREC 6–99. Effective Date: November 4, 2009 Dated: March 4, 2010. By Direction of the Secretary. Will A. Gunn, General Counsel. [FR Doc. 2010–5008 Filed 3–9–10; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 8320–01–P E:\FR\FM\10MRN1.SGM 10MRN1

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 46 (Wednesday, March 10, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11229-11230]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-5008]


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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS


Summary of Precedent Opinions of the General Counsel

AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.

ACTION: Notice.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 11230]]

SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is publishing a 
summary of legal interpretations issued by the Office of General 
Counsel involving Veterans' benefits under laws administered by VA. 
These interpretations are considered precedential by VA and will be 
followed by VA officials and employees in future claim matters 
involving the same legal issues. The summary is published to provide 
the public, and, in particular, Veterans' benefits claimants and their 
representatives, with notice of VA's interpretations regarding the 
legal matters at issue.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Susan P. Sokoll, Law Librarian, 
Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue, N.W. (026H), 
Washington, DC 20420, (202) 461-7623.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A VA regulation at 38 CFR 2.6(e)(8) 
delegates to the General Counsel the power to designate an opinion as 
precedential and 38 CFR 14.507(b) specifies that precedential opinions 
involving Veterans' benefits are binding on VA officials and employees 
in subsequent matters involving the legal issue decided in the 
precedent opinion. The interpretation of the General Counsel on legal 
matters, contained in such opinions, is conclusive as to all VA 
officials and employees, not only in the matter at issue, but also in 
future adjudications and appeals involving the same legal issues, in 
the absence of a change in controlling statute or regulation or a 
superseding written legal opinion of the General Counsel.
    VA publishes summaries of such opinions in order to provide the 
public with notice of those interpretations of the General Counsel that 
must be followed in future benefit matters and to assist Veterans' 
benefits claimants and their representatives in the prosecution of 
benefit claims. The full text of such opinions, with personal 
identifiers deleted, may be obtained by contacting the VA official 
named above or by accessing the opinions on the internet at https://www.va.gov/ogc/precedentopinions.asp.

VAOPGCPREC 1-2010

Questions Presented

    May the amount of a tort claim settlement required to be offset 
from 38 U.S.C. 1151 disability compensation be reduced by the amount of 
an overpayment of such compensation, due to untimely discontinuance of 
compensation, that does not result in the creation of a debt or is 
waived?'

Held

    If a veteran who has established entitlement to compensation for a 
disability under 38 U.S.C. 1151(a) is awarded a judgment or enters into 
a settlement or compromise under the Federal Tort Claims Act based on 
the same disability, section 1151(b)(1) prohibits the Department of 
Veterans Affairs (VA) from paying compensation for that disability for 
any month beginning after the judgment, settlement, or compromise 
becomes final until the aggregate amount of compensation that would 
otherwise have been paid equals the amount of the judgment, settlement, 
or compromise. If VA erroneously continues to pay compensation to the 
veteran and the resulting overpayment does not result in establishment 
of a debt or VA waives recovery of the overpayment, VA may not apply 
the amount of the overpayment or the waived amount to reduce the amount 
required to be offset from future compensation payments.
    Effective Date: January 4, 2010.

VAOPGCPREC 2-2007 Withdrawn

    VAOPGCPREC 2-2007 is not applicable to claims in which the claimant 
dies on or after October 10, 2008. Subsequent to the issuance of that 
opinion, Congress enacted Public Law 110-389, section 212 of which 
added a new section 5121A to title 38, U.S. Code, providing that, if a 
claimant dies while a claim or an appeal of a decision on a claim is 
pending, a person who would be eligible for accrued benefits under 38 
U.S.C. 5121(a) may, within one year of the claimant's death, request to 
be substituted as the claimant for purposes of processing the claim to 
completion.
    Furthermore, section 212(c) of Public Law 110-389 specifies that 
section 5121A shall apply with respect to the claim of any claimant who 
dies on or after the date of enactment, October 10, 2008. Id. 
Therefore, VAOPGCPREC 2-2007 is obsolete as to pending claims in which 
the claimant dies on or after that date.
    Effective Date: September 14, 2009

VAOPGCPREC 6-1999 Withdrawn

    VAOPGCPREC 6-99 is withdrawn in light of the subsequent decision of 
the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in Bradley v. Peake, 22 Vet. 
App. 280 (2010). In VAOPGCPREC 6-99, we explained that section 1114(s) 
excludes total disability based upon individual unemployability (TDIU) 
as a basis for establishing a total rating under that section because a 
TDIU rating takes into account all of a Veteran's service-connected 
disabilities and that, therefore, considering a TDIU rating and a 
schedular rating in determining eligibility for SMC would conflict with 
the statutory requirement for ``additional'' disability of 60 percent 
or more by counting the same disability twice. The exclusion of TDIU as 
a basis for satisfying the total-rating requirement under section 
1114(s) holds true in the specific circumstance where a disability 
relied upon in establishing the TDIU rating would also be relied upon, 
at least in part, in meeting the statutory requirement for 
``additional'' disability of 60 percent or more. In such a case, 
consideration of a TDIU rating for purposes of awarding SMC would 
result in duplicate counting of a disability in awarding additional; 
compensation.
    However, the Veterans Court found there are other circumstances in 
which a TDIU rating may satisfy the total-rating requirement without 
resulting in duplicate counting of a disability. The court concluded 
that it is possible for a Veteran to be awarded TDIU based on a single 
disability and receive schedular disability ratings for other 
conditions. Under that circumstance, the court concluded there would be 
no duplicate counting of disabilities in awarding SMC based on the TDIU 
rating and schedular rating(s) and read the General Counsel opinion as 
not barring the TDIU rating where the same disability need not be 
counted twice, i.e., as a basis for TDIU and as a separate disability 
rated 60-percent or more disabling. Furthermore, the logic of Bradley 
suggests that if a Veteran has a schedular total rating for a 
particular service-connected disability and subsequently claims TDIU 
for a separate disability, VA must consider the TDIU claim despite the 
existence of the schedular total rating and award SMC under section 
114(s) if VA finds the separate disability supports a TDIU rating 
independent of the other 100-percent disability rating. This would 
directly conflict with the holdings of VAOPGCPREC 6-99.
    Effective Date: November 4, 2009

    Dated: March 4, 2010.

    By Direction of the Secretary.
Will A. Gunn,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2010-5008 Filed 3-9-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P
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