Full articlehere:🚨BREAKING NEWS: šŸ’” Supreme Court Upholds VA Court Ruling Denying Veterans’ Benefits

In a consequential 7-2 decision, theĀ U.S. Supreme CourtĀ has ruled against two former service members,Ā Joshua BufkinĀ andĀ Norman Thornton, regarding the judicial review standards of their disability claims. The central dispute involved the “benefit-of-the-doubt” rule, a legal mandate requiring theĀ Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)Ā to rule in favor of a veteran when the evidence for and against a claim is in approximate balance. The high court’s decision clarifies that theĀ U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans ClaimsĀ is not required to perform an independent, specialized review of how theĀ VA applied this rule, but should instead limit its oversight to checking for “clear errors” in the original factual findings. JusticeĀ Clarence Thomas, writing the majority opinion, explained that theĀ Veterans CourtĀ and theĀ Federal CircuitĀ must treat these inquiries as predominantly factual questions. This means that unless theĀ Board of Veterans AppealsĀ made an obvious mistake in weighing the evidence, appellate courts should defer to the agency’s expertise. The ruling emphasizes that the statutory framework does not demand a de novo review of the benefit-of-the-doubt application. Consequently, theĀ Supreme CourtĀ maintained that the appellate courts had fulfilled their legal obligations by reviewing the cases for procedural and legal errors rather than re-litigating the weight of the conflicting medical evidence presented by the veterans.

The two petitioners at the heart of the case brought very different backgrounds to theĀ U.S. Supreme Court.Ā Joshua Bufkin, who served in theĀ Air Force, had sought benefits for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) linked to his service, despite having been discharged years earlier due to domestic hardship. His claim was rejected afterĀ VAĀ medical professionals offered conflicting diagnoses.Ā Norman Thornton, anĀ ArmyĀ veteran of theĀ Persian Gulf War, already received a 50% disability rating for PTSD but argued that the evidence supported an even higher rating. In both instances, theĀ Board of Veterans AppealsĀ found the evidence did not tip in the veterans’ favor, and theĀ Supreme Court has now affirmed that the appellate courts were not required to second-guess those specific evidentiary balances. The decision drew a sharp dissent from JusticeĀ Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined by JusticeĀ Neil Gorsuch. JusticeĀ JacksonĀ argued that the ruling disregards the clear intent ofĀ Congress, which designed theĀ VAĀ system to be uniquely veteran-friendly. She contended that by requiring only a “clear error” review, the court is effectively allowing theĀ Veterans CourtĀ to “rubberstamp” agency decisions, thereby stripping veterans of the protections they were promised under the law.Ā Jackson emphasized that the benefit-of-the-doubt rule was meant to be a powerful tool to help veterans overcome the difficulties of proving service-connected injuries, and she expressed concern that the court’s narrow interpretation undermines the pro-veteran canon of statutory construction. Ultimately, this ruling sets a high bar for veterans seeking to overturn benefit denials at the appellate level. By classifying the application of the benefit-of-the-doubt rule as a factual determination rather than a legal one, theĀ Supreme CourtĀ has significantly limited the paths available for veterans to challenge theĀ VA‘s weighing of evidence. While the majority views this as a standard application of appellate law, the dissent and various veterans’ advocacy groups argue it represents a move toward a more adversarial and less supportive benefits process. The decision inĀ Bufkin v. CollinsĀ will likely have long-term implications for thousands of pending and future claims within theĀ Board of Veterans AppealsĀ system.

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