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Supreme Court Update: Bufkin v. Collins (No. 23-713)

March 12, 2025

When a veteran seeks disability benefits, federal law provides that ties go to the applicant. But if the Veterans Administration decides itโ€™s not a tieโ€”that is, the preponderance of the evidence comes out against the veteranโ€”then it has no occasion to apply this tiebreaking rule. That leads to a question only an appellate lawyer would ask: What standard of review applies to the VAโ€™s determination that the evidence isnโ€™t even: The de novo standard generally used for legal questions or the clear error one used for findings of fact? In Bufkin v. Collins (No. 23-713), a seven-Justice majority held that this is a best seen as a mixed question of law and fact where the fact piece dominates, meriting clear error review. That prompted a dissent from the two Justices perhaps most likely to favor the little guy against the big-bad governmentโ€”Justices Jackson and Gorsuchโ€”who thought the whole point of this tie-breaking rule was to thwart the VAโ€™s historical reluctance to award veterans the disability benefits they should receive.ย ย 

Joshua Bufkin and Norman Thornton are two veterans who applied for disability benefits for PTSD caused by their time in the military. Their claims began in local VA regional offices (the first port of call for veterans seeking disability benefits), where Bufkinโ€™s claim was denied entirely, while Thornton received lower benefits than he sought. Both then appealed to the Board of Veteransโ€™ Appeals, an Article I court that reviews the benefits decisions of VA regional offices. The Board affirmed both regional officesโ€™ decisions. In doing so, it acknowledged that whenever โ€œthere is an approximate balance of positive and negative evidenceโ€ on any issue material to a veteranโ€™s claim, the VA must โ€œgive the benefit of the doubt to the claimant.โ€ 38 U.S.C. ยง 5107(b). But the Board concluded that the evidence was not approximately balanced, so Bufkin and Thornton werenโ€™t entitled to that deferential standard.ย ย 

Bufkin and Thornton then appealed their respective cases to the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (the โ€œVeterans Courtโ€), another Article I tribunal, which reviews decisions from the Board. There, they argued that the evidence supporting their claims was about equal to the evidence against them, and that they were therefore entitled to get the benefit of the doubt. Federal law provides that in reviewing Board decisions, the Veterans Court must โ€œtake due accountโ€ of this benefit-of-the-doubt rule. But the Veterans Court concluded that the account that was โ€œdueโ€ wasnโ€™t much: Seeing no clear error in the Boardโ€™s decision that evidence weighed more strongly against the veterans, it affirmed the Board.ย ย 

Bufkin and Thornton then appealed the Veterans Courtโ€™s decisions to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, a genuine Article III court that (among a great many other things) reviews decisions from the Veterans Court. It agreed with the Veterans Court that clear error applies to the Boardโ€™s decision that the evidence wasnโ€™t roughly 50-50, so it too affirmed the denial of benefits. These three rounds of appeals werenโ€™t enough for Bufkin and Thornton, though, as they successfully convinced the Supreme Court to grant cert to address the appropriate standard of review.ย ย ย 

Unfortunately for our persistent appellants, the Court affirmed all the courts below it in a 7-2 opinion authored by Justice Thomas. It began with the language of the statute which, as discussed above, requires the Veterans Court to take โ€œdue accountโ€ of the โ€œbenefit-of-the-doubtโ€ rule in reviewing the Boardโ€™s decisions. But the phrase โ€œdue accountโ€ doesnโ€™t have a lot of content on its own, so Thomas concluded the general standards of review called for by the veterans statutes are all the โ€œaccountโ€ that is โ€œdue.โ€ Those statutes prescribe the ordinary standards of review appellate lawyers know well, calling for the Veterans Court to review conclusions of law de novo and findings of fact for clear error. So in which bucket fell the Boardโ€™s conclusion that the evidence wasnโ€™t about equal, meaning thereโ€™s no โ€œdoubtโ€ for the veteran to benefit from? For Thomas and majority, weighing up the evidence involves both legal and factual work, making it a mixed question of fact and law. And because this particular mixed question โ€œis about as factual sounding as any question gets,โ€ Thomas thought it was appropriately reviewed only for clear error.ย ย 

Justice Thomas then brushed aside two objections to this reasoning. First, Bufkin and Thornton argued this interpretation of the legislative command that the Veterans Court take โ€œdue accountโ€ of the benefit-of-the-doubt rule made the โ€œdue accountโ€ provision surplusage. Thomas acknowledged that this objection was โ€œa serious one,โ€ but the problem was that itโ€™s just as true if you apply the de novo standard Bufkin and Thornton asked for: Either way, youโ€™re simply following the statuteโ€™s default standards of review. Thomas thus concluded that this wasnโ€™t a context where the rule against surplusage could do any work. Second, the veterans observed that some mixed questions of law and factโ€”like probable cause determinationsโ€”are reviewed de novo. But for Thomas, probable cause determinations dwelt in the โ€œconstitutional realm,โ€ giving rise to heightened scrutiny. The โ€œbenefit-of-the-doubtโ€ standard, by contrast, was a create of statute. And further, probable cause asks the legal-sounding question of what the hypothetical reasonable man might think of a particular set of facts. The question hereโ€”whether the evidence is about equalโ€”was just too fact-like for an appellate court to conduct de novo review. ย 

In dissent, Justice Jackson, joined by Justice Gorsuch, disagreed on both points. In her view, the statutory mandate that the Veterans Court โ€œtake due accountโ€ of the benefit-of-the-doubt rule should be understood as superseding the general standard of review found in the statute, thereby mandating de novo review. And even if one were to apply the baseline standards of review, Jackson thought that the Boardโ€™s determination about whether the benefit-of-the-doubt rule applied looked more like a probable cause determination, meriting de novo review. Although couched in the language of textualism, Jacksonโ€™s dissent relied heavily on legislative history, pointing to past drafts of the statute and testimony from veterans groups to Congress, all of which suggested that the whole point of the โ€œdue accountโ€ provision was to override the Veterans Courtโ€™s perceived record of being too deferential to the Board. Finally, Jackson bolstered her ultimate conclusion with the so-called veterans canon, which provides that statutory provisions for the benefit of veterans should be construed in the beneficiaryโ€™s favor. It is notable that Justice Gorsuch signed on to a dissent that made such heavy use of legislative history. Perhaps he simply thought veterans should get the benefit of the doubt.ย ย 

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