Tadlock v. McDonough ( 2021 )


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  • Case: 20-1762     Document: 40    Page: 1   Filed: 07/15/2021
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    HOWARD L. TADLOCK, JR.,
    Claimant-Appellant
    v.
    DENIS MCDONOUGH, SECRETARY OF
    VETERANS AFFAIRS,
    Respondent-Appellee
    ______________________
    2020-1762
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Court of Appeals for
    Veterans Claims in No. 18-1160, Judge Joseph L. Toth.
    ______________________
    Decided: July 15, 2021
    ______________________
    CARL RICHARD HENNIES, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &
    Sullivan, LLP, Houston, TX, argued for claimant-appel-
    lant. Also represented by WILLIAM ADAMS, MATTHEW A.
    TRAUPMAN, New York, NY.
    RETA EMMA BEZAK, Commercial Litigation Branch,
    Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Wash-
    ington, DC, argued for respondent-appellee. Also repre-
    sented by JEFFREY B. CLARK, TARA K. HOGAN, ROBERT
    EDWARD KIRSCHMAN, JR.; BRIAN D. GRIFFIN, DEREK
    SCADDEN, Office of General Counsel, United States Depart-
    ment of Veterans Affairs, Washington, DC.
    Case: 20-1762     Document: 40     Page: 2    Filed: 07/15/2021
    2                                     TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    ______________________
    Before NEWMAN, LINN, and CHEN, Circuit Judges.
    LINN, Circuit Judge.
    This case presents the question of whether and to what
    extent the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans
    Claims (“Veterans Court”) may make findings of fact in the
    course of considering whether an error of the Board of Vet-
    erans Appeals (“Board”) was prejudicial. Because the Vet-
    erans Court’s jurisdiction to consider prejudicial error does
    not give it the right to make de novo findings of fact or oth-
    erwise resolve matters that are open to debate, we vacate
    the Veterans Court’s determination that Howard L. Tad-
    lock, Jr. (“Tadlock”) is not entitled to presumptive service
    connection and remand for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    BACKGROUND
    Tadlock served in the Army from 1982 until 2003, in-
    cluding service in the Persian Gulf. In 2010, he suffered a
    pulmonary embolism (“PE”) that resulted in a heart attack.
    Tadlock sought presumptive service connection for the PE
    and the heart attack under 38 U.S.C. § 1117. Section 1117
    provides for presumptive service connection for a “qualify-
    ing chronic disability” for veterans who served in the Per-
    sian Gulf War. 38 U.S.C. § 1117(a)(1)(A). A “qualifying
    chronic disability” is, inter alia,
    (2) . . . [A] chronic disability resulting from any of
    the following:
    (A) An undiagnosed illness.
    (B) A medically unexplained chronic multi-
    symptom illness (such as a chronic fa-
    tigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and
    irritable bowel syndrome) that is de-
    fined by a cluster of signs or symptoms.
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    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                       3
    (C) Any diagnosed illness that the Secre-
    tary determines in regulations pre-
    scribed under subsection (d) warrants a
    presumption of service-connection.
    Id. at § 1117(a)(2). The statute expressly requires the Sec-
    retary to “prescribe regulations to carry out this section,”
    id. at § 1117(d)(1), including, inter alia, “[a] description of
    the illnesses for which compensation under this section
    may be paid,” id. at § 1117(d)(2)(B). In a regulation imple-
    menting the statute, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs lim-
    ited the definition of “a qualifying chronic disability” to one
    that, “[b]y history, physical examination, and laboratory
    tests cannot be attributed to any known clinical diagnosis.”
    38 C.F.R. § 3.317(a)(ii).
    After several rounds of examinations, appeals, and re-
    mands, Tadlock underwent a final medical examination
    conducted in July 2017 by a Veterans Affairs (“VA”) physi-
    cian (“examiner”). The examiner diagnosed Tadlock with a
    pulmonary embolism, noting that “Pulmonary Embolism
    (PE) is diagnosed and well documented by generally well
    accepted diagnostic procedure, that being pulmonary CT
    angiogram.” In re Tadlock, No. 13-15 547, at *9 (Bd. of Vet.
    App. 2019) (“VA Op.”) (quoting VA examiner’s opinion).
    The examiner explained that because Tadlock’s PE “is di-
    agnosed, it is not an undiagnosed illness.” Id. The exam-
    iner also explained that Tadlock’s PE was not “medically
    unexplained.” Id. at 11. The examiner thus concluded that
    “[i]t is less likely as not that pulmonary embolism is related
    to his active service, to include exposure to environmental
    hazards in [] Southwest Asia during the Gulf War.” J.A.
    214.
    The Board explicitly adopted the 2017 examiner’s opin-
    ion and largely based its conclusion denying service con-
    nection on that opinion. Id. at 13. The Board ultimately
    held:
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    4                                    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    [T]he pulmonary embolism has been competently
    and credibly associated with a known etiology and
    diagnosis, pulmonary embolism, and therefore ser-
    vice connection based on the law and regulations
    pertaining to undiagnosed illness incurred due to
    Persian Gulf service is not warranted.
    Id. (citing 38 C.F.R. § 3.317). Neither the Board nor the
    examiner made any finding of fact that Tadlock’s condition
    was not a “medically unexplained chronic multisymptom
    illness . . . defined by a cluster of signs or symptoms,” col-
    loquially referred to as a “MUCMI.”
    With the benefit of pro bono counsel, Tadlock appealed
    to the Veterans Court, arguing that the definition of a
    “qualifying chronic disability” in 38 C.F.R. § 3.317 neces-
    sarily conflicts with 38 U.S.C. § 1117. He contended that
    the statute expressly includes not only “an undiagnosed ill-
    ness” but also a “medically unexplained chronic multi-
    symptom illness,” examples of which include diagnosed
    illnesses, “such as chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia,
    and irritable bowel syndrome.” (definition added). See 38
    U.S.C. § 1117(a)(2)(B).
    The Veterans Court, in a single-judge memorandum
    decision by Judge Toth, agreed with Tadlock: “Since a
    MUCMI, by definition, must be a diagnosed illness, deny-
    ing this claim because the veteran’s illness is diagnosed
    was clearly erroneous.” Tadlock v. Wilkie, No. 18-1160,
    
    2019 WL 2707830
    , at *3 (Vet. App. June 29, 2019) (“Veter-
    ans Court Op.”). See also 
    id. at *5
     (“[T]he Board denied his
    claim in part because this PE was a diagnosed illness, and
    this Court found this basis erroneous.”).
    The Veterans Court went on, however, to find that the
    error was not prejudicial. The Veterans Court noted that
    both 38 U.S.C. § 1117 and 38 C.F.R. § 3.317 characterize a
    MUCMI as a condition “defined by a cluster of signs or
    symptoms.” Without citation to any findings by the Board
    or the VA, the Veteran’s Court found in the first instance
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    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                     5
    that “[t]he acute PE that [Tadlock] suffered nearly 10 years
    ago is not characterized by overlapping signs and symp-
    toms and unique features such as pain, fatigue, and dispro-
    portional disability when compared with physical
    findings.” Id. at 4. It therefore held that “any error in the
    Board decision regarding whether his diagnosed illness
    could count as a MUCMI is harmless.” Id. On that basis,
    the Veteran’s Court affirmed.
    The Veterans Court granted Tadlock’s subsequent mo-
    tion for a panel decision. A split panel adopted the memo-
    randum decision as the decision of the court. Tadlock v.
    Wilkie, 
    2020 WL 738550
    , at *1–2 (Vet. App. Feb. 14, 2020).
    In dissent, Judge Pietsch noted that “the Court, under a
    prejudicial error analysis, applied a provision that the
    Board did not apply and made factual findings that the
    Board did not make,” characterizing this case as “the latest
    in a recent string of aggressive prejudicial error analyses”
    by the Veterans Court. 
    Id. at *2
    . Judge Pietsch opined
    that the Veterans Court’s decision was based “on a record
    not developed to answer” whether Tadlock’s disability was
    a MUCMI, and “made medical findings despite its lack of
    medical competency.” 
    Id.
    Tadlock timely appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    I
    As a preliminary matter, the government argues that
    we do not have jurisdiction to review the Veterans Court’s
    decision in this case because Tadlock’s arguments on ap-
    peal require consideration of whether the Board’s error was
    prejudicial, a factual determination outside this court’s ju-
    risdiction to review. See Newhouse v. Nicholson, 
    497 F.3d 1298
    , 1302 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (“Newhouse II”) (holding that
    this court’s jurisdiction does not allow considering appel-
    lant’s “contentions regarding actual prejudice”); Pitts v.
    Shinseki, 
    700 F.3d 1279
    , 1286–87 (Fed. Cir. 2012)
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    6                                     TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    (applying Newhouse II in a similar circumstance); Conway
    v. Principi, 
    353 F.3d 1369
    , 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“[T]he ul-
    timate conclusion of the effect of the rule of prejudicial er-
    ror on this case is beyond our jurisdiction”).           The
    government proffers a rule that “when the Veterans Court
    has undertaken a review for prejudicial error and deter-
    mined that an error is harmless, this court lacks jurisdic-
    tion to disturb that determination.” Appellee’s Br. at 13.
    The government’s proposed rule is overly broad and is
    expressly rejected. This court may review legal questions,
    including the validity of any statute or regulation or any
    interpretation thereof. 38 U.S.C. § 7292(c). “Whether the
    Veterans Court exceeded its jurisdiction is a question of
    law.” Sullivan v. McDonald, 
    815 F.3d 786
    , 789 (Fed. Cir.
    2016). This court routinely exercises jurisdiction to con-
    sider whether the Veterans Court exceeded its jurisdiction
    in making de novo fact-finding. E.g., 
    id. at 792
    –93 (reject-
    ing the government’s argument that determining whether
    the Veterans Court made an improper fact-finding in the
    first instance was outside this court’s jurisdiction because
    it required a factual comparison between the Veterans
    Court’s opinion and the Board’s opinion); Elkins v. Gober,
    
    229 F.3d 1369
    , 1377 (Fed. Cir. 2000); Hensley v. West, 
    212 F.3d 1255
    , 1265 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (holding that the Veterans
    Court’s finding that a veteran’s claim was not well-
    grounded was an improper de novo fact finding”). There is
    no basis for an exception to this well-settled rule in the case
    of a prejudicial error determination.
    Tadlock’s challenge here is not to the factual determi-
    nation of the Veterans Court that his illness was not a
    MUCMI, but instead to the Veterans Court’s authority to
    make that fact-determination in the first instance in its
    consideration of prejudicial error. Although we cannot re-
    view and do not here decide whether the Veterans Court
    was correct to hold that Tadlock’s illness was not a
    MUCMI, we can review the question of law whether the
    Veterans Court exceeded its jurisdiction in making that
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    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                      7
    determination in the first instance. Indeed, we made this
    distinction explicitly in Newhouse II. 
    497 F.3d at 1301
    –02
    (first considering whether the Veterans Court exceeded its
    jurisdiction in violation of Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Chenery
    Corp., 
    318 U.S. 80
     (1943), then holding that we could not
    consider the veterans challenge to the Veterans Court’s fac-
    tual determination of no actual prejudice).
    We conclude that we have jurisdiction over this case
    under 38 U.S.C. § 7292(c). We review the question of law
    regarding the Veterans Court’s jurisdiction de novo. Sulli-
    van, 815 F.3d at 789.
    II
    A
    On the merits, Tadlock argues that the Veterans Court
    improperly engaged in de novo fact finding in making its
    determination of no prejudicial error. He argues that his
    case is analogous to Hensley in which we held that the Vet-
    erans Court had exceeded its jurisdiction in finding no prej-
    udicial error on an insufficiently developed factual record.
    He also argues that the Veterans Court violated Chenery
    by substituting a different rationale in support of its find-
    ing of no prejudicial error, citing Mayfield v. Nicholson, 
    444 F.3d 1328
     (Fed. Cir. 2006). The government argues in op-
    position that the Veterans Court was not only correct in
    reviewing the Board’s decision for prejudicial error, but
    was required to do so, and that this analysis allows the Vet-
    erans Court to go outside the facts found by the Board, re-
    lying on Mlechick v. Mansfield, 
    503 F.3d 1340
     (Fed. Cir.
    2007) and Newhouse II.
    B
    “The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims shall have
    exclusive jurisdiction to review decisions of the Board of
    Veterans’ Appeals.” 38 U.S.C. § 7252(a). The Veterans
    Court’s review is on “the record of proceedings before the
    Secretary and the Board” and “shall be limited to the scope
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    8                                    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    provided in section 7261 of this title.” Id. at § 7252(b) (em-
    phasis added). In authorizing such review, Congress ex-
    pressly limited the Veterans Court’s jurisdiction to exclude
    de novo fact-finding: “In no event shall findings of fact
    made by the Secretary or the Board of Veterans’ Appeals
    be subject to trial de novo by the [Veterans] Court.” 38
    U.S.C.§ 7261(c). As we have recognized, the statute pro-
    hibits the court from making factual findings in the first
    instance.” Deloach v. Shinseki, 
    704 F.3d 1370
    , 1380 (Fed.
    Cir. 2013) (emphasis in original). “[F]act-finding in veter-
    ans cases is to be done by the expert [Board], not by the
    Veterans Court.” Elkins, 
    229 F.3d at 1377
    . “The statutory
    provisions are consistent with the general rule that appel-
    late tribunals are not appropriate fora for initial fact find-
    ing.” Hensley, 
    212 F.3d at 1263
     (observing that “[a]ppellate
    courts can ‘review’ only that which has happened in the
    past”). See also 
    id.
     (quoting Icicle Seafoods, Inc. v.
    Worthington, 
    475 U.S. 709
    , 714 (1986) for the proposition
    that appellate courts “should not simply [make] factual
    findings on [their] own”).
    While the Veterans Court is also empowered to “hold
    unlawful and set aside or reverse [a finding of material fact
    adverse to the claimant] if the finding is clearly erroneous,”
    38 U.S.C. § 7261(a)(4), a determination by the Veterans
    Court that the Board clearly erred in making a fact finding
    is quite different from the Veterans Court finding facts in
    the first instance. The former is statutorily authorized by
    § 7261(a)(4).    The latter is statutorily foreclosed by
    § 7261(c) (prohibiting “trial de novo by the Court”). As we
    stated in Deloach: “The Court of Appeals for Veterans
    Claims, [even] as part of its clear error review, must review
    the Board’s weighing of the evidence; it may not weigh any
    evidence itself.” 704 F.3d at 1380 (emphasis in original).
    C
    The Veterans Court, in deciding all cases before it, is
    also statutorily charged with taking “due account of the
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    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                    9
    rule of prejudicial error.” 38 U.S.C. § 7261(b). Conway, 
    353 F.3d at 1375
     (“[W]e establish today that the Veterans
    Court must ‘take due account of the rule of prejudicial er-
    ror’ in all cases addressing the notice requirements in sec-
    tion 5103(a).”). In reviewing the Board’s decision for
    prejudicial error, the Veterans Court is not limited to con-
    sidering only the facts relied on by the Board and the VA
    but can—and indeed must—consult the full agency record,
    including facts and determinations that could support an
    alternative ground for affirmance. Newhouse II, 
    497 F.3d at 1302
     (“The [prejudicial error] statute does not limit the
    Veterans Court’s inquiry to the facts as found by the Board,
    but rather requires the Veterans Court to ‘review the rec-
    ord of the proceedings before the Secretary and the Board’
    in determining whether a VA error is prejudicial” (quoting
    38 U.S.C. § 7261(b)(2)); Mlechick, 503 F.3d at 1345 (“That
    statutory obligation permits the Veterans Court to go out-
    side of the facts as found by the Board to determine
    whether an error was prejudicial by reviewing ‘the record
    of the proceedings before the Secretary and the Board’”
    (quoting Newhouse II, 
    497 F.3d at 1302
    )).
    In Newhouse v. Nicholson, 
    21 Vet. App. 65
     at *5 (2006)
    (unpublished) (“Newhouse I”), the Veterans Court deter-
    mined that the VA failed to provide Newhouse proper no-
    tice of the evidence he needed to submit to substantiate his
    claims. Newhouse alleged that with the required notice, he
    would have resubmitted a July 1985 examination or would
    have sought additional audiology examination to substan-
    tiate his claim, and that the proper course for the Veterans
    Court was to vacate the Board’s denial of benefits and re-
    mand. 
    Id. at *4
    . The Veterans Court disagreed because it
    determined that the notice deficiency was not prejudicial
    because Newhouse “could not have been prejudiced” by the
    notice error because the July 1985 report was already in
    the record, and Newhouse had already requested addi-
    tional VA audiological evaluations. 
    Id.
     There was thus no
    space for the possibility of actual prejudice.
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    10                                   TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    This court, without considering whether Newhouse
    was actually prejudiced, endorsed the Veterans Court’s
    prejudicial error analysis, noting that the “[t]he statute
    does not limit the Veterans Court’s inquiry to the facts as
    found by the Board, but rather requires the Veterans court
    to ‘review the record of the proceedings before the Secre-
    tary and the Board’ in determining whether the VA error
    is prejudicial.” Newhouse II, 
    497 F.3d at 1302
     (quoting 38
    U.S.C. § 7261(b)(2)). The Veterans Court did not violate
    Chenery by affirming on a different ground than the Board
    because the Veterans Court was statutorily empowered
    and required to consider whether the VA’s error was prej-
    udicial. Id. Reaffirming Newhouse II, this court in
    Mlechick held that the Veterans Court may not simply re-
    fuse to consider whether a notice failure was prejudicial to
    the veteran and, instead, must consider the “the entire ‘rec-
    ord of the proceedings before the Secretary and the Board’
    in determining whether an error was nonprejudicial.” 503
    F.3d at 1345 (quoting Newhouse II, 
    497 F.3d at 1302
    ).
    The government relies on Newhouse II and Mlechick for
    the broad proposition that prejudicial error review allows—
    indeed, requires—the Veterans Court to consider whether
    the Board’s error was prejudicial based on the record, un-
    fettered by the particular fact-findings made by the VA or
    the Board. The government’s argument is overstated and
    its reliance on these cases is misplaced. The Veterans
    Court’s decision in Newhouse I was based on a determina-
    tion that the record unquestionably revealed no prejudice
    from the VA’s notice error: the 1985 letter Newhouse al-
    leged he would have submitted with proper notice was al-
    ready in the record, and he had already requested the
    audiological examinations he alleged he would have sought
    with proper notice. 
    21 Vet. App. 65
    , at *5 (“[T]he appellant
    could not have been prejudiced by such notice.”). The Vet-
    erans Court thus did not need to make a factual determi-
    nation that was open to debate in the first instance.
    Moreover, there is no indication in Newhouse II that the
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    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                    11
    veteran even argued that the Veterans Court’s affirmance
    was based on new fact-findings. 
    497 F.3d at 1301
    –02.
    Newhouse II thus does not support the government’s posi-
    tion.
    Mlechick also does not support the government’s posi-
    tion. At best, both Newhouse II and Mlechick expressly and
    correctly recognized that the prejudicial error analysis
    must be performed in every case and must be done so on
    the record made before the agency. Newhouse II, 
    497 F.3d at 1301
     (“[T]he Veterans Court was required to examine
    whether any errors by VA were prejudicial and [] it must
    do so based on the administrative record” (emphasis
    added)); Mlechick, 503 F.3d at 1345 (“The statutory obliga-
    tion [to consider prejudicial error] permits the Veterans
    Court to go outside of the facts as found by the Board to
    determine whether an error was prejudicial by reviewing
    ‘the record of the proceedings before the Secretary and the
    Board’” (quoting Newhouse II, 
    497 F.3d at 1302
    ) (emphasis
    added)). While “the record of the proceedings before the
    Secretary and the Board” is broader than “the facts as
    found by the Board,” nothing in either case, however, re-
    quires or even suggests that considering the “record of the
    proceedings” authorizes the Veterans Court to make find-
    ings of fact in the first instance.
    In Shinseki v. Sanders, the Supreme Court explained
    that the Veterans Court prejudicial error mandate “re-
    quires the Veterans Court to apply the same kind of ‘harm-
    less error’ rule that courts ordinarily apply in civil cases”
    and when reviewing agency action under the Administra-
    tive Procedure Act (“APA”). 
    556 U.S. 396
    , 406 (2009). In
    reviewing agency action under the APA, “[t]he task of the
    reviewing court is to apply the appropriate APA standard
    of review, 5 U.S.C. § 706, to the agency decision based on
    the record the agency presents to the reviewing court.” Fla.
    Pwr. & Light Co. v. Lorion, 
    470 U.S. 729
    , 743–44 (1985).
    This review is limited to “the administrative record already
    in existence, not some new record made initially in the
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    12                                    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    reviewing court.” Camp v. Pitts, 
    411 U.S. 138
    , 142 (1973).
    The appellate courts “should not simply . . . [make] factual
    findings on [their] own.” Icicle Seafoods, 
    475 U.S. at 714
    .
    Tadlock relies on Mayfield in arguing that the Veter-
    ans Court exceeded its jurisdiction by affirming on a
    ground other than the VA’s stated ground. In that case,
    the Veterans Court concluded that Mayfield did not receive
    adequate notice under the Veterans Claims Assistance Act
    (“VCAA”) via a series of statements and decisions that oc-
    curred after an initial decision by the VA but were statuto-
    rily required to be provided before such a decision. 
    444 F.3d at 1334
    . Rather than remand, the Veterans Court
    held that a 2001 letter provided the necessary notice and
    therefore affirmed the Board’s denial of service connection.
    
    Id.
     On appeal, we held that “the Veterans Court would
    have been in a position to decide whether the insufficiency
    in the notice was prejudicial” only if the Board “had consid-
    ered the March 15, 2001, notice and found it sufficient, and
    if the Veterans Court had ruled that the March 15, 2001,
    notice was insufficient.” Mayfield, 
    444 F.3d at 1337
    . Be-
    cause the Board had not considered the March 15, 2001 let-
    ter, the Veterans Court could not affirm on prejudicial
    error grounds based on that letter. 
    Id.
    D
    Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Veterans Court
    may affirm on a ground not considered by the Board and
    the VA if it is clear that the factual basis for such conclu-
    sion is not open to debate and the Board on remand could
    not have reached any other determination on that issue.
    See Mayfield, 
    444 F.3d at 1336
     (“[T]his case is not one in
    which we can conclude that there was no violation of the
    Chenery doctrine on the ground that ‘it is clear that . . . the
    agency would have reached the same ultimate result under
    the court’s legal theory’” (alteration in original) (quoting
    Grabis v. Office of Pers. Mgmt., 
    424 F.3d 1265
    , 1270 (Fed.
    Cir. 2015)); Fleshman v. West, 
    138 F.3d 1429
    , 1433 (Fed.
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    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                    13
    Cir. 1998) (affirming Veterans Court’s affirmance on a dif-
    ferent legal rubric because “it seems clear to us that the
    agency would have reached the same conclusion if it had
    addressed the legal issue on which the Court of Veterans
    Appeals rested its judgment”). This is consistent with ap-
    pellate review in APA cases. See, e.g., NLRB v. Wyman-
    Gordon Co., 
    394 U.S. 759
    , 766 n. 6 (1969) (affirming agency
    action where “remand would be an idle and useless formal-
    ity” because “the substance of the Board’s command is not
    seriously contestable” and “there is not the slightest uncer-
    tainty as to the outcome of a proceeding before the Board”);
    Koyo Seiko Co. v. United States, 
    95 F.3d 1094
    , 1100–01
    (Fed. Cir. 1996) (holding that Chenery was inapplicable to
    require remand where the court “would have had no choice
    but to reverse” a contrary ruling). But see, e.g., Ventura v.
    INS, 
    264 F.3d 1150
    , 1157 (9th Cir. 2001) (declining to re-
    mand a question to the Board of Immigration Appeals
    (“BIA”) because “it is clear that we would be compelled to
    reverse the BIA’s decision if the BIA decided the matter
    against the applicant”), rev’d, 
    537 U.S. 12
    , 16 (2002) (re-
    quiring remand and noting that appellate courts generally
    cannot make de novo fact findings on “a matter that stat-
    utes place primarily in agency hands”).
    E
    It is well-settled that the veterans’ benefits system is
    intended to be pro-veteran. Henderson v. Shinseki, 
    562 U.S. 428
    , 440–41 (2011). That does not mean, however,
    that the processing and resolution of a claim filed by a vet-
    eran should be open-ended and never-ending. To the con-
    trary, it is in the interests of both the veteran and the
    government that all claims be brought to a full, just,
    prompt and efficient conclusion. To obviate unnecessary
    remands and unnecessarily protracted proceedings, Con-
    gress, while otherwise broadly supporting the rights of vet-
    erans, statutorily mandated consideration of prejudicial
    error in the determination of appeals before the Veterans
    Court. But obviating unnecessarily protracted proceedings
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    14                                   TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    does not suggest that Congress intended to override the
    statutory constraint imposed on the Veterans Court not to
    engage in de novo fact finding. When questions of fact are
    open to debate, veterans are entitled to present whatever
    evidence and arguments they have to the agency charged
    with administering veterans’ benefits and possessed with
    the expertise to render informed judgments and to have
    that evidence and those arguments considered by that
    agency in the first instance. “The rule of harmless error
    cannot be invoked to allow the Court of Appeals for Veter-
    ans Claims to decide a matter that is assigned by statute
    to the [VA] for the initial determination,” nor can the rule
    be invoked to support an affirmance that “may [] have re-
    quired it to make improper de novo findings of fact.” Win-
    ters v. Gober, 
    219 F.3d 1375
    , 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2000); Deloach,
    704 F.3d at 1381 (“[W]hen the Board misinterprets the law
    and fails to make the relevant initial factual findings, ‘the
    proper course for the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
    is to remand the case to the Board for further development
    and application of the correct law’” (quoting Byron v.
    Shinseki, 
    670 F.3d 1202
    , 1205 (Fed. Cir. 2012))).
    For the above reasons, we hold that § 7261(b)’s com-
    mand that the Veterans Court “give due account of the rule
    of prejudicial error” does not give it the right to make de
    novo findings of fact or otherwise resolve matters that are
    open to debate. Affirmance in the face of an error may be
    made by the Veterans Court only if the record already con-
    tains findings made previously by the VA or the Board that
    support affirmance or the entire record makes evident that
    the Board could not have reached any other decision.
    Where additional findings of fact are necessary regarding
    matters open to debate, the proper action for the Veterans
    Court is to remand to the Board for consideration of those
    facts in the first instance.
    Case: 20-1762    Document: 40       Page: 15   Filed: 07/15/2021
    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                    15
    III
    A
    Turning to the present case, the determination of
    whether an illness is “defined by a cluster of signs or symp-
    toms,” 38 U.S.C. § 1117(a)(2)(B), is a question of fact dele-
    gated to the VA. 38 U.S.C. § 1117(a)(1) (“The Secretary
    may pay compensation under this subchapter to a Persian
    Gulf veteran with a qualifying chronic disability” (empha-
    sis added)); Goodman v. Shulkin, 
    870 F.3d 1383
    , 1388 (Fed.
    Cir. 2017) (“[I]n individual MUCMI determinations, the VA
    adjudicator may consider evidence of medical expert opin-
    ions and all other facts of record to make the final determi-
    nation of whether a claimant has proven, based on the
    claimant’s unique symptoms, the existence of a MUCMI”
    (emphasis added)). Such fact-finding is delegated to the
    VA for consideration in the first instance.
    Neither the Board nor the VA here considered whether
    Tadlock’s condition was characterized by overlapping
    symptoms or signs. Rather, the Board’s decision denied
    service connection for Tadlock’s PE because his PE had a
    diagnosis and etiology, and thus did not qualify as an
    MUCMI under 38 C.F.R. § 3.317(a)(1)(ii). Tadlock, 
    2019 WL 2707830
    , at *2 (discussing Board and examiner deci-
    sions). Because of this holding, neither the Board nor the
    VA had cause to consider whether Tadlock could satisfy the
    alternative prong for presumptive service connection under
    38 U.S.C. § 1117: that he suffered from “a medically unex-
    plained chronic multisymptom illness (such as chronic fa-
    tigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and irritable bowel
    syndrome) that is defined by a cluster of signs or symp-
    toms.” (emphasis added).
    Because “a MUCMI, by definition, must be a diagnosed
    illness,” the Veterans Court held that the VA’s denial of
    presumptive service connection was clearly erroneous.
    Tadlock, 
    2019 WL 2707830
    , at *2. It affirmed only by de-
    termining, in the first instance, that “Tadlock has not
    Case: 20-1762    Document: 40      Page: 16    Filed: 07/15/2021
    16                                   TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    identified, any overlapping symptoms or signs related to
    his PE or any other features of his condition that would
    suggest it as a MUCMI.” Veterans Court Op. at 4. The
    Veterans Court did not cite any fact-finding by the Board
    or by the VA examiner and the record does not show such
    a determination by the VA examiner or the Board. 1 Indeed,
    the government readily admits that “the [B]oard had not
    addressed whether Mr. Tadlock’s PE met the additional
    [cluster of signs or symptoms] criteria to be considered a
    MUCMI.” Appellee’s Br. at 21; 
    Id. at 22
     (“Here, the board
    did not address the specific issue of whether Mr. Tadlock’s
    PE was characterized by overlapping signs and symptoms
    and had features such as fatigue, pain, disability out of pro-
    portion to physical findings, and inconsistent demonstra-
    tion of laboratory abnormalities.”). The determination that
    Tadlock’s symptoms did not constitute a MUCMI because
    they did not feature such overlapping signs or symptoms
    was thus the Veterans Court’s alone.
    B
    We agree with Tadlock that this case is substantially
    similar to Hensley. In Hensley, a veteran was awarded pre-
    sumptive service under 38 C.F.R. § 3.316(a) for lung dis-
    ease due to exposure to mustard gas during World War II.
    
    212 F.3d at 1256
    . Hensley later sought service connection
    for heart disease—which was not included in the presump-
    tive service connection list in § 3.316—as a secondary dis-
    ability based on that lung disease. Id. at 1257. To link his
    heart and lung disease, Hensley submitted three personal
    medical reports and a VA report, all indicating a possible
    1  There is no dispute here that whether Tadlock’s
    conditions is a MUCMI is a question of fact. See Gov’t Br.
    at 12 (“This is a factual determination or, at most, an ap-
    plication of law to facts.”); Veterans Court Op., 
    2019 WL 2707830
     at *2.
    Case: 20-1762    Document: 40      Page: 17     Filed: 07/15/2021
    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                      17
    connection between heart disease and toxic gas exposure.
    
    Id.
    The Board held that Hensley’s claim for secondary ser-
    vice connection was not well-grounded because the absence
    of heart disease in the regulation precluded presumptive
    service connection for heart disease through a secondary
    disability route. 
    Id.
     The Board therefore did not consider
    the reports Hensley submitted. 
    Id.
     On appeal, the Veter-
    ans Court held that the Board’s construction was erroneous
    because the absence of heart disease in the regulation did
    not preclude service connection for heart disease as a sec-
    ondary disability. 
    Id. at 1258
    . Nevertheless, the Veterans
    Court affirmed the Board’s holding that Hensley claim was
    not well-grounded after analyzing the reports in the first
    instance to conclude that Hensley failed to establish a
    nexus between his heart disease and his exposure to mus-
    tard gas during service. 
    Id.
     See also Hensley v. West, 
    16 Vet. App. 284
     at *3–5 (1998) (Table).
    On appeal, this court held that the Veterans Court had
    exceeded its jurisdiction. We explained that “[a]s a conse-
    quence of [the Board’s erroneous determination with re-
    spect to the interpretation of 38 C.F.R. § 3.316(a)], the
    [Board] did not consider the surrounding facts or the mer-
    its of the case that they might support.” Hensley, 
    212 F.3d at 1264
    . We further explained that the Veterans Court
    could not affirm based on the reports in the first instance
    because it would improperly require the Veterans Court to
    “review ‘de novo’ the [Board’s] determination of well-
    groundedness.” 
    Id. at 1264
    . Because the Board did not
    consider or analyze the reports as a result of its legal error,
    the Board’s decision led to “an insufficient factual develop-
    ment of the record” on well-groundedness, and “the proper
    course for the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims would
    have been to remand the case to the [Board] for further de-
    velopment and application of the correct law.” 
    Id.
    Case: 20-1762    Document: 40     Page: 18    Filed: 07/15/2021
    18                                  TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    This court applied Hensley in Elkins. There, a veteran
    sought service connection for a headache condition due to
    a car accident in service. 
    Id. at 1371
    . The VA denied his
    claim and the Board affirmed, holding that Elkins had
    failed to submit a well-grounded claim because he did not
    provide competent medical evidence of a current headache
    condition. 
    Id. at 1372
    . The Veterans Court held that the
    Board had clearly erred in this determination and that
    Elkins had indeed provided sufficient medical evidence of
    a current headache condition. 
    Id. at 1377
    . Nevertheless,
    the Veterans Court affirmed, finding a lack of evidence of
    nexus between the headache condition and Elkins’s service
    based on its own initial review. 
    Id.
     Relying on Hensley, we
    held that this was error because the Veterans Court’s affir-
    mance “involve[d] finding facts in the first instance.” 
    Id.
    Like the Veterans Court’s determinations of well-
    groundedness in Hensley and Elkins, the Veterans Court
    here sought to consider in the first instance whether Tad-
    lock’s symptoms constituted a MUCMI, an inquiry dele-
    gated to the VA. As noted above, the Veterans court did
    not cite to anything in the record to support its determina-
    tion, nor did it contend that its determination was the only
    possible outcome within the discretion of the VA and the
    Board. The proper course for the Veterans Court here was
    thus to vacate and remand for consideration by the VA or
    the Board in the first instance about whether Tadlock’s ill-
    ness might be “defined by a cluster of signs or symptoms”
    characteristic of a MUCMI.
    The government attempts to distinguish Hensley and
    Elkins as based not on prejudicial error but clear error.
    What the government overlooks is that in each of Hensley
    and Elkins, the Veterans Court not only held that the
    Board’s denial of benefits was based on clear error, but
    went on to affirm for lack of prejudice on other grounds re-
    quiring additional fact finding. Indeed, in Hensley, we
    stated: “The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims then
    held that the [Board’s] error was therefore not prejudicial
    Case: 20-1762    Document: 40      Page: 19    Filed: 07/15/2021
    TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH                                     19
    to Mr. Hensley,” 
    212 F.3d at 1258,
     a conclusion that we va-
    cated as improperly dependent on fact-finding in the first
    instance. There is no basis to distinguish this case from
    Hensley and Elkins.
    C
    Finally, the government argues that the Veterans
    Court’s determination that Tadlock’s condition was not a
    MUCMI was not based on its finding of facts in the first
    instance but was based “entirely on factual determinations
    made by the board” and that the “factual record here was
    sufficient.” Appellee’s Br. at 30 (citing Veterans Court Op.,
    
    2019 WL 2707830
     at *3, Fleshman, 
    138 F.3d 1429
    , and
    Mayfield, 
    444 F.3d at 1335
    ); 
    id. at 25
    . The government as-
    serts that the Board “specifically noted that the PE was di-
    agnosed and that it was not medically unexplained, and so
    it could not serve as the basis for a grant of service connec-
    tion.” 
    Id. at 25
    . This argument is inexplicable. As the gov-
    ernment immediately thereafter recognizes, the Veterans
    Court found that determination to be clearly erroneous. 
    Id.
    The basis for prejudicial error cannot be the identical de-
    termination the Veterans Court found to be erroneous.
    Contrary to the government’s argument, we agree with
    Judge Pietsch’s observation that the Veterans Court “ap-
    plied a provision that the Board did not apply and made
    factual findings that the Board did not make.” Tadlock,
    
    2020 WL 738550
    , at *2 (Pietsch, J., dissenting). Moreover,
    as noted above, the government admits that the Board did
    not rule on whether Tadlock’s condition was characterized
    by overlapping symptoms or signs.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons discussed above, the Veterans Court
    exceeded its authority in making a fact finding in the first
    instance that Tadlock’s illness did not qualify as a MUCMI
    because of a lack of overlapping symptoms. We thus vacate
    Case: 20-1762    Document: 40      Page: 20    Filed: 07/15/2021
    20                                   TADLOCK   v. MCDONOUGH
    the decision of the Veterans Court and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion. 2
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    COSTS
    Each party shall bear its own costs.
    2   The Veterans Court’s decision expressly avoided
    the question of whether 38 C.F.R. § 3.317(a)(1)(ii) is invalid
    as contradictory to its authorizing statute, 38 U.S.C.
    § 1117. Veterans Court Op., 
    2019 WL 2707830
     at *3 (hold-
    ing that “any inconsistency the veteran perceives between
    the definitions of qualifying chronic disability in the stat-
    ute and the implementing regulation is immaterial to the
    circumstances of his appeal” because “Tadlock’s disability
    still doesn’t exhibit the characteristics and features of a
    MUCMI” in the statute itself). Because the validity of 38
    C.F.R. § 3.317(a)(1)(ii) was not addressed by the Veterans
    Court, we need not and do not consider it in this appeal.