Court Opinion

ID: 9410443
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-07-21 14:01:16.377669+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:57.738001
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS

                                                   No. 20-5759

                                       GILBERT R. DURAN, APPELLANT,

                                                         V.

                                        DENIS MCDONOUGH,
                              SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, APPELLEE.

                             On Appeal from the Board of Veterans' Appeals

(Argued November 15, 2022                                                                Decided July 20, 2023)

       Stephani M. Bennett, with whom John S. Berry and Emily A. Weiss were on the brief, all
of Lincoln, Nebraska, for the appellant.

      Nathan Bader, with whom Richard A. Sauber, General Counsel; Mary Ann Flynn, Chief
Counsel; Joan E. Moriarty, Deputy Chief Counsel; and Crystal Liu were on the brief, all of
Washington, D.C., for the appellee.

         Before ALLEN, TOTH, and JAQUITH, Judges.

     TOTH, Judge, filed the opinion of the Court. JAQUITH, Judge, filed a concurring opinion.
ALLEN, Judge, filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.

         TOTH, Judge: Army veteran Gilbert R. Duran is entitled to VA disability compensation
for Parkinson's disease. The compensation rating for this condition is governed primarily by
diagnostic code (DC) 8004. See 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a (2023).1 In the decision under review, the
Board replaced the minimum 30% rating Mr. Duran had been receiving under DC 8004 with a
combined 50% rating for three distinct Parkinson's manifestations evaluated under different DCs.
These three ratings accounted for only some of his confirmed Parkinson's manifestations. This
appeal raises a narrow question about the proper reading of DC 8004: When some manifestations
of Parkinson's disease are rated as compensable and total more than 30% under DCs other than

          1
            The Board also denied a rating greater than 30% for residuals to the nerves in his hand of a gunshot wound
in the right arm, a rating greater than 30% for residuals of a gunshot wound to the right chest (muscle group VI), and
a rating greater than 30% for residuals of a gunshot wound to the right triceps (muscle group VI). Because Mr. Duran
does not challenge those matters on appeal, the Court dismisses them. See Pederson v. McDonald, 27 Vet.App. 276,
283 (2015) (en banc).
DC 8004, but some manifestations remain that are not rated as compensable, do the ratings under
the other DCs replace or combine with DC 8004's minimum 30% rating?
        Both parties offer a plain reading of the regulation to support their view. The Secretary
agrees with the Board that DC 8004's minimum 30% rating should be replaced when ratings
available under other DCs exceed it. Mr. Duran argues that compensable ratings under other DCs
should be added to DC 8004's minimum 30% rating so long as additional ascertainable Parkinson's
manifestations exist that are not otherwise compensable under the rating schedule. Based on the
relevant text and regulatory context and the broader policies governing VA's rating scheme, we
agree with Mr. Duran on the regulation's plain meaning. We therefore reverse the Board's
discontinuance of the minimum 30% rating under DC 8004 and remand the matter—along with a
PTSD rating claim that we briefly address at the end of our opinion—for further proceedings.

                                             I. BACKGROUND
                                         A. Regulatory Framework
        DC 8004 and its accompanying guidance fall under the rating schedule for neurological
conditions and convulsive disorders and have existed in their current form since just after World
War II. See 29 Fed. Reg. 6718, 6750 (May 22, 1964) (codifying "the 1945 rating schedule"). In
fact, DC 8004 still refers to Parkinson's as paralysis agitans. Parkinson's disease "is a chronic,
slowly progressive central nervous system disorder characterized by muscular rigidity, a tremor of
resting muscles, slow and decreased voluntary movements and positional instability." VA
ADJUDICATION PROCEDURES MANUAL (M21-1), Pt. V, sbpt. iii, ch. 12, sec. C.3.a. It has so far
proven incurable.2 DC 8004 provides a single "[m]inimum rating" of 30%. 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a.
The preamble to the rating schedule instructs:
        With the exceptions noted, disability from the following diseases and their residuals
        may be rated from 10 percent to 100 percent in proportion to the impairment of
        motor, sensory, or mental function. Consider especially psychotic manifestations,

        2
           See Parkinson's disease, MAYO CLINIC, https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/parkinsons-
disease/symptoms-causes/syc-20376055; Parkinson's Disease: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatments, NAT'L INST. ON
AGING, https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/parkinsons-disease.
         "Paralysis agitans" is a term for "shaking palsy" used by Dr. James Parkinson in his groundbreaking 1817
essay on the disease that would be given his name. James Parkinson, An Essay on the Shaking Palsy (1817), reprinted
in 14 J. NEUROPSYCHIATRY & CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCES 223 (May 2002), https://doi.org/10.1176/jnp.14.2.223.
"Paralysis agitans" remains synonymous with Parkinson's disease. See Paralysis agitans, DORLAND'S ILLUSTRATED
MEDICAL DICTIONARY 1356 (33d ed. 2019).

                                                        2
         complete or partial loss of use of one or more extremities, speech disturbances,
         impairment of vision, disturbances of gait, tremors, visceral manifestations, etc.,
         referring to the appropriate bodily system of the schedule. With partial loss of use
         of one or more extremities from neurological lesions, rate by comparison with the
         mild, moderate, severe, or complete paralysis of peripheral nerves.
Id. The note following DC 8025 further instructs:
         It is required for the minimum ratings for residuals under [DCs] 8000-8025, that
         there be ascertainable residuals. Determinations as to the presence of residuals not
         capable of objective verification, i.e., headaches, dizziness, fatigability, must be
         approached on the basis of the diagnosis recorded; subjective residuals will be
         accepted when consistent with the disease and not more likely attributable to other
         diseases or no disease. It is of exceptional importance that when ratings in excess
         of the prescribed minimum ratings are assigned, the [DCs] utilized as bases of
         evaluation be cited, in addition to the codes identifying the diagnoses.
Id.
                                                  B. Case History
         Army veteran Gilbert Duran served from 1969 to 1971, including a year-long deployment
to Vietnam, where he was wounded. In January 2017, he sought service connection for Parkinson's
disease as related to presumptive herbicide exposure. That spring, a VA examiner confirmed a
diagnosis of Parkinson's disease and found that Mr. Duran had "motor manifestations" of the
condition, including stooped posture, balance impairment, slowed motion, speech changes, and
tremors in his upper and lower extremities on the right side. R. at 896. The examiner also found
that Mr. Duran had mild depression, partial loss of smell, moderate sleep disturbances, mild
difficulty chewing and swallowing, moderate constipation, moderate sexual dysfunction, mild
stumbling issues, and moderate jaw tremors.
         VA granted service connection for Parkinson's disease, assigning a 30% rating under DC
8004 for "ascertainable residuals."3 R. at 858. The rating decision stated that "[h]igher evaluations
are based on more severe residuals" but said no more than that. Id. Mr. Duran appealed to the
Board, seeking a higher Parkinson's rating. The case followed the usual administrative appeals
process.
         In an April 2020 decision, the Board increased Mr. Duran's rating because his single 30%
rating under DC 8004 didn't fully capture the severity of his Parkinson's disease. The method by

         3
          VA adjudicators routinely referred to manifestations of Mr. Duran's Parkinson's disease as "residuals." As
we note below, it does not appear strictly accurate to speak of Parkinson's "residuals," but VA's distinctive use of the
term is immaterial to the issue on appeal.

                                                           3
which the Board increased Mr. Duran's rating is the crux of the dispute here. Referring to the
preamble of § 4.124a, the Board found that, if "there are ascertainable residuals that can be rated
under a separate [DC], and the combined disability rating resulting from these residuals exceeds
30 percent, then these separate ratings will be assigned in place of the minimum rating assigned
under [DC] 8004." R. at 16–17 (emphasis added). The Board also referred to § 4.120 ("Evaluations
by comparison") to explain that neurological and convulsive disorders are rated in proportion to
the impairment of motor, sensory, or mental function, meaning that evaluations are made by
comparison to the appropriate rating criteria.
       On this reasoning, the Board replaced Mr. Duran's single 30% rating with separate ratings
for three manifestations—a 40% rating for a right upper extremity condition under DC 8513
(paralysis of a major extremity), a 10% rating for a right lower extremity condition under DC 8520
(paralysis of the sciatic nerve), and a 10% rating for moderate jaw tremors under DC 8205
(paralysis of the fifth trigeminal cranial nerve). See R. at 6 (noting that the veteran's symptoms
"are most appropriately rated under separate rating criteria as opposed to rated collectively under
[DC] 8004"). The DCs for these manifestations all fall under the rating schedule for neurological
diseases and convulsive disorders and combine to a rating of 50%. See 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a.
       The Board also found that the veteran had five other manifestations of Parkinson's disease,
including constipation, depression, sexual dysfunction, a chewing and swallowing condition, and
a speech condition. It determined that a separate rating wasn't permitted for depression because
that "would violate the prohibition on pyramiding as the Veteran's symptoms are already
contemplated in the 30% rating assigned for [his] service-connected PTSD." R. at 18. The Board
similarly found that a separate rating for sexual dysfunction was unwarranted because special
monthly compensation for loss of use of a creative organ had already been granted. Finally, the
Board denied separate compensable ratings for the veteran's remaining manifestations—
constipation under DC 7319 (irritable colon syndrome), his chewing and swallowing condition
under DC 8209 (paralysis of the ninth (glossopharyngeal) cranial nerve), and his speech condition
under DC 8210 (paralysis of the tenth (pneumogastric) cranial nerve)—because none of those
conditions met the requirements for minimum compensable ratings under their relevant DCs. This
appeal followed.

                                                 4
                                          II. ANALYSIS
        The dispute here requires us to interpret 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a as it relates to Mr. Duran's
claim for an increased Parkinson's rating. Specifically, whether that provision requires VA to
replace or add to the minimum 30% rating under DC 8004 when a veteran has some Parkinson's
manifestations that are separately rated under other DCs and total more than 30%, and some
Parkinson's manifestations that are not separately rated under other DCs as compensable.
        Such interpretation is a task we undertake de novo. Tropf v. Nicholson, 20 Vet.App. 317,
320 (2006). If the regulation's meaning is clear from its language, that is "the end of the matter."
Brown v. Gardner, 513 U.S. 115, 120 (1994). The plain meaning of the text at issue is informed
by the regulatory scheme and context of the provision. BO v. Wilkie, 31 Vet.App. 321, 328 (2019).
And a regulation's text, structure, history, and purpose should be carefully considered before the
Court concludes that a regulation is ambiguous and considers whether deference is warranted.
Kisor v. Wilkie, 139 S. Ct. 2400, 2415 (2019). Only if the regulation's text is genuinely ambiguous
"after a court has resorted to all the standard tools of interpretation" does "the possibility of
deference . . . arise." Id. at 2414.
        Mr. Duran contends that, under a plain reading of the relevant regulatory provisions, the
minimum rating should remain intact so long as there are ascertainable Parkinson's manifestations
that cannot be rated compensable under other DCs. For his part, the Secretary believes that a plain
reading requires the replacement of DC 8004's minimum rating once any Parkinson's
manifestations can be assigned ratings totaling more than 30% under other DCs.
        There are three components to § 4.124a at issue here: the preamble to the rating schedule
for neurological conditions and convulsive disorders, DC 8004 itself, and the note applicable to
DCs 8000 through 8025. We first consider the text of these provisions and begin with a brief
comment on the word "residuals."
        Throughout the pendency of the claim, VA adjudicators referred to the "residuals" of Mr.
Duran's Parkinson's disease. In the medical context, a residual is disability that remains following
an injury, operation, or disease. 4 For example, VA compensation claims may involve gunshot
wound residuals or post-knee replacement residuals. When it comes to diseases, the rating schedule
often prescribes different ratings for the active disease process and for residuals when the disease

       4
         See Residual, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/residual; Residual,
DICTIONARY.COM, https://www.dictionary.com/browse/residual.

                                                  5
process is in remission or inactive. See, e.g., 38 C.F.R. §§ 4.88b (2023) and 4.117, DC 7703, Note
(1) (2023). Section 4.124a follows this practice with respect to encephalitis, poliomyelitis, and
meningitis, assigning 100% ratings for the "active" diseases and minimum 10% ratings for
"residuals." 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DCs 8000, 8011, 8019. But as a chronic, progressive disease,
Parkinson's cannot be cured and does not have inactive periods. So, although Parkinson's disease
manifests itself in various ways, it does not appear strictly accurate to call these manifestations
"residuals," as that word is normally used. Indeed, unlike the DCs for the diseases just mentioned,
the DC for Parkinson's doesn't mention residuals or provide a 100% rating for the "active" phase
of the disease. We note this because we think it important to use proper parlance when discussing
the veteran's condition. That said, the Court's analysis is practically unaffected by whether Mr.
Duran's problems related to his Parkinson's are referred to as residuals or manifestations.
       This is clear from the preamble to § 4.124a, which doesn't distinguish between the two for
compensation purposes. It states that "disability from the following diseases and their residuals
may be rated from 10 to 100 percent in proportion to the impairment of motor, sensory, or mental
function," with special consideration to be paid to certain "manifestations." 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a
(emphasis added). ("Proportion" means "the relation of one part to another or to the whole with
respect to magnitude, quantity, or degree." 5 ) So, the preamble makes clear that neurological
conditions like Parkinson's disease are to be rated proportionally to the degree of impairment
caused by either the active manifestations of a disease or by a disease's residuals.
       The remainder of § 4.124a's preamble indicates the method by which the criteria will be
chosen to rate a disease's manifestations or residuals: by "referring to the appropriate bodily system
of the schedule." Id. Put simply, VA should rate a residual under the rating schedule of the bodily
system relevant to that residual. For example, the preamble directs that partial loss of use of one
or more extremities from neurological lesions should be rated "by comparison with the mild,
moderate, severe, or complete paralysis of peripheral nerves." Id.; see 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DCs
8510 to 8540 ("Diseases of the Peripheral Nerves").
       The preamble's instructions accord with VA's broader policy when rating neurological
conditions by comparison. That policy is to ensure that a disability in this area is "rated in

       5
           Proportion, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/proportion.

                                                     6
proportion to the impairment of motor, sensory or mental function," and with reference "to the
appropriate schedule" for each disabling manifestation. 38 C.F.R. § 4.120 (2023).
       DC 8004 itself is laconic but informative. It has one available rating, a "[m]inimum rating"
of 30%. This means that every veteran with service-connected Parkinson's disease is entitled to at
least a 30% rating regardless of the veteran's particular disease manifestations. Put differently, a
Parkinson's diagnosis justifies a minimum rating of 30% where its manifestations, either singly or
together, do not warrant a rating higher than 30%. And that is so whether a particular veteran's
manifestation ratings under pertinent bodily systems total 0% or 30%.
       Finally, we turn to the note following DC 8025. It specifies that a minimum rating available
under a particular DC requires that "residuals"—and we presume "residuals" here is meant to
include "manifestations"—"be ascertainable" to VA adjudicators, either through "objective
verification" or acceptance on the grounds of consistency with the disease in question. 38 C.F.R.
§ 4.124a. The last line of the note reads: "It is of exceptional importance that when ratings in excess
of the prescribed minimum ratings are assigned, the diagnostic codes utilized as bases of evaluation
be cited, in addition to the codes identifying the diagnoses." This text both acknowledges that
ratings in excess of the prescribed minimums may be warranted and emphasizes that the DCs under
which such ratings are assigned should be clearly identified.
       Taken together, these three regulatory provisions offer a clear answer to the question
presented by this appeal. By virtue of having a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease with at least one
ascertainable manifestation, Mr. Duran is entitled to a minimum 30% under DC 8004. Even when
ascertainable manifestation ratings under other DCs combine for a total rating in excess of 30%,
the basis for the minimum rating under DC 8004 remains as long as there is at least one
ascertainable manifestation of Parkinson's disease that is not compensable under any other DC.
Thus, when VA assigns compensable ratings for Parkinson's manifestations that total more than
30% under DCs other than DC 8004, those other ratings do not replace the minimum 30% rating
under DC 8004 provided that some manifestations remain that are not rated as compensable.
       This textual reading harmonizes with the key policies of VA's overall rating scheme,
namely, that veterans should not be undercompensated or overcompensated for a particular
condition. See Burkhart v. Wilkie, 971 F.3d 1363, 1369–70 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (explaining that a
regulatory scheme should be read "as 'an harmonious whole'" (quoting FDA v. Brown &
Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 133 (2000))).

                                                  7
       As a rule, "disabilities arising from a single disease entity . . . are to be rated separately."
38 C.F.R. § 4.25(b) (2023). And consistent with that rule, VA undertakes to "grant[ ] every benefit
that can be supported in law." 38 C.F.R. § 3.103(a) (2023). Section 3.103(a)'s general statement of
policy is given content by the specific substantive provisions in a particular case. Cf. Hanser v.
McDonough, 56 F.4th 967, 975 (Fed. Cir. 2022) ("This statement of policy cannot contradict the
plain meaning of a regulation."). Here, that content is provided by DC 8004 and its accompanying
provisions, which make clear VA's judgment that a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease with at least
one ascertainable manifestation entitles a veteran to a minimum 30% rating. That judgment being
plain, it is equally obvious that replacing DC 8004's minimum rating despite the presence of
ascertainable Parkinson's manifestations that are not being compensated under other DCs would
amount to a discontinuance of the compensation provided by the minimum rating for those
(otherwise uncompensated) manifestations. Replacing DC 8004's minimum rating in Mr. Duran's
circumstances would, in other words, undercompensate him.
       Conversely, our understanding that replacement of DC 8004's minimum 30% rating is
prohibited only when uncompensated Parkinson's manifestations remain jibes with the rule against
pyramiding, which bars "evaluation of the same disability under various diagnoses." 38 C.F.R.
§ 4.14 (2023). The gravamen of this rule is that a certain manifestation of a disability compensated
under a particular DC cannot also be compensated under another DC. See Lyles v. Shulkin,
29 Vet.App. 107, 118 (2017); see also Amberman v. Shinseki, 570 F.3d 1377, 1381 (Fed. Cir.
2009) (agreeing that § 4.14 prohibits the "duplicative" compensation of "overlapping"
symptomatology (emphasis omitted)). Maintaining a minimum 30% rating under DC 8004 where
all of a veteran's Parkinson's manifestations are rated as compensable under other DCs would
overcompensate a veteran.
       Here, the Board found that Mr. Duran's Parkinson's disease manifested itself in at least
eight ways. It concluded that three of those manifestations were entitled to separate compensable
ratings that totaled 50% and that two were already compensated as parts of other conditions. That
left three remaining manifestations that were not compensable under other DCs pertaining to the
bodily systems involved: constipation, a chewing and swallowing condition, and a speech
condition. Even in isolation, any of these three ascertainable manifestations warranted the
minimum 30% rating under DC 8004. That means the Board should not have replaced the 30%
rating under DC 8004 in this case. We therefore reverse the Board's discontinuance of that rating.

                                                  8
        Because we are able to discern the plain meaning of the relevant regulatory text using
standard interpretive tools, we need not reach the Secretary's argument that—in the case of
ambiguity—his interpretation is entitled to deference under Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452 (1997).
See Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2414.

                                       III. PTSD REMAND
        Mr. Duran also appealed the Board's denial of a rating greater than 30% for service-
connected PTSD under the General Rating Formula for Mental Disorders. See 38 C.F.R. § 4.130
(2023). He argues that the Board erred in not addressing certain symptoms that were documented
in lay statements and medical reports from 2017. The Secretary concedes that the Board erred in
this respect. Secretary's Br. at 14. The Court accepts the Secretary's concession of Board error.
Thus, remand is required for the Board to consider and cure the defect in its decision identified by
the parties' briefs.

                                        IV. CONCLUSION
        Accordingly, the Court VACATES that part of the Board's April 23, 2020, decision that
denied a rating in excess of 30% for PTSD and REVERSES that part that discontinued the 30%
rating under DC 8004 for Parkinson's disease. Those matters are REMANDED for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion. The balance of the appeal is DISMISSED.

        JAQUITH, Judge, concurring: I concur with all of the Court's opinion but write separately
because I believe the pro-veteran canon informs the plain meaning analysis and because I also
agree with the portion of Judge Allen's partial concurrence regarding deference to VA's
construction of 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DC 8004.
        As the majority opinion describes, the rating scheme for Parkinson's disease has three
components. First is a preamble that applies to "neurological conditions and convulsive disorders"
and begins: "With the exceptions noted, disability from the following diseases and their residuals
may be rated from 10 percent to 100 percent in proportion to the impairment of motor, sensory, or
mental function." 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a. Next is DC 8004, "[p]aralysis agitans," with a minimum
rating of 30%. Last is a note that begins, "It is required for the minimum ratings for residuals under
diagnostic codes 8000–8025, that there be ascertainable residuals." The note ends, "It is of

                                                  9
exceptional importance that when ratings in excess of the prescribed minimum ratings are
assigned, the diagnostic codes utilized as bases of evaluation be cited, in addition to the codes
identifying the diagnoses." In this case, the Board determined that this rating scheme means that
"[i]f there are ascertainable residuals that can be rated under a separate Diagnostic Code, and the
combined disability rating resulting from these residuals exceeds 30 percent, then these separate
ratings will be assigned in place of the minimum rating assigned under [DC] 8004." Record (R.)
at 17. I agree completely with the majority opinion's conclusion that the Board was wrong, and
"compensable ratings under other DCs should be added to DC 8004's minimum 30% rating so long
as additional ascertainable Parkinson's manifestations exist that are not otherwise compensable
under the rating schedule." Ante at 2. I also agree with the partial concurrence that the words of
the preamble, DC 8004, and the note do not, by themselves, conclusively answer the question of
what happens to the minimum rating when the separate ratings exceed 30%. See post at 20. In my
view, the cranny between us is a consequence of our different perspectives on determining the
law's plain meaning. I concur fully with the majority opinion because I believe discerning the plain
meaning of the rating scheme for Parkinson's disease requires more than just reviewing the words
of the preamble, DC 8004, and the note.

                                          1. Plain Meaning
       To start, the Court's obligation to "exercise independent review over the meaning of agency
rules" requires us to "apply all traditional methods of interpretation" to this regulation and "enforce
the plain meaning those methods uncover." Kisor v. Wilkie, 139 S. Ct. 2400, 2419 (2019). That
mission statement sounds straightforward, but a legal dictionary's definition of the "plain-meaning
rule" portends complications. The dictionary defines the rule as "[t]he doctrine that if a legal text
is unambiguous it should be applied by its terms without recourse to policy arguments, legislative
history, or any other matter extraneous to the text unless doing so would lead to an absurdity."
Plain-meaning rule, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1391 (11th ed. 2019). The definition continues
with an admonition: "Though often applied, this rule is often condemned as simplistic because the
meaning of words varies with the verbal context and the surrounding circumstances, not to mention
the linguistic ability of the users and readers (including judges)." Id. And the dictionary adds
another author's warning:

                                                  10
               "On its positive side, the plain meaning rule states a tautology: Words
       should be read as saying what they say. The rule tells us to respect meaning but it
       does so without disclosing what the specific meaning is. At best, it reaffirms the
       preeminence of the statute over materials extrinsic to it. In its negative aspect, on
       the other hand, the rule has sometimes been used to read ineptly expressed language
       out of its proper context, in violation of established principles of meaning and
       communication. To this extent it is an impediment to interpretation."

Id. (quoting Reed Dickerson, THE INTERPRETATION AND APPLICATION OF STATUTES 229 (1975).
       Our interpretive inquiry begins by focusing on the words, for "if the meaning of a
regulation is clear from its language, that meaning controls and that is the end of the matter." Petitti
v. McDonald, 27 Vet.App. 415, 422-23 (2015); see also, e.g., Edwards v. McDonough, 36
Vet.App. 56, 61 (2023). But the Court "cannot wave the ambiguity flag" without first exhausting
our "legal toolkit" to determine whether there is a single right meaning. Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2415.
We must focus on regulatory language with a wide lens because, "[w]hen assessing the meaning
of a regulation, words should not be taken in isolation but rather read in the context of the
regulatory structure and scheme." Atencio v. O'Rourke, 30 Vet.App. 74, 82 (2018). The Court
"retain[s] a firm grip on the interpretive function," Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2421, by carefully
considering "the text, structure, history, and purpose of a regulation" to penetrate seemingly
"impenetrable" regulations, solve "hard interpretive conundrums," and determine whether "there
is only one reasonable construction of a regulation," id. at 2415; see Huerta v. McDonough,
34 Vet.App. 76, 80 (2021). We peg the plain meaning of a particular provision by viewing it in the
broader regulatory context. See, e.g., Babcock v. Kijakazi, 142 S. Ct. 641, 645 (2022) (applying
that principle in ascertaining the plain meaning of a statute). "'In construing regulatory language,
we must read the disputed language in the context of the entire regulation as well as other related
regulatory sections in order to determine the language's plain meaning.'" Martinez-Bodon v.
McDonough, 28 F.4th 1241, 1244 (Fed. Cir. 2022) (quoting Vazquez-Claudio v. Shinseki, 713 F.3d
112, 115 (Fed. Cir. 2013).
       Though the regulation and diagnostic code at issue here date to the 1945 rating schedule,6
the central question in this case has not previously been specifically answered. But the paradigm
and principles that provide the majority opinion's answer are well established. "[I]f an injury or
disease manifests with two different disabilities, then two separate ratings should be awarded."

       6
           Ante at 2; 29 Fed. Reg. 6718, 6750 (May 22, 1964).

                                                        11
Tropf v. Nicholson, 20 Vet.App. 317, 321 (2006); see 38 C.F.R. § 4.25(b) (2023). And the number
of separate ratings for different disabilities is not limited to two, or to any maximum number.
Section 4.25(b) provides: "Except as otherwise provided in [the rating] schedule, the disabilities
arising from a single disease entity . . . are to be rated separately as are all other disabling
conditions, if any." Subsection (b) was added to § 4.25 in 1989, 54 Fed. Reg. 27,161, 27,162 (June
28, 1989), but § 4.25 has contemplated combining separate ratings for different disabling
conditions since its inception (with 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DC 8400). 29 Fed. Reg. 6718, 6720-21,
6750 (May 22, 1964).
        The prescription of "avoidance of pyramiding," 38 C.F.R. § 4.14, has the same origin story.
29 Fed. Reg. at 6719. Section 4.14 began, and still begins: "The evaluation of the same disability
under various diagnoses is to be avoided," and ends: "[T]he evaluation of the same manifestation
under different diagnoses [is] to be avoided." 38 C.F.R. § 4.14 (2023).7 "Properly read, § 4.14 and
§ 4.25 are complementary provisions instructing VA to rate only distinct manifestations
separately." Perciavalle v. McDonough, 35 Vet.App. 11, 27-28 (2021) (en banc). The anti-
pyramiding rule means "that the rating schedule may not be employed as a vehicle for
compensating a claimant twice (or more) for the same symptomatology[ because] such a result
would overcompensate the claimant for the actual impairment of his [or her] earning capacity."
Brady v. Brown, 4 Vet.App. 203, 206 (1993). However, "[o]f course, it is possible for a veteran to
have separate and distinct manifestations attributable to two different disability ratings, and, in
such a case, the veteran should be compensated under different diagnoses." Fanning v. Brown,
4 Vet.App. 225, 230 (1993).
        The Board found that Mr. Duran has eight separate manifestations of Parkinson's disease:
a right upper extremity condition rated 40% disabling under DC 8513; a right lower extremity
condition rated 10% disabling under DC 8520; moderate jaw tremors rated 10% disabling under
DC 8205; constipation (DC 7319), a chewing and swallowing condition (DC 8209), and a speech
condition (DC 8210) that are not separately compensable; depression contemplated in the 30%
rating for his PTSD; and sexual dysfunction covered by SMC for loss of use of a creative organ.8

        7
            So it also was in the 1945 rating schedule codified in 1964. 38 C.F.R. § 4.14 (1964).
         8
           At oral argument, the veteran's counsel asserted that "[a]t the time of service connection, Mr. Duran was
suffering from four identifiable symptoms of Parkinson's. By the time he reached the Board five years later, he was
suffering with more than thirteen." Oral Argument (OA) at 7:31-7:44, Duran v. McDonough, U.S. Vet.App. No. 20-
5759 (oral argument held November 15, 2022), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3Xng5euocg&t=3387s. VA
acknowledges that Parkinson's is a progressive disease. Id. at 29:38-29:46. See VA ADJUDICATION PROCEDURES

                                                           12
R. at 18-21. The Board assigned the combined disability rating for the veteran's right extremity
and jaw tremors in place of the Parkinson's rating under DC 8004, with no compensation for his
constipation, chewing and swallowing, and speech conditions. R. at 17, 19-21. The Board's action
cannot be squared with § 4.25(b).
        "The rating schedule is replete with rules that prohibit separate evaluation of other
disabilities," Lyles v. Shulkin, 29 Vet.App. 107, 114, 115 (2017) (applying this analysis to hold
that "evaluation of a knee disability under DC 5257 or 5261 does not preclude . . . separate
evaluation of a meniscal disability of the same knee under DC 5258 or 5259"), so it is telling that
the rating scheme for Parkinson's does not expressly prohibit coupling separate ratings for
manifestations of the disease under other diagnostic codes with "residuals" under DC 8004. Given
VA's history of expressly forbidding separate ratings in other circumstances, the lack of an express
bar to separate evaluations of specific manifestations of Parkinson's and the uncompensated
residuals of the disease "must be read as a deliberate decision to permit separate evaluation." Lyles,
29 Vet.App. at 115. The rule that emerges is a straightforward one, and it governs here: "where a
certain manifestation of a disability has not been compensated via an assigned evaluation under a
particular DC, evaluation of that manifestation under another DC would not constitute
pyramiding." Id. at 118. Therefore, in this case, as in Lyles, the Board's reading contravenes the
plain meaning of the regulation. Id. at 115.

                                         2. The Pro-Veteran Canon
        The Board's determination also conflicts with the longstanding pro-veteran canon—"'that
provisions for benefits to members of the Armed Services are to be construed in the beneficiaries’
favor.'" Henderson v. Shinseki, 562 U.S. 428, 441 (2011) (quoting King v. St. Vincent’s Hosp., 502
U.S. 215, 221 n.9 (1991)). If reading the preamble, DC 8004, and the note with § 4.25(b) make
clear that Mr. Duran deserves separate ratings, why should we consider the pro-veteran canon?
First and foremost, because the canons of regulatory construction "require interpretation of words
in their context with an eye to the law as a whole," Ortiz-Valles v. McDonald, 28 Vet.App. 65, 69
(2016), and the context of the law as a whole should include the pro-veteran canon.

MANUAL, M21-1, Part III, Subpart iv, 4.N.8.a (2020) ("Parkinson’s disease is a chronic, slowly progressive central
nervous system disorder.").

                                                       13
       In King, the Supreme Court stated that it presumed that Congress understood the pro-
veteran canon as a basic rule of statutory construction, and the Court applied that canon to read a
provision in the veteran’s favor, even if the language left its significance unsettled. 502 U.S. at 220
n.9. In Henderson, the Supreme Court read the statute at issue in light of the pro-veteran canon,
declaring that "[w]hile the terms and placement of [the statute] provide some indication of
Congress’ intent, what is most telling here are the singular characteristics of the review scheme
that Congress created for the adjudication of veterans’ benefits claims." 562 U.S. at 440-42. And
in Fishgold v. Sullivan Drydock & Repair Corp., the Supreme Court declared that veteran laws are
"to be liberally construed for the benefit of those who left private life to serve their country in its
hour of great need," and the Court showed us how to do so—"construe the separate provisions of
the [law] as parts of an organic whole and give each as liberal a construction for the benefit of the
veteran as a harmonious interplay of the separate provisions permits." 328 U.S. 275, 285 (1946).
"Simply put, the veteran's canon is a traditional tool of interpretation." Chadwick J. Harper, Give
Veterans the Benefit of the Doubt: Chevron, Auer, and the Veteran's Canon, 42 HARV. J.L. & PUB.
POL'Y 931, 949 (2019); see Procopio v. Wilkie, 913 F.3d 1371, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (O'Malley,
J., concurring) ("There is also no doubt that the pro-veteran canon is one such traditional tool [of
statutory construction]."). "[T]he veteran's canon has deep roots in our jurisprudence, reflects the
unique relationship between the government and [veterans], and helps the government fulfill the
obligations flowing from that relationship." Harper, 42 HARV. J.L. & PUB. POL'Y at 958.
       The fourth case on the Mount Rushmore of the pro-veteran canon, Brown v. Gardner, 513
U.S. 115 (1994), brings the scope of plain meaning analysis back to the forefront. In Gardner, the
Board denied the veteran’s claim for benefits under 38 U.S.C. § 1151 based on disabilities resulting
from surgery in a VA facility. Id. at 116-17. The Board’s denial rested on 38 C.F.R. § 3.358(c)(3)
(1993), which interpreted the statute as only covering an injury that proximately resulted from
fault by VA or from an accident during treatment or rehabilitation. Id. Though the statute afforded
compensation for injuries resulting from surgery and said nothing about fault by VA, the Secretary
argued that a fault requirement inhered in the statutory requirement of a compensable injury. Id.
at 117. In rejecting that argument based on the law’s "text and reasonable inferences from it," the
Supreme Court looked first to the pro-veteran canon, which it summarized as "the rule that
interpretive doubt is to be resolved in the veteran's favor." Id. at 120, 117-18. Notwithstanding
Henderson, King, and Fishgold, that 13-word phrase in Gardner has been unlucky for veterans.

                                                  14
        In Kisor, the Supreme Court did not address whether the pro-veteran canon is a traditional
tool of construction that must be considered before concluding that a rule is genuinely ambiguous.
139 S. Ct. at 2415. On remand, the Federal Circuit filled the breach, declaring that: "Under
[Gardner], . . . the canon does not apply unless 'interpretive doubt' is present," a precondition that
"is not satisfied where a sole reasonable meaning is identified through the use of ordinary textual
analysis tools, before consideration of the pro-veteran canon." Kisor v. McDonough, 995 F.3d
1316, 1325–26 (Fed. Cir. 2021) (known as Kisor IV) (quoting Gardner, 513 U.S. at 117-18), cert.
denied, 142 S. Ct. 756 (2022). On that basis, the Federal Circuit determined that the canon did not
apply because the regulatory text at issue had only one reasonable meaning. Id. at 1326. The
conclusion in Kisor IV that the disputed term was not ambiguous, id. at 1319, was the opposite of
its prior holding—which did not cite Gardner or mention the pro-veteran canon. Kisor v. Shulkin,
869 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (Kisor I), vacated and remanded sub nom. Kisor v. Wilkie, 139 S.
Ct. 2400 (2019).
       The dissent in Kisor IV disagreed that interpretive doubt "must be established before the
pro-veteran canon can be applied." Kisor IV, 995 F.3d at 1327 (Reyna, J., dissenting). Judge Reyna
declared:
       Fundamentally, when a veterans' benefit provision is ambiguous on its face, the
       pro-veteran canon must be weighed alongside the other traditional tools in resolving
       interpretive doubt, including whether interpretative doubt exists. Neither the
       Supreme Court's decision in this case, nor this court's precedent, supports the
       majority's assumption that interpretive doubt is to be determined before resort to
       the pro-veteran canon may be had. To the contrary, the pro-veteran canon is a
       traditional tool of construction. It requires that we discern the purpose of a veterans'
       benefit provision in the context of the veterans' benefit scheme as a whole and
       ensure that the construction effectuates, rather than frustrates, that remedial
       purpose: that benefits that by law belong to the veteran go to the veteran.

Id.
       The debate continued when the Federal Circuit denied the veteran's petition for en banc
review. Kisor v. McDonough, 995 F.3d 1347 (Fed. Cir. 2021) (per curiam order) (Kisor V). A
concurrence concluded that Gardner made interpretive doubt "a precondition for applying the
canon" and "the hierarchy of interpretive tools" means courts "should consider the pro-veteran
canon only if, after exhausting all applicable descriptive tools in search of the provision's best
meaning, a range of plausible interpretations remains, none of them fairly described as the best."
Id. at 1354, 1358, 1359 (Prost, C.J., concurring). A dissenter's response included, in pertinent part:

                                                 15
       The pro-veteran canon of construction is not meant to be an afterthought. It is a tool
       in the interpretive toolkit that aids in gleaning congressional intent where the plain
       text of the statute or regulation does not clearly answer the question at hand. . . .
       ....
                The majority . . . cites only Brown v. Gardner for its decision to remove the
       pro-veteran canon—and apparently numerous other canons—from the interpretive
       toolkit it employs. But [Gardner] does not hold that the pro-veteran canon is only
       an after the fact inquiry. . . [a]nd, it does not say that the pro-veteran canon is
       anything other than an interpretive canon. . . .
       ....
                The panel majority's latest approach is inconsistent with multiple Supreme
       Court cases which discuss the pro-veteran canon and treat it as one of the many
       canons of construction to be collectively employed when interpreting veterans
       benefit provisions. . . .
       ....
       [W]hen reviewing an agency's interpretation of a statute or regulation (as is the case
       here), the Supreme Court has made clear that we are to apply all tools of statutory
       construction to glean congressional intent. Where differing plausible, reasonable
       interpretations of the terms of a regulation are possible, Congress has spoken: it
       wants veterans’ benefits to be administered in a "pro-claimant" manner.

Id. at 1366-72 (O'Malley, J., dissenting). And Judge Reyna added: "[Kisor IV] means that the pro-
veteran canon comes into play at the bottom of the ninth inning, after three outs have been made,
and as the players head to their respective dugouts. But by then, it's game over." Id. at 1376. After
Kisor V, one panel of the Federal Circuit concluded that "[t]his court has not definitively resolved
at what stage the pro-veteran canon applies." Roby v. McDonough, ___ F. 4th ___, No. 2020-1088,
2021 WL 3378834, at *8 (Fed. Cir. Aug. 4, 2021).
       In my view, reading Henderson, Gardner, King, and Fishgold together makes clear that
the dissenters in Kisor IV and Kisor V got it right and the pro-veteran canon is part of the context
within which we ascertain plain meaning. Gardner certainly does not say otherwise. In Gardner,
the Supreme Court did not find ambiguity or express interpretive doubt; the Court merely said that
the most VA could claim was ambiguity to be resolved in its favor, noted that any interpretive
doubt would be resolved in the veteran's favor, and held that VA's interpretation of the law was
not even plausible. 513 U.S. at 117-18. Second, Gardner expressly relied on King, which applied
the pro-veteran canon as a basic principle for reading provisions for veterans' benefits. See
Gardner, 513 U.S. at 118 (citing King, 502 U.S. at 220 n.9). And third, Henderson, which came
after Gardner, did not even mention it, instead relying on King, Fishgold, and the solicitude for
veterans that imbues the scheme for adjudicating veterans' benefits claims, "'plac[ing] a thumb on

                                                 16
the scale in the veteran's favor.'" Henderson, 562 U.S. at 440 (quoting Shinseki v. Sanders, 556
U.S. 396, 412 (2009) (Souter, J., dissenting)).
        Most importantly, Gardner itself makes clear that there is no binary choice between textual
clarity and ambiguity, because "[a]mbiguity is a creature not of definitional possibilities but of . .
. context." Gardner, 513 U.S. at 118. So we need not decide whether the Federal Circuit's
interpretations of Gardner in Kisor IV and Kisor V nullify Henderson, King, and Fishgold and
render the pro-veteran canon an empty platitude, because the central premise of Gardner resolves
this case: the meaning of the language at issue, whether "'plain or not, depends on context.'" Id. at
118 (quoting King, 502 U.S. at 221). The Court cannot "'wave the ambiguity flag'" because the
plain language of the preamble, DC, and note "does not conclusively resolve the issue." Barry v.
McDonough, 35 Vet.App. 111, 122 (2022)9 (quoting Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2415). With or without
the pro-veteran canon, the context here—including § 4.25(b)—makes plain that separate
manifestations of Parkinson's can be evaluated under other DCs while otherwise uncompensated
ascertainable residuals support a 30% rating under DC 8004. That is the only meaning of the
preamble, DC 8004, and note that is compatible with the law as a whole. See United Sav. Ass'n of
Texas v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs., Ltd., 484 U.S. 365, 371 (1988); Thompson v.
McDonald, 815 F.3d 781, 785 (Fed. Cir. 2016) ("We read the words of a regulation in their context
and with a view to their place in the overall regulatory scheme.").

                               3. The Board Decision Is Not Due Deference
        Though the pro-veteran canon may not be needed to propel the proper rating for Mr. Duran,
the canon would stay in play if the rules for evaluating Parkinson's were truly ambiguous in the
context of the rating scheme. I agree with Judge Allen that the Board decision is not due any
deference because it is clear that it is not VA's authoritative policy on rating disabilities arising
from Parkinson's disease. See Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2416 (noting that deference is not due to an
agency's ad hoc statements); R. at 22 ("The Board’s decision in this case is binding only with
respect to the instant matter decided. This decision is not precedential and does not establish VA
policies or interpretations of general applicability.") I'd add that Kisor indicates that it would make

        9
           Barry also holds that "a regulation is not ambiguous simply because both parties insist that the plain
meaning supports his or her position and neither party's interpretation is unreasonable to the Court." 35 Vet.App. at
120 (citing Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2423); compare post at 20 & n.21.

                                                         17
no sense to defer to an official position by VA that conflicts with the pro-veteran canon. See 139
S. Ct. at 2416.
        Kisor explains that "we give Auer deference10 because we presume, for a set of reasons
relating to the comparative attributes of courts and agencies, that Congress would have wanted us
to." Id. But that presumption must give way to the special treatment Congress reserved for
veterans—a veterans benefits scheme '''imbued with special beneficence from a grateful
sovereign'"—in recognition that veterans such as Mr. Duran "risked both life and liberty in their
military service to this country."11 Sneed v. Shinseki, 737 F.3d 719, 728 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (quoting
Bailey v. West, 160 F.3d 1360, 1370 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (Michel, J., concurring)); see Henderson,
562 U.S. at 440 (highlighting the longstanding solicitude of Congress for veterans and the resulting
"review scheme that Congress created for the adjudication of veterans' benefits claims" in invoking
the pro-veteran canon); Harper, 42 HARV. J.L. & PUB. POL'Y at 958-59 ("The language and logic
of [Gardner] suggest that courts should apply the veteran's canon before turning to deference
doctrines."). Congress could not have wanted courts to defer to agency interpretations that conflict
with the characteristics of Congress's creation. When "the Secretary's interpretation [of the law] is
unfavorable to veterans, such that it conflicts with the beneficence underpinning VA's veterans
benefits scheme, and a more liberal construction is available that affords a harmonious interplay
between provisions," the more liberal construction prevails. Trafter v. Shinseki, 26 Vet.App. 267,
272 (2013); see Nat'l Org. of Veterans' Advocs., Inc. v. Sec'y of Veterans Affs., 48 F.4th 1307, 1317
(Fed. Cir. 2022) (reaffirming that "'[e]ven if the government's asserted interpretation of [a
regulation] is plausible, it would be appropriate under [the pro-veteran canon] only if the
[regulatory] language unambiguously supported the government's interpretation.'" (quoting
Hudgens v. McDonald, 823 F.3d 630, 639 (Fed. Cir. 2016)(alterations in original))).12

        10
             See Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 461 (1997).
        11
           Mr. Duran was awarded a Purple Heart for gunshot wounds to his chest and arm during his participation
in the Vietnam War. R. at 176, 3273. And he is service connected for Parkinson's disease associated with herbicide
exposure in Vietnam. R. at 883.
        12
            Hudgens noted that "[i]n many cases, the tension between Auer and Gardner is difficult to resolve, since
both seemingly direct courts to resolve ambiguities in a VA regulation but would, in many cases, counsel contrary
outcomes." 823 F.3d at 639. See Roby, 2021 WL 3378834, at *8 ("This court has not definitively resolved at what
stage the pro-veteran canon applies and whether it precedes any claims of deference to an agency interpretation.").

                                                         18
                                                  4. Conclusion
         For the foregoing reasons: (1) I agree with the partial concurrence that the Board decision
is not due any deference; (2) I believe the pro-veteran canon on which the system for adjudicating
veterans' benefits is grounded is part of the context to consider in ascertaining the plain meaning
of regulatory provisions; and (3) I concur fully with the majority opinion that the plain meaning
of the preamble, DC, and note to 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DC 8004 , in the context of the rating scheme,
provides that Mr. Duran's ratings under other DCs for separate manifestations of Parkinson's
disease should be added to DC 8004's minimum 30% rating for additional ascertainable
Parkinson's manifestations that are not otherwise compensable under the rating schedule.

ALLEN, Judge, concurring-in-part and concurring in the judgment:13
         I concur in the Court's judgment reversing the Board's decision discontinuing appellant's
30% disability rating under diagnostic code (DC) 8004 for Parkinson's disease and remanding the
matter for further proceedings. I write separately, however, because my path to reversal and
remand diverges from the Majority's rationale. The Majority concludes that under 38 C.F.R.
§ 4.124a, DC 8004, when VA assigns separate compensable ratings for Parkinson's manifestations
that total more than 30% under DCs other than DC 8004, those separate ratings do not replace the
minimum 30% rating under DC 8004 provided that some manifestations remain that are not
separately rated as compensable.14 So far, so good, because I agree with that reading of the DC.
The reason I can't join the Majority opinion in full is because the Majority holds that the regulation
is unambiguous.15 As I will explain, even though I agree that the Majority adopts the better reading
of § 4.124a, DC 8004, I find the regulation ambiguous. And because the Secretary has not
identified any official, authoritative agency position to which the Court can properly defer in terms
of resolving the ambiguity before us, I would search for the best reading of the ambiguous
regulation. That endeavor necessarily considers the pro-veteran canon of construction, the

         13
            I join in full the portion of the Majority opinion that vacates and remands the Board's decision denying a
disability rating greater than 30% for PTSD. The Board also denied a rating greater than 30% for residuals to the
nerves of the hand of a gunshot wound in the right arm, a rating greater than 30% for residuals of a gunshot wound to
the right chest (muscle group VI), and a rating greater than 30% for residuals of a gunshot wound to the right triceps
(muscle group VI). Because appellant does not challenge those matters on appeal, I also join the Court's dismissal of
the appeal as to them. See Pederson v. McDonald, 27 Vet.App. 276, 283 (2015) (en banc).
         14
              Ante at 7.
         15
              Id. at 8.

                                                         19
application of which removes any doubt here about the proper interpretation of 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a,
DC 8004.16 I will briefly explain my reasoning.
         Figuring out whether a regulation is genuinely ambiguous can be tricky business. As the
Supreme Court recently made clear: "a court cannot wave the ambiguity flag just because it found
the regulation impenetrable on first read. Agency regulations can sometimes make the eyes glaze
over. But hard interpretative conundrums, even relating to complex rules, can often be solved." 17
Or as we have held, perhaps not as colorfully as Justice Kagan did in Kisor, "complexity and
ambiguity are distinct concepts." 18 So, courts must employ the traditional tools of regulatory
construction to determine the meaning of a regulation. "[O]nly when that legal toolkit is empty
and the interpretative question still has no single right answer can a judge conclude that it is 'more
[one] of policy than of law.'"19
         Regulations can be ambiguous for a number of reasons. As Kisor recognizes,20 high on that
list is when the regulation is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation in terms of the
question at hand.21 In my view, that is precisely the situation we have here. Even after applying
the traditional tools of construction, I conclude that § 4.124a, DC 8004, the preamble, and the note
applicable to DCs 8000-8025 do not clearly answer the question before us. 22 There are two
principal reasons for this conclusion. First, nothing in any of the three relevant provisions in the
regulatory structure separately or collectively addresses how to rate ascertainable but

         16
            Unlike Judge Jaquith, I believe that the pro-veteran canon applies only after finding an ambiguity in the
relevant source of law. See ante at 16.
         17
              Kisor v. Wilkie, 139 S. Ct. 2400, 2415 (2019).
         18
              Atencio v. O'Rourke, 30 Vet.App. 74, 82 (2018).
         19
              Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2415 (quoting Pauley v. BethEnergy Mines, Inc., 501 U.S. 680, 696 (1991)).
         20
              Id.
         21
            See, e.g., Smith v. Nicholson, 451 F.3d 1344, 1350 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (holding that 38 C.F.R. § 4.25(b), DC
6260, is ambiguous because its language "still leaves the pertinent inquiry unresolved"); Pacheco v. Gibson, 27
Vet.App. 21, 26 (2014) (holding that 38 C.F.R. § 3.157(b) and (b)(1) are ambiguous because they are subject to both
parties' proffered interpretations); Correia v. McDonald, 28 Vet.App. 158, 166 (2016) (holding that 38 C.F.R. § 4.59
is ambiguous because its language is susceptible to more than one meaning); Vilfranc v. McDonald, 28 Vet.App. 357,
363 (2017) (holding that 38 C.F.R. § 4.150, DC 9905, is ambiguous because the regulation does not answer whether
separate ratings should be assigned for dysfunction in both temporomandibular joints); Urban v. Shulkin, 29 Vet.App.
82, 88-89 (2017) (holding that 38 C.F.R. § 4.96(a) is ambiguous because both parties presented interpretations
consistent with the language of the regulation and the language of the regulation does not explicitly answer the
question); Ray v. Wilkie, 31 Vet.App. 58, 69 (2019) (holding that 38 C.F.R. § 4.16(b) is ambiguous because it provided
incomplete definitions).
         22
              Ante at 7.

                                                           20
noncompensable Parkinson's manifestations when VA has already assigned a separate
compensable rating or ratings for Parkinson's manifestations that total more than 30% under
diagnostic codes other than 8004. One can try to piece together the various parts of the rating
schedule to determine whether appellant or the Secretary proffers the better reading. As I'll explain,
I agree with the Majority's rationale explaining why appellant's reading is truer to the regulatory
language and VA's broader policies. However, concluding that appellant's position is the better
one does not mean that the regulatory provisions are unambiguous.
        A counterexample may be useful. Take Foster v. McDonough by contrast.23 In Foster, we
held that the plain text of 38 C.F.R. § 4.115b, DC 7528, is unambiguous because the regulation
provided step-by-step instructions for how to evaluate prostate cancer, including when a 100%
disability rating is warranted, when VA will reexamine the condition, when the 100% rating
continues or discontinues, and how to rate prostate cancer residuals after the 100% rating ends.24
There is nothing comparable here. DC 8004 does not provide step-by-step instructions for when
to discontinue, or not discontinue, the minimum 30% rating for Parkinson's manifestations.25 In
sum, § 4.124a, DC 8004, the preamble, and the note applicable to DCs 8000-8025 do not "offer a
clear answer to the question presented by this appeal."26
        Second and relatedly, I find the language of § 4.124a, DC 8004, susceptible to multiple
reasonable interpretations. Appellant argues that if there is some uncompensated residual of
Parkinson's disease, a claimant is entitled to a minimum 30% to account for that symptom
regardless of whether other Parkinson's residuals entitle a claimant to a separate disability rating
or ratings greater than 30%.27 Should additional symptoms manifest to a degree that warrants
separate compensable ratings under a different diagnostic code, appellant asserts that the minimum
30% rating remains along with the separate ratings.28 In contrast, the Secretary treats the 30%
rating as a true minimum, meaning a claimant would never be entitled to a lower rating. However,
once a residual or residuals would be ratable at greater than 30%, the Secretary asserts that the

        23
             Foster v. McDonough, 34 Vet.App. 338, 345 (2021).
        24
             Id.
        25
             See 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DC 8004.
        26
             Ante at 7.
        27
             Appellant's Br. at 5-7.
        28
           Id.; Oral Argument (OA) at 15:45-17:40, Duran v. McDonough, U.S. Vet.App. No. 20-5759 (oral argument
held November 15, 2022), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3Xng5euocg&t=3387s.

                                                       21
30% minimum rating is no longer necessary because a claimant's ratable residuals ensure that he
or she will receive at least the 30% disability rating that VA has determined is the floor for service-
connected Parkinson's disease.29 The regulatory language fails to exclude either party's reading
such that, in the words of the Supreme Court, there is "no single right answer" to the question
before us.30 I would therefore hold that § 4.124a, DC 8004 is genuinely ambiguous.
        Having found genuine ambiguity in the regulation, what's the next step in the analysis? In
many cases, finding a regulation genuinely ambiguous would lead to potential deference to an
administrative agency's interpretation of that regulation under Auer as refined in Kisor.31 However,
that is not the case here. The Supreme Court made clear that Auer deference is not a one-size-fits-
all doctrine, "for not every reasonable agency reading of a genuinely ambiguous rule should
receive Auer deference."32 Under Auer, courts only defer to an agency's "authoritative" or "official
position" about the meaning of an ambiguous regulation and that position "must at the least
emanate from those actors, using those vehicles, understood to make authoritative policy in the
relevant context."33 So, we look to what the Secretary identifies as the source of his interpretation
of the regulation. At oral argument, the Secretary made crystal clear that he was seeking
Kisor/Auer deference with respect to only one source: the Board decision itself.34
        The Secretary is clearly wrong. A Board decision is not the type of agency action to which
a court would ever defer under the Supreme Court's reasoning in Kisor. That is certain beyond
doubt. The Board expressly said that it was not making a policy judgment of the kind to which
deference is owed. The Board stated here (as all Board decisions state) that: "The Board's decision
in this case is binding only with respect to the instance matter decided. This decision is not
precedential and does not establish VA policies or interpretations of general applicability."35 It is
difficult to understand how the Secretary could argue that we should defer to the Board as stating

        29
             Secretary's Br. at 9-10.
        30
             Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2415.
        31
             Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2410-15; Auer v. Robbins, 519 U. S. 452 (1997).
        32
             Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2416.
        33
             Id.
        34
           OA at 48:15-48:22, 49:18-49-29; 53:55-54:36; 55:05-55:23. Because the Secretary affirmatively
disavowed seeking Kisor/Auer deference with respect to the ADJUDICATION PROCEDURES MANUAL (or M21-1), I
would leave for another day how a court should consider when, if ever, the M21-1 is entitled to deference.
        35
           R. at 22 (emphasis added). The Board's statement also refers to 38 C.F.R. § 20.1303 that provides that
"Board decisions will be considered binding only with regard to the specific case decided."

                                                          22
the authoritative position of VA on the question before us when the Board itself disclaims any
intention to make such policy judgments. I would clearly and unequivocally hold that Board
decisions are not entitled to Kisor/Auer deference because they do not purport to set out VA's
"official position" on, among other things, the "authoritative" meaning of ambiguous regulations.36
         Because there is no agency position to which the Court might defer, we are left with two
plausible interpretations of DC 8004. So, we must determine what is the better reading of the
ambiguous regulation. I concur with my colleagues that appellant's interpretation is the better one,
even if it is not the only one. I will not repeat the Majority's regulatory analysis here. While I
disagree that the regulation unambiguously supports appellant's position, I agree that the contours
of the regulation that the Majority highlight point in appellant's direction.37
         In addition, the pro-veteran canon of interpretation under Brown v. Gardner supports
appellant's reading.38 That canon is particularly helpful here because both parties' interpretations
of the regulatory structure are plausible.39 I readily acknowledge that the pro-veteran canon arose
in the context of statutory interpretation.40 But the Court has made clear that the canon applies in
the context of regulatory ambiguity as well.41
         Utilizing the pro-veteran canon to decide between two plausible interpretations does not
mean the individual veteran automatically wins. Rather, in my view, the canon means that the
Court should adopt an interpretation of an ambiguous statute or regulation that is categorically
favorable to veterans as a group. There will be situations in which there is no universal pro-veteran

         36
              Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2416.
         37
              See, e.g., ante at 5-8.
         38
           See Brown v. Gardner, 513 U.S. 115, 117-18 (1994); see also King v. St. Vincent's Hospital, 502 U.S. 215,
220-21 n.9 (1991).
         39
            Because there is nothing to which the Court could legitimately defer under Kisor/Auer, this case does not
raise the difficult question of how the pro-veteran canon of construction interacts with administrative deference under
Kisor/Auer. So, I would leave that question for another day. Compare Kisor v. McDonough, 995 F.3d 1347, 1354-55
(Fed. Cir. 2021) (Prost, J., concurring) (concluding that interpretive doubt is a precondition to applying the pro-veteran
canon), with Kisor, 995 F.3d at 1366 (O'Malley, J., dissenting) (concluding that the pro-veteran canon should be used
alongside traditional tools of statutory construction).
         40
              See Brown, 513 U.S. at 117-18.
         41
            See Cottle v. Principi, 14 Vet.App. 329, 335-36 (2001) ("'[A] VA position that adopts a construction less
beneficial to a veteran, as well as any VA resolution of statutory or regulatory ambiguity, would have to take into
account the impact of Gardner, that held that interpretive doubt is to be construed in the veteran's favor.'") (quoting
Wright v. Gober, 10 Vet.App. 343, 351 (1997)(alteration in original) and citing Brown, 513 U.S. at 117-18); see also
Savage v. Gober, 10 Vet.App. 488, 495 (1997) ("[T]o the extent that the language of the regulation is ambiguous,
'interpretive doubt is to be construed in the veteran's favor.") (internal quotations omitted).

                                                           23
meaning and, in such cases, the canon has no application. Here, there is no question that reading
§ 4.124a, DC 8004, as appellant suggests benefits all veterans seeking compensation for
Parkinson's disease who manifest ascertainable but noncompensable Parkinson's residuals when
VA has already assigned a separate compensable rating or ratings for Parkinson's manifestations
that total more than 30% under diagnostic codes other than 8004.
         Looking at the competing interpretations in light of the pro-veteran canon, appellant's
reading meshes with the operative regulation and VA's broader policies better than the Secretary's
contrary view. For example, the Secretary contends that appellant's reading violates the anti-
pyramiding rules and risks compensating distinct and separate symptomology more than once.42
The Majority reasons that the opposite is true because appellant's interpretation "harmonizes with
the key policies of VA's overall rating scheme, namely, that veterans should not be
undercompensated or overcompensated for a particular condition."43 The Majority then concludes
that the Secretary's interpretation of the regulation results in potential undercompensation.44 I tend
to agree with the Majority's reasoning, reasoning that is strengthened by viewing the question
through the lens of the pro-veteran canon of construction. Consider appellant's compensated and
uncompensated Parkinson's symptoms for example. The Board found that some of appellant's
Parkinson's manifestations—a right upper extremity condition, a right lower extremity condition,
and jaw tremors—warranted separate compensable ratings totaling 50%.45 Not included in those
separate ratings are additional ascertainable manifestations—constipation, a chewing and
swallowing condition, and a speech condition.46 Upon the Board's discontinuance of the minimum
30% rating and assignment of separate ratings totaling 50%, appellant no longer received
compensation for constipation, a chewing and swallowing condition, and jaw tremors. 47 Without

         42
              Secretary's Br. at 10.
         43
            Ante at 7. I note that the Majority's resort to the policy behind the rating schedule is a powerful indication
that the regulation at issue is ambiguous. Again, the policy the Majority discusses supports interpreting the regulation
in appellant's favor. But it does not support finding the regulation unambiguous.
         44
              Id. at 8.
         45
              R. at 21-22.
         46
              R. at 19-21.
         47
              R. at 17-18.

                                                           24
leaving the minimum rating intact, appellant appears to be undercompensated for the remaining
ascertainable residuals that VA chose not to rate separately.48
       The Secretary's interpretation may expose claimants to the risk of undercompensation, but
that doesn't mean the Secretary's interpretation is not a plausible reading of the regulation. As I've
said, although I generally agree with the Majority's logic, I disagree that there is only one way to
read the regulation. The Majority's reasoning explains why appellant has a better reading of the
regulation and the pro-veteran canon tips the scales to resolve the interpretive doubt in appellant's
favor. Appellant's reading allows a claimant to receive the minimum rating and separate individual
ratings for ascertainable residuals of Parkinson's disease without fearing pyramiding or double
compensation. There is simply no risk of overlapping a separate compensable rating or ratings for
Parkinson's manifestations with the remaining ascertainable residuals that exist at a non-
compensable rate subject to the minimum rating. The manifestations either warrant separate
compensable ratings or fall to the catch-all minimum rating—they cannot be in both places at once.
Additionally, appellant's interpretation can be applied fairly and equally to any veteran who, as
here, manifests ascertainable but noncompensable Parkinson's residuals when VA has already
assigned a separate compensable rating or ratings for Parkinson's manifestations that total more
than 30% under diagnostic codes other than 8004. On the other hand, the Secretary's interpretation
introduces an ostensible danger of undercompensating claimants by discontinuing the minimum
rating when uncompensated residuals remain. This is particularly problematic given the
progressive nature of the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Thus, I would hold that the pro-veteran
canon resolves any interpretive doubt in appellant's favor.
       In sum, I would hold that 38 C.F.R. § 4.124a, DC 8004, is ambiguous, that Board decisions
are not entitled to Kisor/Auer deference, that appellant has the better reading of the regulation, and
that, to remove any question, the Court should apply the pro-veteran canon to resolve interpretive
doubt in appellant's favor. For these reasons, I respectfully concur in the judgment only with
respect to the question concerning appellant's disability rating for Parkinson's disease.

       48
            R. at 5, 17-18.

                                                 25