Date: 20101223
Docket: T-1259-09
Citation: 2010 FC 1331
Ottawa, Ontario, December 23, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
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ROGER ACREMAN
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
application for judicial review concerns a June 25, 2009 decision of the
Veterans Review and Appeal Board Canada denying the Applicant’s
appeal of the Entitlement Review Panel’s decision to refuse a disability award
to the Applicant for his condition of scleroderma.
[2]
For
reasons that follow, I am allowing this application for judicial review.
Background
[3]
Colonel
Roger Acreman (the Applicant) served in the Canadian Militia from March 31 to
August 12, 1958, the Canadian Forces from January 6, 1959 to September 14,
1961, and in the Regular Forces from September 1961 until his official
discharge on January 10, 1997.
[4]
In 1981,
the Applicant was diagnosed with scleroderma, which was at the time characterized
by severe hypertension and renal failure. Scleroderma is a rare and chronic
autoimmune disease which causes normal tissue to be replaced by dense, thick fibre
tissue. Scleroderma has no known cause and can be life threatening. Medical
restrictions were placed on his military service, limiting him to sedentary
duties in Canada because of his medical condition.
These restrictions were changed in June 1982, and again in May 1989 to continue
his service but restrict him to his present rank.
[5]
Despite
his medical setbacks, the Applicant continued to work, serving in Ottawa, Gagetown (where
he was promoted to Colonel in 1989), Montreal, and South Korea where he was
posted from 1992 to 1996. There he held the positions of Canadian Forces Attaché, Chief
of the Canadian Liaison Group, and the Canadian Member of the United Nations Military
Armistice concurrently.
[6]
The
Applicant complains that the workload at this post was particularly demanding,
as he was required to work many hours, some of them while standing for long
periods of time, which was a challenge given his medical condition. When the
Applicant returned from South
Korea, he was
deemed disabled and unfit for his classification and otherwise unemployable,
although he has not provided a copy of his medical release form. The Applicant was discharged
from the Canadian Forces. His release records were later changed to indicate
that he had been discharged for medical reasons.
[7]
On May 16,
2006, the Applicant applied to the Minister of Veterans Affairs Canada for a
disability award for scleroderma, peripheral cardiovascular disease,
hypertension, renal impairment, ischemic colitis, femoral bypass, and Raynaud’s
phenomenon. The Applicant alleged that his military service adversely aggravated
his health.
[8]
The Department
of Veterans Affairs (the Department) denied his application for disability
based on his scleroderma on November 8,
2006, on the basis that there was no evidence that this condition was caused or
permanently aggravated by his military service. In coming to this conclusion,
the Department relied on the medical advisory opinion of Dr. Verma, the
Department’s medical advisor, who noted that the cause of scleroderma was not
known, and that stress had not been mentioned either as a cause or an
aggravating factor in the development of this disease. The Department found
that hypertension, renal insufficiency and Reynaud’s phenomenon were “part and
parcel” of the scleroderma condition and therefore rejected the claims for
these conditions. The Department also rejected the Applicant’s claims for
peripheral vascular disease and ischemic bowel disease.
[9]
The
Applicant sought a Departmental Review of this decision on March 20, 2007, with
new submissions and evidence, but this was denied on May 7, 2007, on the basis that
the Applicant had failed to provide specific medical evidence to demonstrate
that his scleroderma was caused or permanently worsened by stress during his
military factor.
[10]
The
Applicant then applied to the Entitlement Review Panel for a review of the Department’s
decision regarding his scleroderma claim, although he did not seek review of
the decisions regarding his peripheral vascular disease and ischemic bowel
disease. On February 5, 2008, the Entitlement Review Panel denied a disability
award to the Applicant, finding that the medical opinions of Dr. Verma, and Dr.
Henderson (the Applicant’s rheumatologist since 1988) as well as the
documentary evidence were not sufficiently conclusive to establish that a
disability award should ensue for the Applicant’s claim.
[11]
The
Applicant appealed this decision to the Veterans Review and Appeal Board Canada (the Board).
Decision
Under Review
[12]
In
a letter dated June 25, 2009, the Applicant was informed that the Board would not render a favourable decision. The Board was
not persuaded that stress was a factor in the Applicant’s condition. In
determining this, the Board noted that while stress was mentioned in many of
the sources submitted, the weight of the medical literature suggested that it
was of an unknown etiology.
[13]
The
Board noted the Applicant’s medical history and his submissions of a number of
Internet medical literature suggesting that stress played a role in the
etiology of his condition. The Board also acknowledged the medical opinion of
Dr. Jamie Henderson, the rheumatologist who had helped supervise care of the
Applicant’s scleroderma since 1988, asserting that stress aggravates the
condition. However, the Board also noted that Dr. Henderson did not provide any
medical literature for that opinion. The Board also did not find the articles
were sufficient credible medical sources to conclude that stress played a role
in the onset and continuance of the condition.
[14]
The
Board found that even if it was to find that stress was a factor in the
Applicant’s condition, the evidence before it indicated that his condition was
not worsened by stress relating to the military environment. This evidence
listed included medical opinions that his disease seemed relatively stable,
despite working long and full days, that he was not a medical burden and he was
able to cope with stress. The Board found that in light of this, the
Applicant’s submission that stress played a role in the onset or worsening of
his condition was a “leap of faith”. The Board found that “if anything, the
Appellant’s condition appears to have stabilized subsequent to his diagnosis
and it would appear that this promotional ability was not at all stymied by
this condition.”
[15]
The
Board therefore concluded that there was no link established between the Applicant’s
service factors and the claimed condition of scleroderma. As such, the Board
affirmed the ruling of the Entitlement Review Panel.
Legislation
The Canadian
Forces Members and Veterans Re-establishment and Compensation Act, 2005, c. 21.
2.(1) The following definitions apply
in this Act.
…
“disability”
« invalidité »
“disability” means the loss or
lessening of the power to will and to do any normal mental or physical act.
…
“service-related injury or disease”
« liée au service »
“service-related injury or disease”
means an injury or a disease that
(a) was attributable to or was incurred
during special duty service; or
(b) arose out of or was directly
connected with service in the Canadian Forces.
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2. (1)
Les définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente loi
…
«
invalidité »
“disability”
«
invalidité » La perte ou l’amoindrissement de la faculté de vouloir et de
faire normalement des actes d’ordre physique ou mental.
…
« liée
au service »
“service-related
injury or disease”
« liée
au service » Se dit de la blessure ou maladie :
a)
soit survenue au cours du service spécial ou attribuable à celui-ci;
b)
soit consécutive ou rattachée directement au service dans les Forces
canadiennes.
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45. (1) The Minister may, on
application, pay a disability award to a member or a veteran who establishes
that they are suffering from a disability resulting from
(a) a service-related injury or
disease; or
(b) a non-service-related injury or
disease that was aggravated by service.
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45.
(1) Le ministre peut, sur demande, verser une indemnité d’invalidité au
militaire ou vétéran qui démontre qu’il souffre d’une invalidité causée :
a)
soit par une blessure ou maladie liée au service;
b)
soit par une blessure ou maladie non liée au service dont l’aggravation est
due au service.
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46. (1) An injury or a disease is
deemed to be a service-related injury or disease if the injury or disease is,
in whole or in part, a consequence of
(a) a service-related injury or
disease;
(b) a non-service-related injury or
disease that was aggravated by service;
(c) an injury or a disease that is
itself a consequence of an injury or a disease described in paragraph (a) or
(b); or
(d) an injury or a disease that is a
consequence of an injury or a disease described in paragraph (c).
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46. (1) Est réputée être une blessure
ou maladie liée au service la blessure ou maladie qui, en tout ou en partie,
est la conséquence :
a) d’une blessure ou maladie liée au
service;
b) d’une blessure ou maladie non liée
au service dont l’aggravation est due au service;
c) d’une blessure ou maladie qui est
elle-même la conséquence d’une blessure ou maladie visée par les alinéas a)
ou b);
d) d’une blessure ou maladie qui est la
conséquence d’une blessure ou maladie visée par l’alinéa c).
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The
Veterans Review and Appeal Board Act, S.C. 1995, c.18 (VRAB Act)
3. The provisions of this Act and of
any other Act of Parliament or of any regulations made under this or any
other Act of Parliament conferring or imposing jurisdiction, powers, duties
or functions on the Board shall be liberally construed and interpreted to the
end that the recognized obligation of the people and Government of Canada to
those who have served their country so well and to their dependants may be
fulfilled.
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3. Les dispositions de la présente loi
et de toute autre loi fédérale, ainsi que de leurs règlements, qui
établissent la compétence du Tribunal ou lui confèrent des pouvoirs et
fonctions doivent s’interpréter de façon large, compte tenu des obligations
que le peuple et le gouvernement du Canada reconnaissent avoir à l’égard de
ceux qui ont si bien servi leur pays et des personnes à leur charge.
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38. (1) The Board may obtain
independent medical advice for the purposes of any proceeding under this Act
and may require an applicant or appellant to undergo any medical examination
that the Board may direct.
Notification of intention
(2) Before accepting as evidence any
medical advice or report on an examination obtained pursuant to subsection
(1), the Board shall notify the applicant or appellant of its intention to do
so and give them an opportunity to present argument on the issue.
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38. (1) Pour toute demande de révision
ou tout appel interjeté devant lui, le Tribunal peut requérir l’avis d’un
expert médical indépendant et soumettre le demandeur ou l’appelant à des
examens médicaux spécifiques.
Avis d’intention
(2) Avant de recevoir en preuve l’avis
ou les rapports d’examens obtenus en vertu du paragraphe (1), il informe le
demandeur ou l’appelant, selon le cas, de son intention et lui accorde la
possibilité de faire valoir ses arguments.
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39. In all proceedings under this Act,
the Board shall
(a) draw from all the circumstances of
the case and all the evidence presented to it every reasonable inference in
favour of the applicant or appellant;
(b) accept any uncontradicted evidence
presented to it by the applicant or appellant that it considers to be
credible in the circumstances; and
(c) resolve in favour of the applicant
or appellant any doubt, in the weighing of evidence, as to whether the
applicant or appellant has established a case.
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39. Le Tribunal applique, à l’égard du
demandeur ou de l’appelant, les règles suivantes en matière de preuve :
a) il tire des circonstances et des
éléments de preuve qui lui sont présentés les conclusions les plus favorables
possible à celui-ci;
b) il accepte tout élément de preuve
non contredit que lui présente celui-ci et qui lui semble vraisemblable en
l’occurrence;
c) il tranche en sa faveur toute
incertitude quant au bien-fondé de la demande.
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Issue
[16]
I
would pose the issue as follows:
1.
Did
the Board err in dismissing the Applicant’s evidence on the connection between
stress and his condition of scleroderma?
Standard
of Review
[17]
In
Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1
SCR 190 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada established two
standards of review: reasonableness and correctness. A reviewing court may
consider and apply past jurisprudence which has already established the
standard of review for a particular case.
[18]
This
Court has dealt with the standard of review applicable to a decision of the
Board many times. A question regarding the Board’s assessment or
interpretation of contradictory evidence determining whether an injury was
caused or aggravated by military service is a question of fact and should be
reviewed on a standard of reasonableness: Boisvert v Canada (Attorney
General), 2009 FC 735 at paras 33-35.
[19]
Section
3 of the Veterans Review and Appeal Board Act (the Act) requires that
the provisions of the Act be “liberally construed and interpreted to the end
that the recognized obligation of the people and Government of Canada to those
who have served their country so well and to their dependants may be
fulfilled.” Section 39 further requires that the Board draw every reasonable
inference in favour of the Applicant, accept any uncontradicted evidence
presented to it by the Applicant that it considers credible in the
circumstances, and resolve in favour of the Applicant any doubt, in weighing of
evidence, as to whether the Applicant has established a case.
Analysis
[20]
The
Applicant makes three main submissions with regard to the Board’s decision.
First, the Applicant submits that the Board confused the issue of stress as a
cause of scleroderma with stress as an aggravating factor. Although the
etiology of scleroderma is unknown, the Applicant had been claiming that the
military service exacerbated his condition.
[21]
Second,
the Applicant takes issue with the way the Board considered the medical
evidence before it, particularly the Board’s preference of the opinion of Dr.
Verma, a general practitioner, over the opinion of Dr. Henderson, a
rheumatologist who had supervised care of the Applicant since 1988.
[22]
Third,
the Applicant submits that in highlighting the evidence that showed the
Applicant could still function despite his condition, the Board confused the
issue of whether the Applicant could function in spite of the stress with the
issue that stress contributed to the exacerbation of his condition, which was
the only issue that had to be determined.
[23]
The
Respondent submits that the Board’s decision was reasonable and that its
findings that the Applicant’s condition of scleroderma had not been caused nor
aggravated by his military service are entirely consistent with the evidence
before the Board.
[24]
The
Respondent points out that the Board reviewed all of the evidence. In
particular, the Respondent says that the materials submitted by the Applicant
merely confirmed that it was possible that his medical service aggravated his
condition; however, the Applicant failed to adduce specific evidence that
related to his condition to his military service.
[25]
The
Respondent further submits that although s.3 and 39 of the VRAB act creates
liberal and purposive guidelines, the Board was not obliged to accept evidence
presented by the Applicant if the Board found that the evidence was not
credible, even if it was not contradicted. In the present case, the Board had
found that much of the evidence was not credible, and contradictory evidence
had been placed before it.
[26]
On
one hand, the Applicant carries the burden of proving his claim, which, in this
case, is his claim that military service aggravated his condition of
scleroderma: Hall v Canada (Attorney General), [1998] 152 FTR 58 at para
28. On the other hand, the Board’s decision must be made in a way that is
justified, transparent, and intelligible, falling within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law, as
required in Dunsmuir at para 47.
[27]
Section
45 of the Canadian Forces Members and Veterans Re-establishment and
Compensation Act provides that the Minister may pay a disability award to a
member suffering from a disability resulting from certain types of injuries.
Subsection 45(1)(b) expressly provides that this injury may be a non-service related
one that was aggravated by service. This would indicate that the injury does
not have to be caused by the military service.
[28]
I
am not convinced by my reading of the Board’s decision that the Board confused
the question of the stress as a cause of scleroderma and stress as an
aggravating factor. Although the Board noted that medical literature indicates
that scleroderma is of an unknown etiology, the Board did go on to analyze
stress as a factor in the condition, including stress as a continuing or
worsening factor.
[29]
However,
I am not convinced that the Board weighed the medical evidence before it in a
manner that was reasonable, considering the direction provided by sections 3
and 39 of the Act.
[30]
I
note that Dr. Henderson had physically examined and worked with the Applicant
since 1988, and yet the Board preferred the opinion of Dr. Verma, who had not
done so. It would seem to me that the opinion of a medical specialist, a
rheumatologist, especially one who has examined a patient, should be carefully
considered.
[31]
Dr.
Henderson had not provided any medical literature but he did reference the
Applicant’s researched medical articles. Dr. Henderson wrote in May 24, 2006:
In
my experience in treating connective tissue diseases over the years, it has
been my firm belief that stress aggravates the underlying condition. This
gentleman with his military career with relocations, increasing
responsibilities certainly placed him under stress and would have probably
aggravated the underlying condition. I am sure his involvement in the military
had an impact in his eventual outcome.
He then referred to the Applicant's medical literature later in January 24,
2007:
I have read some of the articles that Mr. Acreman has researched through the
world literature and it would certainly seem to substantiate my impression that
stress can play a negative role in exacerbating underlying autoimmune
conditions.
[32]
Dr. Verma, the medical
advisor, wrote: "The cause of scleroderma is not known and it has a
worldwide distribution...Stress of any kind has not been mentioned either as a
cause or an aggravating factor in the development of this disease..." Dr. Verma did
not refer to any medical literature along with his opinion.
[33]
There
was contradictory evidence before the Board: Dr. Verma’s opinion that stress
had not been mentioned as a factor and Dr. Henderson’s opinion that stress was
a factor. However, there were also the medical articles submitted by the
Applicant which advocated the reduction of stress in the treatment of the
condition. The Board is obligated to weigh this evidence in coming to its
determination.
[34]
The
Board did not accept Dr. Henderson’s opinion, noting that he did not provide
any medical literature for his opinion. On the other hand, the Board also rejected
the medical articles submitted by the Applicant, finding that they were not sufficiently
credible medical sources to conclude that stress played a role in the onset and
continuance of the condition. One of the medical articles was from the Annals
of Oncology (which appears to be a reputable publication by Oxford), focusing on
the topic of stress and scleroderma.
[35]
The
Board shows very little appreciation or consideration for any of the submitted
articles nor does it offer an adequate explanation for its credibility findings
for rejecting the medical articles. It is difficult to follow the Board’s
reasoning in rejecting the evidence of the medical articles.
[36]
Given
that section 3 of the Act requires the provisions be “liberally
construed and interpreted” and section 39 requires the Board draw every
reasonable inference in favour of the Applicant, accept any uncontradicted
evidence presented to it by the Applicant that it considers credible in the
circumstances, and resolve in favour of the Applicant any doubt, in weighing of
evidence, the Board has to properly scrutinize the credibility of the journal
articles and provide cogent reason for rejecting the medical literature.
[37]
The
Applicant relied in part on these articles to prove his claim that the stress
he experienced in military service had exacerbated his scleroderma. No other
medical literature on scleroderma was before the Board. The Board’s failure to
explain its credibility findings with respect to the Applicant’s evidence is an
error that falls outside of the reasonableness requirement of justification,
transparency and intelligibility.
Conclusion
[38]
For
the above reasons, I allow this application for judicial review of the Board’s
decision.
[39]
On
the matter of costs, the Applicant requested the question of costs be addressed
after the decision issued. Accordingly, the parties may make submissions on
the question of costs within 30 days of the issuance of this decision.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS and adjudges that:
1. The
application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is remitted back for
redetermination.
2. The Applicant
may submit such further evidence and materials that relate to his scleroderma.
3. The parties
may make submissions on costs within 30 days of this order.
"Leonard
S. Mandamin"