Skip to content
National Association of Attorneys General
  • Issues
    • Issues
      • Anticorruption
      • Antitrust
      • Bankruptcy
      • Charities
      • Civil Law
    • Issues
      • Consumer Protection
      • Criminal Law
      • Cyber and Technology
      • Disaster Preparedness & Response
      • Elder Justice
    • Issues
      • Ethics
      • Human Trafficking
      • Medicaid Fraud
      • Opioids
      • Powers & Duties
    • Issues
      • Public Health
      • The U.S. Supreme Court
      • Tobacco
      • Veterans & Military
  • Our Work
    • Training & Research
    • Centers
      • Center for Consumer Protection
      • Center for Supreme Court Advocacy
      • Center for Tobacco & Public Health
    • Committees
    • Initiatives
      • Presidential Initiative
      • Strategic Partnerships
      • International Fellows
      • COVID-19
    • Bankruptcy
    • Policy & Advocacy
  • Events & Training
    • Event Calendar
    • Attorney General Symposium
    • Presidential Summit
    • Capital Forum
    • Region Meetings
    • CLE Credit
    • NAAG Trainings
    • Online Learning
    • NAMFCU Trainings
    • NAAG Faculty
  • News & Resources
    • Attorney General Journal
    • Reports & Publications
    • Newsroom
    • NAAG Policy Letters
    • Podcasts
    • Online Learning
    • Research & Data
    • Member Directory
  • Attorneys General
    • What Attorneys General Do
    • Who is my Attorney General?
    • Attorneys General Office 101
    • Research & Data
    • Awards & Recognition
    • Careers in Attorney General Offices
    • Careers in Medicaid Fraud Control Units
  • About NAAG
    • NAAG Staff
    • NAAG Leadership
    • NAAG Member Services
    • NAAG Regions
    • NAAG FAQs
    • SAGE
    • NAMFCU
    • Newsroom
    • Careers at NAAG
  • Find my AG
  • About NAMFCU
    • About the Medicaid Fraud Control Units
    • Reporting Fraud and Abuse
    • MFCU Member Hub
    • Careers with a MFCU
  • Contact Us
National Association of Attorneys General
  • Find My AG
  • Consumer Complaints
  • Member Benefits
  • Contact Us
Log In
  • Issues
    • Issues
      • Anticorruption
      • Antitrust
      • Bankruptcy
      • Charities
      • Civil Law
    • Issues
      • Consumer Protection
      • Criminal Law
      • Cyber and Technology
      • Disaster Preparedness & Response
      • Elder Justice
    • Issues
      • Ethics
      • Human Trafficking
      • Medicaid Fraud
      • Opioids
      • Powers & Duties
    • Issues
      • Public Health
      • The U.S. Supreme Court
      • Tobacco
      • Veterans & Military
  • Our Work
    • Training & Research
    • Centers
      • Center for Consumer Protection
      • Center for Supreme Court Advocacy
      • Center for Tobacco & Public Health
    • Committees
    • Initiatives
      • Presidential Initiative
      • Strategic Partnerships
      • International Fellows
      • COVID-19
    • Bankruptcy
    • Policy & Advocacy
  • Events & Training
    • Event Calendar
    • Attorney General Symposium
    • Presidential Summit
    • Capital Forum
    • Region Meetings
    • CLE Credit
    • NAAG Trainings
    • Online Learning
    • NAMFCU Trainings
    • NAAG Faculty
  • News & Resources
    • Attorney General Journal
    • Reports & Publications
    • Newsroom
    • NAAG Policy Letters
    • Podcasts
    • Online Learning
    • Research & Data
    • Member Directory
  • Attorneys General
    • What Attorneys General Do
    • Who is my Attorney General?
    • Attorneys General Office 101
    • Research & Data
    • Awards & Recognition
    • Careers in Attorney General Offices
    • Careers in Medicaid Fraud Control Units
  • About NAAG
    • NAAG Staff
    • NAAG Leadership
    • NAAG Member Services
    • NAAG Regions
    • NAAG FAQs
    • SAGE
    • NAMFCU
    • Newsroom
    • Careers at NAAG
  • Find my AG
  • About NAMFCU
    • About the Medicaid Fraud Control Units
    • Reporting Fraud and Abuse
    • MFCU Member Hub
    • Careers with a MFCU
  • Contact Us

Supreme Court Report: George v. McDonough, 21-234.

Home / Supreme Court / Supreme Court Report: George v. McDonough, 21-234.
June 27, 2022 Supreme Court
Share this

  • Dan Schweitzer
    Director, Center for Supreme Court Advocacy
    National Association of Attorneys General

Volume 29, Issue 17

This Report summarizes opinions issued on June 15, 2022 (Part I).

 

Opinion: George v. McDonough, 21-234

George v. McDonough, 21-234. In a 6-3 decision, the Court held that the invalidation of a Veterans Affairs regulation after a veteran’s benefits decision becomes final cannot support a claim for collateral relief under 38 U.S.C. §7111 based on “clear and unmistakable error.” Kevin George joined the Marine Corps in 1975, but he did not disclose his history of schizophrenia and a medical examination noted no mental disorders. Less than a week into training, however, George had a schizophrenic episode and was hospitalized. A few months later, the Navy’s Central Physical Evaluation Board found that George’s schizophrenia made him unfit for duty and had not been aggravated by his service. After being medically discharged, George applied for disability benefits based on his schizophrenia. A Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) regional office denied his claim after concluding that his condition predated his military service and was not aggravated by it. The Board of Veterans’ Appeals (Board) agreed and denied George’s appeal in 1977. Neither the regional office nor the Board expressly discussed the VA’s burden of proof. Instead, the VA relied on a regulation stating that the agency could rebut the presumption of sound condition simply by showing that a disability predated service. In 2003, the VA concluded that the regulation conflicted with a statute requiring it to prove that a veteran’s condition was not aggravated by service, and the Federal Circuit agreed. In 2014, George asked the Board to revise its decision in his case based on “clear and unmistakable error.” The Board denied his claim, and the Federal Circuit affirmed. The Court affirmed in an opinion by Justice Barrett.

A 1997 statute permits collateral review of a VA decision for “clear and unmistakable error.” The statute does not define that term, but the Court found that statutory structure and the modifiers “clear” and “unmistakable” denote a “narrow category excluding some forms of error cognizable in other contexts.” When the statute was enacted, the term “had a long regulatory history in this very context.” The Court concluded that Congress codified the existing agency practice, under which a “change in law or a change in interpretation of law” does not qualify as clear and unmistakable error. Under long-existing VA regulations and practice, a clear and unmistakable error must be based on the law that existed at the time of the VA decision. When the Board decided George’s appeal in 1977, it followed the then-applicable regulation, as it was obligated to do. The Court expressed no view on the merits of the new interpretation decades later, but “because it is a change, it cannot support a claim of clear and unmistakable error in the Board’s routine 1977 application of the prior regulation.

George argued that the VA distorted its own history by glossing over Veterans Court opinions in his favor, but “across a century of review for clear and unmistakable error, George can muster only one case sustaining a claim that arguably resembles his.” Even that “outlier” case was ambiguous and failed to discuss the change-in-interpretation principle, and it did not overcome the “mountain of contrary regulatory authority” showing the “mainstream of agency practice” that Congress codified. Even accepting the argument that a judicial decision declares what a statute “always meant,” and that an unauthorized regulation is a “nullity,” the Court would still have to decide whether the application of a binding regulation is the kind of “clear and unmistakable error” for which relief is available, which the Court already answered in the negative. The Court also rejected George’s reliance on the plain meaning of “clear and unmistakable error.” The Court doubted that it is natural to find clear and unmistakable error from the faithful application of a regulation that was found invalid more than 25 years later. In any event, George’s argument conflicted with his concession elsewhere that the clear-and-unmistakable standard tracked a “deeply rooted” regulatory standard; the Court did not consider the term in the abstract, but rather as a preexisting term of art that Congress did not disturb.

Justice Sotomayor dissented, arguing that the Board “clearly and unmistakably” violated a statute in its decision denying George’s application for benefits. She argued that the regulatory system that Congress codified was “unsettled as to whether judicial invalidation of a regulation that squarely contravened an unambiguous statute constituted a change in interpretation of law.” Where the Court saw “certainty” in this history, Justice Sotomayor saw “at most confusion.” Confronted with an ambiguous regulatory scheme, she would apply the canon that provisions for benefits to members of the Armed Services should be construed in favor of the beneficiary.

Justice Gorsuch also filed a dissented opinion, which Justice Breyer joined and Justice Sotomayor joined in part. Justice Gorsuch argued that, because a judicial interpretation of a statute declares what the statute has always meant, the VA’s error was “clear and unmistakable” even though it was not recognized until years later. Even if an agency’s unlawful regulations bind its own employees until a court says otherwise, that does not mean the application of those regulations is error-free. Justice Gorsuch also argued that the 1997 statutes do not ask whether the agency’s error “was” clear and unmistakable, but whether evidence establishes clear and unmistakable error; therefore, the statute considers whether an error is clear today, not whether it was clear when it was made. The dissent (without Justice Sotomayor) also believed the Court erred by incorporating the entire regulatory history into the statute, rather than only the components that Congress specifically codified (which do not include the principle that a change in the interpretation of a law is not a clear and unmistakable error).

Related Posts

Related Posts

Supreme Court Report, Volume 31, Issue 20

Supreme Court Report, Volume 32, Issue 6

Supreme Court Report, Volume 31, Issue 15

Connect with NAAG and the Attorney General Community

Create a NAAG account to subscribe to our newsletters or mailing lists.

Create Account
Subscribe
Marble columns and the top of a federal building

scroll to filters

White Logo for the National Association of Attorneys General

1850 M Street NW
12th floor
Washington, DC 20036

TEL 202-326-6000
EMAIL 

Youtube
  • Issues
    • Issues
      • Anticorruption
      • Antitrust
      • Bankruptcy
      • Charities
      • Civil Law
    • Issues
      • Consumer Protection
      • Criminal Law
      • Cyber and Technology
      • Disaster Preparedness & Response
      • Elder Justice
    • Issues
      • Ethics
      • Human Trafficking
      • Medicaid Fraud
      • Opioids
      • Powers & Duties
    • Issues
      • Public Health
      • The U.S. Supreme Court
      • Tobacco
      • Veterans & Military
  • Our Work
    • Training & Research
    • Centers
      • Center for Consumer Protection
      • Center for Supreme Court Advocacy
      • Center for Tobacco & Public Health
    • Committees
    • Initiatives
      • Presidential Initiative
      • Strategic Partnerships
      • International Fellows
      • COVID-19
    • Bankruptcy
    • Policy & Advocacy
  • Events & Training
    • Event Calendar
    • Attorney General Symposium
    • Presidential Summit
    • Capital Forum
    • Region Meetings
    • CLE Credit
    • NAAG Trainings
    • Online Learning
    • NAMFCU Trainings
    • NAAG Faculty
  • News & Resources
    • Attorney General Journal
    • Reports & Publications
    • Newsroom
    • NAAG Policy Letters
    • Podcasts
    • Online Learning
    • Research & Data
    • Member Directory
  • Attorneys General
    • What Attorneys General Do
    • Who is my Attorney General?
    • Attorneys General Office 101
    • Research & Data
    • Awards & Recognition
    • Careers in Attorney General Offices
    • Careers in Medicaid Fraud Control Units
  • About NAAG
    • NAAG Staff
    • NAAG Leadership
    • NAAG Member Services
    • NAAG Regions
    • NAAG FAQs
    • SAGE
    • NAMFCU
    • Newsroom
    • Careers at NAAG
  • Find my AG
  • About NAMFCU
    • About the Medicaid Fraud Control Units
    • Reporting Fraud and Abuse
    • MFCU Member Hub
    • Careers with a MFCU
  • Contact Us
  • Find My AG
  • Consumer Complaints
  • Member Benefits
  • Contact Us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Privacy & Cookies Notice
  • Sitemap
  • Member Login

About the National Association of Attorneys General

As the nonpartisan national forum for America's state and territory attorneys general and their staff, NAAG provides collaboration, insight, and expertise to empower and champion America's attorneys general.
Learn More

© 2025 Copyright National Association of Attorneys General

Website by Yoko Co

Internal Feedback / Report an Error

Request an Update / Report an Error

The change you are requesting will be linked to this page. The URL for the page will be included in a hidden field when the form is submitted.
Please enter your change or describe your request. Be sure to reference where the error appears on the page and what needs to be done specifically.
Upload any files that need to be linked to this page. PDF only. Submit another request if you have more than five files to upload.
Drop files here or
Accepted file types: pdf, docx, xls, Max. file size: 128 MB, Max. files: 5.

    Who is requesting this change?(Required)

    Scroll To Top

    Insert/edit link

    Enter the destination URL

    Or link to existing content

      No search term specified. Showing recent items. Search or use up and down arrow keys to select an item.
        To provide you more clarity about how we collect, store and use personal information, and your rights to control that information, we have updated our privacy policy, which also explains how we use cookies. You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.I Agree