

Legal Sidebari
Arellano v. McDonough: Veterans Disability
Benefits and Equitable Tolling
December 11, 2023
On January 23, 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Arellano v. McDonough. The case involved a U.S.
Navy veteran, Adolfo Arellano, with a service-connected psychiatric disability resulting from an incident
that occurred on board an aircraft carrier in 1980. Mr. Arellano was honorably discharged on October 29,
1981, but did not file a claim for U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) disability benefits until 2011.
VA granted Mr. Arellano’s claim and assigned a benefits effective date of June 3, 2011, the date VA
received the claim. Mr. Arellano disagreed with the effective date and argued that, for decades starting
upon his discharge from service, his disability prevented him from understanding that he could apply for
VA benefits. He therefore asserted that he should qualify for a statutory exception that allows VA to assign
an effective date of the day after a veteran’s discharge if the veteran files a claim within one year of being
discharged. Under this exception, Mr. Arellano asserted that his benefits effective date should be October
30, 1981, the day after his discharge, or January 1, 1982, when a psychiatrist first diagnosed him as
suffering from psychiatric disability. A unanimous Supreme Court ultimately ruled in VA’s favor. The
Court held that the statute governing the effective dates of veterans’ disability benefits does not allow for
equitable tolling (which, in limited circumstances, suspends filing time requirements to promote fairness).
Accordingly, the Court affirmed VA’s assignment of June 3, 2011, as Mr. Arellano’s benefits effective
date.
The Supreme Court’s decision has significant implications for those seeking VA benefits. This Legal
Sidebar summarizes the doctrine of equitable tolling and Arellano’s factual and procedural history. It then
discusses the Supreme Court’s opinion. The Sidebar concludes with several considerations for Congress.
Equitable Tolling
Equitable tolling is a rare form of relief whereby courts may suspend, or toll, statutes limiting the time
period for filing a claim in the interest of fairness. The Supreme Court has described this remedy as “a
traditional feature of American jurisprudence and a background principle against which Congress drafts
limitations periods.”
Before a court can equitably toll a given statute of limitations, it must determine whether the statute is one
that can be tolled. The Supreme Court has distinguished between jurisdictional rules, which cannot be
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equitably tolled, and claims-processing rules, which are “presumptively subject to equitable tolling.” In
assessing whether a statute is subject to equitable tolling, a court will look to Congress’s intent.
For a court to equitably toll a statute of limitations, it must find that an extraordinary circumstance
prevented a claimant from filing a claim in a timely manner and that, despite the circumstance, the
claimant acted diligently in pursuing the claim. If a claimant demonstrates both factors, the court can toll
the statute of limitations and the court or an agency can accept an otherwise untimely filing. Courts have
equitably tolled statutes in various situations, including when natural disasters, government conduct, or a
disability prevented a timely filing.
Factual Background
Mr. Arellano served in the U.S. Navy from November 1, 1977, to October 29, 1981. On July 29, 1980,
Mr. Arellano was serving on the aircraft carrier USS Midway servicing fighter jets on the flight deck. That
night, the carrier collided with a freighter, which tore through the Midway’s hull underneath the
overhanging flight deck and above the waterline. Two sailors were killed and three were injured. The
carrier suffered major damage to its hull and systems and multiple planes were damaged or destroyed.
During the crash, Mr. Arellano was almost crushed and almost swept overboard by moving equipment.
Mr. Arellano was honorably discharged on October 29, 1981. On January 1, 1982, a psychiatrist first
diagnosed Mr. Arellano as suffering from delusions, anxiety, and paranoia and treated him with
antipsychotic medication. The medication, in turn, caused violent shaking known as tardive dyskinesia.
Over the following decades, Mr. Arellano exhibited the same psychiatric symptoms and was consistently
treated with antipsychotics and anxiolytics as both an outpatient and inpatient (including extended
involuntary admissions) by VA health care providers. Over this same period, Mr. Arellano experienced
great difficulty finding and keeping work and interacting with others.
Procedural History
Mr. Arellano first applied for VA service-connected disability benefits on June 3, 2011, for back, shoulder,
and head disorders. He filed a supplemental claim seeking benefits for post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) on June 13, 2011. A VA regional office (RO) denied his claims in March 2012. Mr. Arellano
sought reconsideration in May 2012, which the RO denied in July 2012.
On October 9, 2012, Mr. Arellano filed another supplemental claim seeking service-connected disability
benefits related to schizoaffective disorder and tardive dyskinesia. The RO denied these claims in August
2013. Mr. Arellano submitted notices of disagreement with the RO’s denials in March 2013 and
November 2013, respectively. In October 2014, the RO issued a new decision reiterating its denials, and
Mr. Arellano perfected his appeal in December 2014. At the end of the month, the RO granted Mr.
Arellano service connection for schizoaffective disorder bipolar type with PTSD and assigned a 100%
disability rating effective June 3, 2011. The RO also granted service connection for tardive dyskinesia,
assigning a non-compensable (0%) rating effective January 31, 2012. Mr. Arellano’s brother, on Mr.
Arellano’s behalf, appealed the RO’s effective date determination to the Board of Veterans’ Appeals
(BVA) seeking an earlier benefits effective date. He argued that Mr. Arellano’s service-connected
disability prevented Mr. Arellano from understanding that he could apply for VA benefits and from doing
so from the time of Mr. Arellano’s discharge until he filed his claim. Mr. Arellano’s brother asserted that
Mr. Arellano should, as a result of incapacity, qualify for an earlier effective date under 38 U.S.C.
§ 5110(b)(1), a statutory provision that allows a veteran’s disability benefits effective date to be the day
after discharge if the veteran files a claim within one year of being discharged. In line with this position,
Mr. Arellano’s brother asked BVA to assign a benefits effective date of October 30, 1981, the day after
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Mr. Arellano’s discharge, or January 1, 1982, when a psychiatrist first diagnosed Mr. Arellano as suffering
from mental illness.
On July 28, 2017, the BVA denied Mr. Arellano’s request for an earlier effective date. In support of its
decision, the BVA cited § 5110 (implemented through 38 C.F.R. § 3.400), which states that, except in
certain circumstances, a veteran’s benefits effective date “shall not be earlier than the date of receipt of
application therefor.” One exception to this general rule is § 5110(b)(1), which provides that if a veteran
files a claim within one year of being discharged for a disability suffered during service, the benefits
effective date will be one day after the date of discharge. The BVA found that this exception did not apply
and that, therefore, Mr. Arellano’s benefits effective date is June 3, 2011. The BVA did, however, find that
Mr. Arellano filed his tardive dyskinesia informal claim earlier than January 31, 2012, and awarded Mr.
Arellano an earlier benefits effective date of August 29, 2011, for that disability. Mr. Arellano appealed
the BVA decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (CAVC).
On August 14, 2019, the CAVC affirmed the BVA’s decision. Like the BVA, CAVC cited § 5110, stating
that, except in certain situations, a veteran’s benefits effective date is the date that VA receives their claim.
The CAVC also relied on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit’s (Federal Circuit’s) 2003
opinion in Andrews v. Principi. In that case, the Federal Circuit held that § 5110 is not a statute of
limitations that can be equitably tolled. Rather, the provision delineates a statutory requirement for when
benefits can begin, and courts are unable to waive this express statutory requirement. Mr. Arellano
subsequently appealed to the Federal Circuit.
A three-judge panel of the Federal Circuit heard argument on July 6, 2020. Before a decision was issued,
a majority of the court voted to consider the case en banc—that is, the judges of the court voted to have
the case considered by all of the judges of the court, not just the original three-judge panel. Following en
banc consideration, the Federal Circuit unanimously held that § 5110 is not subject to equitable tolling
and affirmed the CAVC’s decision. The court was, however, equally divided in the reasons for its
determination, so it issued no majority opinion. Six judges opined that Andrews v. Principi controlled and
that § 5110 is not a statute of limitations subject to equitable tolling. This contingent of judges further
reasoned that, even if the provision was a statute of limitations, its language evinces Congress’s clear
intent to foreclose equitable tolling when it comes to a veteran’s benefits effective date. Six other judges
wrote that § 5110 is indeed a statute of limitations that can be equitably tolled and that Andrews v.
Principi should be overruled. However, this group of judges believed that the facts of Mr. Arellano’s case
did not warrant equitable tolling. Mr. Arellano then sought review by the U.S. Supreme Court by filing a
petition for a writ of certiorari, which the Court granted.
Arellano v. McDonough
On January 23, 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously affirmed the Federal Circuit’s decision. The
Court, in an opinion written by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, expressly did not address whether § 5110 is a
statute of limitations. Rather, the Court determined that there is good reason to believe that Congress did
not want equitable tolling to apply to this provision, regardless of whether it is a statute of limitations,
reasoning that this conclusion is “straightforward.”
The Supreme Court focused on language in § 5110 stating that a veteran’s benefits effective date “shall
not be earlier than the date of receipt of application therefor,” and that this is the case “[u]nless
specifically provided otherwise” in statute. Allowing equitable tolling in addition to existing statutory
exceptions, the Court reasoned, would depart from congressional intent.
The Supreme Court also determined that “[t]he structure of § 5110 reinforces Congress’s choice to set
effective dates solely as prescribed in the [statutory] text,” to the exclusion of equitable tolling. The Court
listed sixteen statutory exceptions to the default benefits effective date, including those that appear to take
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equitable considerations into account. One such exception is § 5110(e)(1), which, in the case of certain
survivor benefits for a deceased veteran’s child, allows the benefits effective date to be “the first day of
the month in which the child’s entitlement arose” if the claim is filed within one year of that date.
According to the Court, this statute takes into account the fact that child claimants are “typically
dependent on others for prompt filing.” The Court therefore concluded that the fact “[t]hat Congress
accounted for equitable factors in setting effective dates strongly suggests that it did not expect an
adjudicator to add a broader range of equitable factors to the mix.”
Based on the foregoing analysis, the Supreme Court held that § 5110 “is not subject to equitable tolling”
and affirmed the Federal Circuit’s decision. Mr. Arellano’s benefits effective date is therefore June 3,
2011, the date VA received his claim.
Congressional Considerations
The Supreme Court’s Arellano decision has implications for veterans seeking VA disability benefits, as
well as other claimants, such as the surviving spouses and children of deceased veterans seeking
dependency, indemnity, or death benefits. It precludes claimants from attaining benefits effective dates
earlier than the dates that VA receives their claims, except in the specific situations statutorily delineated
by Congress in § 5110. None of these exceptions provides for benefits effective dates earlier than one year
prior to VA’s receipt of a claim.
If Congress disagrees with the Supreme Court’s decision in Arellano, it could pass a law accounting for
the effects of claimants’ disabilities on their ability to file claims. For example, Congress could include a
statutory exception to existing benefits effective date provisions addressing cases where a claimant’s
disability hinders or prevents them from making a claim. Such an exception could provide for an earlier
benefits effective date commensurate with when a disability became so severe that it hindered or
prevented a claimant from understanding that they could file for VA benefits or prevented them from
doing so. Congress could also require enhanced compensation for a certain length of time or up to a
certain amount in cases where a disability hindered or prevented a claimant from submitting a claim to VA
in a timely manner.
Author Information
Andreas Kuersten
Legislative Attorney
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