M21-1 Adjudication Procedures Manual
The M21-1 Adjudication Procedures Manual details policies and procedures for Veterans Benefits Administration staff who develop and adjudicate U.S. veterans' disability benefit claims.
Features
The M21-1 Manual contains features designed to assist Veterans Benefits Administration staff and other users.In-text hyperlinked references
The Manual frequently references statutes, regulations, and case law relevant to the particular policy or procedure discussed therein.Continuously updated
The Veterans Benefits Administration continuously updates the Manual, with the dates of any additions, deletions, or modifications provided within the Manual itself.Improved usability
The Veterans Benefits Administration has made an effort to improve the usability of the Manual. Beginning in 2015 the agency transferred the Manual from the WARMS platform to their KnowVA Knowledge Base.Case law summaries
The Manual includes a concise synopsis of important veterans law cases decided by the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and U.S. Supreme Court.Legal status
The M21-1 Adjudication Procedures Manual does not constitute law, in contrast to statutes, federal regulations, and federal case law. The Department of Veterans Affairs has stated, “he M21-1 is an internal manual used to convey guidance to VA adjudicators. It is not intended to establish substantive rules beyond those contained in statute and regulation.” At the same time, federal courts consult the M-21 Manual to determine if VA's actions conform with their own regulations, policies, and procedures, and to gain insight into the meaning and intent of VA regulations.Does the ''M21-1 Manual'' constitute rule-making subject to review by the Federal Circuit?
Veterans advocacy organizations such as Disabled American Veterans and the National Organization of Veterans' Advocates have argued that many additions to the M21-1 Manual constitute "interpretative rules" and that the Federal Circuit therefore has jurisdiction to review such changes upon direct appeal by a veteran. The Federal Circuit concluded in 2017 that M2-1 Manual provisions do not fall under the purview of the Court. However, in 2020 the court overruled aspects of that decision in National Organization of Veterans’ Advocates, Inc. v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs, a unanimous en banc decision.In an amicus brief for that 2020 case, the National Veterans Legal Services Program, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Paralyzed Veterans of America had argued:
Congress require Federal Register publication of all generally applicable interpretive rules... evade section 552 by issuing a generally applicable rule in the Manual. Promulgation of “interpretations of general applicability” via a manual does not make them any less reviewable. If DAV’s erroneous mutual exclusivity theory survives, DVA can insulate substantive rules and generally applicable policy statements and interpretations, and avoid pre-enforcement judicial review, simply by promulgating them through the Manual.
In NOVA v. Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the court stated that the "government also concedes that whether an interpretive rule is actually published in the Federal Register does not dictate whether this court has jurisdiction, as 'VA cannot insulate a rule from pre-enforcement review simply by placing it in the Manual'" and the "VA Manual provision governing knee joint stability … announces VA’s adoption of an interpretive rule establishing a new metric for assessing knee instability claims. It limits VA staff discretion, and, as a practical matter, impacts veteran benefits eligibility for an entire class of veterans."