Andrew H. Carpisassi v. Office of Personnel Management

46 F.3d 1094, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1853, 1995 WL 36316
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 1995
Docket94-3532
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 F.3d 1094 (Andrew H. Carpisassi v. Office of Personnel Management) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew H. Carpisassi v. Office of Personnel Management, 46 F.3d 1094, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1853, 1995 WL 36316 (Fed. Cir. 1995).

Opinion

PLAGER, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the efforts by a federal employee, appealing pro se, to obtain the benefits of one of the retirement options provided by Congress, and illustrates the difficulties an employee can have trying to find his way, with no help from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), through the maze that constitutes the federal retirement system statutes and rules.

Andrew Carpisassi, after many years as a federal employee paying his monthly contribution into the retirement system, retired. Under the law, such an employee is entitled to an annuity which would pay him a monthly retirement income for life. See generally 5 U.S.C. §§ 8333, 8334 (1988 & Supp. V 1993). If the employee is married at the date of retirement, as was Mr. Carpisassi, the amount of the employee’s monthly payment is reduced by a factor actuarially computed to fund a survivor annuity for the life of the spouse, should the spouse survive the employee. Id. §§ 8339(j)(l), 8341(b). The statutes provide that the employee and spouse may together waive the spouse’s right to the survivor annuity by executing the appropriate written form, thereby giving them a larger current income but leaving the spouse without any survivor annuity should he or she survive the annuitant. Id. § 8339©(1).

*1095 Congress later engrafted onto this basic annuity scheme an “alternative annuity” election. During the time frame relevant to this ease, one of an employee’s options upon retirement was to elect to receive (in addition to a monthly income and, if married, the surviving spouse annuity), an up-front cash payment called the “lump-sum credit,” which basically comprises the contributions paid into the system by the employee plus interest. Id. §§ 8331, 8343a(b). 1 If this “lump sum” option were elected, OPM reduced the employee’s monthly retirement payment by an amount actuarially equivalent to the lump-sum payout. Id. § 8343a(c); 5 C.F.R. §§ 831.2204, 831.2205 (1994). It appears that the amount of the spouse’s survivor annuity initially “elected” (that is, not waived) upon retirement, under § 8339(j)(l), remains fixed; 2 it is only the employee’s monthly annuity which is decreased by the payment of the lump-sum credit. 5 C.F.R. §§ 831.2204, 831.2205 (1994).

In Mr. Carpissasi’s case, OPM calculated that under the basic annuity program (no lump-sum payout), he would get $783.00 per month for life, and his widow would get $465.00 per month for her remaining life. Under the alternative annuity, Mr. Carpisas-si would get a $27,224.17 lump-sum payment and $597.00 per month; his widow would get $469.00 per month should she survive him. The impact of the cash payout was to reduce Mr. Carpisassi’s lifetime income, but actually to increase (by a small amount) the surviving spouse’s income. 3

Congress specified that, in the case of a married employee such as Mr. Carpisassi, an alternative annuity could be elected only with the written consent of the spouse: “An employee or Member who, at the time of retiring under this subehapter ... is married, shall be ineligible to make an election under this section unless a waiver is made under section 8339(j)(l) of this title.” 5 U.S.C. & 8343a(d)(1) (1988). The § 8339(j)(l) waiver referred to is a joint waiver of the employee and spouse of the spouse’s right to a survivor annuity under the basic annuity provisions. Id. § 8339(j)(1). As noted above, however, the election of a lump-sum payout option is intended not to reduce that annuity. 4 Thus the requirement for spousal consent in § 8343a is not predicated on the election of an option that would waive or reduce the surviving spouse’s annuity. Rather, Congress for whatever reason required spousal consent whenever the alternative annuity with lump-sum payout is elected.

There is a 'further wrinkle. A special exemption is provided in § 8339(j)(l) relating to spousal consent. That special exemption provides that, in accordance with OPM regulations, a married employee can, without the spouse’s consent, waive the survivor annuity if either (1) the spouse’s whereabouts cannot be determined, or (2) due to “exceptional circumstances, requiring the employee or Member to seek the spouse’s consent would otherwise be inappropriate.” Id. 5

With that background — one that a casual familiarity with the statutes may not impart — we can turn to the problem Mr. Carpi- *1096 sassi faced. In the course of making his retirement election, OPM advised him of his options and the amounts each option would provide. He desired the alternative annuity that provided both a lump-sum payment and a retirement income for himself and his surviving spouse. OPM advised him that he needed written spousal consent for that option, and that under OPM’s rules the alternative annuity election, including the spousal consent, must be filed within a specified short period of time. Mr. Carpisassi realized that would not be easy — he was experiencing marital difficulties, which it appears may have ended in divorce. Consequently, his attorney wrote to OPM requesting additional time to obtain the spouse’s consent. OPM did not respond to the letter.

Several months later, OPM informed Mr. Carpisassi that, since a spousal consent had not been timely filed, his requested lump-sum option was denied, and OPM processed his annuity as a regular monthly annuity by default. Mr. Carpisassi acknowledged receipt of OPM’s notice and again requested an extension of time to obtain his spouse’s consent. Over one month later, OPM responded to this letter by confirming that Mr. Carpi-sassi had failed to file any spousal consent and that OPM therefore had given him a regular annuity. OPM did not address either of Mr. Carpisassi’s extension requests.

Mr. Carpisassi sought reconsideration of OPM’s decision, and again requested additional time to obtain and file the spousal consent form. Again OPM did not respond to the request for extension, and two years later issued a denial of the reconsideration request. Mr. Carpisassi appealed OPM’s denial to the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB or Board). 6

By now, several years had gone by. Mr. Carpisassi did eventually obtain his spouse’s signature on the consent form, and filed it with OPM. The Board was unimpressed by Mr. Carpisassi’s success. The Board noted that Mr. Carpisassi waited nine days after finally obtaining the spouse’s signature before filing the consent form with OPM — a fact which seems to us unremarkable alongside OPM’s failure over several years to respond to Mr. Carpisassi’s requests for relief. The Board found that Mr.

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46 F.3d 1094, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1853, 1995 WL 36316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-h-carpisassi-v-office-of-personnel-management-cafc-1995.