Attia v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMarch 27, 2025
Docket20-1801
StatusPublished

This text of Attia v. United States (Attia v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Attia v. United States, (uscfc 2025).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims

ANIS ATTIA,

Plaintiff,

v. Nos. 20-1801C; 21-1203C (Filed March 27, 2025) THE UNITED STATES,

Defendant.

Anis Attia, West New York, NJ, plaintiff, pro se.

Brittney M. Welch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for de- fendant.

OPINION AND ORDER Granting Mr. Attia’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record on the Federal Tax Gross-Up; Granting the Government’s Motions to Dismiss and for Judgment on the Administrative Record on Other Issues; and Remanding the Federal Tax Gross-Up Issue

SILFEN, Judge.

Anis Attia, proceeding without an attorney, has long alleged problems with his pay as a

servicemember in the U.S. Army, arguing that he was underpaid for his language skills and for

other work he performed. The government has acknowledged errors and adjusted Mr. Attia’s pay

at least three times, giving him lump sums when it has found a pay discrepancy, including on

remand from this court in the two pending (now consolidated) cases. Mr. Attia now alleges that

the government owes him compensation to make him whole for extra taxes he has paid because of

receiving back pay as a lump sum rather than receiving it gradually over the years that he should

have been paid. In other words, he alleges that he sustained a higher federal and state tax burden

1 overall because of receiving lump-sum payments, and he would like a so-called tax gross-up to

make up for that additional burden. He also alleges that the government owes him for tax-related

penalties he incurred based on his lump-sum back pay and owes him further back pay.

Mr. Attia filed two complaints, addressing some overlapping legal issues but distinct facts.

The government moves to dismiss both complaints for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction—arguing

that Mr. Attia fails to allege a legal basis to support his tax gross-up claims—and for failure to

state a claim—arguing that he has been paid, so his other claims are moot. The government also

moves for judgment on the administrative record, and Mr. Attia cross-moves, with both parties

raising related issues and arguments. The court determines that Mr. Attia is entitled to a gross-up

for federal taxes paid on his lump-sum back-pay payments, but he is not entitled to a gross-up for

state taxes, damages for other expenses related to lump-sum payments he received, or any further

back pay. Mr. Attia is therefore entitled to judgment on the administrative record on his federal

tax gross-up claims. The government is entitled to judgment on the administrative record or to

dismissal of the remaining claims. The court will therefore grant in part and deny in part each

party’s motions and will remand the case for a federal tax gross-up calculation and payment.

I. Background

Mr. Attia served as an infantryman in the U.S. Army between 2001 and 2009. AR337-38.1

In 2009, Mr. Attia was involuntarily discharged. AR338. Mr. Attia appealed his discharge to the

Army Board for Correction of Military Records. In 2012, the board granted Mr. Attia partial relief,

voided the discharge, ordered that the Army reinstate Mr. Attia, and awarded him full back pay

1 The administrative record is available at ECF Nos. 50, 50-1, and 50-2 in Case No. 20-1801. Mr. Attia has two pending cases that were recently consolidated, and Case No. 20-1801 is the lead case. Thus, all references to the electronic case filing numbers, unless otherwise noted, refer to filings in Case No. 20-1801. 2 for the time after he was improperly discharged. Id. The Army reinstated Mr. Attia to active duty

in 2013. AR339. In 2014, the Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS) calculated the

money the Army owed Mr. Attia for his constructive service between 2009 and 2013 and issued

him a payment. AR21-22. Mr. Attia served in the Army until 2015, when he was medically retired

due to permanent disability. AR334; AR336.

In 2020, Mr. Attia filed a complaint in this court alleging that he was entitled to additional

payments for his constructive service between 2009, when he was improperly discharged, and

2013, when he was reinstated. ECF No. 1. He alleged that (1) the back-pay award was incom-

plete—for example, his housing allowance and cost of living adjustment were not based on the

correct location—and (2) the award was improperly reported to the Internal Revenue Service and

Social Security Administration as a lump sum of wages received in 2014 rather than as distributed

over his four-year constructive service period—which meant that he paid more in taxes than if he

had been paid smaller sums each year. Id. at 8-9 [¶¶19-22], 13-14 [¶¶32-34], 18-19 [¶¶44-45]. In

2021, the court remanded the case to DFAS to “review and consider Plaintiff’s entitlement to ad-

ditional compensation and issue a comprehensive determination concerning the amounts he is

owed.” ECF No. 26 at 1. In 2022, following its review, DFAS issued a final decision correcting

Mr. Attia’s award and giving him approximately $80,000 in relief. See ECF No. 37-1. DFAS did

not address Mr. Attia’s tax-related claims because they were “not claims for military pay and al-

lowances.” Id. at 6. Mr. Attia amended his complaint, now alleging that DFAS owes him a tax

gross-up to make up for the higher taxes he had to pay as a result of receiving a lump sum in 2014.

ECF No. 45 at 4-7 [¶¶10-15].

In 2021, Mr. Attia filed a separate complaint in this court alleging that he was entitled to

payments from the time of his reinstatement in the Army in 2013 through his medical discharge in

3 2015. Mr. Attia alleged that he should have received foreign language proficiency bonus payments

based on his Arabic and French language skills. See Case No. 21-1203, ECF No. 1. The court

remanded that case to the board, which determined that Mr. Attia was “eligible for [language pro-

ficiency] payments.” Case No. 21-1203, ECF Nos. 10, 27-1 at 22. Mr. Attia then stated in a joint

status report that he believed only his tax-burden-related claims remained unresolved. Case No.

21-1203, ECF No. 28. The court stayed the case until Mr. Attia received payment. Case No. 21-

1203, ECF No. 29. But after conducting an audit of its payment corrections, DFAS determined

that Mr. Attia owed DFAS a debt for an overpayment for certain language proficiencies. Case No.

21-1203, ECF Nos. 44, 51. The court again stayed the case until Mr. Attia received a corrected

2022 W-2 from DFAS. Case No. 21-1203, ECF No. 52. After receiving the corrected 2022 W-2,

Mr. Attia filed an amended complaint alleging that he was entitled to additional language profi-

ciency pay and to a tax gross-up for the language proficiency back pay. See Case No. 21-1203,

ECF No. 56. DFAS then investigated Mr. Attia’s language proficiency underpayment claims,

found that his language proficiency payment for French was an underpayment, and gave Mr. Attia

additional language proficiency back pay. Case No. 21-1203, ECF Nos. 57, 59; ECF No. 81 at Ex.

A.

After both cases returned to the court, the court consolidated Mr. Attia’s 2020 and 2021

cases. Given DFAS’s corrective action and Mr. Attia’s amendments to his complaints, the court

determined that the remaining issues in both cases share a related set of facts and common legal

questions that justified consolidation. ECF No. 74.

II. Discussion

The government moves to dismiss Mr.

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