Bilanow v. United States

309 F.2d 267, 159 Ct. Cl. 93
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 7, 1962
DocketNo. 313-54
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 309 F.2d 267 (Bilanow v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bilanow v. United States, 309 F.2d 267, 159 Ct. Cl. 93 (cc 1962).

Opinions

Dtjeeee, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This proceeding was brought by a former employee of the Securities and Exchange Commission, asserting that he was wrongfully separated from the Federal service by a Eeduction in Force order. Plaintiff’s position was that of Attorney-Adviser, Grade GS-12, in the Division of Corporation Finance. He was claiming as damages, the salary he would have received from August 31, 1953, the date of his separation from the SEC, until August 2, 1954, the date of plaintiff’s first gainful employment following his separation.

Plaintiff has died since the commencement of this suit. A substitution of plaintiff’s administratrix will be allowed under Pule 25(a). Plaintiff’s suit is based on wrongful interference with his contract of employment. The right to employment and to earn a living free from undue molestation is a property right affecting the estate of plaintiff. Such right does not abate upon his death.1

In late April and early May 1953, Congress was preparing the appropriation for the Securities and Exchange Commission for the coming fiscal year. There were indications that the appropriation would be less than the preceding year. In the judgment of the SEC, this lesser amount would make it necessary to drop some employees from their jobs. Acting upon these indications and the authorization [96]*96of the Commission Chairman, on May 20, 1953, the SEC Director of Personnel, Mr. Becker, began preparing the Seduction in Force order. Notices were drawn up, the retention credits of employees were computed, and those employees who would be separated in the event the lower appropriation materialized were designated. This work done in late May and early June, was completed on June 20, 1953. June 30th, 1953, was the date used to measure the retention credits of the employees.

Under the Civil Service Eegulations in effect at this time, employees were given one retention credit for each full year of Federal Government service. Half-years of service were added in the event of a tie. On the occasion of a Seduction in Force order, the employee with the lowest number of retention credits in the same competitive level would be separated first.2

As of June 30, 1953, plaintiff and the two other men in plaintiff’s competitive level, Hall and Olson, each had 10% retention credits. Plaintiff was administratively chosen to be separated because of the tie.

This date of June 30th, the end of the fiscal year, was chosen by the Director of Personnel approximately six weeks ahead of time, and he estimated “that by June 30 * * * we should know one way or the other whether a reduction in fact was necessary.” (Finding 11.) The Director thought that by June 30, the appropriation bill would be passed by the Congress and signed by the President into law.

In fact, the bill was not passed and signed into law until July 31, 1953 — one month later. And as had been feared, the final appropriation did provide the SEC with less funds than the preceding year. It thereby became necessary to issue the Seduction in Force order. Up to this time the notices to the employees affected were held in abeyance by the Director of Personnel and left undated. Plaintiff received his notice of separation shortly thereafter, dated July 31,1953, to be effective August 31,1953.

On July 11, 1953, plaintiff completed 11 years of Federal Government service. If July 31 or August 31 were used as [97]*97measuring dates to compute retention credits, then plaintiff would not have been separated from the SEC. On the date actually used, June 30, plaintiff, Hall and Olson, who comprised plaintiff’s competitive level, each had 10% credits — a tie. On July 31 and August 31, 1953, plaintiff and Olson would have had 11 retention credits each (Olson also having had an employment anniversary in the meantime) and Hall would still have had only 10% credits. (Findings 20 and 21.) Under the regulations, Hall would have had to be separated rather than plaintiff.

It is plaintiff’s contention that the SEC violated the law and regulations governing the Eeduction in Force procedures, when it used June 30th as the cut-off date for earning retention credits. Plaintiff argues that either July 31 (notice of separation given) or August 31 (actual separation) should have been used. Defendant contends that no particular day is specified by the regulations; that the SEC acted properly by choosing a reasonable date under all the circumstances; that if plaintiff’s view is adopted, the administrative difficulties created by leaving the cut-off date open until the final decision is made on the Eeduction in Force order, or changing the computation date after the final decision is made, are so great as to be evidence itself that plaintiff’s interpretation of the regulations is incorrect.

Whether or not any day should be chosen in preference to another, or whether in fact any day is designated by the regulations, are questions we need not reach in this opinion. The Civil Service Eegulations and the Federal Personnel Manual provisions obviate the necessity for such a ruling.

Eegulation 20.4(d) 5 CFE (1953 Supp.), which provides for the compilation of the retention register, states in part that “One retention credit shall be given for each full year of Federal Government service * * Paragraph (e) of this regulation, which deals with the sequence of selection of employees to be separated out, after the retention register has been drawn up, states that in the event of a tie, “Half years of service will be used * * *” to settle the issue. What is clearly contemplated is that retention credits will be determined relative to some date, as here June 30th was chosen. [98]*98After the measuring date is set and the retention register drawn up, the credits given, then, in the event of a tie, the agency is instructed to go back and look at the records again, and on this second look, determine if any man has accumulated an additional six months of service. The governmental agency is to look again at the length of service of the parties who have tied, and looking at their records alone, determine who should be separated and who should be retained, on the basis of half years of service.

Now the question is, must the agency look only at the period of time prior to the computing date, or may it look beyond such date, provided it has in fact passed, on this second look at the records to determine half years of service. There is nothing in the regulations which demands the former interpretation. Indeed the only reasonable interpretation is that the agency should look both before and beyond such date to come to a decision. The regulations speak of “maintaining current records,”3 and when a Beduction in Force order is pending, “the retention records of such employees shall be brought up to date on a current basis * * 4 The import of these regulations is to keep the records moving along, keep them current. To apply the rigid rule that the measuring date cuts off all considerations is not in keeping with the spirit of these regulations. To argue that this creates far too great a burden on the agency is to ignore the fact that the regulations contemplate a second look back at the records of the employees who are tied in retention credits in the first instance. There is no need to set a new computation date. There is the simple act of determining from the records of those employees alone who have tied, who has served a half year longer.

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Bluebook (online)
309 F.2d 267, 159 Ct. Cl. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilanow-v-united-states-cc-1962.