Danna v. United States

30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,993, 2 Cl. Ct. 220, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1794
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 4, 1983
DocketNo. 106-79C
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,993 (Danna 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
Danna v. United States, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,993, 2 Cl. Ct. 220, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1794 (cc 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

SPECTOR, Judge.

Plaintiff, a former supervisor of air traffic controllers for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), filed an amended complaint on April 12, 1979 seeking damages for the alleged uncompensated use of his suggestion for a comprehensive air traffic control system. The suggestion had been submitted some 18 years earlier, in March of 1961, under the FAA’s Incentive Awards Program.

The claim here is essentially based on the theory of breach of an express or implied contract. Plaintiff seeks damages of not less than $5,025,000 for tangible and intan[221]*221gible benefits realized from his suggestion; pain and suffering damages of $1,000,000; “damages to employment” of not less than $100,000, plus attorneys’ fees and costs in an unspecified sum. There has been a prior action in the U.S. District Court on tort theories, which plaintiff has reserved should he be unsuccessful here.

Important threshold issues have been raised by affirmative defenses in defendant’s answer, as explicated in its present Motion for Summary Judgment. It is urged that plaintiff’s claim is time-barred because the petition was not filed here within 6 years after an action for breach of contract first accrued.1 Defendant further submits that a claim filed this long after it first accrued is in any event barred by the equitable doctrine of laches.

Plaintiff responds that the statute of limitations was tolled by defendant’s concealment of facts on which his cause of action depended, facts which were otherwise unknowable by plaintiff. Secondarily, plaintiff cites illness and domestic problems as sufficient to toll the statute of limitations. Alternatively, plaintiff characterizes his claim as a “continuing” one, and hence not time-barred for the 6-year period preceding the filing of his complaint.

Statement of Facts

The facts hereinafter set forth are gleaned from the pleadings, and from the exhibits and affidavits supporting the motion papers. On March 10,1961 when plaintiff was on active duty as a supervisor of air traffic controllers for the FAA, he submitted under that agency’s Incentive Awards Program a detailed and comprehensive written suggestion for modernization of the nation’s air traffic control system.2 While acknowledging that the suggestion was “well presented,” the FAA advised plaintiff on October 13, 1961 that it “was not recommended for adoption” for reasons detailed in an attached “evaluation of Employee Suggestion.” That evaluation concluded that plaintiff’s plan for installing ground navigational facilities on a grid pattern throughout the continental United States had previously been evaluated several times following suggestions by others, and that it was not a new concept. The prior suggestions had also been “recommended for non-adoption.” It was explained that plaintiff’s suggestion would entail a “tremendous capital investment” and that in view of its limitations, implementation of the suggestion could not be justified at that time. The evaluation did acknowledge that plaintiff’s particular suggestion “goes quite a bit further than previous suggestions and details specific equipment applications and operational procedures for the system once it has been installed.”

Upon receipt of this rejection, plaintiff inquired of his superior’s secretary regarding the proper procedure for resubmission. He was advised that resubmission was permissible after a waiting period of 6 months from the date of rejection. Plaintiff did not, however, resubmit his suggestion after 6 months or at any time thereafter. He retired from active service with the FAA ten years later, in May of 1971.

In an independent development, President John F. Kennedy wrote to FAA Administrator N.E. Halaby on March 8, 1961,3 asking that the latter—

conduct a scientific engineering review of our aviation facilities and related research and development and * * * prepare a practicable long-range plan to ensure efficient and safe control of air traffic within the United States.

The FAA Administrator was asked to work closely with the President’s Science Advisory Committee and with the Task Force on National Aviation Goals, and to submit a report to the President by July of 1961. On November 1, 1961, the Administrator transmitted to the President the Report of the Task Force. The report was entitled [222]*222“Project Beacon,” and the President on November 7, 1961 directed Halaby “to begin at once to carry out those recommendations of the [Project Beacon] report which [the Administrator believed would] move the airways program forward rapidly and efficiently.”

Plaintiff alleges that it was about 15 years later in May of 1976 (5 years after his retirement from FAA in May of 1971), that he first discovered that Chapter A of the Report on Project Beacon endorsed the development of an air traffic control system which was, in his view, so similar to his suggestion of March 10, 1961, or parts thereof, that adoption of the Project Beacon Report constituted adoption of his suggestion. He alleges further discoveries by him in the period 1976-78 which persuaded him that his suggested system had been gradually implemented throughout the 1960’s (when he was still employed by the agency) and the 1970’s by the award of contracts for the development and manufacture of equipment described in his 1961 suggestion.

On February 17, 1977, plaintiff wrote Secretary Adams, Department of Transportation, asking that he be accorded recognition for the adoption of his suggestion. Having received no reply, he wrote President Carter on April 18,1977, asking that a reply be expedited. On May 17, 1977, the FAA advised that, although there were no administrative time limitations for reopening award consideration in 1961 when plaintiff had submitted his suggestion, a 2-year time limitation was thereafter imposed in December 1966 in the agency's Handbook 3450.7, paragraph 71.4 The letter explained the need for a 2-year “award entitlement period” following non-adoption of a suggestion by pointing out that:

the evaluators would normally still be available to review a reopened case; the basis for rejection would still be fresh in the minds of those involved etc. However, without any reopening restrictions, a proper reevaluation could be limited or impossible, evaluators or technical personnel involved in program development involved in the subject area could have transferred, retired or died; etc.
The letter of May 17,1977 concludes that: [Y]our time limit for reopening this issue began on December 2, 1966, with the issuance of FAA Handbook 3450.7, and ended on December 2, 1968. This actually provided you with a period of approximately 7 years to request a review of your claim. Your request, however, was not submitted until February 17,1977, an elapsed period in excess of 16 years from the date of non-adoption of your suggestion. In view of the above, we have no recourse but to reject your request for reconsideration at this time. We trust that you appreciate our position, and regret that we cannot give you a more positive answer.

Thereafter, on November 17, 1977, plaintiff filed an action founded on tort in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.5 It was dismissed without prejudice by reason of plaintiff’s failure to file an administrative tort claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,993, 2 Cl. Ct. 220, 1983 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danna-v-united-states-cc-1983.