Fass v. Gray. Candell v. Gray

197 F.2d 587, 91 U.S. App. D.C. 28, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2656
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 1952
Docket11282_1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 197 F.2d 587 (Fass v. Gray. Candell v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fass v. Gray. Candell v. Gray, 197 F.2d 587, 91 U.S. App. D.C. 28, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2656 (D.C. Cir. 1952).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

These appeals concern war veterans and Government employ. The principal question presented involves appellants’ rights to reassignment, a reduction in force having occurred in the offices in which they were employed. This question is not whether these veterans should have been retained in the positions which they held; it is whether, their positions having been eliminated, they must be reassigned to other positions now held by other employees. The process of reassignment involves placing the higher prftference eligible in a position held by another employee with less retention rights, and then putting that displaced employee in a position held by another employee with still less retention rights, and so on down the line until the last employee is entirely separated from the service. The process is known as “bumping”. The Regulations of the Civil .Service Commission limit reassignments in two pertinent respects: (1) to positions for which the displaced veteran is “fully qualified” 1 and (2) to positions in the “local commuting area” in which the veteran has been employed. 2 These features of the Regulations are the ones under attack.

• Appellants are honorably discharged veterans and were employed by the Federal Government in the offices of the Veterans Administration in the New York City area. Each of them held permanent Civil Service status, and each received, in March or April, 1950, a reduction in force notice stat- ■ ing that he would be separated from his position within a stated period.

Within that period appellants in No. 11282 were reassigned by the Administrator to positions of lower grade and salary in the Veterans Administration offices in the New York City area. They appealed to the Civil Service Commission, which found that they were “fully qualified” for positions other than those to which they had been reassigned but still of lower grade and salary than those which they had originally occupied. Appellants were then reassigned to the positions for which the Commission found them “fully qualified”, and each accepted “under protest”.

Appellants in No. 11281 were discharged, and, with the exception of appellant Nelson, each perfected an appeal from that action to the Civil Service Commission. The Commission ultimately found that appellants Fass, Jankowitz and Lerner were “fully qualified” for positions then occupied by employees having lesser retention preference. Appellant Fass. was then reassigned to a position in the Veterans Administration at a grade and salary lower than he had received prior to the reduction in force, which position he accepted “under protest”. The Administrator found, however, that the positions for which the Commission had found appellants Jankowitz and Lerner “fully qualified” had been filled, in the interim between their separation notices and the determination of their appeals, by veterans having similar retention preferences, and that Jankowitz and Lerner were therefore not entitled to be reassigned to such *589 positions. The Board of Appeals and Review of the Commission then found that Jankowitz and Lerner had been accorded their full rights. Nelson, an appellant in No. 11281, was also discharged by the Administrator but filed his appeal after the expiration of the ten-day period provided by the Civil Service Regulations, 3 and the Commission declined to entertain his appeal. For that reason he contends that he has exhausted his administrative remedy, since he has no further rights in administrative channels. Examination of that contention is not necessary to the decision in these cases.

Appellants in both appeals now before us, together with other persons not now in the cases, instituted civil actions in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, against the Veterans Administrator, Gray, alleging that they had been separated or reassigned in violation of Section 4 of the Act of August 23, 1912, 4 and Section 12 of the Veterans Preference Act of 1944, 5 and prayed that the action of the Administrator be declared null and void and that he be ordered to restore them to their former or equivalent positions. They also prayed for back pay, less sums earned by them since the dates of their separation or reassignment. Cross-motions for summary judgment were filed in each action. The District Court granted the motions of the Administrator. These appeals followed.

Appellants’ principal contention is that Section 20.9 of the Civil Service Commission’s “Retention Preference Regulations for Use in Reductions in Force” in effect at the time of these separations and discharges, 6 and particularly subsection (b) thereof, is invalid, being violative of rights conferred upon appellants by Section 12 of the Veterans Preference Act and by Section 4 of the Act of 1912. Section 20.9 of the Regulations read in pertinent part:

“Actions — (a)—In general. Employees who cannot be retained in their positions because of a reduction in force shall be reassigned to continuing positions, furloughed, or separated. * * “(b) Reassignments to continuing positions. Reassignment is required in lieu of separation or furlough, within the local commuting area, without interruption to pay status whenever possible, to an available position for which the employee is fully qualified, unless a reasonable offer of reassignment is refused. No displacement will be required to- permit the reassignment of an employee unless such employee is fully qualified to perform the duties of the position in question.”

Specifically, appellants contend that the limitation of reassignment rights to positions for which the veteran is “fully qualified”, and to those “within the local commuting area”, violates the statutes referred to.

It is conceded by the Administrator that (1) there are positions in the Veterans Administration within the “local commuting area” (in this case the New York-Newark area) for which appellants have the minimum eligibility requirements for appointment but for which they were not “fully qualified”, and (2) 'there are positions in the Veterans Administration outside the “local commuting area” for which appellants are “fully qualified” and which are occupied by employees having lesser retention preferences.

The Act of 1912, as amended, 7 provided in pertinent part:

“In the event of reductions being made in the force in any of the executive departments no honorably discharged soldier or sailor whose record in said department is rated good shall be discharged or dropped or reduced in rank or salary.”

*590 Section 12 of the 1944 Act provides in pertinent part:

“In any reduction in personnel in any civilian service of any Federal agency, competing employees shall be released in accordance with Civil Service Commission regulations which shall give due effect to tenure of employment, military preference, length of service, and efficiency ratings: * * * Provided further,

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Bluebook (online)
197 F.2d 587, 91 U.S. App. D.C. 28, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fass-v-gray-candell-v-gray-cadc-1952.