Featheringill v. United States

217 Ct. Cl. 24, 1978 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 139, 1978 WL 5755
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 17, 1978
DocketNo. 164-76
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 217 Ct. Cl. 24 (Featheringill 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
Featheringill v. United States, 217 Ct. Cl. 24, 1978 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 139, 1978 WL 5755 (cc 1978).

Opinion

Kunzig, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This First Amendment-civilian pay case is before the court as a matter of first impression. Ronald Featheringill (plaintiff) had been hired to teach in the high school located on Misawa Air Base, Japan, for the school year 1974-75; his appointment expired, by its terms, on June 6, 1975. Plaintiff was not rehired for the following year and now claims that he was entitled to be rehired and also entitled to be converted to an indefinite appointment. He had been initially hired for a term "not to exceed” (NTE) one year. Plaintiff bases his claim both on the Back Pay Act, 5 U.S.C. § 5596 (1976) and on the First Amendment to the Constitution. Because we conclude that plaintiff never occupied nor had any entitlement to the job he seeks (appointed indefinite teacher or rehired NTE teacher), we find his claim to be without merit under the Back Pay Act and we hold that under the facts of this case, this court is without jurisdiction to consider plaintiffs constitutional claim.1

In the context of a motion to dismiss, we accept the facts alleged by plaintiff as true. Those facts essential to this case may be briefly stated: Plaintiff was initially hired overseas and was employed by the U.S. Air Force for the school year 1974-75 as an English teacher at the Dependents’ High School, Misawa Air Base, Japan. The appointment was for a period not to exceed one year and bore an expiration date of June 6, 1975. Though plaintiff expected to be rehired for the following year or given an indefinite appointment, neither event occurred. Instead, he received an unsatisfactory performance rating which we must assume (in the "motion to dismiss” posture of the case) to [27]*27have been at least in part the result of an incident occurring on April 7, 1975. On that date, plaintiff and another faculty member circulated a one-page notice addressed to "Parents concerned about quality education,” informing the parents that a substantial reduction in size of the faculty was being planned. Plaintiff alleges that the displeasure of his superiors over that notice was reflected in his unsatisfactory performance report.

Plaintiff leads into his back pay argument by contending that his unsatisfactory performance report is invalid (since, he maintains, it failed to comply with provisions of the Performance Rating Act).2 He further argues that the report penalized him for the exercise of speech protected by the First Amendment. Plaintiff asserts that, but for the unsatisfactory performance report, he was entitled to be rehired (assuming there was a vacancy) and concludes that the decision not to rehire him, based on an invalid performance report, constituted an unjustified personnel action which entitles him to relief under the Back Pay Act3 or under the First Amendment.

We pass by the question whether the unsatisfactory performance report was invalid; indeed, we assume, for purposes of this motion to dismiss, that it was invalid. The more basic issue which we must address is whether the performance report, even if invalid, helps the plaintiffs cause. Defendant vigorously disputes plaintiffs contention that, but for the rating, he would have been rehired. [28]*28Defendant’s position, in short, is that this is simply not a back pay case at all because plaintiff never held and was never entitled to hold the position for which he seeks pay (rehired NTE teacher or appointed indefinite teacher); instead, defendant maintains, plaintiff was fully paid for the one year NTE appointment he did hold. Taking the Back Pay Act out of the case, the defendant contends that the discretionary decision not to rehire, even if based upon an improper rating and even if it infringes First Amendment rights, does not support a suit for money damages in this court by a plaintiff who never held the job he seeks, is owed no money, and cannot show entitlement to any money.

Plaintiffs attorney met the defendant’s case head-on, suggesting four approaches whereby plaintiff might come under the Back Pay Act and then arguing, in the alternative, that this court does have jurisdiction to hear the constitutional claim. Despite plaintiffs able presentation, and for reasons which follow, we agree with defendant. Since plaintiff never held and was never entitled to the position he seeks, and is owed no money, this is not a back pay case and the First Amendment issue raised in this context is beyond the jurisdiction of this court.

Plaintiff maintains that his claim is allowable under the Back Pay Act for four specific reasons: plaintiff argues that (1) there are regulations which mandate the rehiring of NTE teachers; (2) the regulations mandate the conversion of NTE teachers to indefinite appointee status; (3) there exists a practice by which NTE teachers are routinely rehired and converted, and (4) it is, in any event, an improper personnel action to base a decision to rehire on an incident arising out of constitutionally protected speech.

First, we find that the regulation upon which plaintiff relies4 does not mandate the rehiring of NTE teachers. It [29]*29does concern hiring priorities and it does say that NTE teachers may be converted to indefinite status (and, by obvious implication, rehired). DoD Directive 1400.13, para. IV(C)(1). Nowhere does it say that NTEs will be converted. The word "may” is used with respect to conversion, and it is a strained interpretation which says that the choice of that word is anything other than deliberate. The referenced regulation, para. IV (C), begins by saying that "the following order of priority will be used” (emphasis added) and then describes the priority categories. With respect to every category but the one which concerns the conversion of NTE teachers, the operative expression is that preference will be given. DoD Directive 1400.13, para. IV(C)(2); (C)(3); (C)(4); (C)(5). The word "may” is conspicuous by its presence in the vital provision relied upon by plaintiff and can only mean that the conversion of teachers is a discretionary act. The drafters of the regulation clearly knew how to say "will” when they meant to eliminate discretion. Thus, the order of priority regulation does not mandate either the conversion of NTE teachers or their rehiring.

Secondly, we find that the other subsection of the regulation upon which plaintiff relies5 does not mandate [30]*30the conversion of NTE teachers as he argues. The regulation states that a teacher "who is hired” and who has one or more years’ experience in the dependents’ schools will be given an indefinite appointment. DoD Directive 1400.13, para. IV, (E)(l)(a)(2). (emphasis added) For the plaintiff to fit under this section, the language, though perhaps inartfully drawn, requires (by using the conjunctive "and”) that the NTE teacher must have completed his temporary limited appointment prior to his subsection (a)(2) hiring. Thus, this regulation only applies after the teacher has been hired to teach for a second year. Though, at first blush, it may seem to mandate the automatic conversion of NTE teachers, the regulation contains conditions precedent not met by plaintiff and nowhere entitles him to be hired again.

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Bluebook (online)
217 Ct. Cl. 24, 1978 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 139, 1978 WL 5755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/featheringill-v-united-states-cc-1978.