Miller v. United States

180 Ct. Cl. 872, 1967 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 101, 1967 WL 8880
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 20, 1967
DocketNo. 424-64
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 Ct. Cl. 872 (Miller 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
Miller v. United States, 180 Ct. Cl. 872, 1967 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 101, 1967 WL 8880 (cc 1967).

Opinion

ColliNS, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the conrt:

Plaintiff is a former member of the United States Coast Guard who was retired from that service on February 1, 1950. At that time, he was accorded retirement pay based upon his highest attained Coast Guard rank. He now claims entitlement to increased retirement pay based upon a higher rank held during an earlier period of service with the United States Navy.1 The 'applicable statute, 14 U.S.C. § 362,2 sets forth the general proposition that the retirement pay of regular enlisted Coast Guard personnel shall be on the basis of the highest held grade or rating while on active duty. The question presented is whether the statute permits the computation of retirement pay on the basis of a higher rating held in a service other than that from which retired. We conclude that it does.

In Satterwhite v. United States, 123 Ct. Cl. 342 (1952), this court held that the plaintiff — a retired Navy enlisted man who previously had satisfactorily held the federally recognized rank of captain in the Army during World War I — was entitled, under section 513 of the Career Compensation Act of 1949,3 to have his retirement computed on the basis of his higher Army rank. Though we are concerned in this case with a different statute, the Government argues its position in terms not unlike those it presented in Satter-wMte, sufra.

Thus, we are told that the controlling statute (i.e., section 362) is premised upon a “same service” requirement, a phrase which means — when translated into a more common idiom— that the grade at which retired must be one held in the service from which retired. It is this rationale which has been relied upon in the present case to deny plaintiff retirement pay based upon his former Navy rating of chief boatswain’s mate. Also repeated here is the assertion that the Secretary [875]*875(of tlie retiring service) is without authority to ascertain whether the earlier service, performed in a different military branch, meets the statutory requisite of “satisfactory service.”

Section 362 of title 14, the statute under which the present plaintiff claims relief, states:

§362. Retirement in cases where higher grade or rating has been held.
Any enlisted man who is retired under any provision of section 353, 354, 355, or 357 of this chapter shall be retired from active service with highest grade or rating held by him while on active duty in which, as determined by the Secretary, his performance of duty was satisfactory, but not lower than his permanent grade or rating, with retired pay of the grade or rating with which retired. * * *

The directive of the statute is clear and, barring legislative intent to the contrary, its plain and obvious meaning should prevail. The statute prescribes retirement at the highest held active duty grade or rating; it makes no demand that such “highest” rating have been earned exclusively in the service from which retired. In arguing to the contrary, the Government contends that it is a reasonable conclusion to assume that section 362 rests upon a “same service” requirement because its legislative antecedent — the Navy Temporary Promotion Act4 — supposedly incorporated such a requirement. From the Government’s point of view, the phrase “highest grade or rating” refers solely to a higher grade previously held in the same service under a temporary appointment.

As its name implies, one of the purposes of the Navy Temporary Promotion Act was to authorize the Secretary of the Navy5 to make temporary personnel promotions. Congress also directed that such appointments, though temporary, were to be used as a basis for computing retirement pay so long as the service rendered thereunder was deemed satisfactory. In such a case, where retirement was predicated upon a prior temporary appointment, the act could be said to [876]*876incorporate — as defendant contends — a “same service” requirement. However, tire computation of retirement under the act was not limited exclusively to a rank gained by virtue of a temporary promotion. Eather, it specified that retirement should be based upon the highest held rank, and this would be the equivalent of a temporary rank only if the retiring member was not otherwise entitled to the same or higher grade and rank or retired pay. This is made clear by section 10'(b) of the act which, as amended, stated:6

(2) Personnel of the active list of the Eegular Navy and Marine Corps [and Coast Guard] and personnel of the Fleet Eeserve and Fleet Marine Corps Eeserve appointed or advanced under the authority of this Act shall, when subsequently retired, if not otherwise entitled to the same or higher grade and rank or retired f ay, be advanced to the highest grade and rank in which, as determined by the Secretary of the Navy, they served satisfactorily under temporary appointments, and shall receive retired pay computed at the rate prescribed by law and applicable in each individual case but based upon such higher rank. [Emphasis supplied.]

The foregoing provision, in acknowledging the possibility of a retirement grade exceeding that which might otherwise be allowed through a temporary appointment, clearly expands the concept of “highest grade or rating” beyond the narrower limits which defendant would assign to it. The highest rating might be one based upon a temporary appointment, but it clearly need not be.

If, as defendant suggests, we should seek to divine the meaning of section 362 and; its use of the phrase “highest grade or rating held * * * while on active duty” by referring to the Navy Temporary Promotion Act, then it must be conceded that the phrase comprehends more than a previously held temporary rank. Moreover, since neither section 362 nor the Navy Temporary Promotion Act sets out any limitation with respect to the branch of service in which the higher grade must have been held, it would not seem unreasonable to take the position that Congress intended retirement benefits to be based upon the highest held military rank, even though such rank may not have been held in the service from which retired. Such a construction would comport with [877]*877tbe literal prescription of the statute, would transgress no manifested congressional intent, and would grant to plaintiff (and those similarly situated) a measure of retirement pay that acknowledges, rather than ignores, the higher rank earned during earlier service.

Our conclusion in this regard is not undermined by the fact that Congress has declined, on several occasions, to amend title 14 so as to permit retirement based upon the highest grade held in any service. Such congressional inaction — when viewed against a background lacking in any administrative or judicial construction of section 362 — cannot support an inference that the statute, as presently drawn, would not permit retirement based upon the highest rank attained in any service.7

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Bluebook (online)
180 Ct. Cl. 872, 1967 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 101, 1967 WL 8880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-united-states-cc-1967.