Murphy v. United States

16 Cl. Ct. 385, 1989 U.S. Claims LEXIS 30, 1989 WL 17841
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 2, 1989
DocketNo. 128-80C
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 Cl. Ct. 385 (Murphy 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
Murphy v. United States, 16 Cl. Ct. 385, 1989 U.S. Claims LEXIS 30, 1989 WL 17841 (cc 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBINSON, Judge.

This case involves a suit by a retired Air Force Reserve Officer pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1491, et seq., as amended, seeking reinstatement, back pay, correction of military records, and other relief. The matter is before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment filed by the parties. The plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment will be denied in part and granted in part. The defendant’s motion for summary judgment will also be denied in part and granted in part. The court’s reasoning in reaching its conclusions on these motions follows.

FACTS

Plaintiff began his military service as a second lieutenant on active duty in the Air Force Reserves on August 29, 1959. He served until August 27, 1962, when he was voluntarily released due to “personal hardship and the desire to study for a Master’s degree.” No Officer Effectiveness Report (OER), a report rating performance and potential, was prepared at the time of that release from active duty. Thus, plaintiff’s personnel records fail to contain any reference to plaintiff’s performance for the period from January 6 through August 27, 1962.

On November 17, 1962, plaintiff was appointed a first lieutenant in the Indiana Air National Guard (ANG) and remained in. that capacity without interruption until July 17, 1967, when he returned to active duty in the Air Force Reserves. His personnel records covering his ANG service contain no OERs for the periods May 1 to November 9, 1963; August 1, 1966, to January 22, 1967; and January 23 to June 29, 1967.

Plaintiff served on active duty from January 2 to May 7, 1969, at Scott AFB, Illinois. His OER for that period reflected an overall rating of 7-2, Very Fine.1 He attained the grade of permanent major, effective February 1, 1971. He then served on active duty as Chief, Office of Information, 62d Military Airlift Wing (MAW), Military Airlift Command (MAC), McChord AFB, Washington, from June 1971 to January 28, 1973. No OER is in plaintiff’s personnel records for the period June 17, 1972, through January 29, 1973. He was next [387]*387assigned on a temporary duty basis (TDY) for 325 days as a graduate student at San Diego State University. His personnel records contain a Training Report, which covers these two periods, or from June 17, 1972, through January 9, 1974. AFM 213-1, paragraph 4-2, the regulation establishing the TDY program, provided that the permissible periods of study could range only “from a summer session to one year.” However, the training report covered 19 months — seven months more than the maximum allowable time for an approximately 47-week study course.

Plaintiff returned after his TDY ended on January 9, 1974, to his former assignment at McChord AFB. On January 10, 1974, plaintiff signed AF Form 2095 which informed him that his OER rating official would be the Commander, 62d MAW, and his indorsing official would be the Commander, 22d Air Force, MAC, the officials who submitted his previous OER. A subsequent AF Form 2095, dated March 12, 1974, purported to change his rater to Vice Commander, 62d MAW, retroactive to January 18, 1974. Plaintiff was never informed of this change in his reporting official. He conducted himself accordingly with only sporadic and infrequent contact with the Vice Commander, 62d MAW. When plaintiff received his OER for the period January 18 through May 24, 1974, reflecting an overall 7-3, Excellent, rating, the rater was the Vice Commander, 62d MAW, Colonel Donald W. Bennett and the indorser was the Commander, Brigadier General B.F. Starr, Jr.

Plaintiff, after discovering this OER in his records in June 1974, began formal efforts in December 1974 to have this OER voided by the Officer Personnel Records Review Board (OPRRB). Plaintiffs efforts culminated in a personnel letter denying without specific reasons the plaintiffs request for voidance of this OER. [See plaintiffs opposition filed June 17, 1986, App. 1 (plaintiffs statement dated June 6, 1986)].

Plaintiff served as Station Manager for the Far East Network, Okinawa, from June 1, 1974, through June 4, 1975. His OER rater was Major James Lapp and his indorser was Colonel William M. Taylor. No OER appears in plaintiffs personnel records for this period. Plaintiff has obtained letters from Brigadier General C.F. McClain and Colonel Taylor, and an OER with an explanatory letter from Major Lapp, stating plaintiff was entitled to an overall 9-4 rating for the period of his Okinawa service.

As a result of a reduction in military manpower requirements following the withdrawal of forces from Vietnam, a Reserve Officer Screening Board (ROSB), convened on November 11, 1974, to consider the plaintiff, with all other reserve officers serving on active duty in the United States Air Force in specified year groups containing surplus officer manning, for release from active duty. That board screened approximately 21,000 reserve officers. The ROSB panel, using the “whole-person” or “best qualified” concept, aligned in order of merit all officers based upon their respective qualities and potential. The plaintiff was in a non-rated, line-of-the-Air-Force, surplus grouping for Fiscal Years 1962-68. A proportionately higher number of officers were released from this group consistent with service needs and the parameters of the program. Briefing statistics on the ROSB indicate that 11.2 percent of the officers considered in this grouping were selected for release. The plaintiff was one of 23 majors separated in the first instance. His separation was effective June 27, 1975. Following his separation from active duty, the plaintiff briefly reverted to the Indiana ANG. He then was placed on inactive reserve status.

On October 29, 1975, the plaintiff, who was then unemployed, filed his first application for administrative relief with the Air Force Board for Correction of Military Records (AFBCMR or Board). The application requested voidance of the January 10-May 14, 1974 OER; correction of other alleged errors in his record, including insertion of missing OERs or letters of evaluation for 1966-67, 1972-73, 1973-74, 1974-75; and a hearing. The AFBCMR denied the plaintiff’s application in its entirety by form letter dated March 29, 1976. The [388]*388letter stated without an analysis of the plaintiff’s contentions and supporting evidence that the applicant had not submitted sufficient evidence to establish a showing of probable error or injustice.

The plaintiff’s statement (Plaintiff’s Opposition filed June 17,1986, Appendix 1-17) contains a detailed explanation of the personal hardships which he suffered after his discharge. Due to these circumstances and the intercession of General Hairston, the plaintiff obtained a one-time waiver and was allowed to enlist as a Sergeant, E-4, in the Air Force on February 8, 1977. As a result of this enlistment, plaintiff became a “dual status” member of the Air Force — a regular enlisted person concurrently holding a reserve officer appointment. The plaintiff, after training at Fort Harrison, Indiana, and Keesler AFB, Mississippi, was assigned to Ramstein AB, Germany, in August 1977. He was promoted to staff sergeant E-5 while in Germany. He remained overseas for approximately 22 months, returning to the United States in May 1979. During his service overseas, the plaintiff diligently pursued efforts to obtain evidence which would form the basis for another application to the AFBCMR. He submitted his second formal appeal to the AFBCMR on November 22, 1979.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Cl. Ct. 385, 1989 U.S. Claims LEXIS 30, 1989 WL 17841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-united-states-cc-1989.