Perrine v. Department of Veterans Affairs

316 F. App'x 995
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 2009
Docket16-1645
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 316 F. App'x 995 (Perrine v. Department of Veterans Affairs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perrine v. Department of Veterans Affairs, 316 F. App'x 995 (Fed. Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

DECISION

Tarol G. Perrine challenges the decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board denying his petition for enforcement of a settlement agreement with the Department of Veterans Affairs (“DVA”). We vacate and remand.

BACKGROUND

Mr. Perrine worked as a Readjustment Counseling Therapist at a DVA facility in Jacksonville, Florida. On July 11, 2006, the DVA issued a notice of decision removing him because of unacceptable job performance. Mr. Perrine’s removal became effective on July 18, 2006.

Mr. Perrine filed an appeal with the Merit Systems Protection Board challenging his removal. Mr. Perrine and the DVA then entered into a settlement agreement in which Mr. Perrine agreed to withdraw his appeal and submit a signed letter indicating that he was resigning from his position for personal reasons. The DVA, in turn, agreed to “replace the removal action in [Mr. Perrine’s] official personnel folder OPF with [his] signed resignation,” and to “expunge [Mr. Perrine’s] record ‘OPF’ of the removal action” within 30 days after the Board accepted the settlement agreement. The Board entered the agreement into the record and dismissed the case, while retaining jurisdiction to ensure compliance with the agreement.

On October 4, 2007, Mr. Perrine filed a petition for enforcement of the settlement agreement. He contended that the DVA had breached the agreement because he had applied for three positions with the agency but had not been selected for any of those positions. The Board denied the petition on the ground that the settlement agreement did not require the agency to select Mr. Perrine for another position and that the DVA therefore had not breached the terms of the agreement.

On April 29, 2008, Mr. Perrine filed another petition for enforcement in which he contended that the agency had breached the settlement agreement by failing to expunge the removal action from his OPF and replace it with documentation of his voluntary resignation. Mr. Perrine claimed that after the settlement agreement was executed, the agency sent him a copy of his OPF that contained references to the removal action and other documents associated with his removal. Mr. Perrine asserted that he was not selected for positions with the DVA and the Department of the Navy because of the DVA’s failure to comply with the terms of the settlement agreement relating to the expungement of his removal action.

The administrative judge assigned to Mr. Perrine’s second enforcement action concluded that Mr. Perrine had not offered any evidence to support his claim that the DVA had failed to comply with the terms of the settlement agreement. To the contrary, the administrative judge ruled that the DVA had offered “convincing evidence” that it had expunged the removal action from Mr. Perrine’s OPF and had replaced that action with documentation of his voluntary resignation. The administrative judge therefore issued a decision denying Mr. Perrine’s petition for enforcement. After the full Board denied Mr. Perrine’s petition for review, he filed a petition for review by this court.

DISCUSSION

As evidence of its compliance with the settlement agreement, the DVA submitted to the administrative judge the affi *997 davits of Janice Stamm, an employee with the DVA’s Resource Management Service, and Ronald Katt, a DVA Human Resource Specialist. Ms. Stamm stated that Mr. Perrine had requested a copy of his OPF in July 2006, and that she mailed him a copy of his OPF no later than September 1, 2006. It was that OPF, according to the DVA, that contained documentation of Mr. Perrine’s removal action. Accordingly, the agency argued, the OPF that Mr. Perrine received did not demonstrate the agency’s failure to comply with the settlement agreement, because that OPF was provided to him nearly one year before the agency and Mr. Perrine had even executed the agreement on August 2, 2007.

Mr. Katt stated in his affidavit that within 30 days after the Board accepted the settlement agreement, he replaced the removal action in Mr. Perrine’s OPF with a Notification of Personnel Action form (“SF-50”) indicating that Mr. Perrine had resigned. In support of that contention, the agency submitted copies of the SF-50 showing Mr. Perrine’s original removal action; the SF-50 documenting the cancellation of that removal; and the replacement SF-50 reflecting Mr. Perrine’s resignation. Based on that evidence, the administrative judge concluded that the agency had faithfully executed the terms of the settlement agreement.

However, it is not clear from the record whether the SF-50s that the agency submitted to the administrative judge are in fact part of Mr. Perrine’s OPF. The SF-50s documenting Mr. Perrine’s original removal action and the cancellation of that removal by definition constitute evidence of Mr. Perrine’s removal from his position with the DVA. Even the SF-50 documenting Mr. Perrine’s resignation— which the agency offered as proof of its compliance with the settlement agreement — includes in the “Remarks” section the following notation: “CHANGE FROM REMOVAL TO RESIGNATION.” Mr. Perrine argues that the explicit references to “removal” in the SF-50s violate the terms of the settlement agreement, which required the agency to “expunge [Mr. Perrine’s] record ‘OPF’ of the removal action.”

Agencies must strictly comply with a settlement agreement that obligates the agency to “rescind,” “remove,” or “expunge” documentation of an employee’s removal from his personnel file. In Conant v. Office of Personnel Management, 255 F.3d 1371 (Fed.Cir.2001), an employee who was removed from her position with the Internal Revenue Service entered into a settlement agreement with the IRS in which the agency agreed to “rescind” the SF-50 reflecting that the employee had been removed. We stated:

By agreeing to “rescind” the Removal SF-50, the IRS promised in effect to destroy it, erasing “removal” and all reasons for such a removal from [the appellant’s] professional record with the agency. By agreeing to issue a new SF-50 in its place, the IRS promised that the only legal document recording the end of [the appellant’s] employment with the agency would henceforth be the SF-50 stating she resigned for personal reasons.

Id. at 1376. We therefore concluded that the agency breached the settlement agreement when it submitted forms as part of the employee’s disability retirement application that explicitly referred to her removal. Id.

In Mustek v. Department of Energy, 339 F.3d 1365 (Fed.Cir.2003), a settlement agreement between the Department of Energy and a former employee similarly required the agency to “remove [from his OPF] all documentation relating to and culminating in” the employee’s removal. Although the agency alleged that it had *998 properly removed all documents relating to the removal from the employee’s OPF, the agency submitted as evidence an employment record that referred to a “REMOVAL,” a “RESIGNATION,” and a “CANCELLATION” — much like the SF-50s submitted by the agency in this case.

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Related

Young v. United States
133 Fed. Cl. 471 (Federal Claims, 2017)
Perrine v. Department of Veterans Affairs
403 F. App'x 488 (Federal Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
316 F. App'x 995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perrine-v-department-of-veterans-affairs-cafc-2009.