Roski c. United States

204 Ct. Cl. 40, 1974 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 116, 1974 WL 21681
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 20, 1974
DocketNo. 395-72
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 204 Ct. Cl. 40 (Roski c. 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
Roski c. United States, 204 Ct. Cl. 40, 1974 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 116, 1974 WL 21681 (cc 1974).

Opinion

Dtjreee, Senior Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The employment of plaintiff Boski, a research electronic [43]*43engineer in. the Naval Research Laboratory, was terminated for medical unfitness on October 17, 1969. He sues for reinstatement and for “all wages, back salaries and monies, due him as the result of his removal from his employment.” We conclude that the action of the Naval Research Laboratory in removing plaintiff from his job, and the actions of the Appeals Examining Office, the Board of Appeals and Review and the Civil Service Commission in sustaining this removal, were not arbitrary, capricious, unsupported by substantial evidence, or erroneous.

Plaintiff’s removal was pursuant to FPM 339 Section 1-3:

1-3. SEPARATION FOR MEDICAL UNFITNESS
$ $ # # &
b. General Agency Responsibility. When an employee no longer can perform the duties of his position efficiently and safely because of his physical or mental condition, the agency may separate him on the basis of disability. * * *
‡ ❖ ❖ ❖

Plaintiff had been employed by the Navy since 1965 as an electronic engineer (in GS-7 to GS-11 status) and finally reassigned on June 4, 1967, as a GS-11 research electronic engineer (instrumentation) with the Naval Research Laboratory, from which position he was removed on October 17, 1969.

On January 21, 1969, plaintiff’s immediate supervisor, Mr. R. R. Stone, wrote to the NRL’s medical officer that Mr. Roski had manifested strange behavior toward his work and his fellow workers, and requested that Mr. Roski be examined as to his fitness for duty. These conclusions are described by plaintiff as “unsupported and wild accusations,” for which he filed a complaint, alleging that the basic reason for Stone’s “discrimination in employment” against him was that plaintiff had an M.S. degree, and Stone did not.

However, Mr. Stone’s reasons for Roski’s removal were carefully and precisely stated in his three-page report of March 5, 1969. Although Roski “at first * * * exhibited by his enthusiasm and willingness an apparent high potential as a research development scientist,” this high potential was of short duration in Stone’s opinion. Stone described in detail [44]*44several assignments to Eoski of research development in electronics in which. Eoski failed due to “stubborn tendency toward unconventionality and unorthodox explanations,” “inability to admit any error,” “mistrust of the motives and competency of his fellow workers,” a refusal to comply with supervisory work controls and regulations, alienation from and suspicion of his “less informed” fellow workers, and an obsession that others were stealing his ideas. These conclusions by Stone, combined with his observation that records kept by plaintiff “exhibit the unorthodox and scientifically unsound approaches he has taken,” led Stone to assert that:

It is evident from his actions that he does not live in a real scientific world. The theories which he expounds cannot be endorsed by the Laboratory or even published in the scientific community without complete repudiation.

These observations as to plaintiff Eoski by his immediate supervisor were corroborated in detail by a two-page memorandum dated March 10,1969 by L. B. Wetzel, Superintendent, Communications Sciences Division NEL, who had reviewed Eoski’s work and concluded:

a. From a technical point of view, Mr. Eoski’s thought processes have become chaotic and totally ineffective. This is evidenced not only in his inability to speak rationally about the topic of his work, but in his growing insistence on introducing irrelevant abstractions (Special Eelativity, energy principles, mysterious geometric constructions, the scattering of electrons in metals, and most recently, I have been told, general relativistic notions of curved space) into what is essentially a straightforward engineering problem.
b. There is no substance in Mr. Eoski’s accusations against Mr. Stone. In fact, from conversations with people in Mr. Stone’s section, and with Mr. Stone himself, I am convinced that Mr. Stone was extremely fair and lenient with Mr. Eoski, who was given the benefit of every doubt which arose during the course of his work.

Mr. Don I. Himes, Stone’s immediate supervisor, also reported difficulties and concern with plaintiff’s work and his explanations. This was done in response to plaintiff Eoski’s [45]*45request to Himes to review his work in May 1969. Concerning this review, Himes stated:

* * Hi ❖ *
Mr. Eoski presented his experimental results and theories in an increasingly disjointed manner. Although these theories and the results he has obtained do not conform to accepted practice or objective analysis, this factor is not the primary cause for the concern engendered in the writer by this interview. Eather, it became apparent that Mr. Eoski demonstrates an alarming singleness of purpose in ascribing mystical properties to the devices he has developed. His almost animistic explanations could be understood if the individual were ignorant or untrained. On the contrary, Mr. Eoski demonstrated to the writer’s satisfaction a deliberate avoidance of reality (explaining to some degree the disjointedness mentioned earlier) by changing the thrust of the discussion whenever logical continuation would lead to a confrontation between his work and conventional, scientific explanation. This behavior reinforced the conclusion that Mr. Eoski chose to ignore (as opposed to being unable to understand) rational procedures or established relationships.

There is also substantial evidence from these supervisory employees as to plaintiff’s lack of productivity, failure to perform in accordance with his grade and position, resultant economic loss to the Laboratory, and its being prevented from having someone else do work already assigned to plaintiff.

Upon request by Mr. Stone, Dr. Lieberman, the Medical Officer at NEL, after further investigation on March 6,1969, recommended psychiatric testing of plaintiff to determine his fitness for duty.

Plaintiff was advised of his right to submit a list of certified psychiatrists from which one would be selected for the psychiatric examination. Plaintiff chose Dr. Eandolph Frank, who was then sent a letter with background information on Mr. Eoski by Dr. Lieberman in requesting a medical diagnosis and prognosis. Dr. Lieberman also sent to plaintiff’s attorney an explanation of the behavior of plaintiff which had caused the NEL concern as to his fitness to perform his work, concluding in substance that his thought processes “are chaotic, irrational and totally ineffective,” [46]*46that he “is manifesting behavior highly suspicious of Paranoid Schizophrenia.”

In April 1969 Roski consulted a private clinical psychologist, Ruth Lunn, who found him not unfit for duty, but needing psychotherapy and that “he should not for his own good continue working in his present situation” and that he was “manifesting more of the latent schizophrenic symptoms at this time.” She did later state that she was qualified to comment only on Roski’s “social behavior, not his ability to do scientific work,” and she saw him more as “a borderline schizophrenic with obsessive compulsive defenses * *

On May 5,1969, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
204 Ct. Cl. 40, 1974 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 116, 1974 WL 21681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roski-c-united-states-cc-1974.