Stanford Monroe Welcker v. The United States

752 F.2d 1577, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 14692
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJanuary 22, 1985
DocketAppeal 84-1392
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 752 F.2d 1577 (Stanford Monroe Welcker v. The United States) 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
Stanford Monroe Welcker v. The United States, 752 F.2d 1577, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 14692 (Fed. Cir. 1985).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

Stanford Monroe Welcker appeals from a decision of the United States Claims Court, H. Robert Mayer, Judge, granting the Government’s motion for summary judgment. Appellant seeks, inter alia, an award of back pay under the Tucker Act for his allegedly wrongful discharge from civilian employment with the Air Force in 1950. The court ruled that appellant’s case, filed in 1982, was barred by the six-year statute of limitations on suits brought under the Tucker Act. 28 U.S.C. § 2501 (1982). We affirm.

I

For the purposes of this motion for summary judgment, the Government does not take issue with appellant’s version of the hard facts, which is as follows:

Following a tour with the Navy during World War II, appellant worked as a civilian draftsman in the Air Force’s Watson Laboratories in Monmouth, New Jersey. Appellant maintains that, in 1944, an FBI agent and an Army Intelligence officer approached appellant and asked him if he would infiltrate and report on the activities of the Walt Whitman Club, a community *1579 organization suspected of supporting communist activities. Appellant states that he agreed, and attended a number of club meetings at the local YMCA.

In 1949, the Air Force informed appellant that he was suspended for disloyalty to the Government pursuant to Public Law 77-808. 1 Welcker obtained counsel, and appealed the decision to the Laboratory’s loyalty-security board. While the case was pending, appellant’s attorney sent a letter to then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, requesting that the FBI confirm that appellant’s participation in the Walt Whitman Club was at the behest of the Government. Hoover referred the matter to the main Justice Department. The Attorney General’s office responded to appellant’s counsel (in September 1949) by denying that the Government had recruited appellant as an informant. The Government claimed that appellant was already a member of the Walt Whitman Club at the time of his interview with the FBI agent and Army Intelligence officer. According to the Government’s letter, a third, unnamed individual “interested in Mr. Welcker’s welfare” had suggested that the FBI interview appellant in an effort to persuade him to leave the communist fold. The Justice Department’s letter added that “Mr. Welcker never made any report either written or oral, and when questioned regarding specific matters his answers were either evasive or erroneous.” .

The loyalty-security board held a hearing late in 1949, but refused to allow appellant either to examine the reports of the FBI investigation or to cross-examine Government witnesses. At the hearing, in response to questions from his attorney, appellant related his view of the events surrounding his participation in the Walt Whitman Club’s activities, and denied being a communist. The loyalty-security board concluded that appellant was not disloyal; the board recommended, however, that the Air Force dismiss appellant in the interest of national security. In 1950, after another hearing, the Air Force Central Loyalty-Security Board affirmed this determination, as did the Secretary of the Air Force, thereby converting appellant’s suspension into a permanent termination. Appellant instituted no legal action at that time.

In 1979, after Congress passed the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. § 552a), appellant requested a copy of his FBI files. The FBI provided portions of these files in 1981. According to appellant, the documents demonstrate that the FBI and the Justice Department purposely withheld from the Air Force their true role surrounding appellant’s participation in the Walt Whitman Club. Moreover, it is asserted that the FBI failed to inform the Air Force that agents observing the club’s members often failed to distinguish between those entering the YMCA for club meetings and those entering for other purposes, including meetings of the union representing appellant and *1580 other government employees. The entire thrust of the materials, says appellant, shows that the FBI, in ex parte communications to the Air Force loyalty-security board, falsified its reports of appellant’s activities, a state of affairs which appellant says he discovered only in 1981 when the FBI released his files.

The Claims Court ruled that, on the basis of the undisputed facts, appellant should have been aware of the FBI’s alleged duplicity at the time of the loyalty-security board hearings themselves (1949-1950), at which the Air Force informed appellant that the FBI disputed his version of the story. The court pointed particularly to appellant’s Privacy Act request as evidence that appellant had pieced together his view of the FBI’s actions long before appellant saw his file. In his request, appellant stated:

The tenor of the questions put to me by the members of the loyalty-security board indicated that the reports filed by Hughes and Allen [the FBI and Army Intelligence agents] were at substantial variance from my sworn testimony____ I infer from the various board members’ questions that Hughes and/or Allen destroyed some of the informant reports I provided them, and substituted fabricated accounts of my activities. These were designed to convey the impression that I was concealing useful information and providing false information as to the left-wing activities they had asked me to monitor.

Since appellant suspected that he had been discharged on fabricated evidence approximately thirty-one years before bringing this suit, the court ruled that plaintiff’s action was time-barred on the authority of Braude v. United States, 218 Ct.Cl. 270, 585 F.2d 1049 (1978), discussed infra.

II

Welcker concedes that actions under the Tucker Act are subject to a six-year statute of limitations, but relies on the rule that “the running of the statute will be suspended when an accrual date has been ascertained, but plaintiff does not know of his claim.” Japanese War Notes Claimants Association v. United States, 178 Ct.Cl. 630, 373 F.2d 356, 358-59 (1967), cert. denied, 390 U.S. 975, 88 S.Ct. 466, 19 L.Ed.2d 461 (1968). As a judicial interpretation of a legislative enactment, the rule is strictly and narrowly applied: “Plaintiff must either show that defendant has concealed its acts with the result that plaintiff was unaware of their existence or it must show that its injury was ‘inherently unknowable’ at the accrual date.” Id. at 359 (footnote omitted). Appellant argues that he could not have known of the FBI’s actions prior to passage of the Privacy Act and the submission of his request under that legislation.

The undisputed facts squarely belie that contention.

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Bluebook (online)
752 F.2d 1577, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 14692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanford-monroe-welcker-v-the-united-states-cafc-1985.