Stoneburner v. Secy of the Army

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 1998
Docket97-50765
StatusPublished

This text of Stoneburner v. Secy of the Army (Stoneburner v. Secy of the Army) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Stoneburner v. Secy of the Army, (5th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS For the Fifth Circuit

No. 97-50765 Summary Calendar

WILLIAM D. STONEBURNER, Lieutenant Colonel,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

VERSUS

SECRETARY OF THE ARMY; ARMY BOARD FOR CORRECTIONS OF MILITARY RECORDS,

Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas

September 8, 1998

Before DUHÉ, DeMOSS and DENNIS, Circuit Judges

PER CURIAM:

William D. Stoneburner, a Lieutenant Colonel in the United

States Army Reserve, appeals the grant of summary judgment

dismissing his challenge to an Army Board for Correction of

Military Records’ (“ABCMR”) decision. Stoneburner sought to have

the evaluations submitted by his rating officers removed from his

Officer Evaluation Report (“OER”). He alleges that the ABCMR’s

denial of his request was arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, and unsupported by substantial evidence. He also

alleges that the Army’s evaluation procedures violate the Equal

Protection Clause. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

While on active duty at Fort Hood, Texas, Stoneburner

underwent a routine performance and promotion potential evaluation

covering the period from June 1, 1986 through May 31, 1987. He was

evaluated by the rater, Lt. Colonel Ronald W. English,(“English”)

and by the senior rater, Colonel Lawrence C. Richardson

(“Richardson”). Richardson became Stoneburner’s commander and

senior rater March 2, 1987. From that date through May 28, 1987,

his last day of active duty at Fort Hood, Stoneburner was in a

nonrated status1 for 53 days and was absent from observation

another 12 days.

To qualify as a senior rater, AR 623-105, ¶ 3-10(b)(1)

requires that the senior rater serve in that capacity for a

minimum of 60 calendar days, without regard to the rated officer’s

rated or nonrated status. The rater, however, qualifies to

evaluate the rated officer only if the rated officer remains in a

rated status at least 90 days during the rating period. AR 623-

105, ¶ 4-10(c)(3). Richardson had 88 days, including both rated

and nonrated days, to observe and evaluate Stoneburner; English

1 Being in nonrated status means that the officer being evaluated is not performing work related to his duty position. Stoneburner was on leave and in school preparing for a new assignment during the 53 days.

2 also qualified as an evaluator, having observed Stoneburner for at

least 90 rated days before rendering his report.

English rated Stoneburner favorably, giving him the highest

ratings for performance and professionalism and described his

performance and potential as “always exceed[ing] requirement.” He

commented that “LTC Stoneburner has performed his duties as

Operations and Training Officer in an exemplary manner. . . . LTC

Stoneburner is a fine U.S. Army Reserve Officer and has

demonstrated his ability to serve on active duty with the

competence to make a professional contribution.” He recommended,

however, that Stoneburner be promoted with his contemporaries, not

ahead of them. He also recommended that Stoneburner be continued

in the U.S. Army Reserve when he reached his mandatory release from

active duty.

Richardson, the senior rater, assigned Stoneburner a mediocre

rating in potential, two ranks lower than other lieutenant colonels

whom he evaluated at the same time. He added the following

narrative comments to that section of the OER:

Fully concur with rater’s comments. During my observation of LTC Stoneburner’s performance he has demonstrated a very capable ability to plan, schedule, and coordinate Reserve Component training. He is a good staff officer and consistantly [sic] meets the standards of Lieutenant Colonel on active duty and should continue to serve at that level on a higher headquarters staff where he can make significant contributions to the mobilization and training readiness of Reserve Component units.

3 After receiving the OER, Stoneburner requested a “Commander’s

Inquiry” to correct alleged errors and injustices in the report.

Administrative errors were corrected and the Commander, Lt. General

Crosbie Saint, determined that those errors did not invalidate the

report. He further determined that the senior rater evaluation and

comments were not illegal because Richardson was technically

qualified to perform the rating. He did question the fairness of

an evaluation by a senior rater who had had only a minimum

observation period rather than an evaluation completed by the

longer-serving departing senior rater.

Stoneburner next appealed to the Officer Special Review Board

(“OSRB”), requesting that the OER senior rater portion be deleted

because the evaluation was unjust and illegal. In an OSRB

interview, Richardson acknowledged that he had placed Stoneburner

at the low end of his personal senior rater profile. He insisted,

however, that the ranking was appropriate, based on his

observations and review of Stoneburner’s work. He viewed the OER

results as fair, accurate, and objective. The OSRB found no basis

for making an exception to the regulatory policy that determines a

senior rater’s eligibility. It further concluded that Stoneburner

had not provided clear and convincing evidence to justify a

deletion or amendment to the OER.

Stoneburner appealed a second time to the OSRB, raising

essentially the same allegations. The OSRB contacted the rater,

English, who reported that Stoneburner’s performance over the last

4 five to six months of the rating period had deteriorated

significantly. He cited “a bad attitude” and noted that

Stoneburner “did not want to come to work and, when he did, his

appearance did not represent what was expected of a field grade

officer.”

In a second interview, Richardson stated that because of his

limited access to Stoneburner, he had “based much of his impression

of the appellant’s performance and potential on comments from the

previous SR [senior rater] during their two week overlap when the

SR ‘sized-up’ the appellant and other personnel.” Richardson

further explained that he had personally prepared his own OER

comments and, because he did not see Stoneburner as having

potential for promotion to full colonel, he had rated him

accordingly.

The OSRB denied this second appeal, again finding that

Stoneburner had failed to provide clear and convincing evidence to

justify the deletion or amendment of the OER. It did not address

Stoneburner’s constitutional challenge to AR 623-105; it did

determine, however, that the senior rater had adequate information

available to prepare his portion of the OER. The OSRB further

found that the rater’s evaluation was not contradictory or

ambiguous.

Stoneburner’s third appeal was to the Army Board for

Corrections of Military Records. The ABCMR concluded, inter alia,

that the OER did not meet the criteria to be classified as a

5 referred report.2 It found that the senior rater had met the

minimum time in the position necessary to provide an evaluation. It

further found that Stoneburner’s due process claim was not

supported by the record because the applicable administrative

procedures had been followed. It determined that the OER appeared

to “represent a fair, objective and valid appraisal of

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