Tekeley v. Government Accountability Office

173 F. App'x 820
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 2006
Docket2005-3374
StatusUnpublished

This text of 173 F. App'x 820 (Tekeley v. Government Accountability Office) 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
Tekeley v. Government Accountability Office, 173 F. App'x 820 (Fed. Cir. 2006).

Opinion

DECISION

PER CURIAM.

Edward Randolph Tekeley appeals from a decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board, Docket No. DC-0839-05-0059-1-1, affirming a decision of the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”) that denied his request to transfer from the Federal Employees’ Retirement System (“FERS”) to the Civil Service Retirement System (“CSRS”). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The Federal Employees’ Retirement System Act of 1986, Pub.L. No. 99-335, 100 Stat. 514, created a new retirement system for federal employees. Generally, employees hired after December 31, 1983, are automatically covered by FERS. Cer *821 tain rehired employees with five years of prior civil service have the option of electing FERS or maintaining CSRS, CSRSOffset, or Social Security only coverage. Those rehired employees ordinarily have a one-time opportunity to make an election among those options during the first six months of their reemployment. The employing agency must provide those employees with an election form prepared by OPM and must document the employees’ receipt of that election form. 5 C.F.R. § 846.203. Other rehired employees (e.g., those without five years of prior civil service) are automatically covered by FERS.

Between 1993 and 2000, 5 C.F.R. § 846.204 provided a few exceptions to the six-month election period rule, allowing rehired employees to make belated elections under certain circumstances. One of those exceptions provided employees a one-time opportunity to correct an agency’s administrative mistake that erroneously prevented the employee from being offered the usual election period at the start of his reemployment. As OPM has explained, such a mistake might arise on reemployment, for example, if “the agency did not realize that the employee had 5 years of previous civilian service.” Deemed Elections of Coverage Under the Federal Employees Retirement System, 58 Fed.Reg. 47,821, 47,821 (Sept. 13,1993).

In 2000, Congress .enacted the Federal Erroneous Retirement Coverage Corrections Act (“FERCCA”), Pub.L. No. 106-265, Title II, 114 Stat. 762, 770 (codified at 5 U.S.C. 8331 note). 1 Just as 5 C.F.R. § 846.204(b)(2) did before 2000, FERCCA provides a limited exception to' the six-month election period rule, allowing employees a one-time opportunity to correct an agency’s administrative mistake that erroneously prevented the employee from being offered the usual election period at the start of his reemployment. Section 2133 of FERCCA, however, explicitly provides that an employee who already had an opportunity to correct a particular agency error was not entitled to a second opportunity through the operation of FERCCA.

In January 1990 Mr. Tekeley began working for the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) after having left a previous federal employment position in 1985. 2 In 1995 he transferred to a position with the Department of Treasury. In 1996 he transferred back to the GAO, at which time the GAO discovered an error in Mr. Tekeley’s retirement coverage. Athough Mr. Tekeley should have been placed in CSRS-Offset and given a six-month period in which to choose retirement coverage when he reentered federal service in 1990, he was instead placed automatically in FERS. Pursuant to the then-relevant regulation, 5 C.F.R. § 846.204(b)(2)(ii)(A) (1996), the GAO was required to “provide written notice” of the error to Mr. Tekeley, notifying him that he “may, within 60 days after receiving the notice, decline to be deemed to have transferred to FERS.”

The GAO asserts that it sent the required written notification to Mr. Tekeley in 1996, and that a series of communications ensued between the agency and Mr. Tekeley regarding whether Mr. Tekeley wished to decline FERS coverage. In *822 support of that assertion the agency provided a copy of the notification letter, dated November 4, 1996, in which the agency informed Mr. Tekeley of the agency’s error and that he had 60 days to decline FERS coverage. Attached to that letter was an election form. The agency also presented affidavits from several OPM and GAO employees. The affidavits describe a series of conversations initiated by Mr. Tekeley after he received the notification letter, in which Mr. Tekeley requested information about his coverage options. The affidavits and supporting documents—including annuity worksheets and a handwritten note prepared by a GAO employee pursuant to conversations with Mr. Tekeley—also show that GAO provided detailed responses to Mr. Tekeley’s inquiries about his coverage options. The record also contains a May 6, 1997, letter from GAO, addressed to Mr. Tekeley, which states that, “in order to assist you in making your decision whether to transfer from CSRSOffset to FERS, you have been provided with a variety of estimated annuity estimates.”

Mr. Tekeley maintains that he never received any notification regarding his retirement options in 1996. Instead, he claims that he first learned of the agency error in 2004, when he was deciding whether to retire from the agency under a voluntary early retirement program. At that time, Mr. Tekeley asked the agency to retroactively place him in CSRS-Offset instead of FERS. Although Mr. Tekeley acknowledges that he spoke with OPM and GAO employees during the 1996-1997 timeframe, he asserts that the conversations focused on disability benefits and that he never discussed retirement coverage at that time. In support of his assertion that he never received the letters GAO claims to have sent him, Mr. Tekeley offered statements from the manager of his apartment building that mail can be misdelivered at the building, and from a coworker who did not receive mail allegedly mailed to him by the GAO.

Whether Mr. Tekeley received proper notification in 1996 is the central dispute in this case. The agency determined that Mr. Tekeley had been given an opportunity to decline FERS coverage in 1996, and so denied his request for retroactive transfer to CSRS-Offset in 2004. Mr. Tekeley appealed that decision to the Merit Systems Protection Board. An administrative judge credited the agency’s evidence that Mr. Tekeley received notification of the retirement coverage error in 1996 and therefore affirmed the agency’s decision. The full board denied Mr. Tekeley’s petition for review, and Mr. Tekeley now appeals that final judgment.

DISCUSSION

Although Mr. Tekeley fashions his appeal through the lens of various regulatory, statutory, constitutional, and equitable arguments, each of those arguments hinges on the question whether he received proper notice in 1996 of the agency’s error and of his right to decline FERS coverage. If he received proper notice in 1996, he is not entitled to a second opportunity to correct the retirement coverage error. See FERCCA § 2133; 5 C.F.R.

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173 F. App'x 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tekeley-v-government-accountability-office-cafc-2006.