William Vincent Vitarelli v. United States

279 F.2d 878, 150 Ct. Cl. 59, 1960 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 108
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 8, 1960
Docket283-59
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 279 F.2d 878 (William Vincent Vitarelli v. 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
William Vincent Vitarelli v. United States, 279 F.2d 878, 150 Ct. Cl. 59, 1960 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 108 (cc 1960).

Opinions

DURFEE, Judge.

This is suit for pay for the period of separation of an educational officer in the Office of Trust Territories of the Department of Interior which separation was terminated when he was reinstated on June 26, 1959. Plaintiff was discharged on the authority of the Act of August 26, 1950 1 in the interest of national security. He returned to the United States from his position on Koror in the Caroline Islands after having been suspended without pay as a so-called “security risk” on April 10, 1954. He appeared before a security hearing board on June 22 and July 1, 1954. On September 2, 1954, the Secretary of the Interior removed plaintiff from his position. His family remained on Koror until Government transportation became available the following month when they, too, returned to the United States.

Plaintiff challenged the legality of his removal in the Federal courts and on June 1, 1959, the United States Supreme Court held that the dismissal was illegal. His reinstatement to his former position followed thereupon.

The same statute which authorized plaintiff’s removal contains a proviso relating to persons who may be reinstated [880]*880by a department head after having been removed as a security risk. They are to be “allowed compensation for * * * the period of such suspension or termination in an amount not to exceed the difference between the amount such person would normally have earned during the period of such suspension or termination, at the rate he was receiving on the date of suspension or termination, as appropriate, and the interim net earnings of such person.” Plaintiff has been paid his basic salary during the period of separation less his earnings from outside sources.

However, there are certain amounts which the plaintiff insists he would normally have received during this period because he was entitled to them on the date of discharge. Likewise, there is an item which plaintiff believes should be deducted from his interim earnings before they are credited against the back pay of which he was illegally deprived. Thus, the court must determine whether plaintiff should recover a 25 percent territorial post differential for the period of his unlawful removal, the annual leave which he would have accrued during that period, legislative and in-grade raises which he would have received had he not been removed, and per diem payments for the period during which he was away from his territorial post. And, we must determine whether he should be permitted to deduct from the interim earnings the legal costs he incurred in proving that he was wrongfully removed and in securing his reinstatement. We will treat these items in the order just suggested.

This court recently decided that a wrongfully separated firefighter should recover pay based on regular pay and overtime which overtime hours he would have worked had he remained on the job instead of being separated. Lockwood v. United States, D.C., 180 F.Supp. 579, 580. The compensation was based on Section 6(b) (2), Act of June 10, 1948, 62 Stat. 354, 355 2 which permitted payment to the plaintiff at the rate received on the date of the separation. The court said, per curiam, “[T]he overtime rate applicable to the plaintiff’s position as a GS-9 supervisory firefighter was just as much his rate of pay as the straight-time rate.”

The reasoning of the Lockwood case as applied to 5 U.S.C.A. § 22-1 would seem to require that the plaintiff be paid the 25 percent differential as a part of his pay at “the rate he was receiving on the date of the suspension or termination * * However, defendant relies on, and plaintiff is confronted by, the holding in Kalv v. United States, 1954, 124 F.Supp. 654, 128 Ct.Cl. 207. In that case, the Civil Service Commission had ordered that plaintiff be reinstated as a War Department civilian on the grounds that his procedural rights under Section 14 of the Veterans’ Preference Act of 1944, 5 U.S.C.A. § 863, had been violated when he was discharged. In addition to back salary, the plaintiff also claimed the 25 percent overseas differential which he had been receiving prior to his discharge. The statutory basis for that differential was the same as for the territorial differential at issue in this case.

In the Kalv case the court said that the only reasons for granting overseas differential were that the cost of living abroad was higher than at home, or that there were physical hardships and health hazards inherent in the differing environment. It concluded that an employee would be entitled to that differential, therefore, only at such times as he was actually and physically in the overseas area.

Territorial post differentials were first authorized by Section 207 of the Appropriation Act of 1949, as amended,3 where either or both of the following conditions obtained: living costs substantially higher than in the District of Columbia and environmental conditions differing substantially from the United States proper which warrant additional compensation as a recruitment incentive. [881]*881Executive Order 100004 ordered the Civil Service Commission to designate as subject to the payment of differential areas which had environments substantially different from the United States where one or more of the following was true: (a) extraordinarily difficult living conditions, (b) excessive physical hardships, (c) notably unhealthy conditions.

Accordingly, the Civil Service Commission provided that a territorial post differential would be payable at posts having conditions of environment which differed substantially from those of the United States and warranted additional compensation as a recruitment incentive. It designated various areas pursuant to the regulations and the Caroline Islands was assigned a 25 percent differential as a recruitment incentive to induce employees to work and remain in that area in view of the environmental differences in climate, housing, sanitation, medical care, and intellectual and recreational opportunities. There is no evidence that this differential was in any way related to cost-of-living.

The defendant’s position with respect to this item does not differ substantially from the court’s position in the Kalv case. The defendant says that the concept of a recruitment incentive is not an independent one, but relates to the conditions of environment which warrant the incentive. It urges that if an employee is absent from the area of unfavorable conditions, he no longer has any right to the differential. We are inclined to think that the court was somewhat too narrow in its opinion in the Kalv case and that the concept of recruitment incentive was not given adequate consideration. The right to recovery in Kalv existed by virtue of a different and earlier statute than the one now before us. The same statute which applied in Kalv was treated in a considerably different manner in the Lockwood case.

The Government apparently considered it necessary to make the 25 percent differential a part of plaintiff’s total compensation in order to induce him to come to, and remain at, an otherwise unattractive post. In this respect, it was not merely to compensate him for higher living costs or increased physical discomforts experienced only while he was actually on Koror. Wherever his location, whatever his condition, the offer of a higher salary to bring him and his skills to the Islands remained.

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William Vincent Vitarelli v. United States
279 F.2d 878 (Court of Claims, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
279 F.2d 878, 150 Ct. Cl. 59, 1960 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-vincent-vitarelli-v-united-states-cc-1960.