Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge MIKVA.
These consolidated cases represent but the latest chapter in Alan White’s protracted struggle with the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). OPM oversees the selection of administrative law judges employed by the federal government. White has been trying to become an administrative law judge since January 1975. After two unsuccessful applications, White turned to the judicial process in February 1977. Since that time this court has ruled nine times in the matter of White versus the Office of Personnel Management, on more than one occasion disposing of consolidated appeals. White’s suits have alleged violations of, inter alia, the Constitution, the Privacy Act, the Freedom of Information Act, the Administrative Procedure Act, and various regulations implementing these Acts. In the two cases at bar, White is suing for damages under the Privacy Act and for relief for alleged violations of his fifth amendment rights. Because we find that White is not entitled to damages under the Privacy Act and that his constitutional claims are entirely lacking in merit, we affirm the decisions of the district court.
I. No. 84-5639
In White’s first effort to litigate his non-selection as an administrative law judge,
White v. United States Civil Service Commission,
At the core of this dispute are certain evaluations of appellant Alan J. White that were solicited [from his colleagues and superiors] by the United States Civil Service Commission [ (OPM is the successor to the Commission)] in connection with appellant’s application for the position of administrative law judge____ Appellant was apparently worried that, because he had experienced some employment difficulties ..., the evaluations might have mischaracterized the manner in which he had discharged his duties. He sought, therefore, to have these potentially damaging evaluations removed from his application records on file with the Civil Service Commission by pressing a claim under the Privacy Act of 1974. [5 U.S.C. § 552a.]
Id. at 714.
After eight years, the evaluations remain the core of the dispute in No. 84-5639, the first of the. two consolidated cases we decide today. In his original suit, White al *662 leged that retention of the disputed evaluations violated the Privacy Act’s requirement that government records be accurate. See 5 U.S.C. § 552a(e)(5) & (g)(3) (“Each agency that maintains a system of records shall ... maintain all records which are used by the agency in making any determination about any individual with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness and completeness as is reasonably necessary to assure fairness in the determination.”). White believed that if the records were amended he could yet succeed in his failed applications for an administrative law judge position. Therefore, White sued under the Act to have his records amended and his application reconsidered. See 5 U.S.C. § 552a(g). The district court found against White. White v. United States Civil Service Commission, Civ.Act. No. 77-0274 (D.D.C. Dec. 7, 1977). We affirmed in part in the opinion quoted above.
In that opinion, this court decided that White’s Privacy Act claim was premature. We affirmed the dismissal of the suit because White had not exhausted his available remedies under the Administrative Procedure Act. We held that “an assessment of Privacy Act claims is properly undertaken simultaneously with the District Court’s review of the administrative action,”
White,
After something of a hiatus, White filed the lineal predecessor of No. 84-5639 in April of 1980. In his complaint, White sought damages under the Privacy Act with respect to the OPM’s treatment of his first two administrative law judge applications.
See
5 U.S.C. § 552a(g). White also sought prospective relief with respect to a third application he had submitted in March 1980. White wanted the OPM to review his new application without considering the disputed evaluations that had been the subject of the earlier litigation. The district court again ruled against White.
White v. Office of Personnel Management,
Civ.Act. No. 80-0932 (D.D.C. Oct. 16, 1980). On appeal from that decision (in an unpublished opinion) this court upheld the dismissal of White’s claim for prospective relief.
White v. Office of Personnel Management,
The district court concluded that when OPM retained the disputed evaluations it had not violated the Privacy Act’s requirement of accuracy. 5 U.S.C. § 552a(e)(5). The court held that the challenged evaluations necessarily contained opinions and subjective judgments and that, to satisfy the statutory command, the agency was not required to assure that all of these opinions and judgments were accurate. The court, however, did not absolve the agency of all responsibility for vetting the evaluations. It held that if a negative or damaging response were based on a demonstrably false premise, the agency would not be permitted to retain the evaluation. Where a subjective evaluation is based on a multitude of factors, however, and there are various ways of characterizing some of the underlying events, the court held that it is proper to retain and rely on it. We agree. The district court’s reasoning is correct and in accord with governing precedent.
See Doe v. United States,
White argues on appeal that the district court failed to determine the matter *663 de novo and that if it had, it would have found in his favor. White is wrong, however, to assert that de novo review is required. Section 552a(g)(2)(A) of the Privacy Act calls for de novo review in § 552a(g)(l)(A) suits for amendment of records. In such a suit, the district court is not to assess the agency’s review of the amendment request, but rather is to determine for itself whether the request should have been granted. In § 552a(g)(l)(C) and (g)(4) suits for damages, however, de novo review is not called for. Rather, the reviewing court is to inquire whether the standard articulated in § 552a(g)(l)(C) has been met. This inquiry is necessarily distinct from any undertaken by the agency— no damage claim can be brought directly against the agency — but it is not de novo review. The district court here properly inquired whether the records in question satisfied the appropriate test.
In the district court, White also challenged the agency’s use of evaluations solicited at the time of his first application in 1975, to evaluate his second (1976) application. White asserted that this violated the Privacy Act’s requirement of timeliness, § 552a(e)(5) & (g)(1)(C), and led to a claim for damages against the government. The district court, however, held that the Act’s requirement of timeliness was not violated. The district court reasoned that because the evaluations themselves contained information about the time period they covered, and because the OPM weighs the evaluations by recency, their use was in accord with the requirements of the Privacy Act. We agree. If records become too old, the Privacy Act will bar their use, but, for the reasons laid out by the district court, we do not find that the year-old evaluations here fall into that category. The Privacy Act does not require that agency records contain only information that is “hot off the presses.” To hold that the Privacy Act bars the use of year-old evaluations, properly identified as such, would be an unwarranted intrusion on the agency’s freedom to shape employment application procedures. As long as the nature and age of the information in the records is apparent, and the information is not so stale as to impede fairness, retaining information of various vintages is not precluded by the Act. We emphasize, however, that the determination whether records are in fact timely enough to assure fairness is inherently factual; our decision today is necessarily fact-bound.
White also argues that, under the due process clause of the fifth amendment, he was entitled to a hearing before either of his first two applications could be denied. White ingeniously turns this into a Privacy Act claim by asserting that the lack of a hearing, and the resultant lack of a record of such a hearing, renders the administrative record incomplete. He concludes that the OPM’s records violated the Privacy Act’s requirement of completeness and that he is entitled to damages. He is wrong for two reasons.
First, the fifth amendment cases relied on by White simply do not support his assertion that he was entitled to a hearing.
See, e.g., Board of Regents v. Roth,
The situation might be different if the United States had excluded White from all government employment. Here, however, the United States has not “condemn[ed] a man to a suspect class and the outer darkness, without the rudiments of a fair trial.”
Peters v. Hobby,
Second, and more importantly, if White wishes to press a fifth amendment claim he should do so directly. Virtually everything the government does involves paperwork. Each time the government violates the Constitution, statutes or regulations, its paperwork could therefore be said to be “inaccurate” or “incomplete.” Not every such violation, however, gives rise to a Privacy Act claim. To hold otherwise would transform every constitutional and statutory claim based on administrative action into a Privacy Act suit.
Cf. White v. United States Civil Service Commission,
We do not find any of White’s attacks on the district court judgment in No. 84-5639 compelling. We think the district court correctly decided that the challenged records did not violate the Privacy Act. Absent such a finding, damages are not in order.
II. No. 85-5823
White also has had poor luck with his third (1980) application to become an administrative law judge. After that application was evaluated, White received a rating that rendered him eligible for listing on a register for selection as an administrative law judge by a particular federal agency. The rating was not high enough, however, that it resulted in his selection. White administratively appealed his rating. It was corrected and his name advanced on the register. But, although White was first rated in October of 1980, his appeal was not resolved until September 1983. After his appeal, White was listed in fifth place on the selection register; by August 1984, he had moved up to first place. In June 1984, however, OPM announced the abolition of the register and instituted a new application procedure. White’s long climb to the top was thus nullified. White reapplied under the new procedures but so far has been unsuccessful in his quest to become an administrative law judge.
In March of 1985, White sued the OPM under the Administrative Procedure Act, the Declaratory Judgment Act and the Constitution, asking that the district court order OPM to grant him the benefit of his position on the abolished register. On May 29, 1985, the court dismissed the complaint for lack of jurisdiction. The court held that White’s claims under the Administrative Procedure Act were unreviewable in light of the Civil Service Reform Act, and that his constitutional claims were not clearly enough articulated to sustain subject matter jurisdiction. In No. 85-5823, White appeals that dismissal.
The substance of White’s argument seems to be that his initial qualification for the administrative law judge position (i.e., his listing on the register) is a liberty interest protected by the due process clause of the fifth amendment. This claim is not supported by precedent. White compares his case to cases where the Supreme Court has held that bar examiners and other governmental and governmentally-sanctioned regulatory bodies are required to accord procedural due process to applicants for licensing or certification.
See, e.g., Willner v. Committee on Character,
The premise of White’s argument — that his placement on the selection register involves an initial qualification for a type of professional employment — is incorrect. White’s placement on the register was part of the government’s hiring process for a particular job. The government’s relationship with an applicant for a particular job does not implicate the due process clause’s protection of liberty interests.
Justice Douglas eloquently summarized the values and ideals the Court has protected by application of the due process clause:
The right to work, I had assumed, was the most precious liberty that man possesses. Man has indeed as much right to work as he has to live, to be free, to own property. The American ideal was stated by Emerson in his essay on Politics, “A man has a right to be employed, to be trusted, to be loved, to be revered.” It does many men little good to stay alive and free and properties, if they cannot work. To work means to eat. It also means to live. For many it would be better to work in jail than to sit idle on the curb. The great values of freedom are in the opportunities afforded man to press to new horizons, to pit his strength against the faces of nature, to match skills with his fellow man.
Barsky v. Board of Regents,
Nor has White been debarred from all employment with the government — a circumstance that in our day might involve his constitutionally protected liberty interests. Thus, we should not be understood as in any way denigrating the importance of the government as employer. See Peters v. Hobby, supra. Nor are we denying the importance of the due process clause in regulating such an employment relationship once it is established. We simply do not believe that lawyers who wish to become administrative law judges with the United States possess a liberty interest in the mere pursuit of that employment.
In his reply brief and at oral argument, White changed his strategy somewhat and asserted that he had been deprived of a protected property interest. He argues that his spot on the selection register constituted such an interest. We find no more merit in this contention than we do in his
*666
liberty interest argument. The Supreme Court has spoken clearly on the circumstances necessary to find a constitutionally protected property interest.
See, e.g., Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill,
— U.S.-,
Despite the lack of merit in White’s constitutional claims, the district court was wrong to dismiss them for lack
oí jurisdiction.
The district court relied on
Carducci v. Regan,
Thus the OPM’s argument that White’s “cavalier” attitude towards his constitutional claim, and his mere “peppering” of his complaint with references to the fifth amendment bring this case within Carducci’s ambit is incorrect. The district court does not lack subject matter jurisdiction because a complaint does not fully set out the supporting precedent and legal theory behind a constitutional cause of action. The situation here is far removed from that of Carducci. In Carducci the court declined to decide an issue that was not briefed on appeal. The holding was merely an application of the well-settled principle that only those issues appealed will be considered by the court. (Except, of course, when the court’s authority or power to resolve the dispute is called into question.)
However, because we find White’s alleged constitutional claim to be so totally devoid of merit, and because the issue is purely a legal one, we see no need to remand this case to the district court. Although dismissal was on the wrong grounds, we affirm.
Conclusion
We are certain that this interlocking series of cases has gone on far too long. Having today canvassed the entire range of White’s complaints against the government and found them wanting, we hope that this litigation can finally come to an end.
Affirmed.
