Case Information
*2 Before D YK , B RYSON , and R EYNA , Circuit Judges. D YK , Circuit Judge .
James Antonellis, an officer in the United States Na- vy Reserve, appeals from a decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“Claims Court”) dismissing his back pay claim for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. See Antonellis v. United States , 106 Fed. Cl. 112 (2012). Antonellis alleged that he was enti- tled to back pay under the Military Pay Act, 37 U.S.C. § 206(a), because the Navy acted improperly in failing to assign him to a pay billet. The Claims Court dismissed Antonellis’ claim as nonjusticiable, reasoning that there were no standards by which it could review the Navy’s assignment decisions. We affirm.
B ACKGROUND
Antonellis has been a member of the Navy Reserve
since 1986. There is no dispute that he “has had a re-
spectable and upstanding career with the Navy.”
Antonel-
lis
, 106 Fed. Cl. at 113. Antonellis is a member of the
Ready Reserves, which includes the Selected Reserve and
the Individual Ready Reserve.
Id.
The Selected Reserve
is a paid unit; the Individual Ready Reserve is unpaid.
The Individual Ready Reserve includes Volunteer
Training Units, in which members perform their reserve
duties without pay.
See
Bureau of Naval Personnel
Instruction 1001.39F, Ch. 3, § 301 (Sept. 17, 2007).
Antonellis appears to contend that there is no relevant
difference in the duties performed by paid and unpaid
reserve members. Compl. ¶ 7,
Antonellis v. United
States
,
The National Command and Senior Officer Non-
Command Billet Screening and Assignment Board (the
“APPLY Board”) possesses delegated authority to appoint
officers to Selected Reserve billets.
Antonellis
, 106 Fed.
Cl. at 113–14. It assigns officers to billets pursuant to a
policy guidance letter issued by the Commander of the
Navy Reserve Forces Command (“Commander”). The
Commander’s guidance letter directs the APPLY Board to
convene panels to evaluate billet candidates based on
specified criteria and to “select the best qualified Officer”
for each billet. J.A. 30;
Antonellis
,
The Commander’s guidance letter also specifies the selection process. The APPLY Board member responsible for each application “prepare[s] and deliver[s] a briefing” regarding the application and recommends a numerical “confidence factor” to be “voted on by each [APPLY] Board member.” J.A. 29–30. Confidence factors range from 0 to 100 percent, with a score of 0 percent indicating that the applicant is “[n]ot competitive with other Officers” and a score of 100 percent indicating that the applicant is an “[o]utstanding Officer” who “should be screened for as- signment.” J.A. 30.
The Commander’s guidance letter also specifies the criteria to be used in evaluating each applicant. It lists “[p]roven and sustained superior performance in com- mand or other leadership positions” and “successful performance and leadership in combat conditions” as important factors and states that the APPLY Board “shall give favorable consideration to those Officers who have displayed superior performance while serving in Individ- ual Augmentee (IA) assignments in direct support of the Global War on Terrorism.” J.A. 32–33. The letter further indicates that the APPLY Board “shall give favorable consideration to those Officers with[] relevant graduate education, experience in specialized areas, and profes- sional military education.” J.A. 33. The letter does not specify, however, the weight to be given to each criterion in assigning the numerical confidence factor.
The confidence factor provides the basis upon which applicants are then ranked on a “precedence list.” J.A. 30. “The precedence list . . . establish[es] the sequence in which [applicants are] considered for assignments.” Id. The Board then conducts deliberations regarding each assignment. The Commander’s guidance letter states that the APPLY Board’s
goal [is] to select the best qualified Officer to a bil- let that the majority of the Board members con- sider the best match for the preference and qualifications of the Officer, the mission of the unit, and the requirements of the Supported command and billet.
Id.
From 2009 through 2011, Antonellis submitted sixty- nine applications for Selected Reserve billets to the APPLY Board, but he was not assigned to any Selected Reserve billet. Antonellis , 106 Fed. Cl. at 113. During that period, Antonellis was instead assigned to a Volun- teer Training Unit in the Individual Ready Reserve and he performed his reserve duties without pay. Id.
On October 12, 2011, Antonellis filed suit against the United States in the Claims Court. He attached the Commander’s guidance letter to his complaint and assert- ed that, based on his outstanding service record and the standards described in the Commander’s guidance letter, he “has been clearly entitled to a pay billet during the period of time he has . . . been turned down for such.” Compl. ¶ 8. He further alleged that the APPLY Board’s decision not to assign him to a Selected Reserve pay billet was “arbitrary, capricious, [and] unsupported by substan- tial evidence.” He sought over $64,700 in back pay. Antonellis , 106 Fed. Cl. at 114. The Claims Court found Antonellis’ claim nonjusticiable. Id. at 116. It assumed, without deciding, that the Commander’s guidance letter was legally binding, but it found that the letter merely “calls for the Board to make a subjective determination of which officers are the ‘best’ qualified and the ‘best match’ for each billet,” and thus failed to provide any justiciable standards for the court to apply. Id. at 116 & n.2. The Claims Court therefore dismissed Antonellis’ complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be grant- ed. at 116.
Antonellis timely appealed. We have jurisdiction un- der 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3). We review de novo the Claims Court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Cambridge v. United States , 558 F.3d 1331, 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2009).
D ISCUSSION I
When applicable, the Tucker Act confers jurisdiction
on the Claims Court and waives the United States’ sover-
eign immunity.
Greenlee Cnty., Ariz. v. United States
,
487 F.3d 871, 875 (Fed. Cir. 2007). However, “[t]he
Tucker Act itself does not create a substantive cause of
action; in order to come within the jurisdictional reach
and the waiver of the Tucker Act, a plaintiff must identify
a separate source of substantive law that creates the right
to money damages.”
Fisher v. United States
, 402 F.3d
1167, 1172 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc in relevant part).
Here, Antonellis relies on the Military Pay Act as the
pertinent money-mandating statute. Although the gov-
ernment appears to have challenged the Claims Court’s
Tucker Act jurisdiction below,
see Antonellis
, 106 Fed. Cl.
at 114, it does not press that argument on appeal. We in
any event must determine that we have jurisdiction. We
have long recognized that the Military Pay Act “provides
for suit in [the Claims Court] when the military, in viola-
tion of the Constitution, a statute, or a regulation, has
denied military pay.”
Dysart v. United States
, 369 F.3d
1303, 1315 (Fed. Cir. 2004);
see also Sanders v. United
States
,
II
The government urges that we should affirm the Claims Court. It argues that even if Antonellis could establish a violation of the instructions set forth in the Commander’s guidance letter (and that the letter was legally binding), the Claims Court cannot award him back pay. Alternatively, the government argues that the letter does not set forth judicially cognizable criteria. In order to understand the context of this controversy, some de- scription of prior authority is useful.
Unfortunately, our decisions and those of our prede- cessor court, the United States Court of Claims, do not always present a clear picture of the remedies available to a service member challenging a decision concerning promotion, separation, or reassignment. Nonetheless, several principles can be distilled from those cases.
First, civilian courts are reluctant to second-guess de-
cisions of the military authorities as to promotion, separa-
tion, or reassignment. We have emphasized that “the
military is entitled to substantial deference in the govern-
ance of its affairs.”
Dodson v. United States
, 988 F.2d
1199, 1204 (Fed. Cir. 1993);
see also Orloff v. Willoughby
,
Second, if a statute, regulation, or instruction speci-
fies the particular procedure to be followed in personnel
actions, and the plaintiff alleges that the required proce-
dure was not followed, a judicial remedy may be available.
When the military promulgates procedural regulations
and instructions and makes them the basis for a person-
nel action, that action is “subject to judicial review for
compliance with those regulations and instructions.”
Sargisson
, 913 F.2d at 921. When a party asserts that
the military violated a specific procedure mandated by
statute or regulation, “the test[s] or standards against
which this court measures the military’s conduct are
inherent: they are the applicable statutes and regula-
tions.”
Adkins v. United States
,
Some cases have given a broad scope to judicial re-
view of such procedural matters. In
Sanders
, the Court of
Claims, sitting en banc, reversed a non-promotion deci-
sion of the Air Force because the Air Force did not comply
with a statutory requirement “to consider him on the
basis of a record which portrayed his service career on ‘a
fair and equitable basis.’” 594 F.2d at 806–08, 814
(quoting 10 U.S.C. §§ 3442(c), 8442(c) (1976) (repealed
1980)). Similarly, in
Skinner v. United States
, the court
considered a claim that that the plaintiff’s non-selection
for a promotion had been based on ratings which had been
directed by superior officers and were therefore tainted by
“improper command influence.”
Third, contrary to the government’s argument, a back pay remedy under the Military Pay Act is available under some circumstances, based on a finding of procedural violations.
To be sure, back pay is not always available. For ex-
ample, in the promotions context we have noted that “the
Military Pay Act ordinarily does not give rise to a right to
the pay of the higher rank for which the plaintiff was not
selected.”
Smith v. Sec’y of the Army
,
The government attempts to derive a contrary rule
from
Palmer v. United States
, 168 F.3d 1310 (Fed. Cir.
1999) and our unpublished disposition in
King v. United
States
,
We find no such rule in those cases.
Palmer
simply
held that a service member could not recover back pay for
duties not performed,
Fourth, a complaint concerning procedural violations
must typically be brought first before a Board for the
Correction of Military Records. 10 U.S.C. § 1552.
Although there is generally no requirement that a plain-
tiff exhaust remedies with the applicable Corrections
Board before filing suit in the Claims Court,
Heisig v.
United States
,
Finally, a remedy is available only if the statute, regu-
lation, or instruction provides justiciable standards. This
is because a controversy is justiciable only if there are
“tests or standards for the court to apply.”
Voge
, 844 F.2d
at 780;
see also Baker v. Carr
, 369 U.S. 186, 217 (1962)
(noting that an issue is nonjusticiable if there is “a lack of
judicially discoverable and manageable standards for
resolving it”);
Coleman v. Miller
, 307 U.S. 433, 452–53
(1939) (finding no “criteria for . . . a judicial determina-
tion” of what constitutes a “reasonable time” in which to
ratify an amendment to the U.S. Constitution). Thus, in
Gilligan v. Morgan
, the Supreme Court held nonjusticia-
ble a challenge to the “training, weaponry[,] and orders of
the Ohio National Guard” because of “a lack of judicially
discoverable and manageable standards.”
Thus, even where a procedural violation is alleged,
the matter is nonjusticiable unless the pertinent regula-
tions or instructions provide sufficient “tests or stand-
ards” against which the court can measure the military’s
conduct.
Sargisson
, 913 F.2d at 921–22;
see also King
,
III
The government contends that, even if there were a procedural defect in the Navy’s billet assignments, “[An- tonellis] might be entitled to judicial review of whether procedures were followed, but he still cannot receive . . . money for a position [to which] he was not assigned.” Oral Arg. at 18:13–18:41. As discussed above, based on our past decisions and those of our predecessor court, we cannot agree with the government that Antonellis’ claim fails because monetary relief is categorically unavailable to redress a procedural violation resulting in the failure to assign him to a pay billet. At the same time, we agree with the Claims Court that Antonellis failed to allege a justiciable controversy as required by our authority.
Antonellis attempts to frame his claim as a challenge to the APPLY Board’s compliance with required proce- dures. Thus, he argues that the Commander’s guidance letter includes “pages of supporting procedure” which “specifically set forth the factors which are to be consid- ered by [the APPLY Board,] . . . prohibit from discussion or disclosure certain other factors[, and] . . . require the Board members to assign applicants a numerical ranking based on the assigned confidence factor derived from the available enumerated criteria.” Appellant’s Br. 12–13. A closer examination of Antonellis’ argument, however, reveals that he is not in substance alleging a procedural violation. In his complaint, Antonellis asserts, inter alia, that the APPLY Board’s failure to assign him to a Select- ed Reserve billet is “biased, unexplained,” Compl. ¶ 7, “arbitrary, capricious, unsupported by substantial evi- dence,” “a flagrant abuse of discretion, [and] in bad faith,” id. ¶ 10. Antonellis argues in his brief that “it is reasona- ble to infer that given [his] qualifications and exemplary record, the that APPLY Board failed to follow the proce- dures and criteria set forth in the [Commander’s guidance letter].” Appellant’s Br. 13. Apart from this proposed inference, however, Antonellis asserts no basis for con- cluding that the Navy’s assignment process was proce- durally defective. Indeed, at oral argument, counsel for Antonellis conceded that he lacked an adequate basis to even allege any specific procedural violation. Oral Arg. at 6:22–7:05. [2]
Even if Antonellis’ complaint could be read as alleging a procedural violation, as the Claims Court observed, the Commander’s guidance letter “lists the factors the Board should consider [in making billet assignments], but it does not specify the weight to be given to each factor.” Antonellis , 106 Fed. Cl. at 116. While the Commander’s guidance letter specifies in considerable detail the proce- dures to be followed, it ultimately directs Board members to
select the best qualified Officer to a billet that the majority of the Board members consider the best match for the preference and qualifications of the Officer, the mission of the unit, and the require- ments of the Supported command and billet.
J.A. 30. Courts are in no position to determine the “best qualified Officer” or the “best match” for a particular billet. Sargisson , 913 F.2d at 922. We therefore affirm the Claims Court’s dismissal of Antonellis’ com- plaint.
AFFIRMED C OSTS No costs.
Notes
[1] Prior to the enactment of DOPMA, if a service
member established a procedural defect in the promotions
process, his right to recover could be defeated if the gov-
ernment established harmless error.
See Sanders
, 594
F.2d at 814–18;
Hary v. United States
,
[2] At oral argument, Antonellis’ counsel suggested that the APPLY Board did not score and rank Antonellis as required by the Commander’s guidance letter. Oral Arg. at 6:02–6:16. However, he stated that he had not included that allegation in Antonellis’ complaint because he lacked a sufficient basis to make it: Q: “Well where does it—I don’t see where paragraph ten or any other thing you’ve called to our attention says he wasn’t ranked or scored.” A: “Because I can’t, until I can see what their evi- dence—” Q: “You don’t even allege it.” A: “Well . . . perhaps I should have. It’s hard to do that because you’re supposed to have a basis for making an allegation.” at 6:30–6:53.
