Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STARR.
This case arises from an administrative denial of a within-grade salary increase to a government physician. Dr. Ayub K. Om-maya was at all times relevant to this case a GS-15 neurosurgeon employed by the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke (NINCDS), a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Dr. Ommaya was denied a within-grade increase in December 1979 because of his alleged failure to perform at an acceptable level of competence for the period from December 1976 to December 1, 1979. However, inasmuch as Dr. Ommaya had not. received a 60-day advance notice of performance deficiencies required by the governing regulation, 5 C.F.R. § 531.407(b), he was provided a 60-day review period by NIH within which to improve his performance. 5 C.F.R. § 531.-407(e)(5). Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 255.
*829 After the reevaluation of his performance at the conclusion of the sixty-day period, Dr. Ommaya was again denied the within-grade salary increase on February 6, 1980. Petitioner sought reconsideration of the two denials within NIH. The Director of NINCDS, however, sustained the denials. J.A. at 255.
Petitioner thereupon appealed the decisions to the Merit Systems Protection Board (“MSPB” or “the Board”). J.A. at 183. In an initial decision issued in May 1981, the MSPB presiding officiaíreversed NIH’s December 1979 denial of petitioner’s within-grade increase and ordered that the increase be granted retroactively. 1 In a series of findings, the presiding official, first, upheld the NIH’s charge that Dr. Ommaya failed to publish an adequate number of scientific articles on his research. J.A. at 186, 197. Second, the presiding official reversed the NIH on the charge that Dr. Ommaya had failed to focus his research in an adequately narrow fashion, concluding that Dr. Ommaya had never been instructed specifically to do so. J.A. at 191. Third, as to the charge that Dr. Ommaya had inadequately supervised clinical and research functions, the presiding official upheld the NIH’s assertion that Dr. Ommaya had improperly mixed research protocols, 2 but rejected the charge that he had failed to maintain proper patient records or to supervise research personnel. J.A. at 191-93. The presiding official concluded that because Dr. Ommaya’s “responsibility for publishing his clinical findings does not appear to have been a major part of his duties,” he was entitled to his within-grade salary increase. J.A. at 197. NIH filed a timely petition for review before the MSPB.
The Board issued its final opinion and order on June 16,1982, reversing the presiding official’s initial decision insofar as it overturned the agency’s December 1979 denial of the salary increase. The Board overturned as not supported by the evidence the presiding official’s conclusion that Dr. Ommaya was not specifically told to focus his research activities more narrowly. J.A. at 256-58. The Board also rejected the presiding official’s finding that “publication of scientific findings was not an important part of [Dr. Ommaya’s] duties.” J.A. at 259. Finally, the Board reversed the presiding official’s conclusion that Dr. Omma-ya had not failed to maintain patient records or to supervise research personnel. J.A. at 279-80. The petitioner thereupon appealed the Board’s adverse decision to this court.
While Dr. Ommaya’s appeal was pending, this court decided
White v. Department of the Army,
As in
White,
both the presiding official and the MSPB applied the substantial evidence test in reaching their respective
*830
decisions in this case.2
3
J.A. at 184, 197-98, 260-61. In no uncertain terms, the presiding official stated that the substantial evidence test, rather than the preponderance of the evidence test, was being applied. “In order for the agency’s decision denying an appellant’s within-grade increase to be upheld on appeal, it must be supported by substantial evidence.” J.A. at 184 (citing
Parker v. Defense Logistics Agency,
At oral argument, respondent, while acknowledging both
White’s
clear holding and its applicability to the case at hand, suggested that this court apply the doctrine of harmless error and affirm the Board’s decision.
See Doe v. Hampton,
Under settled law, application of the harmless error doctrine is appropriate when it is clear that the error complained of would not have affected the result in the case. Thus, in
Doe v. Hampton, supra,
While the MSPB’s suggestion is not without appeal, we are nonetheless constrained to conclude that
White
precludes the application of the harmless error doctrine to cases such as the one at hand. In
White, we
specifically rejected the very similar argument that the MSPB’s decision at issue there should be affirmed “because an independent assessment of the evidence would show that the personnel action would in any case be sustainable under the preponderance of the evidence standard.”
White,
In White’s wake, remand in this case seems inescapable, notwithstanding the obvious care with which the Board reached its *831 decision. 4 Indeed, remand seems particularly called for where, as here, the presiding ■ official had ruled in favor of the petitioning employee in the first instance. Moreover, where, as here, the error goes to the entire proceeding, inasmuch as all of the evidence was considered under the substantial evidence test, we are reluctant to conclude that the harmless error doctrine should be applied.
We are fortified in this disposition by the classic statement of the rationale of the harmless error doctrine, in which the Supreme Court suggested that departures from an
express command of Congress
should not be deemed harmless. In
Kottea-kos v. United States,
a criminal case, Justice Rutledge, speaking for the Court, suggested two categories of cases to which the doctrine should not apply, namely, “where the departure is from a constitutional norm or a specific command of Congress.”
As demonstrated above, the Board here has clearly departed, in light of the supervening decision in White, from the congressional command that agency denials of a within-grade salary increases be reviewed under a preponderance of the evidence standard. In such circumstances, the dictum in Kotteakos, coupled with the holding in White, lead us to decline the invitation to invoke the harmless error doctrine in the context of this case. 6 We, of course, intimate no view on the question to be resolved by the Board on remand, namely whether the NIH’s actions challenged by the petitioner are supported under the preponderance of the evidence standard.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The presiding official sustained the February 1980 decision, however, “since the first negative determination has been found not to be supported by the evidence, [the] ruling on the second negative determination will have no effect on my finding that [Dr. Ommaya] was entitled to his within-grade increase at the end of his waiting period.” J.A. at 198.
. As the presiding official explained in his decision:
A protocol is therapy from which certain determinations are made, namely, (1) the “toxicity of drugs or mode of treatment,” (2) the “efficacy of that drug or mode of treatment” against an illness or pathology, and (3) the drug’s ability to “behave better than other standard modes of therapy in a given clinical situation.” Tr., p. V-61. The consequences of mixing protocols would be the creation of a new protocol.
J.A. at 192-93.
. In doing so, the presiding official and the MSPB followed the MSPB’s interpretation of 5 U.S.C. § 7701 as set forth in
Parker v. Defense Logistics Agency,
. The Third and Fifth Circuits, in concluding that section 7701 requires application of a preponderance of the evidence standard, also remanded for reconsideration of the agency’s decision under the appropriate evidentiary standard.
See Stankis v. EPA,
. Although a criminal case, Kotteakos has generally been recognized as setting forth the Supreme Court’s classic discussion of the doctrine’s applicability in both civil and criminal cases. See 11 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2883, at 276-79 (1973).
. Petitioner has also argued that the MSPB failed to comply with its statutory procedures in granting NIH’s petition for review from the presiding official’s decision in favor of Dr. Om-maya and in reversing the presiding official’s determination in part. Brief for Appellant at 26-31. These arguments are without merit.
First, our recent decision in
Dunning v. NASA,
Petitioner’s argument that the MSPB may not substitute its findings for those of the presiding official must likewise be rejected. It is clear that the Board may substitute its judgment for that of the presiding official.
See Williams v. Veterans Admin.,
