Betty FRIEDMAN, Executrix of the Estate of Joseph Friedman, Deceased, v. The UNITED STATES.
No. 377-60.
United States Court of Claims.
Nov. 7, 1962.
Rehearing Denied Jan. 11, 1963.
310 F.2d 381
DAVIS, Judge.
Charles M. Munnecke, Washington, D. C., with whom was Asst. Atty. Gen., William H. Orrick, Jr., for defendant.
DAVIS, Judge.
The plaintiff is the widow and executrix of Dr. Joseph Friedman who served in the Army on active duty as a medical officer from January 9, 1941, to January 30, 1947. She sues for disability retirement pay alleged to have been arbitrarily denied her husband.
During his service Dr. Friedman suffered a number of periods of serious illness and underwent considerable hospitalization. In 1944-1946 he had a series of boards to canvass his capacity for continued service, the last of which was a Retiring Board at Walter Reed General Hospital which decided on October 25, 1946, that he was not permanently incapacitated for active service, but also recommended that he be placed on a period of temporary limited duty not in excess of six months, with re-examination and reevaluation at the end of that time. This was not done and he was released, at his own request, on January 30, 1947, not for physical disability. The plaintiff claims that in December 1946, before his release, Major Friedman wrote to Walter Reed, in response to an official request that he indicate whether he wished to remain on temporary limited service for six months or be separated at once, asking that he be recalled to active duty at the end of six months from his appearance before the Retiring Board (which had been in October 1946), for the purpose of re-examination and reevaluation at the hospital. What is said to be the decedent‘s office copies of such an exchange of letters is presented to us. The defendant answers
As our statement of the case implies, this is another suit for disability retirement pay in which the first issue is whether the claim is barred by the six-year statute of limitations,
We discuss first the course of this court‘s past decisions on the time-bar in pay cases, including the rulings in the disability retirement area. Next we consider afresh the primary contention pressed by the plaintiffs in this and related cases: Does the determination of the Board for Correction of Military Records denying a claim for disability retirement ground a new cause of action upon which the claimant has six years to sue in this court? Finally, we treat the limitations problem as it is presented in this particular case.
I. THE COURSE OF THIS COURT‘S DECISIONS ON THE LIMITATIONS BAR IN PAY CASES
We emphasize at the outset that, in canvassing the court‘s prior decisions, we have been mainly guided by our holdings, as distinguished from dicta and observations not truly part of the rationale of the decisions. Also, because the place of limitations in disability retirement cases becomes clearer when seen as part of the general design of our rulings on that problem in pay cases of all types, we begin with a discussion of the different kinds of pay litigation from the standpoint of the time-bar.
A. The “continuing claim” cases. Over the years, the court‘s pay cases (military and civilian) concerned with the issue of limitations have often applied the so-called “continuing claim” theory, i. e., periodic pay claims arising more than six years prior to suit are barred, but not those arising within the six-year span even though the administrative refusal to pay the sum claimed may have occurred, or the statute on which the claim is grounded may have been enacted, prior to six years. These were suits for additional pay at a higher grade, or claiming greater compensation (under a statute or regulation) than the claimant was receiving, or seeking special statutory increments or allowances, etc. The important characteristics of all these cases were: (a) Congress had not entrusted an administrative officer or tribunal with the determination of the claimant‘s eligibility for the particular pay he sought; (b) the cases turned on
B. Cases (other than disability retirement cases) in which the cause of action does not accrue until after a determination entrusted by Congress to an administrative official.
1. Concomitantly with its use of the “continuing claim” theory, the court has applied another principle in a different type of case. That second principle governs situations where Congress has deliberately given an administrative body the function of deciding all or part of the claimant‘s entitlement, i. e., where Congress has interposed an administrative tribunal between the claimant and the court. In those instances the claim does not accrue until the executive body has acted (if seasonably asked to act) or declines to act. So also where Congress
Like the “continuing claim” theory, this second principle fits with general limitations law which recognizes that in appropriate cases conditions precedent to the accrual of a cause of action can be established by statute, contract, or common law, and that where such a condition precedent has been created the claim does not ripen until the condition is fulfilled. See Sese v. United States, 113 F.Supp. 658, 125 Ct.Cl. 526, 528-530.
2. Earlier cases in this court of this general type are Taylor v. United States, 14 Ct.Cl. 339, 353, aff‘d 104 U.S. 216, 221-222, 26 L.Ed. 721 (statute required demand upon the Secretary); Lawton v. United States, 18 Ct.Cl. 595, 601, aff‘d 110 U.S. 146, 149, 3 S.Ct. 545, 28 L.Ed. 100 (same); Harrison v. United States, 20 Ct.Cl. 175 (same); Louisiana v. United States, 22 Ct.Cl. 284, 288, aff‘d 123 U.S. 32, 37, 8 S.Ct. 17, 31 L.Ed. 69 (General Land Office required to consider State‘s proof); Horton v. United States, 31 Ct.Cl. 148, 150, 157 (administrative determination relating to informer‘s award). More recent cases are Schaeffer and Robbins v. United States, 114 Ct.Cl. 568, 570, cert. denied, 344 U.S. 854, 73 S.Ct. 90, (determination by Maritime Commission of just compensation for requisitioned vessels); Smith v. United States, 67 Ct.Cl. 182 (same); cf. Oro Fino Consolidated Mines, Inc. v. United States, 92 F.Supp. 1016, 118 Ct.Cl. 18, 21-22.4
3. In recent years the main field in which the court has applied this principle—aside from the disability retirement cases (to be considered infra)—is that of adverse personnel actions against federal employees (refusal of appointment to the federal service; discharge, separation, dismissal, or removal; refusal of reinstatement; reduction in grade; compulsory retirement). In those cases the court has recognized that Congress has entrusted the administrators with a large measure of discretion and has in effect established an executive agency as the primary tribunal for determining whether certain adverse action should be taken against the employee. Accordingly, the court has not applied the “continuing claim” theory but, instead, has viewed the entire cause of action as accruing once the appropriate agency has finally acted.
The first such case was Middleman v. United States, 91 Ct.Cl. 306, decided in 1940. A civil service employee was dismissed on October 14, 1931—he claimed unlawfully—and suit was not filed until January 2, 1940. The court held the entire action barred by limitations. We read the summary opinion as ruling that discharges are outside the reach of the “continuing claim” doctrine because the administrative agency has been granted
These decisions are not inconsistent with, or a departure from, the “continuing claim” series. The differing results flow from the existence of two separate categories of claims—“continuing claims” which are independent of administrative determination and those other claims dependent on prior administrative evaluation. The discretionary personnel-action cases do not fall into the “continuing claim” group, but, rather, into the second class in which the cause of action accrues only after final administrative decision, and then accrues as a whole. There are good reasons of policy for refusing to apply the “continuing claim” principle to such cases. The Feldman opinion, supra, points out that discharged employees should not be permitted to wait years before suing. The same is true of employees aggrieved by other personnel actions, such as refusals to appoint or demotions. Judicial relief should be sought promptly so that the administrators can know whether the employee should be reinstated, restored to his former grade, etc. Even though this court grants only money relief, its rulings on the legal issues normally determine whether the employee will be restored to duty. There is also the dislocation and expense connected with the employee hired to replace the plaintiff. In sum, more than the plaintiff‘s own salary is at stake.
4. In deciding in these cases that limitations runs from the date of the administrative action, the court has sometimes had to choose which administrative action it will regard as operative. Where the statute requires that a particular administrative remedy must be exhausted (i. e., a mandatory remedy), there has ordinarily been no problem—the statute of limitations does not run until the completion of that process and, by like token, the claimant cannot bring suit until he has reasonably exhausted that remedy. See, e. g., New River Collieries Co. v. United States, 65 Ct.Cl. 205, 232-235; Smith v. United States, 67 Ct.Cl. 182, 206-208; Dawnic Steamship Corp. v. United States, 90 Ct.Cl. 537, 578-579; Utah Power & Light Co. v. United States, 67 Ct.Cl. 602, 606; Mistretta v. United States, 120 F.Supp. 264, 128 Ct.Cl. 41, 45; Cuiffo v. United States, 131 Ct.Cl. 60, 63-64, 66-67.
C. Disability retirement pay cases.7 The court has dealt with the limitations problem, in the disability retirement field, in over 30 decisions since 1954.8 Without attempting to harmonize
1. The claim accrues on final action of a board, not on release from active service. The court has consistently held that Congress has entrusted the military boards with the task of determining whether a serviceman should be retired for disability and therefore that no cause of action arises (and the statute of limitations does not run) until a proper board has acted or declined to act. See, e. g., Furlong v. United States, 152 F.Supp. 238, 138 Ct.Cl. 843, 845-846; Uhley v. United States, 121 F.Supp. 674, 128 Ct.Cl. 608, 611-612; Girault v. United States, 135 F.Supp. 521, 133 Ct.Cl. 135, 143-144; Odell v. United States, 139 F.Supp. 747, 134 Ct.Cl. 634, 638; Lipp v. United States. No final holding of the court is truly inconsistent with this position; and there is no final holding that mere separation from the service without disability retirement, in and of itself, starts the limitations period. On the contrary, Rafael San Millan v. United States, 139 Ct.Cl. 485, 487, 497, 499, in which the Retiring Board was not requested until 3 1/2 years after release, is a recent direct holding that limitations runs not from release but from the later refusal to grant a Retiring Board; see also Proper v. United States, 154 F.Supp. 317, 139 Ct.Cl. 511, Patterson v. United States, 141 Ct.Cl. 435, 438, and Frederick v. United States, Ct.Cl., 280 F.2d 844, for comparable direct holdings. The recent Lipp opinion also recognizes this basis of the cause of action.9 Thus, the court has uniformly applied to this type of case
2. There is no tolling by further consideration after final board action. The court has also held, with one possible exception, that where a proper board has acted finally the running of the statute is not tolled by later consideration by other boards or agencies. In particular, where full action by a Retiring Board had been had (or refused), later review by the Disability Review Board or the Correction Board does not toll the statute. Rosnick v. United States, 129 F.Supp. 958, 132 Ct.Cl. 1; Girault v. United States, 135 F.Supp. 521, 133 Ct.Cl. 135, 143-145; Duff v. United States, 133 Ct.Cl. 161; Levine v. United States, 137 F.Supp. 955, 133 Ct.Cl. 774, 779-780; Odell v. United States, 139 F.Supp. 747, 134 Ct.Cl. 634; MacFarlane v. United States, 140 F.Supp. 420, 134 Ct.Cl. 755; Soukaras v. United States, 140 F.Supp. 797, 135 Ct.Cl. 88, cert. denied, 352 U.S. 918, 77 S.Ct. 214, 1 L.Ed.2d 122; Barker v. United States, 140 F.Supp. 415, 135 Ct.Cl. 42, cert. denied, 352 U.S. 935, 77 S.Ct. 224, 1 L.Ed.2d 161; Levadi v. United States, 146 F.Supp. 455, 137 Ct.Cl. 97, cert. denied, 353 U.S. 917, 77 S.Ct. 665, 1 L.Ed.2d 664; Conlin v. United States, 146 F.Supp. 833, 137 Ct.Cl. 128, cert. denied, 353 U.S. 916, 77 S.Ct. 663, 1 L.Ed.2d 663; Hutchinson v. United States, 149 F.Supp. 156, 137 Ct.Cl. 889; Lipp v. United States, No. 384-58, decided April 4, 1962. These cases hold that the final action of the first proper board to act (finally) is decisive for limitations purposes.
The possible exception is Frederick v. United States, (the opinion in which contains no now-relevant discussion of limitations). The plaintiff was discharged in 1945 after a Retiring Board found him disabled but his disability not service-connected; in 1952 he applied to the Disability Review Board which affirmed the Retiring Board‘s findings; in March 1954 he applied to the Correction Board which (after proceedings the court held to be irregular) refused to grant him disability retirement; suit was begun in 1956. The court‘s opinion does not refer to the prior cases on limitations to which we have just referred, and discusses that subject only in the context of deciding whether the plaintiff should recover his pay back to the date of his separation or only for the six years prior to suit; of the majority, Judges Madden and Littleton thought the former and the Chief Judge the latter, and the judgment was limited to the six prior years. (Judges Whitaker and Laramore dissented.) Since there is no explanation in the majority opinion, one must speculate as to basis for the silent holding that the entire claim was not time-barred. There are at least two possible rationales which would not conflict with the line of cases beginning with Rosnick.10 In any event, the absence of discussion in the opinion precludes us from treating Frederick as a “hard” or full precedent.
4. Where there is no Retiring Board, the claim accrues on action of the Correction Board.—The court has also held that claims were not barred where the serviceman was released (prior to the six-year period) without having or requesting a Retiring Board (and without being misled into failing to ask for one) and where the first board to which request was made was the Correction Board (which acted adversely or declined to act within six years prior to suit). In Proper v. United States, 154 F.Supp. 317, 318, 139 Ct.Cl. 511, 512, 515, the first board to which the plaintiff (who was released in April 1948) applied (in 1954) was the Correction Board; suit was brought in May 1954. The court held that “because of the peculiar facts and circumstances * * * Correction Board proceedings were the only ones open to this plaintiff, and the only administrative action ever taken on his claim for disability retirement with pay was in connection with his application to that Board.”11 In Patterson v. United States, 141 Ct.Cl. 435, 438, the plaintiff was released without a Retiring Board in March 1946 and did not seek relief until he applied to the Correction
Although they hold that limitations does not defeat the suit of an officer who first brings his claim for disability retirement to the Correction Board, the Proper and Patterson cases are not incompatible with the other decisions holding that the claim arises upon the final action of the Retiring Board. The rationale of all the cases, taken together, is that Congress has given the function of deciding entitlement to disability retirement to the Secretary, acting with or through a statutory board, and that the claim does not accrue until final action on the basis of the determination of the first competent board to decide. As this court has said, “All of these boards, the Retiring Board, the Disability Review Board, and the Board for Correction of Military Records act only in an advisory capacity to the Secretary of War. If his decision on the retirement rights of an officer is alleged to have been arbitrary, then the officer‘s right to come to the court for redress accrues as soon as the arbitrary decision is rendered.” Girault v. United States, 135 F.Supp. 521, 526, 133 Ct.Cl. 135, 144, quoted in Lipp. Either the Retiring Board or the Correction Board is a proper board to perform this function of advising the Secretary;12 and where a Retiring Board has not been had or requested, the officer‘s application to the Correction Board together with the action of that Board take the place of the Retiring Board‘s function in triggering the statute of limitations. The Correction Board becomes the first proper board to act (or to be asked to act) on the matter, and the claim does not ripen until that Board‘s action is final. The single judicial claim—not a new cause of action—never accrues (under the general principles discussed supra) until the Correction Board‘s decision. In that sense the Correction Board proceeding becomes a mandatory remedy; without it, the case in this court would be dismissed as premature on the ground that the plaintiff did not seek or obtain a final decision within the administrative hierarchy.13
5. The Lipp decision.—Lipp v. United States, supra, was a case in which the plaintiff requested a Retiring Board in 1948, and again in 1949 and 1950. The opinion followed and was in accord with the Rosnick line, governing instances in
6. “New cause of action.“—The main burden of the present argument of the plaintiffs in this and related cases is that Correction Board action always gives rise to a new cause of action on which the statute will not run until six years after the Correction Board‘s final action—regardless of prior determinations by the Retiring Board or the Disability Review Board. The only ruling of the court which gives real support to that contention is the interlocutory holding in Knight v. United States, No. 64-60, Ct.Cl., decided January 18, 1961, which was expressly overturned in the Lipp opinion.14 We do not find any other decision (as distinguished from general observation) of the court which rests on or invokes this theory.
(a) The Knight decision is contrary to the holdings in the cases, discussed supra, refusing to toll the statute where final action of a proper board has been had, and relief is then sought from other boards (including the Correction Board).15 It is said by the present plaintiffs that in those cases no point was made that action by the Correction Board grounded a new cause of action; we are not certain that this is so but in any event it is implicit in those rulings that the only claim upon which suit could be brought necessarily accrued upon final action by the initial board. That is the foundation-stone of the rationale of those decisions. It would be wholly technical to distinguish them on the ground that the plaintiffs had not formulated their arguments in terms of the creation of a new, separate, cause of action as a result of the Correction Board‘s decision. If the present plaintiffs’ theory is to be adopted, those cases would, in effect, have to be overruled, at least partially.16 On the other hand, in overruling Knight, the Lipp decision did not overrule any other holding if Lipp is confined to the only class it purports to cover (i. e., prior final board action more than six years
(b) It is true that there are expressions in some of the other opinions of the court which can be read, if isolated from the facts and holding of the particular case, as giving support to the general theory that Correction Board action engenders a fresh cause of action. None of these expressions is clear, decisive, or truly relevant, or represents a holding.
First, there are general statements that arbitrary action by the Correction Board might ground a claim (Rosnick v. United States, 132 F.Supp. 478, 132 Ct.Cl. 1, 5, 6; Carlin v. United States, 100 F.Supp. 451, 121 Ct.Cl. 643; Betts v. United States, 132 F.Supp. 478, 132 Ct.Cl. 530). This is correct as a generalization, but it does not mean that where a claim is judicially barred by limitations an arbitrary refusal by the Correction Board to grant it will necessarily create a new judicial cause of action.18 Second, there are cases in which the claim was held free of limitations—for one or another of the reasons discussed above, which do not depend on the creation of a new claim through Correction Board action—in which the opinion also uses language which is said to suggest that a new claim existed (Friedman v. United States, 158 F.Supp. 364, 141 Ct.Cl. 239, 254-256, explicitly leaving the issue open; Towell v. United States, No. 162-59, Ct.Cl., decided June 8, 1960, slip op., pp. 10-11, reference to everything prior to Correction Board action being barred by limitations; Proper v. United States, 154 F.Supp. 317, 139 Ct.Cl. 511, 512-513, possible implication that Secretary‘s action in 1955, after Correction Board proceedings, created the claim). But these passing, somewhat ambiguous, observations do not indicate that (except in Knight) the court as a whole has accepted, or decided on the basis of, the theory that Correction Board action normally creates a new claim.
Third, there are cases, not involving eligibility for disability retirement, in which the court has allowed a recovery which takes account of more than a six-year period, on the ground that the claim was timely because founded on the action of a board. In Seabrook v. United States, 140 F.Supp. 787, 135 Ct.Cl. 190, the initial Retiring Board held in 1946 that the plaintiff was not entitled to disability retirement, but two years later (in 1948) the Navy reopened his case (at his request) and a new Retiring Board held that he was disabled. He was not, however, paid retired pay for the period between his release from duty in 1946 and his placement on the retired list in 1948. Suit was brought in May 1954. The court held (following earlier decisions such as Holt v. United States, 140 F.Supp. 268, 134 Ct.Cl. 801, Hamrick v. United States, 96 F.Supp. 940, 120 Ct.Cl. 17, and Ramsey v. United States, 107 F.Supp. 957, 123 Ct.Cl. 504) that since the second board had held his disability incident to service it necessarily followed as a matter of law that the plaintiff was entitled to retirement pay from the date of his release (but recovery was limited to the six-year period prior to the bringing of suit). Similarly, in Brown v. United States, 141 Ct.Cl. 557, the serviceman was released in 1946 (after appearing before a Retiring Board) without disability retirement pay. On May 10, 1949, the Disability Review Board reversed this finding, but he was not given disability retired pay for the period from 1946 to 1949. In 1952, he applied to the Correction Board to modify the records so as to entitle him to this back pay, but the Board refused to do so. Suit was
These cases—Seabrook, Brown, Caddington, and Eicks—stand not for the general proposition that any action of the Correction Board creates a new cause of action (for limitation purposes), but for a considerably narrower rule. Brown, Seabrook and Caddington clearly dealt with implementation of a favorable board decision and in that sense the claim was, and had to be, founded on the board‘s own action. It was a necessary prerequisite.19 Eicks can be viewed in the same light, as implementing the favorable decision in 1944 granting the plaintiff disability retirement. The court thought it necessary to correct the plaintiff‘s records to show the accumulated leave (in order to compute the additional pay he sought) and only the Correction Board could make the required correction.20
7. Summary: As our discussion has shown, the main course of the court‘s decisions on the time-bar in the disability retirement field reveals a well-structured design:
(a). The judicial claim for disability retirement pay does not accrue on release from active duty but rather on final ac-
(b). Normally, the Retiring Board is the proper board, but where the claimant has not had or sought a Retiring Board, his claim does not accrue until final action by the Correction Board (which in that instance stands in the place of the Retiring Board as the proper tribunal to determine eligibility for disability retirement).
(c). A board‘s action (or failure to act) is not final if (i) the claimant has been misled, (ii) the board‘s decision is tentative and invites reopening, (iii) the armed service itself reopens the case, or (iv) there are other circumstances depriving the action or non-action of finality.
(d). Once a final decision is had, the claim accrues, the limitations period begins to run, and there is no tolling of the statute by reason of further applications to other boards or agencies (including the Correction Board).
(e). Once a final decision is had, adverse determinations by other boards, including the Correction Board, do not give rise to a new cause of action.
(f). A claim for entitlement to disability retirement status and pay—of the type requiring discretionary action by a board and the Secretary—is not a “continuing claim” but accrues as a whole (once it accrues). However, other types of pay claims not dependent on a board finding—including claims for increased retirement pay because of new legislation, etc.—are “continuing” claims.
II. DOES ACTION BY THE CORRECTION BOARD CREATE A NEW CLAIM?
The plaintiffs in this and other cases also urge that, regardless of the course of our prior decisions, we should now hold that action by the Correction Board gives rise to a new cause of action, despite a prior ruling by a Retiring Board or the Disability Review Board, on which the claimant has six years to sue. In deference to these requests, we have carefully considered the issue de novo and afresh. We have again concluded that where, as in the Lipp type of case, the Correction Board is in effect reviewing a prior adverse determination by a Retiring Board or the Disability Review Board (or a refusal to convene such a board), the Correction Board‘s adverse decision does not give rise to a new cause of action. We continue, however, to agree with our past rulings that, where the Correction Board is not a reviewing tribunal but is the first board to consider or determine finally the claimant‘s eligibility for disability retirement, the single cause of action accrues upon the Correction Board‘s final decision.
A. Judicial review. The normal rule, where a proper administrative tribunal has denied or refused to consider a claim and further administrative remedies are permissive not mandatory, is that the judicial cause of action arises immediately upon the initial tribunal‘s action and does not start again upon a subsequent administrative decision affirming that holding. It is said, however, that that rule should not apply to the Correction Board remedy because Congress intended that there be judicial review of all Correction Board decisions. We find this argument unpersuasive.
1. It should be noted, first, that it is far from plain to what extent any judicial review of Correction Board action was affirmatively intended by Congress. The statute and the legislative materials are not clear and arguments can be made both ways.21 The Government has often argued that Congress did not intend any review of Correction Board decisions. But for us the answer has already been given by the court‘s decisions—which have consistently held that in dis-
2. But it does not follow from the general existence of judicial review for Correction Board decisions that those decisions create a new substantive cause of action which has its own, new, limitations period. That a tribunal‘s rulings are subject to judicial review means that the administrative decision is open to scrutiny by a court, if a timely judicial proceeding is filed—not that the administrative tribunal‘s decision, in itself, becomes the new measure and the new beginning of the plaintiff‘s judicial rights. There is a profound difference between a legislature‘s providing for further review of a ruling on a cause of action and its creating a new and independent cause of action. District Court decisions are reviewable in the Courts of Appeals, but the appellant‘s cause of action is grounded on the various substantive statutes or other substantive federal law (or state law in diversity cases), not on the provisions of the Judicial Code establishing review of District Court cases by the Courts of Appeals or giving the District Courts jurisdiction of that type of case. Similarly with the administrative agencies. In court cases coming from the National Labor Relations Board or the Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, the individual seeking judicial relief places his claim on the substantive provisions of the National Labor Relations Act or the Securities Act, not on the provisions in those statutes for judicial review of agency proceedings. Judicial review and substantive claim are entirely separate concepts. The former is usually provided to see whether the latter is valid or has been properly enforced, but the establishment of review does not ipso facto create a new substantive claim.
In short, as applied to our problem, the existence of judicial review does not, in itself, supply any basis for asserting that the limitations period runs from the time of the Correction Board‘s decision. All that the existence of judicial review means is that the Board‘s decision will be reviewed, in a proper case, if a timely suit is brought. That is what the House Committee meant, in part, when it said that the courts would not be precluded from reviewing Correction Board cases “under appropriate circumstances” (H. Rept. No. 449, 82d Cong., p. 3).
3. It may be said, however, that on this view it is quite possible that the six-year statute of limitations will have run before completion of the Correction Board proceeding, and therefore that there will be no judicial review of the Board‘s determination even if it is wholly arbitrary and review would be “appropriate” if suit were timely brought (cf. Knight v. United States, No. 64-60, decided Jan. 18, 1961, slip op., p. 2). This
The first is that it is inherent in all statutes of limitations that claims otherwise justifiable and justiciable will be denied because suit is not brought in time.22 Nor is it unique in federal law to have an administrative remedy immune from judicial review if a timely proceeding is not commenced. For example, the ten-year limitations statute for the General Accounting Office (
The second answer is that the plaintiff can bring suit and obtain judicial review within six years of his Retiring Board proceeding; he can then ask the court to suspend the judicial proceedings to allow resort to (or completion of) Correction Board proceedings (if it is desirable to have Correction Board review). See this suggestion in Odell v. United States, 139 F.Supp. 747, 134 Ct.Cl. 634, 645-646 (original opinion) and Ogden v. Zuckert, 111 U.S.App.D.C. 398, 298 F.2d 312, 317 (C.A.D.C.). In that way there can be full completion of the administrative remedy, if that is appropriate.
Third, a claimant who has had a Retiring Board proceeding—or who is sufficiently aware of a possible disability that he requests a Retiring Board (and is turned down)—ordinarily has adequate notice of his potential entitlement to disability retirement pay so that he can and should bring suit within six years; he is not caught unawares by the sudden development of a latent or progressive condition that he reasonably thought non-disabling at the time of his separation. Such a claimant should be fully able to protect himself by bringing suit in time.23
B. Exhaustion of administrative remedies.
1. Another argument is that a Correction Board proceeding should be viewed as mandatory not permissive, and therefore as a necessary prerequisite to the accrual of a cause of action for disability retirement pay in this court.24 The District of Columbia Circuit recently held in Ogden v. Zuckert, 111 U.S.App.D.C. 398, 298 F.2d 312 (Dec. 1961), that exhaustion of Correction Board proceedings was not required—agreeing with this court‘s Girault decision (and those following it). Again we see no adequate
2. Another facet of the exhaustion argument is that, even though resort to the Correction Board is permissive not mandatory, the cause of action does not accrue, if an application is made to the Board, until its final decision. Reliance is placed on Keeney v. United States, No. 11-58, Ct.Cl., decided June 8, 1960, discussed supra, in which the court declared that, although a veteran‘s appeal to the Civil Service Commission from adverse personnel action is permissive, still limitations does not run until the Commission‘s final decision. It is not at all clear, and we do not decide, that under Keeney the veteran‘s appellate remedy is truly permissive, but in any case we shall not apply the Keeney rule—even if it be considered to be that a wholly permissive remedy tolls the statute—to disability retirement cases. Appeals to the Civil Service Commission in veterans’ personnel matters must normally be taken within a short time after the adverse action by the employing agency. A six-year period from the agency‘s decision would almost never run before appeal had to be taken, and normally the appeal would be concluded in a few months. Accordingly, the employee is not in a position, by appealing, to postpone the final administrative decision for any lengthy period. On the other hand, until recently, review by the Correction Board or the Disability Review Board could be sought well after the end of the six-year span and a claimant who had allowed the six-year limitations period to elapse could easily revive his judicial claim by applying to one or both of these Boards. The claimant could, in effect, pick his own time for suit; he could delay it for many years if he wished to do so, or he could bring it on at once if that was his desire. The long period for applying to the Correction and Disability Review Boards makes it inadvisable and inappropriate to carry over the suggested rule to the disability retirement area. The potentialities of delay and manipulation are too great.
C. Tucker Act. Still another contention is based on the Tucker Act (now
We have already noted the relevant analogies showing that the Correction Board statute is not the basis of the claim. The legislation upon which is founded a federal claim pursued in the District Courts is the substantive statute, not the provisions of
Moreover, if every Correction Board decision creates a new cause of action under the 1951 Act—a cause of action which is judicially cognizable—it would follow that every ruling of the Boards, not merely monetary cases (such as disability retirement claims) but all rulings on the manifold types of disciplinary and other questions coming before the Boards, would be reviewable in the courts of the District of Columbia by declaratory judgment action or suit for injunctive relief under
D. Other considerations. Two other potent considerations argue against accepting the thesis that Correction Board action creates a new, independent, cause of action, upon which suit may be brought within six years.
1. The first is that it is unusual to have two or more causes of action stemming from the same events or transactions, but arising at wholly different times. Theoretically, it would not be impossible for Congress to make such provision, but in the absence of some definite legislative indication to that effect it is preferable to follow the normal principle
The plaintiffs’ theory would mean that a claimant might have three separate causes of action on which suit could be brought successively. He could sue immediately after the Retiring Board decision and if he lost at that time could appeal (in many cases) to the Disability Review Board and then file another suit and if he lost again could then proceed before the Correction Board and, losing there, file still another suit. These successive suits would not be subject to a defense of res judicata (since the claims would be different, under the theory of a “new cause of action“) and might even avoid collateral estoppel on the basis of some new aspect of disability, etc. The claimant could thus have three separate and successive causes of action in this court, each with its own six-year limitations period.26
2. Another reason for declining to recognize the Correction Board decision as starting a new six-year period is that most of these disability retirement cases involve an appraisal of the facts of the claimant‘s health when he left the service a considerable time before suit (usually in 1946-1948). In World War II cases, review by the Correction Board could be sought until October 1961; review by the Disability Review Board could be sought until fifteen years after release or retirement. Added to these long periods must be the significant factor that this court has been allowing the creation of full de novo records in disability retirement cases. As the court has pointed out (Odell v. United States, 139 F.Supp. 747, 134 Ct.Cl. 634, 645; Gordon v. United States, 140 F.Supp. 263, 134 Ct.Cl. 840, 843), ancient controversies, requiring the court to evaluate facts of the distant past, would be presented if claims were regularly allowed to wait until after the Correction Board or Disability Review Board proceedings. One of the prime objectives of the statute of limitations is to prevent factual issues from being tried too long after the events occurred—with witnesses dead or gone, records lost or destroyed, and memories confused or dimmed—at a time when the past cannot be reconstructed with any pretense of accuracy.
It is true, of course, that the same lengthy time can elapse where the Correction Board is the first Board to act (see Proper v. United States, 154 F.Supp. 317, 139 Ct.Cl. 511, and Patterson v. United States, 141 Ct.Cl. 435, discussed supra) as where the Correction Board is reviewing a Retiring Board‘s earlier decision. The answer is that Congress has deliberately given servicemen this lengthy period in which to apply to the Correction Board although no Retiring Board has been called or asked; in effect, Congress has allowed many servicemen a very long time in which to seek retirement pay and has not insisted that application be made at or upon release from service. We do not depart from our prior decisions embodying the principle that the claim for disability retirement pay does not accrue until the final action of a proper board simply because we may possibly believe too long a time has elapsed or been allowed. But it is worth noting that in cases in which the lapse of time puts the Government at too great a disadvantage in its proof before the Correction Board (or in this court) a rejection of the claim by the Board may well not be arbitrary in view of the difficulties of proof due to the passage of the years.
In discussing this double need to have the judicial determination of the facts take place at a moment not too far removed from the actual events and also to allow claimants an adequate (but not overly long) period to bring suit, we emphasize that we do not propose to make our rulings on these limitations issues turn on whether, in the particular case then before us, it would be easy or hard to reconstruct the facts accurately. Of course, the formulation of the general rules can and should take account of different recurring categories of factual situations; one reason, for instance, why we believe that the statute does not commence to run until Correction Board action where it is the first board, is that many or most of those will be cases where the serviceman did not know or appreciate his disability at the time of his release. But the classification is general and does not depend on an appraisal of the individual facts or the appeal of the particular case.
E. Conclusions. Our conclusion on de novo consideration is that the court has been correct in its implicit holding, in disability retirement pay cases, that a decision by the Correction Board does not create a new claim founded on the 1951 Correction Board legislation. But we also adhere to the holdings that, where a Retiring Board has not been had or requested, the claim based on the retirement legislation does not accrue until final denial by the Correction Board; in that event, the Correction Board action does not create a new claim but simply ripens or accrues the plaintiff‘s single claim.
We believe that the general rules set forth at the end of Part I, supra, which we now reaffirm, (a) accord with the trend of our time-bar rulings in disability retirement pay cases; (b) are in harmony with the main line of this court‘s prior limitations decisions in the pay field generally; (c) are in harmony with the general principles governing the statute of limitations; (d) are fair to the plaintiff in giving him adequate time to bring suit and to protect his rights in court; (e) are fair to the Government in that they follow established general principles and Congressional legislation, and would not normally allow too great a time to elapse between suit and the facts on which the claim is predicated; (f) do not depend upon an ad hoc evaluation whether the particular claimant deserves a chance to recover or not; and (g) are sufficiently well-defined for both court and counsel to follow. Moreover, we believe that neither plaintiffs nor the Government can properly complain that the court has unfairly hurt them by refusing to follow past rulings; the state of the prior decisions is such that neither side can correctly argue that it has been lulled into action or inaction by a series of prior decisions which we would now be refusing to follow.27 On the contrary, as we have said, in our view the rules we affirm today conform
III. THE PRESENT CASE
The present case is almost identical with the Lipp case which we today reapprove. The decedent was accorded a Retiring Board before his release from active service in January 1947. He died in 1958. Relief was not sought from the Correction Board (by his wife) until 1960, and this suit was begun in that year. The only problem is whether the 1946 Retiring Board‘s recommendation that the officer be re-evaluated at the end of six months deprived its action (and his release from service) of the necessary finality so that no cause of action accrued until the denial by the Correction Board in 1960. Cf. Suter v. United States, 153 F.Supp. 367, 139 Ct.Cl. 466, 468, 469-70, 471; Friedman v. United States, 158 F.Supp. 364, 141 Ct.Cl. 239, 254-256; Charles W. Allin v. United States, 147 Ct.Cl. 459-65, 471-72, 474-76; Stanley Weiner v. United States, 148 Ct.Cl. 445-50, 455, 460-61, 463-64. We do not think that is so in this case since the officer, after his release and prior to his death in 1958 (11 years after his release), did not make any effort to obtain the contemplated re-evaluation. Whether or not Dr. Friedman made a request for re-evaluation in December 1946, before his final release from active duty on January 30, 1947,28 it is undisputed that he did nothing further and there is no adequate excuse given for his doing nothing from 1947 to 1958. See War Department Circular No. 303, 9 Oct. 1946, par. 18b (requiring written application for re-evaluation). In these circumstances, the cause of action accrued before 1954 (six years prior to suit) since he did nothing about his claim during the entire period from 1947 through 1953. In comparable cases in which the Retiring Board suggested later re-evaluation and the court held that the Board‘s action was not final because of that recommendation, the officer made efforts within one, two, or three years to obtain the promised re-evaluation; none delayed anywhere near as long as the officer in this case. See Friedman v. United States, 158 F.Supp. 364, 141 Ct.Cl. 239; Charles W. Allin v. United States, 147 Ct.Cl. 459-65; Stanley Weiner v. United States, 148 Ct.Cl. 445.
Accordingly, we hold that this suit is wholly barred by limitations. Plaintiff‘s motion for summary judgment is denied and the defendant‘s motion for summary judgment is granted. The petition will be dismissed.
JONES, Chief Judge, and DURFEE, LARAMORE and WHITAKER, Judges, concur.
APPENDIX
The legislative history is quite inconclusive with respect to preclusion of judicial review of Correction Board determinations.
1. The position that Congress affirmatively intended judicial review of Correction Board actions is founded upon (a) the deletion from the finality provision of the Correction Board statute (now
2. On the other hand, there are also indications in the legislative history pointing toward the conclusion that Correction Board decisions are not reviewable at all. First, it is clear that the Correction Boards were initially authorized in 1946 to provide an administrative substitute for the enactment of private bills for the correction of military or naval records; and such private laws were, of course, not reviewable by the courts (except for constitutionality); since the Correction Board stands in the place of such private legislation it can be argued that Board action should be equally immune from judicial review. Second, the original finality clause proposed for the 1951 amendment (the clause which initially provided that Board decisions “shall be final and conclusive * * * including review by the courts * * *“, which was later modified to omit the reference to the courts) was introduced with reference only to subsection (b), the money settlement section,30 and not with reference to subsection (a), which was the general provision granting power to the Secretaries to make corrections to remedy injustice or error. From the House hearings there is ground for the view that the reason this finality provision was
modified to delete all reference to the courts, and transferred from subsection (b) to subsection (a), was to make sure that the General Accounting Office (and this court) would not be precluded from passing on the monetary correctness of sums owing to a claimant as a result of a favorable decision by the Board, i. e., a Board decision correcting a military record in such a way that money would be owing the claimant. The General Accounting Office stressed its concern with compensation and not with the substantive aspects of a Board decision (see the dissent in Haislip, supra), and the changes in the finality clause appear to have been made (at least in part) to meet these objections. After these changes were made, there were statements in the course of a colloquy between Representative Vinson, the chairman of the full committee, and Representative Smart, the spokesman for the subcommittee, which seem to say (without being explicit as to judicial review) that Congress intended the Secretary‘s authority to be final and conclusive except for computation of amounts (See I Hearings before the House Committee on Armed Services [No. 27], Full Committee Hearings on * * * H.R. 1181 * * *, 82d Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 600-601 (June 5, 1951)).
This legislative history can be argued to define the “appropriate circumstances” (the term the Committee Report used, H.Rept. No. 449, 82d Cong., p. 3) which Congress envisaged for judicial review as being solely the question of the determination and computation of the amounts due as a result of a correction made by the Secretary. Once the Secretary has effected a correction which would entitle the applicant to recover money from the United States, under the Correction Board statute he cannot properly deny the applicant all the monies to which his
