Lead Opinion
Opinion PER CURIAM.
Concurring Opinion filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
For the past nine years, appellant Clinton Smith, a black career civil servant, has sought disability benefits from his employer, the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”). The Federal Circuit affirmed OPM’s denial of disability benefits pursuant to direct, if limited, review in January 1986. Smith now appeals the district court’s dismissal of a separate Title VII claim based on his contention that OPM’s denial of benefits was discriminatorily motivated. We affirm the district court’s judgment dismissing the Title VII action. We do so on the ground that appellant waived his Title VII claim.
I.
Smith, whose service in the federal government stretched from 1963 until his
Smith had claimed before the MSPB, inter alia, that imposing the burden of persuasion on him — to show medical grounds for disability — discriminated against him because of his race. Smith v. OPM,
In 1985, before the Federal Circuit considered, on remand from the Supreme Court, Smith’s appeal from denial of his disability claim, the Clerk of that court by letter
[t]his appeal involves no claim of discrimination and no claim of discrimination was raised before the agency or before the Merit Systems Protection Board.... I have not filed a suit in any other court challenging the decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board challenged on this appeal.
Brief for Appellee at 9-10. The Federal Circuit then reviewed Smith’s appeal under the Lindahl standard and affirmed the MSPB. Smith v. OPM, No. 83-700 (Fed. Cir. Jan. 27, 1986) (unreported decision; tabulated at
In a series of opinions giving rise to this appeal, the district court held that, although Smith was entitled to litigate his Title VII retaliation claim in the district court, Smith v. Homer,
II.
We disagree with the district court’s ruling that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction. That court confused or blended two discrete questions: (1) Did Smith tender a claim arising under a federal law over which the court has authority; (2) Was Smith entitled to any relief on the claim he presented. It remains the approach we are instructed to take that, except for claims “wholly insubstantial or frivolous,” a federal court has subject matter jurisdiction when
the right of the [plaintiff] to recover under [the] complaint will be sustained if the ... laws of the United States are given one construction and will be defeated if they are given another.
Wheeldin v. Wheeler,
We do not reach the question of the impact section 8347(c) would have should a litigant in Smith’s position follow the teachings of Williams, i.e., the direction to proceed in district court and district court only when a claim of discrimination is present. Smith failed to heed that direction, brought home to him effectively in the letter from the Federal Circuit.. His Title VII action must be turned away therefore, not for want of “subject matter” jurisdiction, but because he waived his right to proceed under that Act when he declined the transfer offered by the Federal Circuit.
III.
The government has consistently urged that Smith’s appeal should be rejected because he waived his Title VII claim. We agree and rest our affirmance on the ground that appellant relinquished that cause of action when he responded to the Federal Circuit's Clerk’s letter that he was not also asserting a discrimination claim.
The Federal Circuit in Williams adopted an eminently sensible approach to the mixed claim problem. If an appellant is simultaneously asserting both a Title VII claim as well as an appeal to that Circuit challenging an MSPB determination, the Federal Circuit will decline jurisdiction. Since a federal district court may hear both claims, see Hayes v. United States Gov’t Printing Office,
Nor are we persuaded by appellant’s argument to the effect that his waiver in the Federal Circuit should not bind him because of the Supreme Court cases which guarantee a plaintiff a federal court to resolve Title VII claims regardless of prior litigation before state or federal administrative agencies. See University of Tennessee v. Elliott,
Because appellant has waived his Title VII discrimination claim, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Section 2000e-3(a) provides, in part:
It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to discriminate against any of his employees or applicants for employment ... because he has opposed any practice made an unlawful employment practice by this subchapter, or because he has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under this subchapter.
. The text of the letter, as reproduced in Brief for Appellee at 9, was as follows:
In Williams v. Department of the Army,715 F.2d 1485 (Fed. Cir.1983) this Court held that when a claim of discrimination is present, jurisdiction is vested only in the U.S. District Courts.
If you complete and file the enclosed form indicating that you have abandoned all claims of discrimination, the appeal will proceed in this court on such non-discrimination claims as may be present.
A claim of "discrimination" referred to in the enclosed form means a claim that the adverse action complained of was based on age, sex, race, religion, national origin, or handicap. If you do not abandon the claim of discrimination, you may request the court to transfer the case to a U.S. District Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1631.
If you do not file the enclosed form within 15 days of the above date, the appeal will be dismissed.
. Smith could also be held precluded from litigating his Title VII claim because he "split" his two claims. Smith chose to litigate his disability claim in a court (the Federal Circuit) that could hear less than his entire claim instead of going to the district court, which was competent to entertain both his disability and Title VII claims. Claim preclusion does not turn on whether the first court chosen had jurisdiction as expansive as a later one. See Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 24 comment g, illustrations 13-15 (1982). All that matters is that plaintiff Smith had the opportunity to litigate both claims in a court of competent jurisdiction (here, the district court), but instead chose to split them. Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I write separately because I believe we are obliged to reach the jurisdictional issue the majority avoids. Without subject matter jurisdiction over the case we would be without power or authority to consider the government’s affirmative defense of waiver. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3). The district court held that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over appellant’s claim since 5 U.S.C. § 8347(c) deprived it of judicial power to entertain appellant’s claim for retirement disability benefits. Smith v. Horner,
Appellant contends that, since he alleges OPM’s denial of retirement disability benefits was discriminatorily motivated, under Title VII law he is entitled to de novo review of that determination. He asserts that the very arbitrariness of OPM’s decision — when compared with its treatment of other disability cases — is evidence of its discriminatory motive. And, therefore, it is impossible to judge fairly his discrimination claim without retrying his disability claim in federal district court. According to Smith, the district court was in error in perceiving section 8347(c) as even applicable to such a proceeding because, whatever limitations that section imposes on the Federal Circuit’s review of disability claims, those jurisdictional restrictions do not apply when the disability claim is an integral part of a Title VII lawsuit.
Smith relies on Supreme Court cases holding that Title VII plaintiffs are entitled to de novo review of discrimination claims in federal courts even if a federal or state administrative agency has already adjudicated the same claims. See University of Tennessee v. Elliott,
Here, however, we encounter a separate federal statute, section 8347(c), that limits the scope of federal judicial review of the disability claim, and I think the district court was right in concluding that appellant could not circumvent that section’s jurisdictional limitations merely by seeking review of the disability claim as part of his Title VII suit. Section 8347(c), after all, does not apply only to the Federal Circuit’s review of MSPB orders; it forecloses review by any federal court of factual questions of disability, Lindahl v. OPM,
In any event, it does seem clear that the discrimination allegations can form a separate Title VII claim in the federal district court since, but for a possible limitation caused by Brown v. GSA, it could be raised as a procedural defect pursuant to Lin-dahl. In other words, the Supreme Court’s opinion in Lindahl holds that Congress, by passing 8347(c), did not totally foreclose judicial scrutiny of denials of retirement disability; it just foreclosed judicial inquiry of any kind into the underlying medical facts. In order to make a prima facie case, however, a plaintiff would have to allege and produce evidence other than merely a contention that an agency’s denial of benefits was factually unsupported or even arbitrary and capricious. Separate evidence of discriminatory motive (other than based on the medical facts) would be necessary; otherwise any member of a protected class could circumvent section 8347(c) by seeking indirect review of a disability claim in a Title VII suit.
If, independent of the medical facts in a disability case, a plaintiff could show a discriminatory motive on the part of the agency, it similarly would not be open to the government defendant to rebut the plaintiff’s claim by pointing to the validity of the adjudication since then the court would — in order to determine whether the agency’s defense was a pretext — be in the proscribed position of intruding into a factual determination that Congress wished unreviewed. And, if the court concluded that the plaintiff had proved discriminatory motive, it would truly be irrelevant whether or not the disability determination could otherwise be defended. The proper disposition in such a case, where, as here, plaintiff has asked for any relief the court believes appropriate, would be an order directing a new disability determination free of discrimination. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g) (1982) (wide powers given to district courts to make whole identifiable victim of discrimination); Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
I do not think Rosenfeld v. Department of the Army,
The district court in this case was thus quite correct, in my view, in concluding that it could not, by reviewing the facts of the disability determination, provide the relief plaintiff specifically sought — the grant of disability benefits. But, as I have explained, I think the district court was in error in concluding no relief was possible; therefore, it retained subject matter jurisdiction. Nevertheless, it is unnecessary to remand because I agree with my colleagues the district court’s judgment can be affirmed based on appellant’s waiver.
. A prima facie case typically is presented by showing that the plaintiff is a minority or woman and that he or she was qualified for the benefit or position that the employer denied; then the burden shifts to the employer to adduce a nondiscriminatory reason for the denial. See Texas Dep’t of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
. At least one circuit has rejected the Fourth Circuit’s premise that ADEA claimants have the same right to de novo review as that available under Title VII. See Stillians v. Iowa,
