Aрpellant Pepper appeals the decision of the United States Claims Court (Gibson, J.,
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presiding) in
Pepper v. United States,
BACKGROUND
We set forth here an overview of the pertinent agreed facts by paraphrasing the discussion thereof by the Claims Court.
Appellant David S. Pepper entered the Air Force on active duty on February 10, 1965, at the grade of second lieutenant and • was thereafter progressively promoted to the permanent, regular grade of captain on February 10, 1972. Pepper subsequently failed five promotion board reviews for the grade of mаjor. Three of those reviews, October 18, 1976, June 5, 1978, and June 4, 1979, resulted in Pepper’s nonselection to the grade of “temporary” major. Pepper was involuntarily discharged on February 29, 1980, pursuant to 10 U.S.C. § 8303 (1976 and Supp. IV) after having been twice passed over for promotion to the regular grade of permanent major on June 19, 1978, and July 9, 1979.
On October 9, 1980, Pepper filed suit in the Court of Claims, contending that his discharge was the result of allegedly defective Officer Effectiveness Reports (OERs). 1 The alleged defects include allegations of procedural irregularities on the part of the rating officers, and the inherently prejudicial aspects of the Air Force officer rating procedure. Specifically, Pepper challenges the ratings he received during the time that Air Force Regulation 36-10 was in effect, from November 30,1974, to October 31, 1977. 2 Air Force Regulation 36-10 controlled the preparation and scoring of *1573 Air Force Effectiveness Reports by limiting the number of officers of a given rank who could receive the highest rating (22%), the second highest rating (28%), and so on. During the period Regulation 36-10 was in effect, Pepper received three ratings, which placed him in the second, third, and second categories, respectively. Subsequent to this period, Pepper received an additional effectiveness rating prior to his discharge which placed him in the first category. His allegation below was that the less-than-perfect ratings, under what he considered an inherently unfair system, resulted in his passovers and discharge.
Judicial proceedings were suspended in 1981 so that the parties might first seek a resolution of the case before the Air Force Board for Correction of Military Records. On March 8, 1984, the board denied relief to Pepper. The parties returned to the Claims Court, at which point the court heard arguments concerning the government’s contention that Pepper should have raised any challenge he might have to the allegedly defective OERs at the time they were rendered, and that his failure to do so barred him under the doctrine of laches.
The Claims Court decided that Pepper was barred by laches, аnd specifically declined to address the merits of Pepper’s claims. Thus, the question before us is limited solely to the question of whether Pepper’s claims were barred by the doctrine of laches for inexcusable and prejudicial delay in asserting a claim frоm the date of the first challenged OER in 1974 to suit in 1980, as found by the Claims Court.
OPINION
In this circuit, two elements are necessary to establish the affirmative defense of laches: (1) inexcusable delay on the part of the claimant; and (2) prejudice to defendant as a result of such delаy.
Brundage v. United States,
1. Inexcusable Delay.
We think that
Adkins v. United States,
Pepper cites three cases which he argues show that the Claims Court has considered the claims of officers arising from defective OERs when there were delays in those cases equal to or greater than his own delay. In one of these cases,
Hary v. United States,
In the third case cited by Pepper,
Riley v. United States,
Thus, Riley’s cаse and Pepper’s are fundamentally different. Riley’s complaint before the Court of Claims was to the procedural irregularities in his promotion boards, and not to any deficiencies in the OERs themselves, which had been clearly voided. The 4-year delay in petitioning the OPRRB to have the OERs voided might well have been sufficient grounds for a defense of laches before that board, but once that board accepted and decided the challenge to the OERs, any subsequent timely appeals could not be subject to a defеnse of laches.
Pepper never took any action with respect to his allegedly defective OERs for 6 years and some 4 years after first being passed over for promotion. None of these cases cited by Pepper aids his appeal and nоne assists him materially in distinguishing his case from Adkins. In view of Adkins, we cannot agree with Pepper that the Claims Court erred when it found his delay in bringing his claim to be inexcusable under the facts here.
2. Prejudice to the Defendant.
The Claims Court found that the United States had been prejudiced by Pepper’s inexcusable delay in at lеast two ways. First, the court found that delay alone, if it is long enough, can be sufficient prejudice. Second, the Claims Court found that the United States would be damaged monetarily by Pepper’s delay since, had his claim been timely raised and sustained, the award would have beеn less. While we agree with Pepper that the Claims Court may have impermissibly considered, in calculating the prospective damages, the time since his claim was filed in 1980, we do not agree that this entirely negates the court’s finding that the United States had been prejudicеd by Pepper’s inexcusable delay.
“The longer the delay by a plaintiff in filing suit, the less need there is to search
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for specific prejudice and the greater the shift to plaintiff of demonstrating lack of prejudice.”
Deering v. United States,
We agree with the Claims Court when it says, on good authority, that prejudice exists in the present case beсause “[ejquity contemplates that [those .officials accused of creating the defective OERs] are entitled to defend and explain their acts when their recollections are fresh, and relevant evidence has not disappeared.” Pepper, 8 CLCt. at 677. We also think this rationale extends to include the rights of the government in defending actions as well as to those of the individual officials.
Appellant Pepper has failed to show that the Claims Court’s actions in granting summary judgment to the United States and denying appellant’s cross-motiоn were based on an erroneous interpretation of the law.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. According to the Claims Court:
An OER, or Officer Efficiency [sic] Report, is the Air Force form filled out pursuant to the Air Force Officer Evaluation Program. The information contained in this form is the primary, although not the exclusive, basis upon whiсh officers are considered for promotion. During the period of plaintiff’s challenged OERs, one rating system was employed up to 1974, and another was in effect thereafter. The following description of the two programs is taken from the stipulation by the parties:
Up to and including the time the September 1974 OER was rendered, the Air Force employed an OER rating system based upon a maximum score of 9-4. The first figure (ranging from 0-9) represented the evaluator’s assessment of the ratee’s duty performance; the second figure (ranging from 0-4) rеpresented an assessment of potential for advancement within the ranks. In addition, the OER contained eight specific factors to be evaluated separately in rating overall performance. One of five verbal ratings, from best to worst, was ascribed tо each factor. Finally, the OER provided space in which the evaluator was to offer a descriptive appraisal of the officer's talents and shortcomings.
In late November, 1974, the Air Force instituted a new system of officer evaluation.
The new system was designed to ensure that OER ratings reflected differences in the performance and potential of all Air Force officers by imposing strict quotas on the percentage of officers who could receive the highest scores. More than ninety percent оf all Air Force officers ... were in a position whereby only twenty-two percent could receive the highest overall rating and only fifty percent could receive the highest or next-highest rating. The regulation prescribed that these quotas were to be enforсed through various control points, specified as major commands or separate Air Force agencies.
The revised OER form designed to implement this system listed ten performance factors, with five possible ratings in each. ... In place of the overall dual rating which characterized the 9-4 system, the new OER provided for a single overall rating to be ascribed in one of six unlabeled categories, ranging from highest to lowest. ... The new evaluation system relied upon two separate raters, along with a reviewer to assign оverall ratings to each officer. In addition to these quantitative ratings, the revised OER contained space for written comments about the officer’s job performance and potential for advancement.
Pepper,
. As the Claims Court stated:
Before the AFBCMR, plaintiff’s claim was based on а challenge to four OERs, i.e., September 28, 1974; October 31, 1975; October 31, 1976; and October 31, 1977. See AFBCMR, Record of Proceedings, at 1. In his petition here, plaintiff challenged specifically by name only one OER, i.e., the September 29 [sic], 1974 report. See plaintiffs petition at 2. *1573 At oral argument, however, plaintiff conceded there was no longer a challenge to the September 28, 1974 OER, but that the 1975, 1976, and 1977 OERs were still in issue.
See Pepper,
. These arguments were also made before the Claims Court and were adequately addressed in Judge Gibson's opinion in
Pepper,
