Timothy O. Holmes appeals the final decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims dismissing for lack of jurisdiction his amended complaint asserting two separate breach of contract claims under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1).
Holmes v. United States,
For the reasons set forth below, we hold that the settlement agreements at issue can fairly be interpreted as mandating the payment of money damages for breach by the government. We also hold that, at least insofar as the allegations in the amended complaint are concerned, Mr. Holmes has demonstrated entitlement to the benefit of the accrual suspension rule. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Federal Claims and remand the case to the court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
I
The pertinent facts are set forth in the amended complaint (“Am. Compl.”).
See Samish Indian Nation v. United States,
Mr. Holmes is a disabled Navy veteran who was honorably discharged in December of 1990 after twelve years of military service. Am. Compl. ¶ 13. He was subsequently employed by the Navy as a yeoman storekeeper aboard the USNS Mars, a naval supply ship operated by the Military Sealift Command, Pacific Fleet. Id. ¶ 16. Mr. Holmes was terminated from his employment aboard the Mars on July 22, 1994, purportedly for performance reasons. Id. ¶ 20. On October 1, 1994, he filed a complaint with the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) alleging that he had been wrongfully terminated due to “false, malicious, and discriminatory accusations about his character and conduct aboard [the] USNS Mars.” Id. ¶ 21. In August of 1995, Mr. Holmes and the Navy executed an agreement (“1995 Agreement”) to settle the EEOC action. Id. ¶ 23. Under the terms of the 1995 Agreement, the Navy agreed (1) to remove from Mr. Holmes’s Official Personnel Folder (“OPF”) all adverse performance evaluations pertaining to his employment with the Navy for the period of time he was aboard the Mars; (2) to remove all records of disciplinary *1307 action taken against him during his employment; and (3) to document his OPF to show that he had resigned for personal reasons on July 22,1994. Id. ¶ 23.
In 1996, after requesting and receiving a copy of his personnel record, Mr. Holmes discovered that the Navy had not complied with its obligation under the 1995 Agreement to expunge adverse information from his OPF. Id. ¶ 24. He thereupon filed a second EEOC complaint alleging breach of the 1995 Agreement. Id. ¶ 25. In November of 1996, Mr. Holmes and the Navy signed an agreement (“1996 Agreement”) to settle the second EEOC action. Id. ¶26, Ex. A. Under the 1996 Agreement, the Navy agreed (1) to employ Mr. Holmes as a yeoman storekeeper; (2) to provide him transportation to his worksite; and (3) to document his OPF to show that he had resigned on July 22, 1994 for personal reasons. Id. ¶ 27, Ex. A ¶ 2.
In accordance with the 1996 Agreement, the Navy employed Mr. Holmes as a yeoman storekeeper aboard the USNS Guadalupe, beginning in January of 1997. Am. Compl. ¶ 28. After leaving the Guadalupe in July of 1997, Mr. Holmes served aboard the USNS Kilauea as a civilian storekeeper from September of 1997 to August of 1998. Id. ¶¶ 29, 30. Following his departure from the Guadalupe, Mr. Holmes was accused of stealing a government-owned refrigerator from his stateroom and selling it to another crew member. Id. ¶ 29. This accusation led the Navy to suspend Mr. Holmes from his job aboard the Kilauea for fourteen days. Id. ¶ 31. In response, Mr. Holmes filed a third EEOC complaint. In it, he asserted that the allegation of theft and the resulting suspension were the result of “discriminatory and retaliatory conduct against him during his service aboard the USNS Guadalupe.” Id. ¶ 32.
From October of 1998 to April of 1999, while his third EEOC complaint was pending, Mr. Holmes served as a civilian storekeeper aboard the USNS Niagara Falls. Id. ¶ 34. While aboard the Niagara Falls, he was accused of threatening a fellow crew member. As a result, the ship’s captain proposed to remove Mr. Holmes from his position. Id. ¶ 35. After being notified of his proposed removal, Mr. Holmes resigned from his position aboard the Niagara Falls. Id. ¶ 36. According to Mr. Holmes, shortly after he resigned, he joined the Seafarers International Union (“SIU”) and obtained several temporary contract jobs aboard civilian supply vessels as a storekeeper. Id. ¶ 71.
On December 16, 1999, Mr. Holmes withdrew his third EEOC complaint. Thereafter, on February 22, 2000, he filed a civil action against the Navy in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The suit related to, inter aha, his fourteen-day suspension while aboard the Kilauea. Id. ¶ 37, Compl. for Employment Discrimination on the Basis of Reprisal at 3, Holmes v. Danzig, No. 00-01839 (C.D.Cal. Feb. 22, 2000). The case was subsequently transferred to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. Am. Compl. ¶ 37.
Mr. Holmes and the Navy signed an agreement settling the district court action on April 26, 2001 (“2001 Agreement”).
Id.
¶ 38, Ex. B. Under the terms of the 2001 Agreement, the Navy agreed to pay Mr. Holmes $1,000 and to “take the necessary steps, within a reasonable time, to expunge from [Mr. Holmes’s] Official Personnel File, the fourteen-day suspension” and “to provide the Marine Index Bureau (MIB) with a neutral reference for [Mr. Holmes].”
2
Id.,
Ex. B ¶¶2-4. Pursuant
*1308
to paragraph 17 of the agreement and a handwritten note by the Magistrate Judge at the bottom of the agreement, the district court retained jurisdiction for one year “for the purposes of resolving any dispute alleging a breach of [the 2001 Ajgreement.”
Id.,
Ex. B ¶ 17, p. 5 11.20— 21;
see Holmes,
Mr. Holmes requested and received copies of his personnel records from the Navy in May of 2006; the records indicated that the Navy had not documented his record to show that he resigned from the Navy for personal reasons effective July 22, 1994.
Id.
¶¶ 41-42. Thereafter, in 2008, Mr. Holmes filed suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York, seeking compensatory damages for the Navy’s breach of the 1996 Agreement.
Id.
¶ 53. On October 31, 2008, the district court dismissed the complaint for lack of jurisdiction, stating that Mr. Holmes’s breach of contract claim was required to be filed in the United States Court of Federal Claims.
Id.
¶ 56;
Holmes v. Dep’t of Navy,
II
Mr. Holmes filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims on April 9, 2009. In his amended complaint, filed on August 17, 2009, he alleged that the Navy had breached the 1996 Agreement by failing to document his OPF to reflect that he resigned from the Navy in 1994 for personal reasons. He also alleged that the Navy had breached the agreement by failing to expunge references to the circumstances of his discharge in 1994. He alleged that the Navy had breached the 2001 Agreement by failing to expunge references to the fourteen-day suspension. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 58-59, 61-64. As a result of these breaches, Mr. Holmes alleged, he had been largely unsuccessful in obtaining employment, and had not been able to obtain any employment since 2005. Id. ¶¶ 69-74. For the alleged breaches, Mr. Holmes sought monetary damages. Id. ¶ 75. The government moved to dismiss the amended complaint for lack of jurisdiction pursuant to RCFC 12(b)(1) or, alternately, for failure to state a claim pursuant to RCFC 12(b)(6). The government’s jurisdictional motion made two separate arguments: (1) that Mr. Holmes had not established a money-mandating source of law for his claim in order to invoke jurisdiction under the Tucker Act; and (2) that his breach of contract claims were barred by the six-year statute of limitations set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2501.
The Court of Federal Claims granted the government’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, agreeing with the government that the terms of the 1996 and 2001 Agreements did not support a “fair inference” that Mr. Holmes was entitled to money damages for breach of contract.
Holmes,
Mr. Holmes appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
DISCUSSION
I
We review
de novo
the Court of Federal Claims’s dismissal of a claim for lack of jurisdiction.
Adair v. United States,
II
A
The Court of Federal Claims derives its jurisdiction from the Tucker Act, which, in relevant part, gives the court “jurisdiction to render judgment upon any claim against the United States founded either upon the Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any regulation of an executive department, or upon any express or implied contract with the United States.... ” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). The Tucker Act does not create substantive rights. Rather, it is a jurisdictional provision “that operate[s] to waive sovereign immunity for claims premised on other sources of law (e.g., statutes or contracts).”
United States v. Navajo Nation,
In granting the government’s motion to dismiss, the Court of Federal Claims stated that Mr. Holmes had failed to identify “any terms of either the 1996 Agreement or the 2001 Agreement which are reasonably amenable to a reading that supports [his] claim that he is entitled to money damages for defendant’s breach.”
Holmes,
Mr. Holmes argues that the Court of Federal Claims’s Tucker Act jurisdiction encompasses his claims that the Navy breached the 1996 and 2001 Agreements. He also argues that because the agreements are express contracts, the court erroneously imposed upon him the burden of *1310 demonstrating a “fair inference” that the terms of the agreements entitle him to money damages. He maintains that such a burden does not exist when a Tucker Act claim is “founded ... upon any express or implied contract with the United States,” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1), because money is the presumptive remedy for breach of contract. In the absence of contract terms specifically precluding the recovery of money damages, Mr. Holmes urges, a non-breaching party is entitled to such damages when the government breaches a contract. In short, Mr. Holmes argues that the money-mandating requirement of Tucker Act jurisdiction was satisfied by the very nature of his suit — an action for breach of two Title VII settlement agreements — and that the Court of Federal Claims erred when it required him to identify “separate” money-mandating provisions in the agreements. As he did in the Court of Federal Claims, Mr. Holmes argues in the alternative that, assuming he was required to show that the agreements could fairly be interpreted as contemplating money damages for breach, he carried that burden.
Like Mr. Holmes, the government takes the position that the Tucker Act’s grant of jurisdiction for breach of contract claims can encompass such claims arising from Title VII settlement agreements. Appellee’s Br. 51 & n. 8.
3
It argues, however, that the 1996 and 2001 Agreements do not “provide[] for damages as a result of a breach” and that therefore, the Court of Federal Claims lacks jurisdiction. Appel-lee’s Br. 52 n. 8. In making this argument, the government points to
Navajo Nation, Rick’s Mushroom Service, Inc. v. United States,
The government contends that the Court of Federal Claims properly examined whether the 1996 and 2001 Agreements were money-mandating, and that it correctly determined that Mr. Holmes had not carried his burden of establishing that the agreements supported a “fair inference” that money damages were payable in event of breach. Appellee’s Br. 38^42, 48-50. The government points to the trial court’s observation of “the absence of any
*1311
provision mandating the payment of money for a breach by the government.”
Holmes,
B
Before addressing the money-mandating issue, however, we must resolve the initial jurisdictional question of whether the Court of Federal Claims may exercise its Tucker Act jurisdiction over a claim alleging breach of a Title VII settlement agreement. That is so even though Mr. Holmes and the government do not dispute the point.
See John R. Sand & Gravel Co. v. United States,
Our court has not addressed this question, and there is a split of authority on it in the Court of Federal Claims. Some decisions of the Court of Federal Claims have held that the court lacks Tucker Act jurisdiction over claims alleging breach of a Title VII settlement agreement due to the comprehensive statutory scheme established under Title VII, which assigns jurisdiction over discrimination suits to the district courts.
See, e.g., Griswold v. United States,
There also appears to be a split of authority among the regional circuits. In
Frahm v. United States,
We agree with the D.C. Circuit, as well as Court of Federal Claims cases which have reached a similar conclusion, that Tucker Act jurisdiction may be exercised in a suit alleging breach of a Title VII settlement agreement. We do not view Title VII’s comprehensive scheme as a bar to the exercise of such jurisdiction. In
Massie v. United States,
C
We turn now to the question of whether, in order to invoke the Tucker Act jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims, Mr. Holmes was required to show that the 1996 and 2001 Agreements could support a fair inference that he is entitled to the payment of money damages for breach, or was required to demonstrate that the two agreements could fairly be interpreted that way. As seen, the government contends that Mr. Holmes was required to make such a showing and that he failed to do so. Mr. Holmes argues, however, that because each of the agreements was an express contract with the government, such a showing was not necessary. He maintains that, because money damages are the presumptive remedy for *1313 breach of contract, the money-mandating requirement was met by the very nature of his suit — an action for breach of contract. In other words, he contends that he was not burdened with any fair inference or fair interpretation requirement. 6 Alternatively, he contends that, assuming he was required to demonstrate that the agreements could fairly be interpreted as contemplating money damages for breach, he did so.
As seen, the Tucker Act provides in relevant part that the Court of Federal Claims “shall have jurisdiction to render judgment upon any claim against the United States founded either upon the Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any regulation of an executive department, or upon any express or implied contract with the United States....” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). In
Eastport Steamship Corp. v. United States,
The Supreme Court has shown continued support for this distinction by excluding contract claims from its subsequent discussion of the money-mandating requirement.
See, e.g., White Mountain Apache Tribe,
In our view, when referencing the money-mandating inquiry for Tucker Act jurisdiction, the cases logically put to one side contract-based claims. To begin with, “[n]ormally contracts do not contain provisions specifying the basis for the award of damages in case of breach.... ”
San Juan City Coll. v. United States,
[I]n the area of government contracts, as with private agreements, there is a presumption in the civil context that a damages remedy will be available upon the breach of an agreement. Indeed, as a plurality of the Supreme Court noted in United States v. Winstar Corp.,518 U.S. 839 ,116 S.Ct. 2432 ,135 L.Ed.2d 964 (1996), “damages are always the default remedy for breach of contract.” Id. at 885,116 S.Ct. 2432 (plurality opinion) (citing, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 346, cmt. a (1981)).
Sanders v. United States,
That is not to say, however, that the existence of a contract always means that Tucker Act jurisdiction exists. A contract expressly disavowing money damages would not give rise to Tucker Act jurisdiction, and we have found Tucker Act jurisdiction lacking in the case of an agreement “entirely concerned with the conduct of the parties in a criminal case.”
Sanders,
In
Rick’s Mushroom,
the plaintiff brought suit in the Court of Federal Claims under the Contract Disputes Act, 41 U.S.C. §§ 601-613 (“CDA”), based upon a cost-share agreement with the Natural Resource Conservation Service (“NRCS”). The Court of Federal Claims held that because the contract between Rick’s and the NRCS was a cooperative agreement and not a procurement contract, there was no basis for jurisdiction under the CDA for Rick’s breach of contract claim.
7
Rick’s Mushroom Serv., Inc. v. United States,
We also rejected Rick’s attempt to establish jurisdiction based upon an implied-in-fact contract with the NRCS.
Id.
at 1344. As an adjunct to its CDA claim, Rick’s had alleged breach of an implied warranty under
United States v. Spearin,
We do not agree with Mr. Holmes that the Court of Federal Claims erred in requiring him to demonstrate that the 1996 and 2001 Agreements could fairly be interpreted as contemplating money damages for breach. Both agreements settled Title VII discrimination complaints, and we readily accept that settlement of a Title VII action involving the government could involve purely nonmonetary relief — for example, a transfer from one agency office to another. 8 Under these circumstances, in this case, we think it was proper for the court to require a demonstration that the agreements could fairly be interpreted as contemplating money damages in the event of breach. That said, we do agree with Mr. Holmes’s alternative argument: that the agreements can fairly be interpreted as contemplating such damages. The Court of Federal Claims therefore has jurisdiction over Mr. Holmes’s breach of contract claims.
As noted, under the 1996 Agreement, the Navy agreed to document Mr. Holmes’s OPF to show that he had resigned on July 22, 1994 for personal reasons. Am. Compl. ¶ 27, Ex. A ¶ 2. Likewise, under the 2001 Agreement, the Navy agreed to “take the necessary steps, within a reasonable time, to expunge from [Mr. Holmes’s] Official Personnel File, the four *1316 teen-day suspension” and “to provide the Marine Index Bureau ... with a neutral reference for [Mr. Holmes].” Am. Compl. ¶ 38, Ex. B ¶¶ 3^. We think that, in the context of the two agreements, the purpose of documenting and expunging Mr. Holmes’s record clearly was to prevent Mr. Holmes from being denied future employment based on his record as the Navy maintained it prior to the agreements. In short, the agreements inherently relate to monetary compensation through relationship to Mr. Holmes’s future employment. Further, there is no language in the agreements indicating that the parties did not intend for money damages to be available in the event of breach.
Neither do we think that the EEOC regulation to which the government points bars the exercise of Tucker Act jurisdiction. Section 1614.504(a) provides that a complainant alleging breach of an EEOC agreement “shall notify the [Equal Employment Opportunity] Director, in writing, of the alleged noncompliance within 30 days of when the complainant knew or should have known of the alleged noncompliance [and] may request that the terms of settlement agreement be specifically implemented or, alternatively, that the complaint be reinstated for further processing.... ” 29 C.F.R. § 1614.504(a). Without diminishing the force of this regulation, we see no reason for § 1614.504(a) to preclude a suit for money damages in the event of breach that is separate from, or in addition to, the relief the regulation provides. 9
Finally, we need not reach the issue of whether the Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction over consent decrees because we do not agree with the government that the 2001 Agreement is a consent decree. As the First Circuit has explained, the Supreme Court has emphasized three related factors to be used to determine if a court-ordered consent decree exists: (1) the change in legal relationship must be court-ordered, (2) there must be judicial approval of the relief visa-vis the merits of the case, and (3) there must be “judicial oversight and ability to enforce the obligations imposed on the parties.”
Aronov v. Napolitano,
Ill
A
As noted, the Court of Federal Claims separately ruled that it lacked jurisdiction *1317 because, as Mr. Holmes acknowledged, his complaint was filed more than six years after the Navy allegedly breached the two agreements, and because the court determined that he was not entitled to the benefit of the accrual suspension rule.
Section 2501 states that all claims that otherwise fall within the jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims “shall be barred unless the petition thereon is filed within six years after such claim first accrues.” 28 U.S.C. § 2501. A cause of action first accrues when all the events have occurred that fix the alleged liability of the government and entitle the claimant to institute an action.
Ingrum v. United States,
In the Court of Federal Claims, Mr. Holmes took the position that the government breached the 1996 Agreement by failing to act in or around November 1996 and that it breached the 2001 Agreement by failing to act in or around April 2001.
10
See
Am. Compl. ¶¶ 58, 61. That meant that, in the case of each agreement, Mr. Holmes’s suit, which was first filed on April 9, 2009, was filed outside the six-year limitations period, as it was filed over twelve years after the alleged breach of the 1996 Agreement and approximately eight years after the alleged breach of the 2001 Agreement, or, as the Court of Federal Claims noted, approximately seven years after the conclusion of the one-year period during which the district court retained jurisdiction over the 2001 Agreement.
Holmes,
However, as the Court of Federal Claims noted, the “accrual of a claim against the United States is suspended, for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2501, until the claimant knew or should have known that the claim existed.”
Id.
at 319 (quoting
Young v. United States,
The Court of Federal Claims found that there was no evidence that the Navy had attempted to conceal Mr. Holmes’s records or that would support a finding that the Navy’s breach of the agreements was “inherently unknowable.”
Holmes,
B
Mr. Holmes does not contend on appeal that the Navy attempted to conceal its alleged breach of the two agreements. Instead, he argues that the breach was “inherently unknowable.” He relies on
L.S.S. Leasing Corp. v. United States,
Mr. Holmes argues, as he did before the Court of Federal Claims, that he did not actually know that the Navy had breached its obligations under the agreements until he received copies of his OPF from the Navy in 2006. Appellant’s Br. 46; Pl.’s Resp. at 4. He contends that, in any event, the earliest time at which he reasonably should have known of the breaches was in 2005, when the SIU and civilian supply *1319 vessel employers began conducting background checks and he was no longer offered contract jobs. See Appellant’s Br. 46-49, 51-52; Am. Compl. ¶ 72. According to Mr. Holmes, the Court of Federal Claims misconstrued the allegations in the amended complaint to mean that he believed the Navy had breached the agreements at the time he was turned down for jobs, i.e., starting in 1999 due to the Navy’s breach of the 1996 Agreement, and in 2001 due to the Navy’s breach of the 2001 Agreement. Instead, Mr. Holmes argues, paragraphs 40 and 70 in the amended complaint were merely assertions that he “only now believes that the Navy’s breaches caused him damages as early as 1999” and he “did not state or otherwise imply in the complaint that he believed or suspected at the time that the Navy’s breaches were causing him harm.” Appellant’s Br. 46. Contrary to the court’s findings, Mr. Holmes argues that these paragraphs do not indicate that he was on “inquiry notice” prior to 2005 that the 1996 and 2001 Agreements had been breached. 13
Mr. Holmes also argues that the fact that he was having some difficulty obtaining employment was not alone enough to put him on inquiry notice of the breaches because applicants for jobs are not offered positions for a multitude of reasons. This is particularly so, he urges, because he was able to secure temporary employment after he resigned from the Navy in 1999, before the SIU began its background checks in 2005. Mr. Holmes contends that the Court of Federal Claims ignored allegations in the amended complaint relating to his periods of temporary employment, as well as allegations that the Navy
had
complied with some of its obligations under the Agreements, by paying him $1,000 (2001 Agreement) and by employing him (1996 Agreement). In addition, he points to the July 11, 2001 letter alleged in paragraph 39 of the amended complaint. In that letter, Mr. Holmes asserts, the Navy told the Assistant United States Attorney representing the government in the Northern District of California litigation that it had expunged his OPF and asked the MIB to correct its records relating to him. Am. Compl. ¶ 39;
see
Oral Arg. at 13:38-14:27 & 41:39-42:15,
available at
http://www. cafc.uscourts.gov/oral-argument-recordings/2010-5119/all. Mr. Holmes maintains that he was not obligated to continuously monitor whether the Navy had complied with its duties under the agreements, since government officials are presumed to act in good faith.
See Savantage Fin. Servs., Inc. v. United States,
The government responds that the Court of Federal Claims correctly held that Mr. Holmes failed to show that his alleged injury was “inherently unknowable” when his claims accrued. The government argues that the circumstances of this case are analogous to those in our
*1320
unpublished decision in
Roberts v. United States,
C
We agree with Mr. Holmes that the “concealed or inherently unknowable” test, which has been used interchangeably with the “knew or should have known” test,
Ingrwm,
An example of [an inherently unknowable injury] would be when defendant delivers the wrong type of fruit tree to plaintiff and the wrong cannot be determined until the tree bears fruit. In this situation the statute will not begin to run until plaintiff teams or reasonably should have learned of his cause of action.
D
The 2001 Agreement required the Navy to expunge the fourteen-day suspension from Mr. Holmes’s OPF and to provide the MIB with a neutral reference for him. As set forth in the amended complaint, two and a half months after the 2001 Agreement was signed, “the Navy stated in a letter to the Assistant United States Attorney handling the civil action [which led to the 2001 Agreement] that the Navy took the necessary steps to expunge Mr. Holmes’s Official Personnel Folder and that the Navy requested corrections to the Marine Index Bureau pertaining to Mr. Holmes.” Am. Compl. ¶ 39.
14
Thus, according to Mr. Holmes, very shortly after the 2001 Agreement was signed, the Navy, whose officials are presumed to act in good faith,
see Savantage Financial Services,
Mr. Holmes does not allege that the July 2001 letter addressed the Navy’s per *1322 formance under the 1996 Agreement, but the alleged breach of this earlier agreement was in the same stream of events as the alleged breach of the 2001 Agreement. Further, according to the amended complaint, the Navy partially complied with its obligations under the 1996 Agreement by appointing Mr. Holmes as a yeoman storekeeper aboard the USNS Guadalupe between January 1997 and July 1997. Am. Compl. ¶ 28. Moreover, as noted, after leaving the Navy in 1999 Mr. Holmes was able to obtain several temporary contract jobs. Id. ¶ 71.
It is true that, prior to the execution of the 1996 Agreement, Mr. Holmes had requested and received a copy of his personnel record and had discovered that the Navy had failed to comply with the 1995 Agreement to expunge his record. Id. ¶ 24. We do not believe, however, that either this fact, or Mr. Holmes’s unsuccessful attempts to obtain employment after the 1996 Agreement, were sufficient to reasonably put him on inquiry notice of the Navy’s alleged breach of the 1996 Agreement. That is because, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Mr. Holmes, it is reasonable to conclude that the Navy’s execution of the 1996 Agreement, along with its partial performance thereof, could have provided the basis for a belief on Mr. Holmes’s part that the Navy had performed its obligations under the 1996 Agreement. In view of his ability to obtain employment, the Navy’s contractual promise, and his knowledge that the Navy had partially performed, we do not believe Mr. Holmes was on “inquiry notice” that the Navy had breached the 1996 Agreement. Relatedly, we do not agree with the Court of Federal Claims’s reading of paragraphs 40 and 70 of the amended complaint. We agree with Mr. Holmes that these paragraphs are most properly read as stating Mr. Holmes’s state of mind when he filed the amended complaint in 2009, rather than during the period when he alleges the Navy breached the 1996 and 2001 Agreements.
Finally, we think the circumstances of this case serve to distinguish it from both Roberts and Ingrum, upon which the government relies. Neither of those eases involved agreements in which the government promised to take certain action (thereby bringing into play the proposition that government officials are presumed to act in good faith), combined with indications that the promised action had been taken. Rather, those cases involved the situation in which a plaintiff simply failed to request information from the government when he could have done so (Roberts) and the situation in which the governmental conduct on the plaintiffs property was open and notorious but the plaintiff did not avail himself of the opportunity of discovering it (Ingrum).
We agree with Mr. Holmes that he reasonably should have known of the alleged breach of the 1996 and 2001 Agreements for purposes of the statute of limitations when the SIU began conducting background checks in 2005 and he was no longer being offered contract jobs. Therefore, having demonstrated entitlement to the benefit of the accrual suspension rule, and having filed his complaint within six years of when he reasonably should have known of the alleged breach, Mr. Holmes’s suit is not time-barred and thus beyond the Court of Federal Claims’s jurisdiction. 15
*1323 Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the Court of Federal Claims dismissing Mr. Holmes’s amended complaint for lack of jurisdiction. The case is remanded to the Court of Federal Claims for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 16
REVERSED and REMANDED
Costs
Each party shall bear its own costs.
Notes
. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.
. The MIB compiles data pertaining to claims by employees in the maritime industry in an
*1308
effort to detect fraudulent claims.
See Barclay v. Keystone Shipping Co.,
. The government states:
We recognize that the Court of Federal Claims possesses jurisdiction over a claim where plaintiff can establish a substantive right enforceable against the United States for money damages. It is the Government’s position that this includes a Title VII settlement agreement providing for damages as a result of a breach. Thus, simply because a settlement agreement pertains to a Title VII case does not automatically mean that the Court of Federal Claims lacks jurisdiction.
Appellee's Br. 51.
. The Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-572, § 902(a), 106 Stat. 4506, 4516, changed the name of the United States Claims Court to the United States Court of Federal Claims.
Wilner v. United States,
. In
Kokkonen
the Supreme Court distinguished actions based on a settlement agreement from an action under a law whose alleged violation gave rise to the settlement.
. The parties do not argue that the “fair inference” articulation of
White Mountain
alters or differs from the "fair interpretation” articulation,
see Fisher v. United States,
. The Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction over CDA claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(2).
. Indeed, we note that money damages appear not to be the routine remedy for the breach of a settlement agreement involving an employment dispute. Typically, the employee’s remedy is enforcement of the settlement terms or rescission of the settlement agreement and reinstatement of the underlying action.
See, e.g., Harris v. Brownlee,
. We acknowledge that at least one other circuit has reached the contrary conclusion.
See Frahm,
. The 1996 Agreement did not set forth a time frame within which the Navy was required to document Mr. Holmes’s OPF to indicate that he had resigned for personal reasons. The 2001 Agreement required the Navy to expunge Mr. Holmes's OPF "within a reasonable time.” Am. Compl. Ex. B ¶ 3.
. As the Court of Federal Claims observed, the accrual suspension rule is distinct from equitable tolling, which the Supreme Court has stated is precluded under 28 U.S.C. § 2501.
Holmes,
.Although it is sometimes stated that accrual of a claim against the United States will be suspended until the claimant "knew or should have known” that the claim existed, we have explained that this formulation does not represent a separate test and has been used inter changeably with the "concealed or inherently unknowable” standard.
Ingrum,
. The paragraphs of the Amended Complaint to which the Court of Federal Claims pointed read as follows:
40. Between 2001 and the present, Mr. Holmes applied for various positions which he was otherwise qualified [sic]. On information and belief, Mr. Holmes was denied or not considered for these positions because of the Navy's breaches of the 1996 and 2001 Agreements.
70. Mr. Holmes has attempted to obtain employment multiple times since 1999, but has largely been unsuccessful because his personnel record retained by the Navy contained unfavorable employment information that discouraged potential employers from hiring him. Moreover, on information and belief, representatives of the Military Sealift Command have given negative and other than ''neutral” references to prospective employers.
Am. Compl. ¶¶ 40, 70.
. As the Court of Federal Claims noted, Mr. Holmes did not attach a copy of this letter to his amended complaint, nor did he argue before the court that the letter should result in some type of tolling of the statute of limitations.
Holmes,
. Our holding is based solely on the allegations set forth in the amended complaint. After discovery, as Mr. Holmes has acknowledged, the government may be war ranted in renewing its motion to dismiss for lack of juris diction due to the statute of limitations, should evidence suggest that, in fact, Mr. Holmes knew or reasonably should have known of the Navy's alleged breach at an earlier date. See Oral Arg. at 44:39-46:03, *1323 available at http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/ oral-argument-recordings/2010-5119/all.
. Our holding that the Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction does not address whether Mr. Holmes’s suit is subject to dismissal on the merits under RCFC 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.
See e.g., Adair,
