Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
This appeal stems from Air Force Major (now retired) John F. Kreis’s continuing efforts to obtain a correction of his military records and retroactive promotion by the Air Force Board for the Correction of Military Records (“the Board”). Following a remand,
Kreis v. Sec’y of the Air Force,
I.
The background to this appeal is set forth in
Kreis I,
The Board examined your request and concluded that it does not meet the criteria for reconsideration by the Board. Reconsideration is authorized only when newly discovered relevant evidence is presented which was not available when the application was submitted. The reiteration of facts previously addressed by the Board, uncorroborated personal observations, or additional arguments on the evidence of record are not adequate grounds for reopening a case.
(emphasis added) Whether the Board properly refused to consider the documents submitted by Kreis for failure to meet the criteria for reconsideration is governed by the Board regulation on reconsideration, which provides, in relevant part:
Requests for reconsideration shall provide newly discovered relevant evidence not reasonably available to the applicant at the time of a previous application. All requests ... will be initially screened by the staff of the Board .... * * * If such [new] factual allegations, or documentary evidence have been submitted, the request shall be forwarded to the Board for a determination [whether to authorize a hearing, recommend that the records be corrected without a hearing, or to deny the application without a hearing],
32 C.F.R. § 865.9(c) (1994). Kreis sued the Secretary, alleging that the Board’s refusal to reconsider his application was
II.
As the court stated in
Kreis I,
while the district court’s jurisdiction does not reach military personnel decisions, the court has jurisdiction “to evaluate, in light of familiar principles of administrative law, the reasonableness of the Secretary’s decision not to take certain corrective action with respect to [Kreis’s military] record.”
First, the only fair reading, of the Board’s decision is that, in the Board’s view, the evidence submitted by Kreis did not provide adequate grounds for the Board to reach the merits of his request for reconsideration. The Board stated: “The Board examined your request and concluded that it does not meet the criteria for reconsideration by the Board.” Admin. Rec. at 123. Neither has the Secretary argued on appeal that the Board considered the merits of Kreis’s request. Thus, the Board denied Kreis’s motion at the threshold level by deciding that the documents he submitted did.not warrant Board consideration of the underlying merits of his request for reconsideration. This conclusion is bolstered by a staff recommendation, to the Board that “only addressed the arguments of [Kreis] ... to the extent they relate to the appropriateness of this Board reconsidering its decision.” Id. at 105.
In that light, the Board’s refusal to consider “uncorroborated” evidence imposed a requirement not present in its regulation and inconsistent with its precedent. The evidence before the Board consisted of three declarations by military officials, an excerpt from a deposition of a fourth military official, and an affidavit by Kreis’s counsel , regarding statements made by Lariy W. Neptune, a former Air Force Personnel officer. According to the affidavit, Neptune stated that a memorandum of Brigadier General William R. Brooksher, Air Force chief of security police, which had been destroyed, directed
Second, the Board also ignored its precedent in denying reconsideration without addressing the substantive merits of the three declarations attached to Kreis’s motion for reconsideration or an excerpt from a deposition of a fourth military official submitted as a supplement to his motion. Kreis points to Board precedent that treated as evidence, not arguments, expert opinion refuting Board judgments and reasoning.
See also Guy v. United States,
The Board decisions appended to Kreis’s brief on appeal indicate that while the Board may not give much weight to expert opinion, upon submission of such expert opinions, the Board has reached the merits of a motion for reconsideration.
E.g.
Second Addendum to Record of Proceedings, A.F.B.C.M.R. No. 9103049 (Feb. 16, 1999);
see, e.g.,
Addendum to Record of Proceedings, A.F.B.C.M.R. No. 9702571 (Aug. 24, 1999). The Secretary does not attempt to distinguish the Board precedent cited by Kreis; but rather makes the bald assertion that the Board “is not bound by its previous decisions” in unrelated cases in which reconsideration was granted. Br. for Ap-pellee at 11-12. Absent any reasoned explanation in the Board’s decision for different treatment of Kreis’s expert military évidenee,
see Indep. Petroleum Ass’n of Am.,
To the extent the Secretary maintains the expert military opinions are not newly discovered evidence under 32 C.F.R. § 865.9(c), because they merely reiterate facts already before the Board and assert opinions that the Board made the wrong decision in 1992, the declarations and deposition focus on the military practice rationale and statistical evidence relied on by the Board in 1992 in concluding that there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate
Having previously considered such expert military opinion to be “newly discovered relevant evidence” warranting consideration of a motion for reconsideration on the merits, the Board, which is a civilian board,
Roelofs v. Sec’y of the Air Force,
Accordingly, we reverse and remand the case to the district court with instructions to remand to the Board for consideration of the merits of Kreis’s motion for reconsideration; such reconsideration shall address the merits of the expert military opinions expressed in the declarations of U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Brett, U.S. Air Force Colonel Stewart, and U.S. Air Force Colonel Knudson, the other evidence Kreis submitted with his motion, and any supplements to his motion.
