This case raises the question whether it was proper for the Merit Systems Protection Board to dismiss an employee’s appeal from his removal when the agency canceled the removal after the employee retired. Because we agree with the decision of the Board dismissing the employee’s appeal as moot, we affirm the Board’s order.
I
On April 1, 1991, the Navy removed petitioner Larry L. Cooper from his position as a warehouse worker foreman because of his inability to perform the duties of the position. Cooper filed a timely appeal of his removal with the Board. After his first three appeals were dismissed without prejudice, Cooper filed a fourth appeal. In the meantime, Cooper applied for disability retirement benefits, and his application was approved.
On March 2, 1993, an administrative judge issued an initial decision dismissing Cooper’s appeal. The administrative judge ruled that Cooper’s disability retirement application was retroactive to a date prior to his removal and that the appeal of the removal was therefore moot. When Cooper petitioned for review of the administrative judge’s decision, the full Board reversed and remanded the case to the administrative judge for further proceedings. The Board held that as long as the removal was effected prior to OPM’s grant of disability retirement, the Board had jurisdiction to hear the appeal, regardless of the effective date of the retirement.
After that decision, the Navy rescinded Cooper’s removal and eliminated all references to the removal from his official personnel file. The Navy substituted a separation based on disability retirement for the removal action. Because the removal was rescinded, the Board dismissed Cooper’s appeal as moot. That decision became final on May 18, 1995.
On June 16,1995, Cooper filed a complaint against the Navy and the Board in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California. In his complaint, Cooper raised four claims. His first claim sought to appeal the decision of the Board
II
The parties agree that the Board initially had jurisdiction over Cooper’s appeal of the Navy’s action removing him for unacceptable performance. See 5 U.S.C. § 4303(e); 5 C.F.R. § 1201.3(a)(1). The dispute in this case centers on the effect of the Navy’s rescission of Cooper’s removal after OPM granted Cooper’s retirement application.
If an appealable action is canceled or rescinded by an agency, any appeal from that action becomes moot. In this case, Cooper alleges that it was improper for the Board to dismiss his appeal as moot, because the rescission of the removal action did not return him to his former position. We uphold the Board’s ruling. The Navy’s cancellation of the removal action and the removal of all references to that action from Cooper’s official personnel file eliminated all the consequences of that action and thus rendered Cooper’s appeal moot. After the Navy took those actions, there was no longer any removal or other adverse action for Cooper to appeal.
Compare Bruning v. Veterans Admin.,
Cooper argues that to hold his appeal moot would permit an agency to avoid review of a removal action by pursuing the following course: removing the employee, waiting for the employee to file for retirement benefits, rescinding the removal when the retirement application is approved, and then moving to dismiss the employee’s appeal from his removal on mootness grounds. The flaw in that argument is that an employee who believes that he has been effectively removed from his position by being improperly coerced or induced to retire can argue that his retirement was involuntary. The Board has jurisdiction over an involuntary retirement, which is treated as if it were a removal.
See Staats v. United States Postal Serv.,
Relying on 5 U.S.C. § 7701(j) and this court’s decision in
Mays v. Department of Transportation,
The only portion of this case over which this court has jurisdiction is the appeal from the decision of the Merit Systems Protections Board. The complaint that Cooper filed in the district court, however, included claims under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 791 et seq., and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16, and a claim of retaliation for conduct protected by the Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989, 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8). Moreover, the complaint sought not only reinstatement and other job-related remedies, but also damages of at least $5 million, based on agency conduct extending beyond Cooper’s removal. Those claims and the request for damages would be outside the jurisdiction of the Merit Systems Protection Board even if the Board had jurisdiction over Cooper’s appeal from his removal. While the government suggests that there may be other infirmities in Cooper’s complaint, we are not in a position to make that determination, as claims two through four of the complaint are not within our jurisdiction. Therefore, while our order affirming the decision of the Board disposes of the first claim in Cooper’s complaint, which relates to the appeal from the Board’s jurisdictional ruling, it does not dispose of the remaining three claims. Although the district court transferred the entire case to us, it did not advert to the fact that we would not have jurisdiction over counts 2 through 4, nor did it address whether it had jurisdiction over those counts. Under these circumstances, we deem it the best course to transfer the case back to the United States District Court for the Southern District of California pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1631 for further proceedings on the three remaining claims in the complaint.
AFFIRMED and TRANSFERRED.
