Plаintiff Luis S. Navas Davila appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico dismissing Navas’s claims challenging his separation from the Puerto Rico National Guard (“PRNG”).
Navas served with the PRNG for 34 years, the last 26 as a commissioned officer. When this case arose, his continuеd membership in the Guard had been under annual review pursuant to National Guard *767 Regulation (“NGR”) 635-102, which requires that a Selective Retention Board (“SRB”) convene yearly to consider whether officers and warrant officers with 20 or more years of qualifying service should be retained in the Guard. 1 Navas’s mandatory removal date was November 4, 1986.
On February 8, 1983, Navas was advised that an SRB would convene on March 21-22, 1983 to consider his retention in the. PRNG. Navas visited the office of Captain Nilda Negron on February 17, 1983 to inspect his personnel files, which were to be submitted to the 1983 SRB. Navas discovered that his Officer Efficiency Reports (“OERs”) for the years 1980-81 and 1981-82 werе not in his file, notified Captain Nilda Negron of their absence, and was reassured by the Captain that he should not be concerned as the missing OERs were being processed. Navas did not write a letter to the SRB, although the regulations allow an officer to do so to “invit[e] attention to any matter of record concerning himself that he feels important in the review of his records.” NGR 635-102, ¶ 9-(e)(2).
The SRB actually convened on March 19-20, 1983. Consistent with NGR 635— 102, Navas was not given an opportunity to appear and be heard at the meeting, nor was he advised of the SRB’s findings or basis of decision. He was latеr told, however, that the SRB never had before it the two OERs that Navas had earlier found missing from his personnel file. On April 11, 1983, former Adjutant General of the PRNG, Orlando Lienza, received and approved the SRB’s recommendation that Navas not be selected for retention.
On April 13, 1983, Navas was notified of the nonretention decision and was advised that he would be separated from the PRNG by June 11, 1983. Navas requested reconsideration of the decision on April 29, 1983. Otto J. Reifkohl, Staff Judge Advocate, PRNG, advised Navas on May 11, 1983 that his request for reconsideration “cannot be entertained since it is nоt provided for in the regulations.” On May 16 and 25, Navas again submitted to the Adjutant General, now Luis E. Gonzales Vales, requests for reconsideration. Apparently in an effort to invoke the state administrative remedy provided by the Military Code of Puerto Rico, P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 25, § 2802, 2 Navas also noted in his letter of May 25, 1983 that:
By copy of this letter to the Honorаble Governor of Puerto Rico, Commander in Chief of the Puerto Rico National Guard, I hereby request a simultaneous reconsideration, under the terms outlined previously, should my Request be denied by the Adjutant General.
On May 31, 1983, Gonzales Vales responded that NGR 635-102
does not provide for reconsideration by TAG-PR of your non-selection by the Selective Retention Board of 1983, whose report became final on 11 April 1983 when the then Adjutant General, MG Orlando Lienza, approved the board’s report ____ In order that you exhaust your administrative remedies, you must request relief from the Army Board for Correction of Military Records, as provided in AR 15-185.
Instead of appealing to the Army Board for Correction of Military Records (“ABCMR”) under 10 U.S.C. § 1552, 3 Navas filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, mandamus, and damages against the Commonwealth and federal governments and certain PRNG officers. Navas claims that (1) *768 his separation from the PRNG was not in conformity with the applicable regulations because the SRB did not have before it his two most recent OERs and this regulatory violation constituted legal error redressable in a court of law; (2) the SRB deprived him of a property interest in сontinued service with the PRNG until his mandatory removal date without due process, by failing to follow the regulations; and (3) NGR 635-.102 is invalid on its face because it allows the PRNG to deprive Navas and other similarly situated officers of a property interest in continued service without providing minimum due process requirements such as an effective opportunity to confront the evidence against them, a means by which the SRB’s determinations can be challenged, or a decision supported by findings.
The parties submitted the matter for resolution through a joint stipulation of facts and exhibits on June 20, 1983. The district court denied Navas’s motion for summary judgment and granted appellees’ motions to dismiss or for summary judgment, ruling that Navas failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted and that the issues he raised constituted a nonjusticiable military controversy. We affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
We turn first to Navas’s constitutional claims, summarized as (2) and (3) above. The fatal weakness in both is that, like the guardsman in
Penagaricano,
Navas “does not have a constitutionally protected property interest in continued employment in the Guard ... [, tjhus, no process is due” him.
Penagaricano v. Llenza,
Navas asserts that NGR 635-102 creates a mutual expectancy that officers will be retained by the Guard until their mandatory removal date unless separated by an SRB that has complied with all valid regulations. However, the mere fact that the Guard has promulgated procedural rules by which to make retentiоn decisions does not by itself create a constitutionally cognizable property interest in continued employment in the Guard.
See Board of Curators v. Horowitz,
These regulations create no such entitlement. They do not require separation only for cause, nor do they otherwise imply the granting of tenure.
Cf. Arnett v. Kennedy,
We therefore reject Navas’s claims of constitutional deprivation.
II.
Having rejected Navas’s two constitutionally based claims, we turn to his contention that the SRB’s alleged violation of military regulations, i.e., its failure to consider his two recent OERs, constitutes a violation of law which this сourt should adjudicate and for which it may grant relief. We hold that the claim is not justiciable. 5
This court recently considered the criteria for determining the reviewability of claims incident to military service in
Penagaricano,
We need not reach the balancing component of the justiciability analysis as Navas failed to satisfy the threshold requirement of exhaustion of intraservice administrative remedies. Navas did not avail himself of the ABCMR’s review mechanism even though the Adjutant General notified him that to exhaust his remedies, he had to petition the ABCMR for relief.
Navas seeks to excuse his failure to exhaust by arguing that the ABCMR is an inappropriate forum for resolution of the issues he raises. In particular, he questions the ABCMR’s competence to adjudicate his constitutional claims. This issue is moot as we have found Navas’s constitutional claims to be without merit. See Section I, supra. The ABCMR is better equipped than the courts to resolve Navas’s only viable claim: that his separation from the PRNG was not in conformity with NGR 635-102 and that the nonretention decision was, therefore, invalid as a matter of administrative law.
This contention involves a number of questions that require for their resolution an evaluation of the content and character of the regulations. Specifically, the parties differ over whether the regulations require SRBs to have before them all relevant OERs. Even if it is found that the regulations contain such a requirement, it remains to be decided whether the regulations are designed to protect the rights of the individuals under consideration and thus must be followed closely,
see Morton v. Ruiz,
All these questions are better addressed by the ABCMR. It has far greater experience than this court in deciphering the content and effect of military regulations and should be permitted to exercise its exper *770 tise. Additionally, the issue of whether the asserted error was harmless is one that involves a review of the merits of the SRB’s decision, i.e., a determination of whether this military tribunal’s decision was in error or unjust. This is a task for which the ABCMR was created.
Navas also claims that because the ABCMR cannot give him complete relief, he should not be required to appeal to that board before pursuing judicial remedies. The ABCMR cannot compel the Puerto Rico National Guard to reinstate Navas, but it can cоrrect Navas’s record to show that he is eligible for reinstatement into the PRNG. The ABCMR is also empowered to provide Navas with substantial relief by reinstating him in active federal reserve status and ordering the payment of all pay and allowances lost as a consequence of a wrongful separation.
Penagaricano,
Finally, Navas argues that he should not be compelled to seek relief from the ABCMR because the regulations do not contemplate review by the board. The short answer to this argument is that 10 U.S.C. § 1552 is a generally available remedy, of which Navas was informed if he was not already aware, and is available to “correct any military record ... when ... necessary to correct an error or remove an injustice.” (Emphasis added.) The fact that the regulations do not make sрecific mention of the availability of ABCMR review does not affect Navas’s ability or duty to seek relief under 10 U.S.C. § 1552.
Our decision today is consonant with the general rule that “military personnel with grievances against the military establishment or its personnel must exhaust the administrative remedies provided by the military service before seeking relief in civilian courts.”
Penagaricano,
whether this is viewed as a legal or a factual question, the Army ought to be the primary authority for the interpretion of its own regulations. A decision by the ABCMR that the Army should have followed [the regulation at issue] might completely obviate the need for judicial review. If on the other hand, the ABCMR concludes that [the regulatiоn at issue] is inapplicable to the facts of this case and [the plaintiff serviceman] then seeks judicial review, the court will at least have a definitive interpretation of the regulation and an explication of the relevant facts from the highest adminis *771 trative body in the Army’s own appellate system. See Nelson v. Miller, 3 Cir.,373 F.2d 474 , 480, cert. denied, 1967,387 U.S. 924 ,87 S.Ct. 2042 ,18 L.Ed.2d 980 ; Sohm v. Fowler, 1966,124 U.S.App.D.C. 382 ,365 F.2d 915 , 918-919.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The statutory and regulatory scheme that defines the role of thе state Guard and the operation of the Selective Retention Program is detailed in
Penagaricano v. Llenza,
. Any member of the Military Forces of Puerto Rico[, which includes the PRNG,] who believes himself aggrieved by his commanding officer, and who, upon due application to that commanding officer, is refused redrеss, may complain to any superior commanding officer, who shall forward the complaint to the Governor or Adjutant General.
P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 25, § 2802.
. The ABCMR "may correct any military record ... when ... necessary to correct an error or remove an injustice.” 10 U.S.C. § 1552.
. Navas does not claim that speciаl circumstances exist in his case that give him a unique entitlement to continued employment with the Guard.
Cf. NeSmith v. Fulton,
. Ordinarily we would consider the issue of justiciability before reviewing, as we have just done, supra, the merits of related claims. However, Navas’s constitutional claims are so clearly insubstantial that we feel justified in disposing of them first. This simplifies our discussion of the justiciability of the remaining claim.
