Thе appellant, Ralph E. Price, was a civilian employee of the Department of Defense. After retiring in 2007, he served as a re-employed annuitant for a fixed two-year term that expired on January 3, 2009. Like many other Department of Defense employees, Mr. Price was subject to the National Security Personnel System (“NSPS”), under which employees were eligible for performance-based incentives in the form of bonuses and salary increases. The NSPS was created by statute in 2003. See National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004, Pub.L. No. 108-136 § 1101, 117 Stat. 1392, 1621-22 (2003). It remained in effect until 2009, when it was repealed by the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010, Pub.L. No. 111-84, § 1113(b), 123 Stat. 2190, 2498 (2009).
During the fiscal year that ended on September 30, 2008, Mr. Price received a performance rating for the “appraisal period” ending on that date that made him eligible for NSPS benefits. Those benefits, referred to as a “performance payout,” could take the form of a salary increase, a bonus, or a combination of the two. Because Mr. Price’s two-year term ended on January 3, 2009, he was not eligible for a salary increase, because by regulation the effective date of any performance payout in the form of a salary increase was the first day of the first pay period beginning on or after January 1 of each year, which in 2009 was January 4. See 5 C.F.R. § 9901.342(g)(6).
The dispute in this case turns on the effective date of NSPS bonus payments. *1338 The Department of Defense took the position that the effective date of a performance payout in the form of a bonus was the same as the effective date of a performаnce payout in the form of a salary increase, i.e., the first day of the first pay period beginning on or after January 1 of the year following the employee’s appraisal period. Mr. Price argued that the effective date of a performance payout in the form of a bonus should be either the end of the appraisal period (in this case, September 30, 2008) or the first day of the follоwing year (in this case, January 1, 2009). Because he was employed by the Department of Defense on both of those days, he contends that he was eligible for a bonus because he was employed on the effective date of the bonus payments.
When the Department of Defense denied Mr. Price’s request to be paid a bonus for the appraisal period ending on September 30, 2008, he filed an аction in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on behalf of himself and a class of similarly situated former Department of Defense employees. Proceeding under the Little Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346, he argued that the Department of Defense had unlawfully denied bonus benefits to him and to all others who had completed an appraisal period but had resigned, retired, or transferred out of the NSPS beforе the designated effective date for an increase in salary, i.e., the first day of the first pay period of the following year.
The district court held that it had jurisdiction over the action under the Little Tucker Act. On the merits, however, the court sustained the Defense Department’s determination that the effective date for the payout of bonuses under the NSPS was the same as the effective date for increases in salary, i.e., the first day of the first pay period of the year following the appraisal period, January 4, 2009. Because Mr. Price was not employed on that date, the court held that he was not entitled to payment of a bonus for the appraisal period that ended on September 30, 2008.
I
We are met at the outset by the government’s argument that the district court lacked jurisdiction over this aсtion. Like the district court, we reject that argument, and for the same reasons.
The Little Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a), allows a plaintiff to bring an action in district court if the action is based on a claim against the United States “not exceeding $10,000 in amount, founded either upon the Constitution, or any Act of Congress, or any regulation of an executive department.” The Act both creates jurisdiction in the district court and waives sоvereign immunity for an action falling within the jurisdictional grant. It does not, however, create a cause of action; for that, the plaintiff must look elsewhere.
Fisher v. United States,
A statutory or regulatory provision that grants a government official or agency substantial discretion to decide whether to expend government funds in a particular way is not considered money-mandating and does not create a cause of action that can be prosecuted under the Little Tucker Act.
See Barnick v. United States,
Complaints by civil service employees regarding personnel actiоns covered by the Civil Service Reform Act are subject to the jurisdiction of the Merit Systems Protection Board and do not give rise to actions under the Tucker Act or the Little Tucker Act.
See United States v. Fausto,
As the district court noted, the statutory schеme at issue in this case contemplated that bonuses would be paid in amounts dictated by the ratings given to NSPS employees for the pertinent appraisal period. 5 U.S.C. § 9902(b)(7)(I) (Supp. II 2008) (directing the Defense Department to promulgate regulations providing for a “pay-for-performance evaluation system to better link individual pay to performance and provide an equitable method for appraising and compensating employees”). Those regulations created the NSPS pay system, which established pay structures and pay administration rules that replaced the standard civil service pay system for covered employees. 5 C.F.R. § 9901.301(a). With respect to the performance pay provisions of the NSPS, the *1340 regulations provided that NSPS employees would be rated after the close of each fiscal year, and each employee would be assigned a specific number of “shares” based on that rating. Those shares would then be used to determine the amount of the employee’s performance payout. 5 C.F.R. § 9901.342. The amount of the performance payout would be calculated by starting with the number of shares each employee was assigned and multiplying the value оf each share by the employee’s base salary. Id. § 9901.342(g)(2).
In Mr. Price’s case, the government does not dispute the amount that he would have been entitled to under the regulations if he had been employed on the effective date of the bonus payments. According to Mr. Price, that amount, calculated according to his rating during the 2008 appraisal period and reduced to a sum certain, was $4,777. The issuе in this case is not the amount of the bonus, but whether he was entitled to any bonus at all, which turns not on the exercise of discretion by a government official, but on the date that is determined to be the effective date of the bonus payments for the appraisal period ending on September 30, 2008.
Mr. Price’s claim is thus to a fixed amount calculated according to the regulatory formula, and his eligibility to be paid that sum turns on an interpretation of the governing statute and regulations. If Mr. Price is correct that he was employed on the effective date of the bonus payments, he would have an undisputed right to the payment of a bonus in an amount certain. An action to enforce the payment of that amount could properly be brought under the Little Tucker Act, as the regulation in dispute would be money-mandating as to an employee who is determined to be eligible for a bonus in a fixed amount.
See Doe v. United States,
The government’s argument that this case does not fall within the purview of the Little Tucker Act is based in part on its contention that Mr. Price is wrong in interpreting the pertinent regulations, and that under the proper interpretation of the governing regulations he was required to be employed on January 4, 2009, in order to be entitled to a bonus for the perfоrmance year ending on September 30, 2008. The government asserts that because Mr. Price was “not entitled to a bonus payout,” the NSPS regulations were “not money-mandating with respect to Mr. Price.” Gov. Br. 18. As the district court pointed
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out in responding to the same argument, however, that argument conflates jurisdiction with the merits. If Mr. Price is correct on the merits of his regulatory argument, he was entitled to be paid the bonus, аnd the district court would have jurisdiction to issue judgment in his favor. If Mr. Price is wrong on the merits, he is not entitled to be paid. But that is because he would lose his case on the merits, not because the district court would lack jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute.
See Doe,
II
On the merits, Mr. Price argues that he was entitled to be paid a performance bonus even though he was nоt employed on January 4, 2009, the date that the agency identified as the effective date for performance payouts attributable to the 2008 appraisal period. We reject his argument and hold that the Defense Department was entitled to adhere to its consistent practice of designating the first day of the first pay period of the year following the appraisal period as thе effective date for the bonus component of the performance payout.
Under the pertinent NSPS regulations, a “performance payout” is defined to mean “the total monetary value of a performance pay increase and bonus” under the performance-based pay system. 5 C.F.R. § 9901.304. The regulations provide that employees who are no longer covered by the NSPS “оn the effective date of the payout ... are not entitled to a performance-based payout.” Id. § 9901.342(g)(7). The regulations further provide that the effective date of the salary increase component of the performance payout “will be the first day of the first pay period beginning on or after January 1 of each year.” Id. § 9901.342(g)(6). Mr. Price points out that while the “effective date” regulation expressly refers to the effective date of the salary increase component of the performance payout, it does not expressly refer to the effective date of the bonus component of the performance payout. In fact, no regulatory provision speaks expressly to that issue.
Mr. Price argues that the court should adopt the end of the appraisal period as the effective date of the bonus component of the performance payout. By that time, he contends, the employee has “earned” the bonus by the quality of his or her work. It is unfair, Mr. Price asserts, to deprive an employee who “earned” a bonus during the appraisal period from receiving that bonus simply because the employee left the agency several months later.
The question, however, is not what the court might select as the most equitable date for a bonus to vest, but rather whether the agency’s selection of the first day of the first pay period in the following year is a permissible choice. As noted, there is no statutory or regulatory provision setting the particular date on which the right to bonus payments vests. In the absence of an express provision аs to the effective date of bonus payments, the agency has construed its regulations to make the effective date for bonuses the same as the effective date for salary increases.
It is well settled that an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations is entitled to deference unless that interpreta
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tion is “plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.”
Auer v. Robbins,
There is nо reason to believe that the Defense Department’s interpretation of its NSPS regulations is merely a “convenient litigating position” or a “post hoc rationalization” in this case.
See Chase Bank USA, N.A v. McCoy,
— U.S. -,
From the regulatory record, it is clear that, despite the omission of reference to the effective date fоr bonus payments, the new regulations were intended to codify and continue the previous practice rather than to alter it. The new regulations largely tracked the previous version, and the Department identified those areas in which changes were intended. Those specified modifications did not include any reference to altering the effective date of bonuses by separating salаry increases from bonuses for purposes of determining the date of vesting. See Proposed Rules, 73 Fed.Reg. 29,882, 29,890 (May 22, 2008). During the notice-and-comment process, a commenter suggested that an NSPS employee “who earns a bonus for the performance year but retires before the end of the calendar year should still be able to *1343 receive a bonus payment.” Final Rule, 73 Fed.Reg. 56,344, 56,372 (Sept. 26, 2008). The Department of Defense rejected that suggestion, explaining that the regulation “clearly states that an employee who is no longer covered by NSPS on the effective date of the payout is not entitled to a performance-based payout.” Id. While that response did not specifically identify the effective date of the bonus component of the payout, it rejected the underlying rationale of Mr. Price’s argument — that an employee who is covered by the NSPS during the appraisal period should be entitled to the bonus earned during that period.
The administrative record thus shows that the interpretation of the regulation advanced by the government in this case is consistent with the position taken by the Department of Defense as to the effective date issue since the Department first promulgated regulations implementing the NSPS. In short, this is a case in which “the agency’s course of action indicates that the interpretation of its own regulations reflects its considered views.”
Long Island Care at Home, Ltd. v. Coke,
AFFIRMED
