This is a companion appeal to
Matlovich v. Secretary of the Air Force,
192 U.S.App.D.C. -,
Ensign Berg began this action against the Secretary of the Navy shortly before he was scheduled to be discharged. The District Court refused an order temporarily restraining separation and Berg was discharged under conditions other than honorable on June 3, 1976. He then thrice amended his complaint to seek (on various grounds) reinstatement and a declaratory judgment that his separation was invalid. In the course of the proceedings below the Secretary upgraded the discharge to honorable but refused Berg further personal relief.
Both parties moved for summary judgment and Judge Gesell, in a written memorandum opinion and order, granted appellee’s motion and denied that of appellant. He first upheld the constitutional validity of the Navy’s general policy of discharging homosexuals, then rejected a series of claims that appellant had been denied due process or other procedural protections, and finally concluded that the Navy did not abuse its discretion in refusing to retain Ensign Berg.
Berg
v.
Claytor,
On this appeal, appellant makes the same constitutional challenge to the policy of separating seamen who commit homosexual acts with consenting adults, in private and off-base, as does Sgt. Matlovich in No. 76-2110. Berg also raises a number of other issues going to the fairness or lawfulness of the naval proceedings against him. At this time we reach none of these questions because there is the same defect in this case as we have found in Matlovich, i. e., the *851 failure of the service to articulate adequately why it determined not to retain this appellant.
Although the Navy regulation on homosexuality (SECNAVINST 1900.9A (July 31, 1972)) does not in terms provide any exception to the general policy of separating homosexuals, the Navy has interpreted it as not mandating separation in all cases.
See Champagne
v.
Schlesinger,
As in
Matlovich,
we cannot tell why Berg failed of retention or appraise that exercise of discretion. The Administrative Discharge Board found that his record in the service did not reflect such an outstanding potential as a naval officer as to militate against separation. The District Court observed that, though he “was a fine officer,” “there is nothing in his record that marks him as being unusual or especially valuable to the Navy.”
For these reasons and on grounds comparable to those set forth in the opinion in Matlovich v. Secretary of the Air Force, we hold that this case must be remanded to the Secretary of the Navy. The decision granting summary judgment to the Government is vacated and remanded with instructions to remand to the Navy for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and that in Matlovich. Appellant can of course seek judicial relief from any adverse determination made on the remand. 5
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. The two cases were consolidated for argument.
. On this appeal, appellee, the Secretary of the Navy, does not contend that, under the Navy regulation and policy, discharge was mandatory for appellant.
. Judge Gesell then added: “Moreover, the records in recent homosexual cases demonstrate that physicians and psychologists differ widely concerning the causes and varied manifestations of homosexuality. Thus there is also a continuing need for the military establishment to be aware of further investigation in this area. In the final analysis there is, after all, an obligation to accommodate personnel policy to changing scientific knowledge and social standards to the fullest extent so long as conduct which threatens to interfere with defense objectives can be avoided.”
. Like the regulations applicable to the Air Force proceedings against Matlovich, the directives controlling the Navy’s action against Berg are properly read as calling for a reasoned determination. For the Navy directives, see Bureau of Naval Personnel Manual, arts. 3410100, 3420250; SECNAVINST 1920.6, especially para. 9.
. In particular, appellant may raise again the procedural and due process challenges he has levied — on none of which do we now pass.
The instructions in the Matlovich opinion with respect to the further proceedings also apply to this case.
