OPINION
The question before the Court is whether it has subject matter jurisdiction to entertain a lawsuit on behalf of federal retirees who assert that the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is deliberately refusing to properly pay them the annuities to which OPM has conceded they are statutorily entitled, or whether their grievance instead must be channeled only through an administrative review scheme created by Congress. In many ways, this question goes to the heart of this Court’s judicial power under Article III and the applicable statutes.
I. BACKGROUND
The Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”) is one of the nation’s largest health
As of the 1980s, the annuity a part-time nurse would receive was pro-rated based on the percentage of part-time work she performed over the length of her career. See Pub. L., No. 96-330. On January 23, 2002, Congress passed subsection (c) of Pub.L. No. 107-135, Title I, § 132, 115 Stat. 2454 (2002) (the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care Programs Enhancement Act, “Enhancement Act” or “Act”), which directed that all part-time work performed by VA RNs prior to April 7, 1986, was to be credited as full-time service rather than part-time service, effectively increasing the annuity for a number of qualifying RNs.
OPM immediately began applying the Enhancement Act to RNs who retired after its effective date, that is, after January 23, 2002. Am. Compl. ¶ 6. However, the Enhancement Act did not explicitly state whether it was to be applied retroactively, that is, whether it applied to all RNs who performed part-time service prior to April 7, 1986, regardless of when they retired. OPM initially took the position that the Enhancement Act was not retroactive, and refused to apply it to RNs who had retired before January 23, 2002 and who sought recalculation of their benefits under the Act. See id.
In 2007, approximately 160 individuals whose requests for an Enhancement Act recalculation had been denied by OPM appealed to the Merit Systems Protection Board (“MSPB”). Id. ¶¶ 28-29. The MSPB consolidated those 160 appeals under the lead case of Lippman v. OPM, No. PH-0831-08-0212-1-1. Id. ¶ 31. On May 7, 2008, Administrative Judge Michael Rudisill in the Northeastern Regional Office of the MSPB issued an initial decision determining that Congress intended the Enhancement Act to be applied retroactively, i.e. to individuals who retired after April 7, 1986 and before January 23, 2002, and ordering OPM to recalculate the benefits of each of the claimants at the new Enhancement Act level, both for past and future payments. Id. ¶¶ 32-33. OPM requested reconsideration of Administrative Judge Rudisill’s decision by a three-member panel of the MSPB, which reconsideration was declined. Id. ¶ 34, Ex. 1, ECF No. 81-1; see 5 C.F.R. §§ 1201.113-15; 5 U.S.C. § 7701. As a result, the Lippman decision became final and binding upon the Lippman claimants (and upon OPM with regard to them) as of the end of 2008. Complying with Lippman, OPM both paid each claimant for benefits past due, and adjusted her monthly benefit rate going forward. Id. 42.
According to Plaintiffs counsel, while in the wake of Lippman, OPM initially recalculated the benefits for a number of post-Lippman claimants who requested it, id. ¶ 43, in a number of instances in 2009 OPM did not respond to individual requests to recalculate bene
At least throughout the years of 2009-10, however, OPM had determined that it would only recalculate the benefits of a qualifying nurse who specifically requested recalculation under the Enhancement Act before OPM; that is, notwithstanding its acquiescence in a global application of Lippman, an application it posits is required by law, it would not voluntarily identify and recalculate the benefits of all RNs who are otherwise eligible for such recalculation under the Enhancement Act, nor would it voluntarily notify those individuals of their ability to seek a recalculation. See Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 46-49, 72, 77, 81.
On December 30, 2010, the five original named plaintiffs in this case — Wigton, Gorgonzola, Hudson, Daane, and Vallazuso— filed suit in this Court on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated against John Berry in his official capacity as Director of OPM. Those individuals were RNs and their surviving spouses who (1) worked part-time before for the VA before April 7, 1986; (2) retired between April 7, 1986 and January 23, 2002, and to whom OPM give full-time credit for pre-April 7,
On May 9, 2011, Plaintiffs moved to certify a class pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23, ECF No. 15. On May 11, 2011, Defendant filed a Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs first Complaint, asserting that this Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the case. ECF No. 19. On December 5, 2011, Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss was denied without prejudice to renew upon Plaintiffs filing a First Amended Complaint, ECF No. 79, and Plaintiffs motion for class certification was denied without prejudice to renew upon the Court’s resolution of the issue of subject matter jurisdiction, ECF No. 80.
During the pendency of this litigation, OPM voluntarily recalculated the original named Plaintiffs’ annuities, along with those of approximately ten (10) other retired VA nurses who were members of the putative class. Am. Compl. at 3. On June 20, 2011, Plaintiffs filed a Motion pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(d)(1), asserting that Defendants’ contacts relative to recalculation with the original named Plaintiffs and other putative class members jeopardized the class, and asking the Court to enjoin Defendant from initiating any further contact with putative class members. ECF No. 35. On November 23, 2011, the Court granted that motion and ordered OPM not to directly contact any putative class members in this case, ECF No. 75, an order which it clarified on December 16, 2011, ECF No. 87, and again on December 3, 2012, ECF No. 119, ruling that OPM may not directly contact any putative class member only with regard to the subject matter of this litigation, and may contact such members with regard to other matters as necessary. That order remains in effect presently.
During the briefing of the 23(d)(1) motion, OPM for the first time described in detail its efforts to contact potential eligible annuitants under the Enhancement Act post-Lippman. See ECF No. 54, filed Aug. 13, 2011. According to OPM, at the time of its acquiescence in the Lippman decision on March 4, 2009, it believed that given a lack of computerization of its annuity and employee information systems until very recently, the only way to identify the potential annuitants who would be eligible for a recalculation was to manually review the file of each individual annuitant who retired from the VA between April 7, 1986 and January 23, 2002, a list of approximately 78,551. Decl. Edlef J. Foelster, OPM Br. Opp., Pl.’s Rule 23(d)(1) Mot. Ex. C ¶ 13, ECF No. 54-3. It appears that given the burdens accompanying that task, OPM initially did, in fact, only recalculate the annuity of an individual who specifically requested it. Id. ¶ 8.
However, sometime subsequent to March 2011, OPM became aware that its annuity computer database, known as the “Annuity Roll Processing System” or “ARPS”, id. Ex. B. ¶ 6, Decl. Amy Kathleen Benson, ECF No. 54-2, could be cross-referenced with another employee computer database, the Central Personnel
Cross-referencing the CPDF and the ARPS, OPM was able to first generate a list of annuitants who had performed part-time service as a VA nurse between December 1972 and April 6, 1986, and who retired between April 7, 1986 and January 23, 2002. Id. Ex. C ¶21. The Court will refer to the individuals so identified as “List 1” annuitants. See id. Of course, List 1 annuitants would almost all be eligible for a recalculation of their benefits, and would represent the vast majority of entitled annuitants post-Lippman concession.
However, as noted above, on July 20, 2011, Plaintiffs filed their Rule 23(d)(1) motion, asking the Court to preclude OPM from making any contact with a potential class member in this case. Id. ¶ 29; see ECF No. 35. At that time, OPM ceased both of those recalculation/identification efforts pending the Court’s ruling on that motion, and has apparently not re-initiated them to this date. Id. ¶ 29; Mot. Dismiss Hr’g Tr. 30:20-25, 21:1-5, July 23, 2012, ECF No. 112.
Plaintiffs filed a First Amended Complaint on December 6, 2011. ECF No. 81. It appears that the two current named
Plaintiffs assert five (5) counts. Count I seeks a writ of mandamus from this Court compelling OPM to fulfill its “clear and unequivocal ministerial duty to identify Class members, notify them of their rights, recalculate their pensions, pay them benefits owing from retirement, and adjust their monthly rates going forward.” Id. ¶ 92. Count II seeks similar relief under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. § 706(a), Id. ¶ 99. Count III asserts a violation of the Equal Protection component of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, on the grounds that OPM has no rational basis for discriminating between members who self-identify as entitled to a recalculation and members who do not self-identify. Id. ¶ 106. It asks that the Court set aside the agency’s unconstitutional action under the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(B), and seeks “equitable relief.” Id. ¶¶ 108-109. Count V seeks the same relief as Count III, and asserts that OPM’s actions violated the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, by depriving annuitants of their property interest in their enhanced annuities without due process of law. Id. ¶¶ 119-120. Count IV asserts a direct action under the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(B), for arbitrary and capricious agency action. Id. ¶ 116. Count VI asserts a violation of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794, on the grounds that many putative class members are elderly and/or disabled, and that OPM has a duty to “reasonably accommodate” those individuals by conducting notification and recalculation. Id. ¶¶ 126-127. Also, more generally, the Amended Complaint seeks relief in the form of a declaratory judgment, see id. at 25-26.
The only motion pending before the Court is Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint, ECF No. 93, filed on February 10, 2012 (“Motion”). The Court has had the benefit of extensive briefing on this Motion encompassing the duration of the year 2012,
“Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), a court must grant a motion to dismiss if it lacks subject-matter jurisdiction to hear a claim.’ ” In re Schering Plough Corp. Intron/Temodar Consumer Class Action,
III. DISCUSSION
By statute, OPM administers retirement annuities under both the Federal Employees’ Retirement System (FERS), 5 U.S.C. § 8461, and the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS), 5 U.S.C. § 8347.
In 1978, Congress passed the Civil Service Reform Act (“CSRA”), which “comprehensively overhauled the civil service system, creating an elaborate new framework for evaluating adverse personnel actions against federal employees. It prescribes in great detail the protections and remedies applicable to such action, including the availability of administrative and judicial review.” United States v. Fausto,
Before delving into OPM’s arguments, it is important to make one observation regarding Plaintiffs’ claims, which is that, without ruling on their merits, they appear to assert one or more facially valid constitutional claims. First, Plaintiffs argue that they have a due process interest in receiving the proper annuity dictated by statute, an interest which is violated by their failure to receive enhanced benefits under the Enhancement Act in light of OPM’s Lippman concession,
A. Sovereign Immunity
First, Defendant argues that Plaintiffs have not asserted a valid waiver
However, for actions against administrative agencies, 5 U.S.C. § 702 does provide that waiver. Under the APA’s waiver of sovereign immunity,
An action in a court of the United States seeking relief other than money damages and stating a claim that an agency or an officer or employee thereof acted or failed to act in an official capacity or under color of legal authority shall not be dismissed nor relief therein be denied on the ground that it is against the United States____ Nothing herein (1) affects other limitations on judicial review or the power or duty of the court to dismiss any action or deny relief on any other appropriate legal or equitable ground; or (2) confers authority to grant relief if any other statute that grants consent to suit expressly or impliedly forbids the relief which is sought.
5 U.S.C. § 702. This case meets the first criterion, because Plaintiffs’ suit is equitable and not for money damages: they “seek[] to enforce the statutory mandate itself, which happens to be one for the payment of money.” Bowen v. Massachusetts,
The remaining barrier to § 702’s application, then, lies in its final requirement that it may not be used to supplant another statute which “expressly or impliedly forbids the relief which is sought.” Defendant asserts that the CSRA is just such a statute. Therefore, the sovereign immunity/ § 702 inquiry collapses
B. Exclusivity of the CSRA Statutory Scheme
Whether the CSRA (along with certain other administrative agencies’ review schemes) provides a plaintiffs exclusive avenue for a claim for relief, or whether instead a United States District Court may entertain such an action, has been the subject of a great amount of judicial push- and-pull over the years.
1. Initial Supreme Court Cases-CSRA and Other Statutory Schemes
In United States v. Fausto,
Additionally, the Supreme Court considered similar challenges to the actions of other administrative agencies. In Heckler v. Ringer,
First, in Bowen v. City of New York,
Second, in McNary v. Haitian Refugee Ctr., Inc.,
2. Lower Court CSRA Cases
Two lower courts then considered cases with facts very similar to those here. In Anselmo v. King,
A decade later, in Fornaro v. James,
3. Elgin
Most recently, the Supreme Court considered the breadth of the exclusivity of the CSRA scheme in Elgin v. Dep’t of Treasury, — U.S. -,
The Court analyzed the question before it under the framework of Thunder Basin Coal Co. v. Reich,
Second, the Court examined whether any factors were present that would indicate that Congress did not intend the plaintiffs’ claims to be reviewed only within the CSRA scheme, namely, the “presumption that Congress does not intend to limit district court jurisdiction [1] if a finding of preclusion could foreclose all meaningful judicial review; [2] if the suit is wholly collateral to the statute’s review provisions; and [3] if the claims are outside the agency’s expertise.” Id. (quoting Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Co. Accounting Oversight Bd., — U.S. -,
that petitioners’ constitutional claims are the vehicle by which they seek to reverse the removal decisions to return to federal employment.... A challenge to removal is precisely the type of personnel action regularly adjudicated by the MSPB and the Federal Circuit within the CSRA scheme.... Far from a suit wholly collateral to the CSRA scheme, the case before us is a challenge to CSRA-covered employment action brought by CSRA-covered employees requesting relief the CSRA routinely affords.
Id. at 2139-40. Finally, the Court found the third factor also absent, because certain employment-related questions such as whether plaintiff suffered a “constructive discharge” were still within the agency expertise, and that expertise still could be “brought to bear” on an appeal. Id. at 2140. Writing for three Justices, Justice Alito penned a forceful dissent, in which he argued, inter alia, that at least facial constitutional challenges such as those asserted by the Elgin plaintiffs indeed fit the “wholly collateral” bill, given that they are unrelated to the statutory rules of federal employment, and lack detailed factual issues pertaining to specific circumstances from which employee grievances arise. Id. at 2143 (Alito, J., dissenting).
4. Application of Precedent to the Present Case
The crux of the issue before this Court is what kind of challenge to OPM action, if any, may be brought in district court after Elginl For the reasons that follow, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs here have presented at least one sort of attack that does survive.
First, properly applying Elgin to this case requires that the claims here be viewed across three main (3) axes: the type of claim, the type of plaintiff, and the
Second, the Court must consider the particular groups of Plaintiffs/putative class members. The potential annuitants on whose behalf the Plaintiffs seek relief can be fairly divided into two categories: putative class members who are aware of OPM’s Lippman concession, and therefore of their right to increased annuities (which would include the named Plaintiffs, for example), and putative class members who are entirely unaware of those circumstances, and are necessarily absent from the litigation. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 105-106.
Third, with regard to those asserted duties and individuals, the relief they seek can further be parsed. In accordance with what they assert are OPM’s duties, Plaintiffs seek on behalf of all putative class members that OPM (a) recalculate their benefits and pay them their enhanced annuities and with respect to the unknowing putative class members, Plaintiffs seek an order that OPM (b) notify them of their potential right to seek such a recalculation.
With these classifications in mind, the Court turns to their analysis under the relevant case law. Because, as noted above, each of Plaintiffs’ constitutional challenges presents a colorable constitutional claim as in Elgin, the Thunder Basin analysis is appropriate here. See Elgin,
However, a closer examination counsels against that more sweeping conclusion. Turning to the types of plaintiffs here — individuals who know of their rights post -Lippman and individuals who do not — as to the first group, Congress provided an effective system to challenge the agency actions taken against them in the form of the CSRA. They would simply present their claim to OPM asserting their entitlement to an increased benefit postLippman; if the claims are denied, they may appeal to MSPB and then to the Federal Circuit; if the claim is granted, they receive their pay and are satisfied. In relevant aspect, then, these individuals are like the Elgin plaintiffs: they can receive complete review of their claims through the CSRA scheme, culminating in Federal Circuit review. The relief they seek-recalculation-is specific to each of them and is entirely within the agency’s authority. Therefore, in light of Elgin, the Court does not have difficulty concluding that at least as far as an individual’s claim for benefits to which she is entitled under the law, that is, an individual’s recalculation, including for reasons such as those asserted here, Congress did indeed intend for an individual to present that claim through the CSRA’s scheme, and not attack it collaterally in district court.
But as to the second group of individuals, who never know of their rights or the Lippman concession, and whom OPM neither notifies nor recalculates, the CSRA scheme is necessarily unavailable to them.
The Court considers this form of relief under three Free Enterprise Fund factors discussed in Elgin that counsel against exclusivity. While the Supreme Court has expressed the three factors in the conjunctive rather than the disjunctive, lower
The first and most important Free Enterprise Fund factor cuts sharply in favor of district court review here: denying it indeed “could foreclose all meaningful judicial review.” Elgin,
To put it another way, the Supreme Court has never held that the CSRA provides the exclusive remedy for an agency position that is both systemwide and secret. Elgin considered a policy that was systemwide, but anything but secret (enshrined in statute; injury known by aggrieved individual). See generally
Equally importantly, the CSRA itself does not provide any mechanism by which that unknowing individual could receive the notice to which she may be due. An individual without notice of OPM’s Lippman acquiescence of course cannot on her own avail herself of the CSRA scheme, because she doesn’t know that she needs to; therefore, the only way she could get relief is if another individual asserts it on her behalf. But even according to OPM, a deserving individual who actively requests a post-Lippman recalculation before OPM will receive one. OPM Class Cert. Opp. Br. at 11, ECF No. 33. Therefore, that individual (the one who asks for and receives recalculated benefits) cannot ever become an appellant, either before the MSPB or the Federal Circuit, because she will have received what she is asking for, and would not have standing (let alone the motivation) to serve as an appellant. Moreover, even if a claimant appealed an OPM decision after not prevailing below, that individual could not represent an absent unknowing claimant at the MSPB. This is because while the MSPB allows for the consolidation of appeals, it does not allow for the certification of a class action for benefits as a district court does.
Regarding factor (2), the Court does note that Elgin dealt a blow to the “wholly collateral” arguments relied on by the Court in Bowen v. NYC,
Finally, factor (3) also does not counsel in favor of exclusive CSRA review. The agency’s expertise here would lie in determining whether an individual is the type of person who would be eligible for relief under the Enhancement Act, and calculating the proper annuity due that individual. The agency has already done the former, and the Court reiterates that it cannot compel OPM to undertake the latter, post Elgin. That is, OPM has already explained that it has identified the List 1 and List 2 individuals, and the Court has already determined that ordering the recalculation of individual benefits is outside its purview. All that remains is sending those individuals a notification letter, something that the Court does not consider to require any agency expertise. Additionally, the
In sum, to require CSRA review as to all relief sought in this case “could foreclose all meaningful judicial review” of the serious constitutional questions presented by the Plaintiffs on behalf of those who have not been notified of their rights, is collateral to the CSRA’s review mechanism, and does not implicate agency expertise.
However, the Court must emphasize the narrowness of its holding. As noted above, fairly read, Elgin sets out a broad standard, one that almost entirely encompasses the universe of claims relating to an individual federal employee’s rights or entitlements.
C. Jurisdiction; Causes of Action
Having determined that sovereign immunity does not bar the present claim, and that the CSRA does not of its own force divest this Court of jurisdiction it otherwise possesses, it is appropriate to highlight the source of this Court’s jurisdiction as tied to a federal cause of action. First, in the absence of the CSRA exclusivity, 28 U.S.C. § 1331’s grant of federal question jurisdiction remains in full force. See Whitman v. Dep’t of Transp.,
Finally, some consideration of the remaining causes of action is in order. A number of Plaintiffs’ causes of action likely come with additional hurdles: for example, the mandamus statute requires a clear, nondelegable duty, see Heckler,
Such a cause of action does remain, in the form of an invocation of this Court’s inherent equitable power (if not duty when the issue is properly presented) to enjoin agency action that is unconstitutional. Courts in the past have been less than crystal clear in explaining the source of the power of a federal court to enjoin the unconstitutional action of a federal agency or official, but the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit may have explained it most plainly:
The courts’ power to impose equitable remedies against agencies is broader than its power to impose legal remedies against individuals. Bivens [v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,403 U.S. 388 ,91 S.Ct. 1999 ,29 L.Ed.2d 619 (1971) ] actions are a recent judicial creation and, as Carlson v. Green [446 U.S. 14 ,100 S.Ct. 1468 ,64 L.Ed.2d 15 (1980) ] made clear, comparatively easy for Congress to preempt. The court’s power to enjoin unconstitutional acts by the government, however, is inherent in the Constitution itself, see Marburg v. Madison [5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137 ,2 L.Ed. 60 (1803) ].
Hubbard v. E.P.A.,
See, e.g., Correctional Servs. Corp. v. Malesko,534 U.S. 61 , 74,122 S.Ct. 515 ,151 L.Ed.2d 456 (2001) (equitable relief “has long been recognized as the proper means for preventing entities from acting unconstitutionally”); Bell v. Hood,327 U.S. 678 , 684,66 S.Ct. 773 ,90 L.Ed. 939 (1946) (“[I]t is established practice for this Court to sustain the jurisdiction of federal courts to issue injunctions to protect rights safeguarded by the Constitution”); see also Ex parte Young,209 U.S. 123 , 149, 165, 167,28 S.Ct. 441 ,52 L.Ed. 714 (1908).
Free Enterprise Fund,
In addition, the Court notes that “non-statutory review” may also be another rubric by which Plaintiffs’ claims here could persist. Our Court of Appeals has recently approvingly referred to the availability of “nonstatutory review” of agency action. Treasurer of N.J.,
D. Justiciability
Although the Court has concluded that its federal question jurisdiction over the instant action has not been stripped entirely by the CSRA remedial process, it is continually obliged to satisfy itself of its subject matter jurisdiction more broadly, including assessing whether a “case” or “controversy” in accordance with Article III of the Constitution is presented. See, e.g., Sprint Commc’ns Co., L.P. v. APCC Servs., Inc.,
Here, Plaintiffs initially filed a Complaint alleging that OPM maintained a policy of only recalculating an individual’s benefits if she specifically requested it. See ECF No. 1. ¶¶ 44-50. During this litigation, OPM revealed that even if that was once its initial policy, at some point in 2011, it abandoned that policy and began to attempt to recalculate and notify eligible individuals, once it realized it was possible to do so. According to OPM, it had already identified the two groups of potentially eligible individuals, had begun to recalculate benefits for the List 1 individuals, and was preparing a mass mailing to the List 2 individuals. It further appears that it may be that the only thing preventing OPM from continuing to do those activities — the very activities Plaintiffs were suing OPM for its failure to do — was this Court’s own orders, entered at the behest of Plaintiffs, forbidding OPM contact with any putative class member in this ease. See ECF Nos. 75; 87; 119. Plaintiffs then filed their Amended Complaint, which, almost identically to the first, made a blanket allegation that OPM had a policy of recalculating an individual’s benefit only if she specifically requested it, an assertion which may not have been in accord with factual reality. See ECF No. 81 ¶¶ 47-48, 71-72.
In light of these facts, the Court believes that a question of justiciability lies before it, especially now that the Court has narrowed the issue that it has the power to decide to only whether OPM is obligated to notify potential eligible annuitants. Plaintiffs seek, inter alia, a declaration that OPM is obligated to identify and notify potential eligible annuitants of its Lippman acquiescence (and the process for activating it), and an injunction ordering OPM to do so; OPM seemingly agrees that it is obligated to identify and notify potential eligible annuitants, and asserts that it was attempting to do so until Plaintiffs’ Rule 23(d)(1) motion put the brakes on those efforts. Given the relative thinness of the facts of record relating to those efforts at this time, and the lack of briefing on the matter, it is difficult to pin down the exact category of the potential justiciability concern: whether the case is not yet ripe, because Plaintiffs are too early in challenging a failure to receive a remedy which they are about to receive anyway;
Rather than immediately order further briefing in this already heavily briefed case, the Court believes the better course is to convene a status conference to assess, with the parties’ participation, the best course to tack in this case going forward. Defendants’ petition for dismissal for want of subject matter jurisdiction is now off the table, as is Plaintiffs’ request for injunctive relief from this Court ordering OPM to recalculate benefits. For example, in Anselmo, the court monitored the voluntary actions of OPM to notify the eligible Wassenaar Plaintiffs, see Anselmo v. King, Civ. A. No. 94-0895, slip op. (D.D.C. Mar.18,1998), available at Pis.’ Resp. Mot. Dismiss Ex. D, ECF No. 99-4, and in Fornar o, OPM had stipulated it would voluntarily notify the eligible Pitsker Plaintiffs,
IV. CONCLUSION
The CSRA does not divest this Court of subject matter jurisdiction over the instant action, but that jurisdiction exists only to the extent that Plaintiffs seek relief relating to the notification of individuals who
An appropriate order will issue.
Notes
. Additionally, survivors of retirees are eligible to receive "survivor annuities” as well. See 5 U.S.C. §§ 8341, 8331 (10)-(11). Because there is no operative difference between the eligibility of an annuitant or her survivor for the purposes of this litigation, both "annuitants” and "survivor annuitants” will be referred to collectively as "annuitants.” See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 79, 82.
. The message reads, "This notice is an update to the email issued on December 2, 2008, that advised RSP staff of how to handle inquiries from non-appellants of the Lippman vs. OPM decision. The decision ordered OPM to apply the part-time DMS computation under Public Law 107-135 ... to the 153 former VA nurses involved in the lawsuit. At the time, it was determined that only the 153 annuitants were affected and that inquiries from other annuitants needed to be sent to a special address. However, RSP has since been advised by the Retirement Policy Group that the new computation will apply to any VA registered nurse whose benefit was computed with the part-time DMS formula. Therefore, inquiries no longer need to be sent to room 3349. Instead they need to be handled through the normal post adjudication process.” OPM Br. Support Mot. Dismiss Ex. 1, ECF No. 94-1.
. See OPM Br. in Opp. Pis.’ Mot. Class Cert., ECF No. 33, at 16 n. 8 ("OPM no longer takes the position that amendments enacted by [the Enhancement Act] ... are applicable only to individuals who retired on or after January 23, 2002”); id. at 11 ("In light of the fact that OPM has already determined that all annuitants with part-time VA nurse service before April 7, 1986 are entitled to receive annuities with such service computed as full-time service, no such individual will be denied the retroactive and prospective annuities using such a computation. Therefore, no dispute exists as to whether any of the alleged class members are entitled to receive such annuity.”); OPM Reply Support Mot, Dismiss, ECF No. 104, at 2 (“OPM does not dispute that an individual is entitled to a recalculation of his/ her annuity in accordance with § 132 of Pub L. No. 107-135 ...”) (emphasis added); id. at 29 ("OPM, following the date of the decision in Lippman, adopted the interpretation that Section 132 ... applies with full retroactivity to all persons who retired between April 7, 1986 and January 23, 2002, when the statute was enacted. That is the posture of the statutory interpretation that was in case when this case was first filed in this Court.").
. This civil action was reassigned to this member of the Court on December 7, 2011. ECF No. 82.
. OPM would have to ensure, for example, that the individual was not herself a plaintiff in the original Lippman decision who would have already received the appropriate recalculation. See id. ¶¶ 25-26.
. OPM has also asserted potential additional categories of individuals potentially eligible for benefits, but who would not be revealed by cross-referencing the CPDF and the ARPS: individuals who worked part-time as a VA nurse but then transferred to another agency prior to December 1972, individuals whose information was erroneously omitted from the CPDF, and individuals who worked part-time as a VA nurse but then transferred to another occupational series prior to December 1972. ECF No. 104 at 34. According to OPM, the only way to identify those individuals would be to manually inspect the records of each of the upwards of 1 million federal employees who retired between April 7, 1986 and January 23, 2002. See id. at 33-34.
. Perhaps sensing the significance and complexity of these issues, the parties by agreement sought a number of extensions for the filing of an out-of-the-ordinary number of briefs, along with supplemental briefing at the Court's request, through December, 2012. ECF Nos. 90, 95, 97, 108, 122, 124.
. Defendants also move for a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal for failure to state a claim only of Plaintiffs’ claim for mandamus. ECF No, 93; ECF No. 94 at 3, 19. Because the Court concludes that the jurisdictional questions before it substantially predominate the "merits” questions, that some viable claims on the merits remain, and that it would be in the interests of judicial economy to decide all merits issues together at a later point in time, Defendant’s Motion with respect to its 12(b)(6) attack will be denied without prejudice.
. Because the CSRS and the FERS are identical in the rights and remedies they afford (including CSRA review), for the purposes of this Opinion, the Court will refer to the statutes accompanying the CSRS, the older of those two systems. See Anthony v. OPM,
.The Court takes OPM at its word in its repeated and unequivocal assertions that it believes it is required to apply the Act retroactively, for which the Court uses “the Lippman concession” as shorthand. See supra note 3, Therefore, at least for the purposes of this litigation, that is OPM's official statutory interpretation, either by way of the principle of judicial estoppel or by way of an agency interpretation akin to that in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
. Therefore, determining whether OPM’s procedures indeed violated procedural due process would require an examination of "(1) the nature of the private interest that will be affected, (2) the comparative risk of an erroneous deprivation of that interest with and without additional or substitute procedural safeguards, and (3) the nature and magnitude of any countervailing interest in not providing additional or substitute procedural requirements.” Turner v. Rogers, - U.S. -,
. And none has been advanced, with the possible proviso that it might be very labor-intensive to do so as to potential claimants beyond Lists 1 and 2. See text accompanying note 6 supra. The Court has not been advised of any precedent which authorizes the disregard of a conceded statutory obligation to pay earned, vested benefits on the basis that it is really hard to do so.
. For example, the Supreme Court’s thorough discussion in Elgin,
. Because the Court has found a waiver of sovereign immunity under § 702, it does not need to decide at this stage in the litigation whether the mandamus statutes, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1361, 1651(a), independently would provide that waiver, nor whether mandamus is an appropriate remedy in this case. See, e.g., In re Briscoe,
. The court did not, in that opinion, rule on "whether a declaratory judgment will issue or whether this Court will grant relief in the nature of mandamus.”
. Also, it appears that even after Elgin, attacks to OPM rulemaking that does not affect any individual employee, and therefore would fall far outside the CSRA's purview, would still be available. See, e.g., Nat'l Treasury Employees Union v. Whipple,
. In light of the Court's conclusion that Plaintiffs' constitutional claims lie within the Court’s subject matter jurisdiction (and fall under Elgin’s analytical rubric) it need not, and therefore does not, express an opinion relative to Plaintiff's claims in the remaining counts.
. However, the statute and regulations do speak to the particular scenario of termination of annuity payments, for example, which under law must be accompanied by notice and contain a special appeal procedure. See 5 U.S.C. §§ 8311-22; 5 C.F.R. §§ 831.109; 831.1104.
. In this way, OPM's approach-providing recalculation only to those that know to ask-might be viewed as its own version of "double secret probation,” that is, something that would matter greatly to those it affects, but whose effect they cannot appreciate because they don’t know that it is affecting them.
. MSPB regulations permit "Class appeals.” 5 C.F.R. § 1201.27. Although the regulation does state that the MSPB in making its decision should be "guided but not controlled by the applicable provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,” which would include Fed.R.Civ.P. 23, it also speaks to the joinder of individual appellants' claims: "When a class appeal is filed, the time from the filing date until the judge issues his or her decision ... is not counted in computing the time limit for individual members of the potential class to file individual appeals.” Id. None of the cases cited by OPM supports the proposition that MSPB may authorize a class action including abseniynon-appellant class members. See Jude v. Dep’t of Treasury,
. In that decision, the MSPB declined to waive the requirement of exhaustion for those absent, unknowing class members. See
. Am. Compl. at ¶ 95 ([T]his Court should direct OPM to identify and notify Class members of their entitlement, recalculate their pensions ... pay benefits past due, and adjust monthly pension benefits going forward); id. at 25 (“WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully request that this Court ... E. Declare that OPM has violated its obligations under [the Act and its Lippman acquiescence] by failing to identify and notify members of the putative Class, recalculate their pensions, and pay them amounts owed under the [Act]; F. Order OPM to perform its obligations under [the Act and its Lippman acquiescence], and identify all Class members entitled to recalculation, recalculate their pensions in accordance with the [Act] ... L. Provide the Named Plaintiffs with a complete list of all living and deceased members of the Class, which includes their last known address and telephone number ...”).
. Given this Court's conclusion that constitutional review might not be available at all to some of the Plaintiffs here, absent this Court's narrow exercise of jurisdiction, it may well be that this case falls within the range of a "statute that purports to deny any judicial forum for a colorable constitutional claim” and would therefore fall under the rubric of Webster v. Doe,
. The Court in Elgin did reiterate that " ‘competitive service employees, who are given review rights by Chapter 75, cannot expand these rights by resort to' judicial review outside of the CSRA scheme,”
.Perhaps the best indication of the breadth of Elgin is Justice Alito’s dissent. See
. Fornaro,
Nor are the cases that have considered various duties of OPM to notify annuitants to the contrary. First, the majority of the cases cited by OPM considered OPM’s duty to notify potential annuitants (whose rights had not yet vested) of either future rights or rights to file for certain benefits. See Davis v. OPM,
It is true that statute does require OPM to provide notice to individual annuitants in certain other areas, see 5 U.S.C. § 8339(o )(2)(B), (6) (spousal election eligibility), suggesting that Congress knew how to require OPM notice when it wanted to. However, that cannot and does not alter the fact that notwithstanding Congress’s silence in specifically providing for notice in the relatively rare situations of retroactive recalculations in light of agency acquiescence in a statute's applicability, as here, such notice might be constitutionally required, see Mathews v. Eldridge,
.In Mitchum v. Hurt,
. It is in light of this conclusion, that the Court does not need to examine the propriety of mandamus relief, as challenged by Defendant's Rule 12(b)(6) Motion, in order to determine whether there is any colorable cause of action that may support jurisdiction here, that the Court will permit Defendant to reassert its arguments that a claim for relief under mandamus has not been stated at later point in time, to be determined alongside the merits of Plaintiffs’ other potential causes of action.
. The Declaratoiy Judgment statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, may also support a cause of action here. See, e.g., Yu,
. "Ripeness requires a substantial controversy, between parties having adverse legal interests, of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant the issuance of a declaratory judgment.” Lewis v. Alexander,
. See, e.g., Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc.,
. See, e.g., Am. Disabled for Attendant Programs Today v. U.S. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev., CIV. A. 96-5881,
. Without ordering the lifting of that order here, it appears to the Court that its continuance may no longer be proper: it seems the best way for the Court to vindicate the rights of putative class members is to permit OPM to notify them. Far from attempting to “pick off” plaintiffs in an attempt to moot a case, Weiss v. Regal Collections,
The Court does observe, however, that its determination that it only has the jurisdiction to consider a challenge to OPM action as it relates to individuals who are unaware of their potential annuity entitlements, a group of individuals that may necessarily exclude each named Plaintiff in this action, may raise questions both of Rule 23(a) typicality and representativeness, and of Article III standing. As just explained, this litigation may not ultimately take the form of a class action at all, and therefore Rule 23’s requirements need not be definitively considered now. With regard to one party asserting the claims of another, however, the Third Circuit has recently reasserted that "the prohibition on third party standing, however, ‘is not invariable and our jurisprudence recognizes third-party circumstances,’ ” and that " ‘the principles animating prudential standing are not subverted if the third party is hindered from asserting its own rights and shares an identity of interests with the plaintiff.' ” In re Majestic Star Casino, LLC,
