Acha v. AGRI
Filing
[10421500] Vacated in part and Remanded. Terminated on the merits after oral hearing. Written, signed, published; Judges Lucero, Baldock (authoring judge) and Bacharach. Mandate to issue. [15-9581]
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Document: 01019720535
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PUBLISH
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FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
November 14, 2016
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
_________________________________
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
JOHN A. ACHA,
Petitioner,
v.
No. 15-9581
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE,
Respondent,
-----------------------------OFFICE OF SPECIAL COUNSEL,
Amicus Curiae.
_________________________________
Appeal from the Department of Agriculture
(Department No. DE-1221-13-0197-W-2)
_________________________________
Ryan C. Gilman, Gilman Law, LLC., Glenwood Springs, Colorado, for Petitioner.
Emma E. Bond, Trial Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.,
(Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy, Assistant Attorney General, Robert E. Kirschman,
Jr., Director, Elizabeth M. Hosford, Assistant Director, U.S. Department of Justice,
Washington, D.C., and Rayann Lund, of Counsel, Litigation Specialist, U.S. Department
of Agriculture Forest Service, Albuquerque, New Mexico, with her on the brief), for
Respondent.
Carolyn N. Lerner, Special Counsel, Louis Lopez, Associate Special Counsel, and Shayla
Silver-Balbus, Attorney, U.S. Office of Special Counsel, Oakland, California, filed a
brief for Amicus Curiae.
_________________________________
Before LUCERO, BALDOCK, and BACHARACH, Circuit Judges.
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_________________________________
BALDOCK, Circuit Judge.
_________________________________
Petitioner John A. Acha worked as a Purchasing Agent for the Forest Service,
an agency of the Department of Agriculture, at the White River National Forest in
Glenwood Springs, Colorado.
Petitioner’s job, which was subject to a one-year
probationary period, primarily consisted of meeting the Forest Service’s purchasing
needs. Petitioner was also responsible for ensuring that all purchases complied with
the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), a set of “policies and procedures [that
govern] acquisition by all executive agencies.” 48 C.F.R. § 1.101.
In January 2012, a few months into his job, Petitioner submitted a report to his
direct supervisor that documented an apartment rental he had helped secure on behalf
of the Forest Service. In this report, Petitioner noted that another Forest Service
employee “had put $500.00 of his own money down as the deposit on the [apartment]
unit.”
Petitioner believed this specific employee did not have the authority to
obligate the government in such a manner and therefore violated the FAR when he
made this unauthorized deposit. Petitioner’s supervisor, however, did not act on
Petitioner’s concerns; in fact, his supervisor instructed him to delete the report’s
reference to the deposit.
Petitioner followed the instructions and deleted the
reference.
Several months later in April, Petitioner sent an email to the Department of
Agriculture’s Office of Inspector General in which he again mentioned that the
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Forest Service employee had violated the FAR when he made the unauthorized
deposit on the apartment. Petitioner also indicated in his email that he had previously
told his supervisor about this violation; that, in response, his supervisor had
instructed him to cover up the violation; and that he was punished afterward and
treated poorly for following this instruction. Like Petitioner’s supervisor, however,
the record does not indicate that the Inspector General ever took any actions on the
issues Petitioner disclosed in his email.
Petitioner was eventually terminated during his probationary period from his
position with the Forest Service. He filed a complaint with the Office of Special
Counsel (OSC), the independent agency responsible for protecting federal employees
from prohibited personnel practices, alleging that he was actually terminated because
he had disclosed to the Inspector General in April that (1) his fellow employee’s
unauthorized deposit violated the FAR, (2) his supervisor had directed him to cover
this up, and (3) he had been punished for helping in the cover-up. Petitioner, in other
words, alleged that he had been terminated because he was a whistleblower. See
5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8).
The OSC eventually closed its inquiry into Petitioner’s
complaint and refused to seek any corrective action on his behalf from the Merit
Systems Protection Board (MSPB), the independent agency with the power to
actually order corrective action for employees affected by prohibited personnel
practices. The OSC determined that no official involved in Petitioner’s termination
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knew of his email to the Inspector General and, as such, his email could not have
contributed to his termination. See 5 U.S.C § 1221(e)(1).1
As a result, Petitioner appealed the OSC’s determination and sought corrective
action from the MSPB himself. See 5 U.S.C. § 1221(a). As he did before the OSC,
Petitioner argued that he was fired for making protected whistleblowing disclosures
to the Inspector General in April. But this time around he also argued that he was
fired for disclosing the FAR violation to his direct supervisor in January.
The
Department of Agriculture objected to Petitioner’s new allegation that he was
terminated for making a whistleblowing disclosure in January. It argued that because
Petitioner had not raised this argument before the OSC, he had not exhausted all of
his administrative remedies before the OSC regarding his January disclosure. See 5
U.S.C. § 1214(a)(3). And because this failure to exhaust requirement is jurisdictional
in nature, e.g., Ellison v. Merit Sys. Protection Bd., 7 F.3d 1031, 1037 (Fed. Cir.
1993),2 the Department of Agriculture claimed that the MSPB lacked jurisdiction to
consider whether Petitioner was terminated for making this January disclosure.
1
Petitioner also argued to the OSC that he was fired because he had refused to
participate in any further violations of the FAR. See 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(9).
Petitioner, however, does not present this issue on appeal before our Court, nor does
it affect his appeal in any way, so we do not consider it.
2
Until 2012, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit had
exclusive jurisdiction “to review a final order or final decision of the [MSPB].”
5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1) (2006 & Supp. V 2011). In 2012, however, Congress amended
this statute for federal employees who allege that they were subjected to prohibited
personnel practices because of their whistleblowing disclosures. In those instances,
federal employees may now appeal the MSPB’s decisions to the “United States Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or any court of appeals of competent jurisdiction”
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Petitioner responded that he had made his January disclosure to his supervisor
during his “normal course of duties,” which meant that, at the time he filed his
complaint to the OSC, he necessarily could not have received any corrective action
from the MSPB for that disclosure. See, e.g., Huffman v. Office of Pers. Mgmt., 263
F.3d 1341, 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (holding that “an employee who makes disclosures
as part of his normal duties” is not a protected whistleblower), superseded by statute,
Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112-199, 126 Stat.
1465. Thus, Petitioner contended that he had no reason to argue before the OSC that
he was terminated for making his January disclosure. But after the OSC had closed
its inquiry into his case, Congress passed the Whistleblower Protection Enhancement
Act of 2012 (WPEA), which changed the law and allowed employees to obtain
corrective action for disclosures they made in their normal course of duties in certain
circumstances. See 5 U.S.C § 2302(f)(2). Further, the MSPB held in a separate case
that the new protections given to disclosures made during the normal course of an
employee’s duties applied retroactively to all pending cases before the MSPB. Day
v. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 119 M.S.P.R. 589, 602 (2013). In light of the WPEA and
the MSPB’s decision in Day, Petitioner argued that the MSPB should excuse him
from the exhaustion requirement for his January disclosure; indeed, he contended that
for a five-year trial period that ends in late 2017. 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1)(B) (2012)
(emphasis added), amended by 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1)(B) (Supp. II 2014).
As a result, we have had jurisdiction over cases like the one Petitioner brings
before us today for only four short years, and our caselaw regarding MSPB decisions
that deal with whistleblowing allegations is thus virtually non-existent. We therefore
utilize many of the Federal Circuit’s past decisions in this area of law for guidance.
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he should not be punished for refusing to make then-frivolous arguments in his
complaint to the OSC.
But Petitioner further argued that he did not even need to be excused from the
exhaustion requirement because he had, in fact, exhausted his remedies for the
January disclosure. Specifically, he claimed that although he did not actually allege
in his complaint to the OSC that he was terminated for making his January
disclosure, he did include information about the January disclosure in his complaint.
For support, he noted that he had attached his April email to the Inspector General to
his complaint to the OSC and that in this email he had specifically discussed that he
disclosed the FAR violation to his supervisor in January and was punished for doing
so. He reasoned that this was enough for him to exhaust his administrative remedies,
for the failure to exhaust requirement demands only that an employee “give the
Office of Special Counsel sufficient basis to pursue an investigation which might
have led to corrective action.” Serrao v. Merit Sys. Protection Bd., 95 F.3d 1569,
1577 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The MSPB agreed with Petitioner and concluded that his failure to argue
before the OSC that he was terminated for making the January disclosure to his
supervisor was not fatal to its jurisdiction. Although it did not mention Day or the
change in law brought about by the WPEA, it agreed with Petitioner that he had
provided enough information about his January disclosure to the OSC so that the
OSC could sufficiently pursue an investigation of that claim.
6
Thus, the MSPB
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determined that “although the allegations could be clearer,” Petitioner exhausted his
remedies before the OSC regarding the January disclosure.
Moving on to the merits, however, the MSPB determined that Petitioner was
not entitled to corrective action for either his January disclosure to his supervisor or
his April disclosure to the Inspector General. Regarding his April disclosure, the
MSPB agreed with the OSC that no officials involved in Petitioner’s termination had
knowledge of his email to the Inspector General, so it could not have contributed to
his termination. See 5 U.S.C § 1221(e)(1). And regarding the January disclosure, the
MSPB recognized that although disclosures made during the normal course of duties
now could warrant corrective action under the WPEA, such corrective action was not
guaranteed. Instead, the MSPB concluded that corrective action for disclosures made
during the normal course of duties was contingent on whether an employee could
prove that the officials responsible for the personnel action at issue acted with an
improper “retaliatory motive”—that is, a heightened burden that is not required when
a whistleblower makes a disclosure outside the normal course of his duties. Compare
5 U.S.C § 2302(f)(2) (forbidding personnel actions relating to a disclosure made
during the normal course of duties only if the action is “in reprisal for” the
disclosure), with 5 U.S.C § 2302(b)(8) (forbidding personnel actions relating to all
other disclosures when the action is merely “because of” the disclosure). In the
MSPB’s eyes, if the employee could not prove such a motive, then the employee’s
disclosure was not a “protected” whistleblowing disclosure and therefore could factor
into the personnel action at issue without being unlawful. Utilizing this logic, the
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MSPB concluded that even if Petitioner could prove his January disclosure factored
into his termination, he could not prove the officials responsible for his termination
acted with a retaliatory motive regarding that disclosure.
Thus, the MSPB
determined that Petitioner’s January disclosure was not protected and refused to
order corrective action for it.
Before this Court, Petitioner does not challenge the MSPB’s ruling regarding
his April disclosure to the Inspector General; he appeals only the MSPB’s ruling
regarding his January disclosure to his supervisor. In so doing, he does not take issue
with the MSPB’s finding that his disclosure to his supervisor was made during his
normal course of duties, nor does he dispute that he cannot prove a retaliatory
motive. Instead, he argues that the MSPB erred by making him prove a retaliatory
motive as a prerequisite before it would consider his disclosure to his supervisor to
be protected. For a variety of different reasons, he contends that any inquiry into the
existence of a retaliatory motive—if such a motive is even required under the
WPEA—is instead “properly reserved for consideration after a protected disclosure is
found” and that the burden is on the Department of Agriculture to prove that its
officials lacked a retaliatory motive when they terminated him. Appellant’s Br. 13
(emphasis added). He therefore asks us to set aside the MSPB’s finding that he failed
to make a protected disclosure, find that this disclosure was protected, and remand
this case back to the MSPB for further proceedings.
But before we may determine whether we should do so, we have the sua
sponte obligation to satisfy ourselves “not only of [our] own jurisdiction, but also
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that of the lower courts,” which, in this case, happens to be the MSPB, “even though
the parties are prepared to concede it.” Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523
U.S. 83, 95 (1998) (internal quotation marks omitted). Generally, we would have
jurisdiction to adjudicate Petitioner’s appeal from the MSPB’s final decision pursuant
to 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1)(B). If, however, the MSPB itself did not have jurisdiction
to determine whether Petitioner was entitled to corrective action for his January
disclosure, then we have jurisdiction “merely for the purpose of correcting the error
of the lower court in entertaining the suit.”
Steel Co., 523 U.S. at 95 (internal
quotation marks omitted). And when reviewing whether the MSPB had jurisdiction,
we are bound by the MSPB’s jurisdictional factual findings “unless those findings are
not supported by substantial evidence,” but we review de novo the ultimate legal
question whether the MSPB had jurisdiction to adjudicate an appeal.
Rosario-
Fabregas v. Merit Sys. Protection Bd., 833 F.3d 1342, 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (internal
quotation marks omitted); see also Waldau v. Merit Sys. Protection Bd., 19 F.3d
1395, 1398 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (“[W]e review de novo the question whether the MSPB
has jurisdiction to adjudicate a case.”); 5 U.S.C. § 7703(c).
What gives us pause is the MSPB’s determination that Petitioner exhausted his
administrative remedies before the OSC for his January disclosure to his supervisor.
This exhaustion requirement is governed by 5 U.S.C. § 1214(a)(3) and states that,
subject to an exception not applicable here, a federal employee “shall seek corrective
action from the [Office of] Special Counsel before seeking corrective action from the
[MSPB].”
As the MSPB itself recognized, this requirement is jurisdictional in
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nature. Ellison, 7 F.3d at 1037; McCarthy v. Merit Sys. Protection Bd., 809 F.3d
1365, 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2016).3
And as the MSPB also recognized, § 1214(a)(3)
requires an employee to “give the Office of Special Counsel [a] sufficient basis to
3
We are cognizant of recent Supreme Court cases that caution us to label a
statutory rule as jurisdictional only when “Congress has ‘clearly state[d]’ that the rule
is jurisdictional.” Sebelius v. Auburn Reg’l Med. Ctr., 133 S. Ct. 817, 824 (2013)
(alteration in original) (quoting Arbaugh v. Y&H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 515 (2006)).
We are equally cognizant that, for this very reason, our Court has of late cast doubt
on whether exhaustion requirements in other statutes are actually jurisdictional. See,
e.g., Muskrat v. Deer Creek Pub. Sch., 715 F.3d 775, 783–84 (10th Cir. 2013)
(pausing to consider whether the exhaustion requirement of the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) should remain jurisdictional in light of the
Supreme Court’s recent remarks, but ultimately concluding that “for purposes of this
case IDEA exhaustion’s status as a jurisdictional prerequisite is not at issue”). We
note that our Court has even explicitly held that some exhaustion requirements are
now properly nonjurisdictional. See, e.g., Hull v. IRS, U.S. Dep’t of Treasury, 656
F.3d 1174, 1181–82 (10th Cir. 2011) (holding that the exhaustion requirement of the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) is nonjurisdictional because the FOIA “does not
unequivocally make” the exhaustion requirement jurisdictional (internal quotation
marks omitted)).
That said, Congress has clearly indicated that the exhaustion requirement
outlined in § 1214(a)(3) is jurisdictional. The context of § 1214(a)(3) and its
placement in the overall statutory scheme is instructive as to why. See Auburn Reg’l,
133 S. Ct. at 824 (“This is not to say that Congress must incant magic words in order
to speak clearly [about jurisdiction]. We consider context . . . as probative of
whether Congress intended a particular provision to rank as jurisdictional.” (internal
quotation marks omitted)). First, consider that Congress explicitly stated that the
MSPB shall “hear, adjudicate, or provide for the hearing or adjudication, of all
matters within the jurisdiction of the [MSPB] under this title . . . .” 5 U.S.C.
§ 1204(a) (emphasis added). The only matters within the jurisdiction of the MSPB,
in turn, are those expressly made appealable to it “under any law, rule, or regulation.”
Id. § 7701(a). Finally, one of the matters made appealable to the MSPB is cases
wherein a federal employee alleges that he is entitled to corrective action for making
whistleblowing disclosures, but an employee’s ability to bring such a case is
“[s]ubject to the provisions of . . . subsection 1214(a)(3).” Id. § 1221(a) (emphasis
added). Combining these statutes, it is thus clear that if a federal employee cannot
satisfy the requirements of § 1214(a)(3)—that is, the exhaustion-of-remedies
requirement—then his whistleblowing claim is not appealable to the MSPB under
any law, rule, or regulation, which necessarily means that the MSPB does not have
jurisdiction over his claim.
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pursue an investigation which might have led to corrective action.” Serrao, 95 F.3d
at 1577; see also id. (noting that an employee must “articulate with reasonable clarity
and precision [before OSC] the basis for his request for corrective action” (alteration
in original) (internal quotation marks omitted)). Thus, when hearing an employee’s
appeal from the OSC, the MSPB’s jurisdiction is “limited to those issues that have
been previously raised with OSC.” McCarthy, 809 F.3d at 1374 (internal quotation
marks omitted).
Unlike the MSPB, we believe that Petitioner did not raise his January
disclosure with the OSC in a way that would allow the OSC to sufficiently pursue an
investigation. Even though Petitioner’s complaint to the OSC undoubtedly included
his April email to the Inspector General (which, in turn, discussed his January
disclosure to his supervisor), this is not enough. Instead, the fact that he did not even
attempt to allege in the complaint itself that he was terminated for making the
January disclosure was fatal to the MSPB’s jurisdiction.
For illustration, consider the decision in McCarthy v. Merit Systems Protection
Board, where the Federal Circuit encountered an almost identical issue and ruled that
the MSPB lacked jurisdiction. In that case, a federal employee submitted a report to
the State Department’s Office of the Inspector General in which he alleged that his
employer was engaging in different types of fraud, waste, and abuse. McCarthy, 809
F.3d at 1368. Significantly, the employee specifically noted in the report that he had
previously informed his supervisor of these instances of fraud, waste, and abuse via
different legal memoranda he had drafted.
11
Id.
The employee was thereafter
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terminated. Id. As is the case with Petitioner, the employee then filed a complaint
with the OSC wherein he alleged only that his termination was because of the report
he had submitted to the Inspector General—he did not allege that the legal
memoranda he had drafted earlier contributed to his termination. Id. As is also the
case with Petitioner, the employee’s failure to allege that these legal memoranda
contributed to his termination stemmed from the fact that these memoranda were
made during the normal course of his duties, which, at the time, meant that he had
absolutely no chance of receiving corrective action for them. Id.
The OSC refused to seek corrective action on the employee’s behalf. Id. The
employee sought corrective action from the MSPB, which initially affirmed the
OSC’s decision. Id. But afterward, Congress enacted the WPEA, and as a result the
employee asked the MSPB to reopen his case based on the fact that he could now
allege that the legal memoranda contributed to his termination. Id. at 1368–69. The
MSPB refused to reopen his case and dismissed his appeal. Id. at 1369.
Upon review, the Federal Circuit affirmed the MSPB’s decision on the
grounds that the MSPB lacked jurisdiction to hear the employee’s case because the
employee had not exhausted his administrative remedies with the OSC. Id. at 1375.
In pertinent part, the Federal Circuit stated the following:
[The] OSC complaint only identifies [the employee’s] . . . report to the
[Inspector General] and a . . . disclosure to Congressman Reyes. It makes
no mention of his legal memoranda. Given this, the OSC’s “basis to pursue
an investigation” was only these two disclosures and the circumstances
surrounding them, such as whom these disclosures were made to, [his
employer’s] awareness of these disclosures, and how they related to the
events that led to [his] termination. This did not provide the OSC with a
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“sufficient basis to pursue an investigation” with respect to [his] legal
memoranda—these were different disclosures, made to different people, at
different times.
Moreover, the case that [he] presented to the OSC . . . substantially differs
from the case he presents now. [Before the OSC, his] legal memoranda
were not considered protected disclosures . . . ; thus, the OSC would have
had no basis to investigate the legal memoranda and develop findings
related to these disclosures. What [he] presents now is in essence a
different case, and the OSC has not had an opportunity to “effectively
pursue an investigation” with respect to these circumstances.
***
[The employee] also argues that the exhaustion requirement only applies
to the content of whistleblowing disclosures, and that existing case law
does not require that he correctly affix legal labels to these facts. We
agree that the focus of the exhaustion requirement is on substance;
however, [he] has not satisfied this requirement here. . . . [T]he core
substance of [his] complaint has shifted from a single disclosure to the
[Inspector General] (which, at best, was at least in part cumulative of a
nebulous collection of previous disclosures) to four distinct legal
memoranda provided to specific individuals at specific times.
We find, then, that [the employee] has not exhausted his OSC remedies
with respect to the legal memoranda.
Id. at 1374–75 (emphases added) (citations omitted).
Although we are not bound by Federal Circuit precedent, we find the McCarthy
court’s logic powerful and persuasive.
We are not prepared to say that Petitioner
exhausted his administrative remedies before the OSC regarding his January disclosure
just because he discussed it as pertinent background information in his disclosure to the
Inspector General. That was not enough for the McCarthy court—where, as stated above,
the employee referenced in his report to the Inspector General previous disclosures he
had made—and it is not enough for us. Indeed, and as the McCarthy court put it, the
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“core substance” of Petitioner’s complaint has “shifted from a single disclosure to the
Inspector General” to a “distinct” disclosure that he provided to his supervisor three
months earlier. This was a “different disclosure, made to [a] different [person], at [a]
different time[].”
The simple fact that the OSC knew about Petitioner’s January
disclosure would not have made it aware that it should have investigated whether he was
terminated for making this disclosure when the complaint itself, like the complaint in
McCarthy, “makes no mention” on its face of any other disclosures. See Serrao, 95 F.3d
at 1577 (“[A]n employee [must] articulate with reasonable clarity and precision the
basis for his request for corrective action.” (emphasis added)).
The change in law brought about by the WPEA—protecting disclosures made
during the normal course of duties—simply highlights and buttresses this conclusion.
Because Petitioner’s January disclosure could not have merited corrective action when he
filed his complaint with the OSC, “the OSC would have had no basis to investigate the
legal memoranda and develop findings related to these disclosures.” Petitioner’s case
before the MSPB and our Court, therefore, “is in essence a different case,” and the OSC
is entitled to determine in the first instance whether it would like to pursue corrective
action on his behalf for his January disclosure.
We adhere to our conclusion today even though we have previously recognized
that exhaustion is not required “where it would be futile or fail to provide adequate
relief.” McQueen ex rel. McQueen v. Colo. Springs Sch. Dist. No. 11, 488 F.3d 868, 874
(10th Cir. 2007) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Honig v. Doe, 484 U.S. 305,
327 (1988) (“[E]xhaustion . . . should not be required . . . in cases where such
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exhaustion would be futile either as a legal or practical matter.” (omissions in
original) (internal quotation marks omitted)). To be sure, it would indeed have been
futile for Petitioner to argue to the OSC that his January disclosure could merit corrective
action—at the time, and as we have discussed, Petitioner would have undoubtedly lost on
such an argument. McQueen, 488 F.3d at 875 (holding that exhaustion is futile when “it
is clear at the outset” that the administrative agency cannot grant any relief for the
claim at issue). That said, the Supreme Court has specifically informed us that courts
are “not [to] read futility or other exceptions into statutory exhaustion requirements
where Congress has provided otherwise”—that is, when “Congress has mandated
exhaustion.” Booth v. Churner, 532 U.S. 731, 741 n.6 (2000) (emphasis added); see
also Shawnee Trail Conservancy v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 222 F.3d 383, 389 (7th Cir.
2000) (“Although we do not believe that the district court had the power to waive the
statutorily-mandated exhaustion requirement of the APA, the plaintiffs have not
demonstrated that the district court erred in applying administrative exhaustion even
if we assume arguendo that the district court had the discretion to excuse that failure
on the ground of futility.” (citations omitted)); Glisson v. U.S. Forest Serv., 55 F.3d
1325, 1327 (7th Cir. 1995) (distinguishing the flexible common law doctrine of
administrative exhaustion with the “inflexible command of a statute”). And here,
Congress has indeed mandated exhaustion via 5 U.S.C. § 1214(a)(3). See supra. We
are therefore prohibited from applying the futility doctrine to Petitioner’s claim that
he was terminated for making his January disclosure to his supervisor.
strictly required to present this claim to the OSC first.
15
He was
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Nor is it significant that the MSPB held in Day v. Department of Homeland
Security that the WPEA’s new rules regarding disclosures made during the normal
course of an employee’s duties are retroactive. Day, 119 M.S.P.R. at 602. Questions
of retroactivity and questions of jurisdiction are distinct. An employee must still
exhaust his administrative remedies before the OSC for disclosures made during the
normal course of duties before he can claim that the substantive change in law as
enacted by the WPEA applies to those disclosures. Indeed, we note that even in
McCarthy neither party “dispute[d] that the WPEA could be applied retroactively”
and yet the Federal Circuit still found that the employee failed to exhaust his
administrative remedies. McCarthy, 809 F.3d at 1369.
In conclusion, the MSPB lacked jurisdiction to consider whether Petitioner
was terminated for disclosing the FAR violation to his supervisor in January. We
therefore vacate the MSPB’s decision insofar as it concluded that Petitioner’s
January disclosure was not a protected disclosure and remand this case back to the
MSPB to dismiss that issue for lack of jurisdiction.4 The MSPB’s decision regarding
his April disclosure to the Inspector General still stands.
4
We note that Petitioner remains free to pursue a complaint with the OSC with
respect to his January disclosure, “as there is no statutory time limit for filing a
request for corrective action with the OSC.” McCarthy, 809 F.3d at 1375 (citing
Augustine v. Dep’t of Justice, 50 M.S.P.R. 648, 652 (1991)).
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VACATED IN PART and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.5
5
The OSC filed an amicus curiae brief that argues the MSPB’s decision
should be reversed on the merits because Petitioner actually did not make his January
disclosure during his “normal course of duties,” and the Department of Agriculture
filed a motion asking for leave to respond to the OSC’s brief. But because both
Petitioner and the Department of Agriculture have steadfastly assumed before the
MSPB and our Court that the January disclosure was made in the normal course of
duties, and because we vacate the MSPB’s decision on jurisdictional grounds without
deciding whether reversal is warranted on the merits, we decline to address the
OSC’s argument and express no opinion on it. The Department of Agriculture’s
motion asking for leave to file a response is accordingly denied as moot.
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