MARKEL v. DEL TORO et al
Filing
33
MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by Judge Richard J. Leon on 1/27/2025. (lcrjl1)
UNITED ST ATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
JAMES MARKEL,
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Plaintiff,
v.
CARLOS DEL TORO, Secretary
of the Navy, et al.,
Defendants.
Civil Case No. 22-1389 (RJL)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
?
January?"\ 2025 [Dkt. #22, Dkt. #24]
Plaintiff James Markel . ("plaintiff' or "Markel") brings this action against
defendants Carlos Del Toro, Secretary of the Navy; the U.S. Department of the Navy; and
the Board for Correction of Naval Records ("BCNR" or "Board") (collectively,
"defendants") under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), 5 U.S.C. § 551 et seq.
Plaintiff, a former Naval officer, seeks to set aside the BCNR's denial of his request to
correct his military records. Specifically, plaintiff believes he should have been "medically
retired," a type of separation from military service which would entitle him to numerous
benefits.
Now before the Court are the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment. See
Pl.'s Mot. for J. on the Admin. R. ("Pl.'s Mot.") [Dkt. #22]; Defs.' Cross-Mot. for Summ.
J. ("Defs.' Cross-Mot.") [Dkt. #24]. Upon consideration of the parties' briefing, the
relevant law, and the entire record in this case, both motions will be GRANTED IN PART
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and DENIED IN PART, and the case will be REMANDED to the BCNR for further
proceedings.
I.
BACKGROUND
A.
Statut01y and Regulatmy Background
A service member can be medically retired from military service if he or she is
"unfit" for service because of a disability. 10 U.S.C.§ 1201(a). Medical retirement entitles
the service member to certain benefits, such as access to military bases, healthcare benefits,
and commissary privileges. The Navy evaluates service members' fitness through a multi
step process.
First, a commanding officer or medical or dental officer refers a service-member for
evaluation by the Medical Evaluation Board ("MEB"). Navy Sec'y Instr. (hereinafter,
"SECNAVINST") 1850.4E (Dep't Disability Evaluation Manual)§§ 3102, 3106. If the
MEB determines further evaluation is warranted, it refers the service member to a Physical
Evaluation Board ("PEB"). Id.§ 3201(a).
Second, the PEB determines whether the service member is "fit" or "unfit" to
continue service. Id. § 1004(a). An unfit service member may be eligible for medical
retirement. Here, a "[s]ervice member shall be considered unfit when the evidence
establishes that the member, due to physical disability, is unable to reasonably perform the
duties of his or her office, grade, rank, or rating ... ." Dep't of Def. Instr. ("DoDI")
1332.38 § E3.P3.2; see also SECNAVINST 1850.4E § 3301. The PEB considers the
following factors when deciding whether a service member can reasonably perform his or
her duties:
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Common Milita1y Tasks. The member, due to physical disability, is unable
to reasonably perform the duties of his or her office, grade, rank, or
rating. .. .
Physical Fitness Test. Whether the member is medically prohibited from
taking the respective Service's required physical fitness test. ...
peployability. When a Service member's office, grade, rank or rating
requires deployability, whether a member's medical condition(s) prevents
pbsitioning the member individually or as part of a unit with or without prior
notification to a location outside the Continental United States ....
Special Qualification . For members whose medical condition causes loss
of qualification for specialized duties, whether the specialized duties
comprise the member's current duty assignment; or the member has an
alternate branch or specialty; or whether reclassification or reassignment is
feasible.
DoDI 1332.38 § E3.P3.4; see also SECNAVINST 1850.4E § 3304(a).
Third, if the service member disagrees with the PEB's finding and has been
separated from the military, he can petition the BCNR for relief. SECNAVINST 1850.4E
§§ 3102(c), 5001(a). The BCNR may revise a military record when necessary to correct
an error or remove an injustice. 10 U.S.C.§ 1552(a)(l ); see also 32 C.F.R. § 723.3(e)(2).
If the BCNR denies a service member's application, its "determination shall be made in
writing and include a brief statement of the grounds for denial." 32 C.F.R. § 723.3(e)(3).
B.
Factual Background
Plaintiff graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in May 2006. Admin.R.("A.R.")
[Dkt. #29] 15, 97. He was commissioned as an Officer with the designator code 1160,
which means "Unrestricted Line Officer who is in training for Surface Warfare
qualification." A.R. 175, 356. He was flown out to his ship, the USS Forrest Sherman,
which was deployed at the time. A.R. 97. Shortly after arriving on the ship, plaintiff
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reported anxiety, difficulty breathing, rapid heartbeat, difficulty sleeping, and thoughts of
running the ship aground and fighting his shipmates. A.R. 97-98. He was medically
evacuated to a Naval Hospital in Rota, Spain, where he was diagnosed with Bipolar I
Disorder. A.R. 83-84. Plaintiff was then flown back to the United States for outpatient
psychiatric treatment at the Naval Medical Center ("NMC") in Portsmouth, Virginia. A.R.
97. NMC Portsmouth determined plaintiff was "not psychiatrically fit for full duty" and
placed him on Limited Duty in an administrative role on shore. A.R. 95-96. He was also
referred to a MEB. A.R. 95-96.
The MEB evaluated plaintiff and described his impairment as "moderate"; changed
his diagnosis from Bipolar Disorder to Major Depressive Disorder,- Recurrent with
Psychotic Features; and referred him to a PEB. A.R. 97-100. In March 2008, an informal
PEB found plaintiff "FIT to perform the duties of his/her office, grade, or rank on active
duty." A.R. 436-38.
Nonetheless, a few months later, the Navy disqualified plaintiff from submarine
duty, nuclear field duty, sea duty, and deployment. A.R. 110-13, 312-14. His Limited
Duty service continued during this time and he earned glowing evaluations. See A.R. 11920. Given his success in this administrative role, plaintiff requested to be redesignated as
a Human Resources Officer. See A.R. 121. The Commander of Naval Surface Force
Atlantic strongly recommended plaintiff for redesignation, describing him as "an
exceptional Junior Officer" with "uncanny organizational, leadership, and deductive
reasoning skills." A.R. 121. The Navy declined to redesignate plaintiff and honorably
discharged him-but did not medically retire him-in March 2009. See A.R. 316-17.
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C.
Procedural Background
In August 2015, plaintiff petitioned the BCNR to correct his military record to
reflect a medical retirement. A.R. 283-86. The BCNR denied plaintiffs application in a
two-page letter. A.R. 273-74, 278. Plaintiff then filed this lawsuit, seeking judicial review
of the BCNR's decision under the APA. See generally Comp!. [Dkt. #1]. The parties
requested a joint remand back to the BCNR, which this Court granted in September 2022.
Order (Sept. 26, 2022) [Dkt. #13]. The remand instructed the BCNR to re-adjudicate
plaintiffs claim and "issue a new final decision explaining Plaintiffs entitlement to
medical retirement pursuant to 10 U.S.C. § 1201, DoDI 1332.38, and other statutory and
· regulatory guidance." -Id. at 1.
On remand, the BCNR again denied plaintiffs application in a 10-page letter. A.R.
1-11. The BCNR found that plaintiffs condition "was not so debilitating as to render
[him] incapable of performing [his] duties" and thus the PEB did not err in finding plaintiff
fit. A.R. 3-4. In reaching its conclusion, the BCNR highlighted plaintiffs exemplary
performance while on Limited Duty. A.R. 3-4. Plaintiff then filed an amended complaint
challenging that second BCNR decision, Am. Comp!. [Dkt. #17], and moved for judgment
on the administrative record, Pl.'s Mot. Defendant filed a cross-motion for summary
judgment. Defs.' Cross-Mot. These motions are fully briefed and ripe for review.
II.
LEGAL STANDARD
A final decision of the BCNR is subject to judicial review under the APA. 5 U.S.C.
§ 706; see Dickson v. Secretary of Defense, 68 F.3d 1396, 1402 (D.C. Cir. 1995)
(explaining "that when a Board reviews the merits of a former servicemember's application
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under§ 1552(a)( l ), the decision is subject to judicial review" (citing Chappell v. Wallace,
462 U.S. 296, 303 (1983))). The Court must set aside agency action that is "arbitrary,
capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 5 U.S.C.
§ 706(2)(a). The scope ofreview is narrow, as this Court "review[s] a decision ofa military
corrections board under an 'unusually deferential application of the "arbitrary and
capricious" standard."' Roberts v. United States, 741 F.3d 152, 158 (D.C. Cir. 2014)
(quoting Kreis v. Sec'y ofthe Air Force, 866 F.2d 1508, 1514 (D.C. Cir. 1989)). The Court
should "limit [its] inquiry to whether the 'Secretary's decision making process was
deficient, not whether his decision was correct."' Id. (quoting Kreis, 866 F.2d at 1511).
Still, this Court's review is not a rubber stamp. The Court "retain[s] a role, and an ·
important one, in ensuring that agencies have engaged in reasoned decisionmaking."
Judulang v. Holder, 565 U.S. 42, 53 (2011). "[T]he court must be satisfied that the agency
has 'examine[d] the relevant data and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation for its action
including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made."' Iaccarino
v. Duke, 327 F. Supp. 3d 163, 173 (D.D.C. 2018) (alterations in original) (quoting
Alpharma, Inc. v. Leavitt, 460 F.3d 1, 6 (D.C. Cir. 2006)).
III.
ANALYSIS
Plaintiffs amended complaint asserts three claims for relief, each of which posits
that the BCNR's decision violates the APA. See Am. Compl.
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,r,r 66-76. Addressing each
claim in tum, I find that summary judgment is warranted for plaintiff on the first and third
claims for relief and for defendants on the second claim for relief.
A.
Plaintiffs First Claim for Relief
First, plaintiff claims that the BCNR's decision was arbitrary and capricious because
it failed to evaluate all relevant criteria for a service member's fitness under binding statutes
and regulations. Am. Compl. ,r,r 66-70 (First Claim for Relief). The relevant criteria in
determining fitness are: (1) the service member's ability to reasonably perform the
common military tasks associated with his office, grade, rank, or rating; (2) the service
member's ability to pass required physical tests; (3) the service member's deployability;
and (4) whether the disability caused- the service member to lose qualifications or
specialized duties. DoDI 1332.38 § E3.P3.4.1; SECNAVINST 1850.4E § 3304(a). I find
the BCNR's findings regarding the first factor 1 arbitrary and capricious and therefore grant
summary judgment for plaintiff on his first claim for relief.
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Factors two and three are undisputed; factor four is disputed. With respect to factor two,the BCNR found
that "the deployability factor weighed in favor of a finding [] that you were not reasonably able to perform
your duties due to your MDD condition." AR. 6. The parties do not contest this determination. See Pl. 's
Mot. 26; Defs.' Cross-Mot. 19. Regarding factor three, plaintiff did not assert before the BCNR or in
briefing that he is unable to pass the physical fitness test or that any BCNR findings regarding this factor
are arbitrary and capricious. See A.R. 6 n.6; Pl.'s :tvt;ot. 26. Factor four,however, is disputed. Here,I find
the BCNR's decision was not arbitrary or capricious. Plaintiff was disqualified from submarine and nuclear
field duty because of his medical condition, see A.R. 110,113,312,but the BCNR did not view this as
persuasive evidence of his unfitness in part because redesignation to another specialty was feasible,A.R.
8; see DoDI 1332.38 § E3.P3.4. l.4 (instructing the PEB to consider "whether reclassification or
reassignment is feasible"). Plaintiff sought redesignation as a Human Resources Officer,but the Navy
ultimately declined to redesignate him and instead separated him. The record does not indicate why the
Navy made this decision. Plaintiff suggests that redesignation must have been infeasible because the Navy
in fact did not redesignate him,but that logical leap assumes the Navy's reasoning without support in the
record. The BCNR provided a sound justification-the strong endorsement from the Commander of Naval
Surface Force Atlantic, see A.R. 121-to support its conclusion that redesignation was feasible, and
plaintiff failed to provide countervailing evidence. Therefore,the BCNR' s decision on factor four was not
arbitrary or capricious.
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The first factor-plaintiffs ability to perform his common military tasks-requires
establishing (1) plaintiffs rating2 ; (2) the common military tasks associated with that
rating; and (3) plaintiffs ability to reasonably perform those common military tasks. The
BCNR's findings with respect to the third prong are arbitrary and capricious.
1.
Plaintifrs Rating
The BCNR determined plaintiffs rating was Unrestricted Line Officer, a
"generalist[]" rating "assigned to perform a wide variety of tasks." A.R. 7. Plaintiff
counters that his rating should be his designator code 1160, a narrower classification which
means Unrestricted Line Officer in training/or Surface Warfare qualification. Pl.'s Mot.
16-20. The BCNR's determination here was not arbitrary .or capricious. Contrary to
plaintiffs assertion, see Pl.' s Mot. 20, the BCNR did not ignore plaintiffs designator code
and instead explained why it did not consider that code determinative, see A.R. 7. The
BCNR stated that the Navy defines "ratings" as "occupational fields," and reasoned that
being "in training for Surface Warfare qualification" was not an occupational field. A.R.
7 (emphasis added); see SECNAVINST 1850.4E § 2057 (defining rating as "[t]he
occupational fields prescribed for Sailors ... . Does not include secondary specialties").
Plaintiff cites no persuasive authority for the assertion that his designator code is his rating3
2
The parties' dispute centers around plaintiffs rating rather than his office, grade, or rank. The heart of
plaintiffs argument is that the BCNR should have evaluated his ability to complete the tasks associated
with his designator code, which is, according to plaintiff, his rating. See Am. Compl. ,i 17; A.R. 7; Pl.'s
Mot. 2 n.1, 16-20.
3 Plaintiff argues that "the Navy uses 'designator' codes to classify, identify, and document officer
occupational field duties and qualifications." Pl.'s Mot. 2 n.1. However, plaintiffs cited source-an
excerpt of the Manual of Navy Officer Manpower and Personnel Classifications, Vol. !--does not state that
designator codes describe officers' occupational fields or ratings. See A.R. 175.
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and, given the deference owed to the BCNR here, its decision was neither arbitrary nor
capnc1ous. See Roberts, 741 F.3d at 158.
2.
Common Military Tasks Associated with Plaintiffs Rating
Finding no error with the BCNR's decision regarding plaintiffs rating, the next
question is whether the BCNR's determination of that rating's common military tasks was
arbitrary and capricious. Here again the BCNR's decision must stand.
According to the BCNR, the common military tasks associated with being an
Unrestricted Line Officer are: "training and leading Sailors; learning and becoming
proficient in the wide variety of technical tasks associated with service onboard service
ships; thinking; planning; organizing; coordinating; and performing administrative
functions." A.R. 7. This finding was not arbitrary or capricious. The BCNR reviewed
examples of common military tasks provided in SECNAVINST l 850.4E § 3304(a)-such
as "the need to fire a weapon, perform field duty, or wear load bearing equipment or
protective gear"-and determined that common military tasks are akin to general, day-to
day tasks, not end goals or the achievement of certain qualifications, as plaintiff argues.
See A.R. 6-7. Additionally, the BCNR's broad list of tasks aligns with the Navy's broad
definition of Unrestricted Line Officer: "Officers of the line of the Regular Navy and Naval
Reserve who are not restricted in the performance of duty." See A.R. 171. This is another
area where the BCNR is owed significant deference, see Roberts, 741 F.3d at 158, and its
findings here were neither arbitrary nor capricious.
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3.
Plaintifr s Ability to Perform His Common Military Tasks
The final question is whether the BCNR's determination that plaintiff could perform
an Unrestricted Line Officer's common military tasks was arbitrary and capricious. This
is where the BCNR's decision fails.
The BCNR included as common military tasks "the wide variety of technical tasks
associated with service onboard service ships" and explained that Unrestricted Line
Officers "are assigned to perform a wide variety of tasks, both at sea and on shore." A.R.
7 (emphases added). Plaintiffs condition prevented him from returning to service at sea,
as the BCNR acknowledged. A.R. 7 ("You proved that the circumstance of your condition
prevented you from returning to sea to obtain SWO qualification ...."); Defs.' Cross-Mot.
19 ("[T]he Correction Board recognized that Plaintiff was 'not medically cleared to return
to sea duty or for worldwide assignment before [his] discharge."').4
The BCNR offers a perplexing explanation for why plaintiffs medical
disqualification from serving at sea does not establish his inability to perform tasks at sea:
"There is a distinct difference between medical advice not to engage in certain activities
and an inability to do so." A.R. 6-7. Hogwash. Plaintiff was disqualified from returning
4 Defendants argue that plaintiffs inability to serve at sea cannot be the sole basis for finding plaintiff unfit.
Defs.' Cross-Mot. 19. Defendants point to SECNAVINST 1850.4E § 3304(a)(3), which states that the
inability to serve "in every geographic location and under every conceivable circumstance will not be the
sole basis for a finding of Unfit." However, this provision speaks to fitness factor three, deployability, not
factor one, common military tasks. Compare§ 3304(a)(3) ("Deployability") with§ 3304(a)(l) ("Common
Military Tasks"). Defendants argue that allowing deployability to be determinative of whether plaintiff can
perform common military tasks nullifies § 3304(a)(3)'s prohibition on treating the deployability factor as
the sole basis for finding a service member unfit. Defs.' Cross-Mot. 19. This argument is unpersuasive.
Common military tasks and deployability are separate factors, and there is no bar to considering a service
member's ability to serve at sea as a common military task. Moreover, the ability to serve at sea is not a
common military factor in every case, and allowing its consideration here does not nullify§ 3304(a)(3).
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to sea, not just advised against doing so. Specifically, a Medical Assignment Screening
found plaintiff could not return to sea duty because of his mental state, and there is ample
evidence supporting that finding. A.R. 112; see also A.R. 83-84 (explaining that before
plaintiff was removed from the ship, "he would have thoughts of running the ship around
[sic] or punching someone in the ear"); A.R. 98-100 (stating that while on bridge watch,
plaintiff "would have thoughts of running the ship aground" and "fighting with shipmates
and even striking his captain"). The Navy never returned plaintiff to sea duty and instead
separated him. A.R. 316. There is no support in the record for the BCNR's assumption
that plaintiff could have eventually returned to sea duty and thus could perform his
common military tasks at sea.·
Given its determination that several of plaintiffs common military tasks are
"associated with service onboard service ships" and its acknowledgment that plaintiff could
not return to sea duty, the BCNR's conclusion that plaintiff could perform his common
military tasks is self-contradictory. Such illogical decisions are not rationally connected to
the facts and are thus arbitrary and capricious. See Constellation Mystic Power, LLC v.
FERC, 45 F.4th 1028, 1055 (D.C. Cir. 2022) ("[W]hen an agency 'fail[s] to provide an
intelligible explanation' for its decision, it 'has fail[ed] to engage in reasoned
decisionmaking' and we remand for further explanation. An order with apparent
contradictions as to a dispositive issue is not reasoned decisionmaking and requires further
clarification." (citation omitted)); see also laccarino, 327 F. Supp. 3d at 177. 5
The parties devote much of their briefing to whether the BCNR properly considered plaintiffs
performance of administrative tasks while on Limited Duty. As explained above, I do not find the BCNR' s
5
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B.
Plaintiffs Second Claim for Relief
Second, plaintiff claims the BCNR's decision was arbitrary and capricious because
the BCNR improperly asserted that it need not determine plaintiffs fitness and refused to
identify the duties of plaintiffs office, grade, rank, or rating. Am. Comp1.
,r,r 71-73
(Second Claim for Relief). I disagree and therefore grant summary judgment for
defendants on plaintiffs second claim for relief.
The BCNR stated its "statutory and regulatory function ... is to correct errors in,
and remove injustices from, naval records. This Board is not the PEB and does not make
medical fitness determinations." A.R.2. Plaintiff vehemently disagrees: "the Board was
required to determine [plaintiffs] fitness." Pl.'s Reply 1. Plaintiff misunderstands the
BCl'_ffi.'s statements. The BCNR was clarifying that the question before it was not whether
plaintiff was unable to reasonably perform his duties; instead, it was tasked with
determining whether the PEB erred in finding plaintiff medically fit or whether plaintiffs
separation without medical retirement constitutes an injustice warranting relief. A.R. 2.
The BCNR further explained that "[t]he burden to prove either of these bases for relief is
on [plaintiff], presumably by establishing that [he was] incapable of reasonably performing
the duties of [his] office, grade, rank, or rating." A.R.2. The BCNR was simply setting
out the standard of review and plaintiffs burden. See A.R.2.
determinations of plaintiffs rating and common military tasks arbitrary or capricious. See supra Section
III.A.1-2. Therefore, the BCNR' s consideration of plaintiffs performance of administrative tasks while
on Limited Duty is not improper. Error lies elsewhere in the BCNR's decision.
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Moreover, the BCNR did not "refuse[] to identify the duties of [plaintiffs] office,
grade, rank, or rating." See Am. Compl.
,r 72. The BCNR identified a list of common
duties associated with being an Unrestricted Line Officer. A.R. 7. Plaintiff disputes.
whether those are the correct rating and duties, but the BCNR did identify them and its
findings on those points were not arbitrary or capricious. See supra Section III.A.1-2.
Therefore, I find the BCNR's decision was neither arbitrary nor capricious here.
C.
Plaintiffs Third Claim for Relief
Third, plaintiff claims the BCNR's decision was unsupported by substantial
evidence. Am. Compl.
,r,r 74-76 (Third Claim for Relief) (citing 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(E)
(instructing courts to set aside agency action "unsupported by substantial evidence")). I
agree and therefore grant summary judgment for plaintiff on his third claim for relief.
For the reasons discussed above regarding plaintiffs first claim for relief,the BCNR
failed to adequately grapple with evidence of plaintiffs inability to perform his common
military tasks associated with service at sea. See supra Section III.A.3. The BCNR's
decision is therefore not supported by substantial evidence. See Genuine Parts Co. v. EPA,
890 F.3d 304,312 (D.C. Cir. 2018) ("[E]vidence that is substantial viewed in isolation may
become insubstantial when contradictory evidence is taken into account. Therefore, an
agency cannot ignore evidence that undercuts its judgment; and it may not minimize such
evidence without adequate explanation." (alteration in original) (citation omitted) (quoting
Landry v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., 204 F.3d 1125, 1140 (D.C. Cir. 2000))).
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IV.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is GRANTED
IN PART and DENIED IN PART; defendants' cross-motion for summary judgment is
GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART; and this case is REMANDED to the
BCNR for further proceedings. A separate Order consistent with this decision accompanies
this Memorandum Opinion.
RICHARD J. LEON
United States District Judge
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