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http://laws.findlaw.com/fed/025017.html |
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
02-5017
Joseph
C. Campa, Wayne S. Airmet, Mario P. Alfonsi, Randolph P. Allen, Steven R.
Allison, James P. Anderson, Michael L. Anderson, John M. Archield, Johnny D.
Ayo, Richard D. Ballas, Donald G. Baker, Robert L. Baltzer, Robert E. Barb,
Michael K. Barber, Marya M. Bard, William D. Barker, Richard C. Beaman, Lee R.
Beard, David W. Bearden, Lisa Mara Bell, Robert D. Bell, Scott W. Beyer,
Michael G. Birdsong, Ricky A. Blakely, Betty Borders, Arthur L. Bouck, John L.
Boudreaux, Keith E. Bowman, William J. Brisendine, Lewis A. Brooks, Harold M.
Broth, Brett C. Brown, James H. Brown, Rickie L. Brown, Terry Brown, Loyd
Bryant, Charles Buchanan, Dann A. Buche, Richard W. Buckingham, Leslie S.
Buerki, Leo R. Bukowski, Marcus L. Burgher, Scott Butcher, Ardell G. Camacho,
Harris Capps, Kenneth W. Carlson, Odis A. Carmon, Lance T. Carroll, David E.
Carter, Teresa Carter, Thomas Catlett, Sidney E. Chatterly, Bruce Chillion,
John A. Chodacki, Dennis Clark, Albert T. Cloud, William R. Clough, Gregg N.
Clymer, Jimmy Ray Coffer, George W. Coggin, Alan N. Coker, Gregory C. Coker,
James E. Colotta, Robert W. Colvin, Clare L. Conley, Bert Correll, Malcolm G.
Cozort, Paul S. Craig, John L. Crawley, Wayne E. Crenwelge, Gerald S. Crocker,
Douglas A. Crone, Jack R. Cyrus, Willie G. Darden, Richard G. Darenberg, David
L. Davenport, Susan E. Davenport-Goolsby, John R. Davis, John D. DeBlock,
Thomas J. DeClue, Charles H. Dean, Charles R. Dobbins, David T. Doerffel,
Steven J. Donaldson, Lee J. Douet, Glen B. Downey, Christopher G. Dunham,
William A. Eason, James Echols, Ika K. Edwards, Mark S. Edwards, Stephen J.
Enzweiler, Jay D. Evans, Dale E. Falk, Scott H. Faulring, David S. Fenton, John
S. Ferrell, Bruce R. Ferries, William W. Fink, Ronald E. Fish, Stuart D.
Fisher, Karl J. Flusche, Schahresad Forman, Mark Fredrick, Robert A. French,
Michael D. Frye, David A. Frymire, Dennis Funnemark, John H. Gabbert, Francis
M. Gahren, Ted A. Gallagher, Leonard R. Garcia, Joseph A. Garnett, Geoff G.
Gavrilla, Alan W. Gibbs, Brian J. Giles, James A. Godard, Evelio A. Gonzalez,
Michael S. Goodman, La-Goge W. Graham, Frank A. Gray, George R. Gray, Jack A.
Green, Stephen Green, Jo C. Greenmyer, Richard A. Griffith, David N. Griffiths,
Dale R. Gross, William Gross, Theodore F. Guild, Stephen H. Gunderson, Allan G.
Hagelthorn, John Hall, David A. Hannington, Steve Hardersen, Thomas L. Harper,
Judith A. Harris, Donald L. Harrison, Martin T. Harrison, Michael A. Harrison,
James E. Hatcher, Patricia A. Hatcher, Justin H. Heath, Carl J. Hegedus, Craig
C. Henschen, Mark D. Hensley, Bonifacio Hernandez, Dennis M. Hesse, Travis J.
Hestilow, John C. Heyne, Keith A. Hicks, Gregory A. Hight, Lewis Hill, Lawrence
Hill, Randall A. Hill, George W. Hodyno, Jolly Holden, Gregory W. Hood, Don W.
Hoover, Phyllip B. Huffman, James D. Hughes, James J. Hughes, Waller S. Hunt,
Paul B. Hurdle, Sonya M. Hutchins, Dennis N. Hutchings, Gary Jackson, Napoleon
Jackson, Edward B. Janesko, Donald W. Johnson, Edward C. Johnson, Gilbert P.
Johnson, Gregory S. Johnson, Eric J. Johnston, Yvan R. Jolin, Larry C. Jones,
Michael N. Jones, Howard L. Joseph, Craig A. Kanske, John A. Kardach, Wade J.
Kearns, Steven J. Keith, Steven R. Keller, Jeffrey L. Kiner, David L. Kipfer,
Kenneth E. Kleid, Robert C. Knarr, William M. Kohnke, Kevin W. Kozlowski,
Robert L. Krause, Timothy A. Krause, Jeffrey A. Krinock, John Kyriazis, Lynn R.
Langer, Richard Lasky, Bertha M. Lawrence, Carol M. Laymance, Dennis A. Lee,
Lonnie Leibbrand, Jeff Leknes, Peter S. Lemaire, Samuel E. Lewis, Gerald A.
Livingston, Kenneth F. Long, Gordon A. Love, Donn N. Lund, James D. MacGuffie,
Robert C. McCabe, Anthony A. McCoy, Steven M. McDermott, Phillip A. McDevitt,
Raymond P. McDoulett, Michael T. McElhinney, David E. McGarry, David G.
McGinnis, Glenn R. McGowan, James W. McLaurin, Anthony R. McPheeters, Walter M.
Mallory, Minnis V. Mansur, Joe Mariotti, Thomas S. Marshall, Richard L. Martin,
Roger C. Matteson, Gail E. Matthews, Stephen F. Mature, Michael P. Mekanik, Richard
Meyer, Robert C. Michel, James Miklasevich, Phillip H. Miller, Michael Miller,
Robert L. Miller, Mark E. Millican, Steven L. Millican, Pamela Minton, Kenneth
L. Morgan, Thomas O. Muehlenweg, Brian D. Mundt, Brian S. Murff, James C.
Murphy, Kevin A. Murphy, Thomas V. Murphy, William F. Murray, Robert M.
Navarro, William D. Neal, Jeffrey R. Neel, David B. Netterville, Kathleen S.
Nokes, Randall A. Nordhagen, Steven W. Obendorf, Francis D. Odle, Leland D.
Oliger, Barbara Osburn, John K. O'Mara, Richard J. O'Shea, Don R. Parker, John
J. Paschkewitz, James G. Pasierb, Kevin M. PeGan, Robert J. Pekny, Wayne E.
Perrin, Joel J. Petkovich, Lawrence E. Pfeifer, William B. Pickerill, Donald F.
Pickett, Peter M. Pino, Michael K. Pomphrey, Judy Ponder, Thomas J. Pope,
Carmen S. Powers, Alan D. Preisser, Raymond L. Pulsifer, Richard J. Quinnette,
Terry R. Rasmussen, Roger W. Rawls, James E. Ray, Ivan D. Redford, Walter C.
Reiker, John P. Reilly, Clifford A. Reinke, Joy L. Riggleman, Richard V.
Robbins, Danny P. Robertson, James Robicheaux, Paul D. Romanick, William Roper,
Gregory T. Rosalia, John F. Rosenbaum, Michael E. Ross, Richard R. Ross, Jessie
T. Rush, Richard W. Rush, David C. Sampson, Robert M. Sampson, Troy L. Sanders,
Michael J. Santi, Jose R. Santiago, John A. Schmit, William P. Schomas,
Alexander D. Schramm, Donald H. Schubring, Douglas E. Sears, Calvin T.
Shackleford, Bradford N. Shai, Richard C. Shaw, Stephen M. Shub, Donald B.
Shull, Phillip J. Simpson, John G. Sletten, James W. Smart, Terry L. Smart, Noel
M. Smith, John D. Snoddy, Reid A. Squier, Robert Alan Starks, James A. Stevens,
James R. Stevens, Robert J. Stewart, JR., Terry E. Stine, Edward L. Strom,
Harold C. Stuart, Peter David Summer, Leslie W. Sutton, Scott A. Swanson, James
M. Takos, Iverson H. Taylor, Paul Taylor, Daniel R. Thirkill, Oatice M. Thomas,
Suzanne D. Tibbs, Charles W. Tootle, Anthony B. Torres, Melvin D. Townsend,
Thomas J. Tritz, William R. Troegner, Peter Tully, Jason E. Tyler, Russell E.
Valley, Michael D. Vargo, David C. Venus, Allen N. Vickrey, Karen B. Wade,
Steven J. Walke, Frederick E. Watson, Kenneth C. Wells, Mark C. Weston, Russell
O. Wheeler, Hugh K. Whisted, Johnston H. Wickham, Glen L. Williams, Jeffrey H.
Williams, James M. Willis, Gary L. Wilson, Gerald L. Witter, David A. Wolff,
Kent P. Wood, Jerry W. Woods, Terry Woods, Michael B. Wortham, Richard H.
Wraith, Lewis A. Wright, William D. Wright, Joseph L. Wyllie, Peter C. Yansza,
Thomas L. Yost, Roger L. Youngblood, Nick T. Zarras, and Barry M. Zetsch,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES,
Defendant-Appellee.
Guy J. Ferrante, King &
Everhard, P.C., of Springfield, Virginia, argued for plaintiffs-appellants.
J. Reid Prouty, Attorney,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, Department of Justice, argued for
defendant-appellee. On the brief were Robert
D. McCallum, Jr., Assistant Attorney General; David M. Cohen,
Director, Bryant G. Snee, Assistant Director; and Lee J. Freedman,
Trial Attorney.
Appealed from: United States Court of Federal Claims
Senior Judge James
F. Merow
02-5017
Joseph C. Campa, Wayne S. Airmet, Mario P. Alfonsi, Randolph P. Allen, Steven R. Allison, James P. Anderson, Michael L. Anderson, John M. Archield, Johnny D. Ayo, Richard D. Ballas, Donald G. Baker, Robert L. Baltzer, Robert E. Barb, Michael K. Barber, Marya M. Bard, William D. Barker, Richard C. Beaman, Lee R. Beard, David W. Bearden, Lisa Mara Bell, Robert D. Bell, Scott W. Beyer, Michael G. Birdsong, Ricky A. Blakely, Betty Borders, Arthur L. Bouck, John L. Boudreaux, Keith E. Bowman, William J. Brisendine, Lewis A. Brooks, Harold M. Broth, Brett C. Brown, James H. Brown, Rickie L. Brown, Terry Brown, Loyd Bryant, Charles Buchanan, Dann A. Buche, Richard W. Buckingham, Leslie S. Buerki, Leo R. Bukowski, Marcus L. Burgher, Scott Butcher, Ardell G. Camacho, Harris Capps, Kenneth W. Carlson, Odis A. Carmon, Lance T. Carroll, David E. Carter, Teresa Carter, Thomas Catlett, Sidney E. Chatterly, Bruce Chillion, John A. Chodacki, Dennis Clark, Albert T. Cloud, William R. Clough, Gregg N. Clymer, Jimmy Ray Coffer, George W. Coggin, Alan N. Coker, Gregory C. Coker, James E. Colotta, Robert W. Colvin, Clare L. Conley, Bert Correll, Malcolm G. Cozort, Paul S. Craig, John L. Crawley, Wayne E. Crenwelge, Gerald S. Crocker, Douglas A. Crone, Jack R.Cyrus, Willie G. Darden, Richard G. Darenberg, David L. Davenport, Susan E. Davenport-Goolsby, John R. Davis, John D. DeBlock, Thomas J. DeClue, Charles H. Dean, Charles R. Dobbins, David T. Doerffel, Steven J. Donaldson, Lee J. Douet, Glen B. Downey, Christopher G. Dunham, William A. Eason, James Echols, Ika K. Edwards, Mark S. Edwards, Stephen J. Enzweiler, Jay D. Evans, Dale E. Falk, Scott H. Faulring, David S. Fenton, John S. Ferrell, Bruce R. Ferries, William W. Fink, Ronald E. Fish, Stuart D. Fisher, Karl J. Flusche, Schahresad Forman, Mark Fredrick, Robert A. French, Michael D. Frye, David A. Frymire, Dennis Funnemark, John H. Gabbert, Francis M. Gahren, Ted A. Gallagher, Leonard R. Garcia, Joseph A. Garnett, Geoff G. Gavrilla, Alan W. Gibbs, Brian J. Giles, James A. Godard, Evelio A. Gonzalez, Michael S. Goodman, La-Goge W. Graham, Frank A. Gray, George R. Gray, Jack A. Green, Stephen Green, Jo C. Greenmyer, Richard A. Griffith, David N. Griffiths, Dale R. Gross, William Gross, Theodore F. Guild, Stephen H. Gunderson, Allan G. Hagelthorn, John Hall, David A. Hannington, Steve Hardersen, Thomas L. Harper, Judith A. Harris, Donald L. Harrison, Martin T. Harrison, Michael A. Harrison, James E. Hatcher, Patricia A. Hatcher, Justin H. Heath, Carl J. Hegedus, Craig C. Henschen, Mark D. Hensley, Bonifacio Hernandez, Dennis M. Hesse, Travis J. Hestilow, John C. Heyne, Keith A. Hicks, Gregory A. Hight, Lewis Hill, Lawrence Hill, Randall A. Hill, George W. Hodyno, Jolly Holden, Gregory W. Hood, Don W. Hoover, Phyllip B. Huffman, James D. Hughes, James J. Hughes, Waller S. Hunt, Paul B. Hurdle, Sonya M. Hutchins, Dennis N. Hutchings, Gary Jackson, Napoleon Jackson, Edward B. Janesko, Donald W. Johnson, Edward C. Johnson, Gilbert P. Johnson, Gregory S. Johnson, Eric J. Johnston, Yvan R. Jolin, Larry C. Jones, Michael N. Jones, Howard L. Joseph, Craig A. Kanske, John A. Kardach, Wade J. Kearns, Steven J. Keith, Steven R. Keller, Jeffrey L. Kiner, David L. Kipfer, Kenneth E. Kleid, Robert C. Knarr, William M. Kohnke, Kevin W. Kozlowski, Robert L. Krause, Timothy A. Krause, Jeffrey A. Krinock, John Kyriazis, Lynn R. Langer, Richard Lasky, Bertha M. Lawrence, Carol M. Laymance, Dennis A. Lee, Lonnie Leibbrand, Jeff Leknes, Peter S. Lemaire, Samuel E. Lewis, Gerald A. Livingston, Kenneth F. Long, Gordon A. Love, Donn N. Lund, James D. MacGuffie, Robert C. McCabe, Anthony A. McCoy, Steven M. McDermott, Phillip A. McDevitt, Raymond P. McDoulett, Michael T. McElhinney, David E. McGarry, David G. McGinnis, Glenn R. McGowan, James W. McLaurin, Anthony R. McPheeters, Walter M. Mallory, Minnis V. Mansur, Joe Mariotti, Thomas S. Marshall, Richard L. Martin, Roger C. Matteson, Gail E. Matthews, Stephen F. Mature, Michael P. Mekanik, Richard Meyer, Robert C. Michel, James Miklasevich, Phillip H. Miller, Michael Miller, Robert L. Miller, Mark E. Millican, Steven L. Millican, Pamela Minton, Kenneth L. Morgan, Thomas O. Muehlenweg, Brian D. Mundt, Brian S. Murff, James C. Murphy, Kevin A. Murphy, Thomas V. Murphy, William F. Murray, Robert M. Navarro, William D. Neal, Jeffrey R. Neel, David B. Netterville, Kathleen S. Nokes, Randall A. Nordhagen, Steven W. Obendorf, Francis D. Odle, Leland D. Oliger, Barbara Osburn, John K. O'Mara, Richard J. O'Shea, Don R. Parker, John J. Paschkewitz, James G. Pasierb, Kevin M. PeGan, Robert J. Pekny, Wayne E. Perrin, Joel J. Petkovich, Lawrence E. Pfeifer, William B. Pickerill, Donald F. Pickett, Peter M. Pino, Michael K. Pomphrey, Judy Ponder, Thomas J. Pope, Carmen S. Powers, Alan D. Preisser, Raymond L. Pulsifer, Richard J. Quinnette, Terry R. Rasmussen, Roger W. Rawls, James E. Ray, Ivan D. Redford, Walter C. Reiker, John P. Reilly, Clifford A. Reinke, Joy L. Riggleman, Richard V. Robbins, Danny P. Robertson, James Robicheaux, Paul D. Romanick, William Roper, Gregory T. Rosalia, John F. Rosenbaum, Michael E. Ross, Richard R. Ross, Jessie T. Rush, Richard W. Rush, David C. Sampson, Robert M. Sampson, Troy L. Sanders, Michael J. Santi, Jose R. Santiago, John A. Schmit, William P. Schomas, Alexander D. Schramm, Donald H. Schubring, Douglas E. Sears, Calvin T. Shackleford, Bradford N. Shai, Richard C. Shaw, Stephen M. Shub, Donald B. Shull, Phillip J. Simpson, John G. Sletten, James W. Smart, Terry L. Smart, Noel M. Smith, John D. Snoddy, Reid A. Squier, Robert Alan Starks, James A. Stevens, James R. Stevens, Robert J. Stewart, JR., Terry E. Stine, Edward L. Strom, Harold C. Stuart, Peter David Summer, Leslie W. Sutton, Scott A. Swanson, James M. Takos, Iverson H. Taylor, Paul Taylor, Daniel R. Thirkill, Oatice M. Thomas, Suzanne D. Tibbs, Charles W. Tootle, Anthony B. Torres, Melvin D. Townsend, Thomas J. Tritz, William R. Troegner, Peter Tully, Jason E. Tyler, Russell E. Valley, Michael D. Vargo, David C. Venus, Allen N. Vickrey, Karen B. Wade, Steven J. Walke, Frederick E. Watson, Kenneth C. Wells, Mark C. Weston, Russell O. Wheeler, Hugh K. Whisted, Johnston H. Wickham, Glen L. Williams, Jeffrey H. Williams, James M. Willis, Gary L. Wilson, Gerald L. Witter, David A. Wolff, Kent P. Wood, Jerry W. Woods, Terry Woods, Michael B. Wortham, Richard H. Wraith, Lewis A. Wright, William D. Wright, Joseph L. Wyllie, Peter C. Yansza, Thomas L. Yost,
Roger L. Youngblood, Nick T. Zarras, and Barry M. Zetsch,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES,
Defendant-Appellee.
__________________________
DECIDED: August 9, 2002
__________________________
Before MICHEL, SCHALL and LINN, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM.
Plaintiffs Joseph Campa and 367 other former Air
Force Officers appeal from a summary judgment by the United States Court of
Federal Claims holding that (1) precedent foreclosed Plaintiffs’ claims that,
as implemented, the Air Force promotion board system -- under which Plaintiffs did
not obtain a promotion in rank and thus had to separate from the military --
violates 10 U.S.C. §§ 616(c), 617(a); and (2) the promotion board system also
does not violate other governing statutes and regulations, including 10 U.S.C.
§§ 611(a), 612(a)(1), 613, 615(a)(3), 618(f) and 621. Campa v. United States, 50 Fed. Cl. 300, 303-05 (2001).
On appeal, Campa focuses on 10 U.S.C. §§ 616(c) and
617(a) only, arguing that the trial court erroneously likened his case to
binding precedent and that both these statutes require a knowing
approval and certification by at least a majority of the promotion board
members, not just those members whose smaller panel happened to review, score
and recommend a particular officer for promotion. Because our decision in Small v. United States, 158 F.3d
576, 580-81 (Fed. Cir. 1998) squarely rejected any requirement that a majority
of board members have personal knowledge of those selected for promotion, we
affirm.
I
We
do not and need not recount at length the procedures employed by the Air Force
promotion boards, the specifics of which our court has detailed in Small,
158 F.3d at 578-79, and other recent precedents. For purposes of this appeal, we need only recite that, in its
discretion, the Air Force has promulgated regulations that divide each
convening promotion board into various, smaller panels. AFR 36-89 (April 1992). Each of the board’s panels then scores a
proportionate share of the total records of those officers eligible for
promotion. Each record is then ranked
according to the total score assigned to it by the panel relative to the other
records scored, with the highest scored record being ranked first and so on.
The panels then each apply a proportionate quota to
all the records that each panel considered, thereby selecting and recommending
for promotion the highest-scoring officers until the panel reaches its
promotion quota’s cut-off point. The
panel also re-scores records that fell into the “gray zone,” i.e., those
records that had the same total score and were at the cut-off point for
promotion. After each panel finally
identifies the officers selected and recommended for promotion, a statutorily
required written report is compiled. See
10 U.S.C. § 617.
Each board member signs this report, thereby certifying
to the Secretary of the Air Force that all the candidates listed therein
represent the “best qualified” for promotion.
As a result of this process, board members recommend many officers for
promotion even though only certain of those members -- namely, the ones on a
particular panel -- may have reviewed and scored those particular officers’
respective records.
In
this case, Plaintiffs are former Air Force officers who were considered under
the system described above but did not receive a promotion. Consequently, they allege, they had to
involuntarily separate from military service, since a promotion would have
otherwise entitled them to continue serving in the Air Force. Plaintiffs seek correction of their military
records and back pay.
II
We reject
Plaintiffs’ claims and uphold the trial court’s summary judgment. As that court explained, precedent precludes
Plaintiffs’ claims that the Air Force’s promotion system contravenes the
statutory requirements set forth in 10 U.S.C. §§ 616(c), 617(a), as neither
provision requires that a majority of board members have personal knowledge of
those officers selected and recommended for promotion.
Section 616(c) provides that:
(c)
A selection board
convened under section 611(a) of this title may not recommend an officer for
promotion unless – (1) the officer receives the recommendation of a majority
of the members of the board; and (2) a majority of the members of the board
finds that the officer is fully qualified for promotion.
(Emphases
added.) Section 617(a), meanwhile,
provides that:
(a) Each selection board convened under section
611(a) of this title shall submit to the Secretary of the military department
concerned a written report, signed by each member of the board, containing a
list of the names of the officers it recommends for promotion and certifying
(1) that the board has carefully considered the record of each officer whose
name was furnished to it under section 615 of this title, and (2) that, in
the opinion of a majority of the members of the board, the officers
recommended for promotion by the board are best qualified for promotion to meet
the needs of the armed force concerned . . . among those officers whose names
were furnished to the selection board.
(Emphasis added.)
Interpreting these provisions, including the language emphasized above,
we held in Small that because the statutes did not address whether the
board could divide itself into smaller panels, with each panel reviewing a
proportionate share of the total number of records considered, the Air Force
could reasonably conduct the promotion board system in this manner. 158 F.3d at 581 (citing Chevron, U.S.A.,
Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-43 (1984)). Moreover, we emphasized that the Air Force
could lawfully use these panels even though, as a result, only one of the
board’s panels would have reviewed and thus would know about any one of the
candidates recommended for promotion:
The statute does not require that a majority
determination be based on a knowing review and conscientious consideration of
each officer’s record. Nothing in the
plain language of the statute requires first-hand knowledge on the part of the
deliberators of an officer’s record.
All that is required is a numerical showing that more than half of the
board members approved or disapproved of the matter before them. ***
In addition, using the signing of the Board Report as a means for the
members to both express their approval of the recommended candidates and make
the required certification is permissible under the statutory scheme as
well.
Id.
(emphasis added); accord Fluellen v. United States, 225 F.3d
1298, 1301 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (relying on Small and rejecting claims that
10 U.S.C. §§ 616(c), 617(a) forbid the use of board panels to consider records
of the officers eligible for promotion, as opposed to having all the board
members review every record); Roane v. United States, 237 F.3d 1352,
1353 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (same).
Notwithstanding
this precedent, counsel for Campa and the other Plaintiffs -- the same counsel
as in Small, Fluellen and Roane, supra, among
others -- insists that the arguments here differ. Specifically, he argues that the evidence in this case, not
present in Small, “demonstrates that the ‘consensus-by-ratification’
theory underlying Small is untenable,” thereby rendering Small
“factually distinguishable” and “clearly erroneous.” (Appellants’ Br. at 13.)
In support of this theory, Campa points to the deposition testimony and
declarations of a board member and an officer assigned to ensure compliance
with board procedures, both of whom aver that board members “had no knowledge
whatsoever about a majority of the officers” considered and recommended for
promotion. (Id. at 14.) Along these same lines, Campa asserts that
the term “certifying,” as used in 10 U.S.C. § 617(a), contemplates that a
majority of the board members sign and thereby certify the report presented to
the Secretary only if they can give a knowing and meaningful assurance about
all the officers recommended for promotion.
(Id. at 16-18.) As Campa
sees it, the Air Force cannot satisfy 10 U.S.C. § 617(a) when board members
“merely go through the motions of unknowingly signing their names to what
amounts to nothing more than an attendance roster.” (Id. at 18.)
We
disagree. As explained in Small,
nothing in either § 616(c) or § 617(a) bars the Air Force promotion board from
using panels to review and select for promotion a proportionate share of the
total records under consideration.
Further, it matters not that board members have “no knowledge whatsoever
about a majority of the officers” recommended for promotion. Put simply, the Small court made it
abundantly clear that a majority of the board members need not have knowledge
of all the officers recommended for promotion: “The statute does not require
that a majority determination be based on a knowing review and conscientious
consideration of each officer’s record.
Nothing in the plain language of the statute requires first-hand
knowledge on the part of the deliberators of an officer’s record. All that is required is a numerical showing
that more than half of the board members approved or disapproved of the matter
before them.” 158 F.3d at 581.
The same reasoning and precedent preclude Campa’s
argument about the certification required by section 617(a). Indeed, in Small, we likewise
confronted and rejected the argument, essentially parroted by Campa here
(Appellants’ Br. at 18), that the “current process is no more than an empty
ritual” and “that § 617(a) is violated when (a) none of the members know whom
they are ‘recommending’ for promotion and (b) board members affirm their faith
in the selection board process rather than certifying the existence of a
majority consensus about the officers who are best qualified for
promotion.” See 158 F.3d at
580. In short, when the Small
court held that nothing in this statute required that a majority of board
members have knowledge of all the records recommended for promotion, it was
plainly referring to § 616(c) and § 617(a) in their entirety. 158 F.3d at 580-81. Absent a good-faith argument to overturn our
prior interpretation of these provisions, neither Plaintiffs nor any future
parties suing the government on the same or similar grounds can reasonably
assert that any term in § 616(c) or § 617(a) imposes a knowledge
requirement.
Last, to the extent that Plaintiffs attempt to
undermine the bases underlying Small, it goes without saying that we, a
panel, lack the authority to overturn precedent, let alone deem it “clearly
erroneous.” (Further, we upheld the
summary judgment granted in Small, meaning the “clearly erroneous”
standard, a standard ordinarily reserved for fact finding, did not apply either
there or here. See RCFC
52(a).) As with all parties seeking to
overturn the precedent of our court, Plaintiffs would likely need to seek en
banc consideration of this issue, see generally Fed. Cir. R.
35(a).
III
For
the reasons stated above, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary
judgment.
AFFIRMED