Court Opinion

ID: 4301249
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-08-06 15:00:37.882037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:56:53.659331
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
      for the Federal Circuit
                 ______________________

      FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION -
      STATESIDE REGION, KAREN GRAVISS,
                  Petitioners

                            v.

   DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, DOMESTIC
 DEPENDENTS ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY
                SCHOOLS,
                 Respondent
           ______________________

                       2015-3173
                 ______________________

    Petition for review of an arbitrator’s decision in No.
14-1024-00182-7 by Steven G. Hoffmeyer.
                  ______________________

                Decided: August 6, 2018
                ______________________

    DOROTHY LOUISE LEE, Dublin, OH, argued for peti-
tioner Karen Graviss.

    TARA K. HOGAN, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil
Division, United States Department of Justice, Washing-
ton, DC, argued for respondent. Also represented by
BENJAMIN C. MIZER, ROBERT E. KIRSCHMAN, JR., CLAUDIA
BURKE.
2                FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION     v. DEFENSE

    MATTHEW WHITMORE MILLEDGE, Office of General
Counsel, American Federation of Government Employees,
Washington, DC, for amicus curiae American Federation
of Government Employees. Also represented by DAVID A.
BORER, ANDRES MYLES GRAJALES.

   KATHERINE MICHELLE SMITH, Office of the General
Counsel, Merit Systems Protection Board, Washington,
DC, for amicus curiae Merit Systems Protection Board.
                 ______________________

       Before DYK, PLAGER, and REYNA, Circuit Judges.
     Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge DYK.
    Dissenting Opinion filed by Circuit Judge PLAGER.
DYK, Circuit Judge.
    This panel initially held that the agency had violated
petitioner’s procedural due process rights in connection
with her discharge from federal service. See Fed. Educ.
Ass’n—Stateside Region v. Dep’t of Def., 841 F.3d 1362
(Fed. Cir. 2016). The en banc court granted review and
vacated the panel opinion. 873 F.3d 903 (Fed. Cir. 2017)
(en banc) (per curiam). This case returns to the panel
after an order by the en banc court “to dissolve the en
banc court . . . and refer[] [the case] to the original panel.”
Dkt. 133. We now hold that the petition for review was
untimely and dismiss the petition.
                              I
    Karen Graviss was removed by the agency from her
position as a teacher working for the Department of
Defense Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary
Schools. Ms. Graviss sought review by an arbitrator, as
allowed by the applicable collective bargaining agree-
ment. The arbitrator sustained the removal in a decision
dated April 20, 2015. See J.A. 2. It was mailed on the
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION     v. DEFENSE               3

following day. On June 23, 2015, more than 60 days after
the arbitration award was mailed, Ms. Graviss petitioned
for review of the arbitrator’s decision. The government did
not object to the timeliness of the petition.
     This panel initially reversed the arbitrator’s decision.
Then the full court granted en banc review and vacated
the panel decision. Shortly before the scheduled en banc
oral argument, the court discovered that there was a
question as to the timeliness of petitioner’s petition for
review to this court. En banc oral argument, held on
March 8, 2018, was directed to the timeliness issue. 1 The
court then ordered supplemental briefing “to address this
court’s jurisdiction under 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1).” 884 F.3d
1349, 1349–50 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (en banc) (per curiam).
After receiving supplemental briefing, the en banc court
dissolved en banc status and “referred [the case] to the
original panel” to consider this court’s jurisdiction in the
first instance.
                             II
     Under § 7703(b)(1), “any petition for review shall be
filed within 60 days after the [Merit Systems Protection]
Board issues notice of the final order or decision of the
Board.” Instead of appealing an adverse personnel action
to the Board, an employee who is a member of a collective-
bargaining unit may choose to challenge the action
through arbitration, as provided in the collective-
bargaining agreement. 5 U.S.C. § 7121(e). When an
employee pursues arbitration, the statute specifies that
“judicial review shall apply to the award of an arbitrator
in the same manner and under the same conditions as if
the matter had been decided by the Board.” Id. § 7121(f)

    1   Before en banc oral arguments, Ms. Dorothy Lee
withdrew as counsel for Federal Education Association—
Stateside Region and now only represents Ms. Graviss.
4               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION    v. DEFENSE

(emphasis added); accord S. Rep. 95-969, at 111 (1978)
(“In applying the provisions of [§ 7703] the word ‘arbitra-
tor’ should be read in place of the words ‘Merit Systems
Protection Board.’”), reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2723,
2833; see also Cornelius v. Nutt, 472 U.S. 648, 661 n.16
(1985); Klees-Wallace v. FCC, 815 F.3d 805, 808 (Fed. Cir.
2016). Therefore, the statutory requirement that any
petition for review must be filed within 60 days after the
Board “issues notice” of a final decision applies with equal
force to arbitration decisions. We have held that the time
limit is jurisdictional. Fedora v. Merit Sys. Prot. Bd., 848
F.3d 1013, 1014–16 (Fed. Cir.), petition for rehearing en
banc denied, 868 F.3d 1336 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (en banc) (per
curiam).
                            III
    Here, the arbitrator’s decision is dated April 20, 2015,
and contains a written post mark of April 21, 2015. The
decision was received by Ms. Graviss on April 27, 2015.
Dkt. 1, at 2. Ms. Graviss’s petition for review was received
by this court on June 23, 2015. Id. at 1. Under the statu-
tory scheme, Ms. Graviss’s petition was timely filed if the
start date for the limitations period for the time to appeal
began on the date she received the decision, but her
petition was not timely if the start date is the date of the
decision or the date of the post mark.
    The Board issues notice in one of two ways—either
electronically or by first-class certified mail. If a party
signs up for e-filing, the Board provides service of a deci-
sion by sending an email that notifies the party that a
decision has been issued and provides a link to view and
download the decision. MSPB Amicus Br. 8. Alternatively,
if the party has not registered for e-filing, the Board
serves the decision by mailing the decision to the address
of record. Id. The date that the Board sends this notice—
either by email or regular mail—is the date that the
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION    v. DEFENSE                5

Board issues notice, as we held in Fedora. 848 F.3d at
1016.
    Ms. Graviss contends that the arbitrator did not “is-
sue notice” until she received the arbitration award
because the arbitration award was not available to her
until it was received. Unlike electronically issued Board
decisions that are made available on the same day that
they are issued, in general, no mechanism exists for
electronic issuance of arbitrator decisions. We reject Ms.
Graviss’s argument.
    Congress amended § 7703(b)(1) in 2012 from requir-
ing a petition to be filed within 60 days after the date
“petitioner received notice” to within 60 days after “the
Board issues notice.” See 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1) (1998);
Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act of 2012, Pub.
L. No. 112-199, sec. 108(a), § 7703(b)(1), 126 Stat. 1465,
1469. By its plain terms, this amendment changed the 60-
day clock to begin on the date the Board or other deci-
sionmaker issues notice, not the date the petitioner
receives notice or could receive notice of the decision.
    The term “issues notice” suggests the date of issuance
is the date the decisionmaker distributes notice of the
decision whether or not the decision is received or could
be received by electing to receive notice electronically on
that date. Black’s Law Dictionary defines the verb “issue”
as “to send out or distribute officially.” Issue, Black’s Law
Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). Moreover, Webster’s Dictionary
defines the verb “issue” as “to go out or come out or flow
out.” Issue, Webster’s Third International Dictionary
(2002). We conclude that the date on which the deci-
sionmaker “issues notice” is the date on which it sends the
parties the final decision, whether electronically, by
regular mail, or by other means.
    Here, the arbitrator issued notice on April 21, 2015—
the date of the post mark. Because 60 days from this date
6                FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION     v. DEFENSE

was a Saturday, the petition for review was due on Mon-
day, June 22, 2015. Graviss’s petition, received on June
23, 2015, was therefore untimely under § 7703(b)(1).
    Ms. Graviss argues that her delay in filing is subject
to equitable tolling. However, timeliness of the petition
for review is a jurisdictional issue. Fedora, 848 F.3d at
1014–16; Oja v. Dep’t of the Army, 405 F.3d 1349, 1360
(Fed. Cir. 2005); Monzo v. Dep’t of Transp., 735 F.2d 1335,
1336 (Fed. Cir. 1984).
    The dissent urges that the Supreme Court’s recent
decision in Hamer v. Neighborhood Housing Services of
Chicago, 138 S. Ct. 13 (2017), effectively overrules our
earlier decision in Fedora, finding the 60-day time limit is
jurisdictional. We disagree.
     Hamer concerns an appeal from one Article III court
to another, and found that the time limit was not jurisdic-
tional because it was not in a statute. The Court stated,
“If a time prescription governing the transfer of adjudica-
tory authority from one Article III court to another ap-
pears in a statute, the limitation is jurisdictional, . . .
otherwise, the time specification fits within the claim-
processing category.” Id. at 20. This was followed by a
footnote that stated in relevant part, “In cases not involv-
ing the timebound transfer of adjudicatory authority from
one Article III court to another, we have additionally
applied a clear-statement rule: ‘A rule is jurisdictional ‘[i]f
the Legislature clearly states that a threshold limitation
on a statute’s scope shall count as jurisdictional.’’” Id. at
20 n.9. (citations omitted).
    The provision giving this court jurisdiction over deci-
sions of the MSPB is titled “Jurisdiction of the United
States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit” and
states that “The United States Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit shall have exclusive jurisdiction . . . (9) of
an appeal from a final order or final decision of the Merit
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION    v. DEFENSE                 7

Systems Protection Board, pursuant to sections 7703(b)(1)
and 7703(d) of title 5.” 28 U.S.C. § 1295. This constitutes
a clear statement that our jurisdiction is dependent on
the statutory time limit. This result is supported by
United States v. Kwai Fun Wong, 135 S. Ct. 1625 (2015),
which found a time-limit for appeal to a district court
from an agency nonjurisdictional. In that case, the statu-
tory provision granting jurisdiction made no reference to
the statutory provision containing the time bar. The
Supreme Court noted, “Nothing conditions the jurisdic-
tional grant on the limitations period, or otherwise links
those separate provisions.” Id. at 1633; see also Henderson
v. Shinseki, 562 U.S. 428, 439–40 (2011); Reed Elsevier,
Inc. v. Muchnick, 559 U.S. 154, 164–65 (2010); Arbaugh v.
Y&H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 515 (2006); Zipes v. Trans
World Airlines, Inc., 455 U.S. 385, 393–94 (1982). Here,
the statutory provisions are explicitly “linked.” The juris-
dictional grant is expressly linked to the statutory section
imposing the time bar. 2 The Court’s decision in Hamer
thus supports our earlier holding in Fedora that “this
court lacks jurisdiction over petitions for review that fail
to comply with the requirements of § 7703(b)(1)(A).” 848
F.3d at 1016.

    2   The dissent suggests that the Supreme Court’s
decision in Kloeckner v. Solis, 568 U.S. 41 (2012), contra-
dicts the majority’s position. Kloeckner is irrelevant. It did
not involve § 7703(b)(1), or any other provision establish-
ing a time limit for court of appeals review, or address
whether any such time limit is jurisdictional. In Kloeck-
ner, the court simply held that § 7703(b)(2), setting time
limits for filing mixed cases in district court, did not
create an exemption from district court jurisdiction for
procedural issues by virtue of the reference to “judicially
reviewable action.” Id. at 53.
8               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE

    Accordingly, this petition for review is dismissed for
lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
                      DISMISSED
    No costs.
  United States Court of Appeals
      for the Federal Circuit
                 ______________________

      FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION –
      STATESIDE REGION, KAREN GRAVISS,
                  Petitioners

                            v.

   DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, DOMESTIC
 DEPENDENTS ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY
                 SCHOOL,
                 Respondent
           ______________________

                       2015-3173
                 ______________________

    Petition for review of an arbitrator’s decision in No.
14-1024-00182-7 by Steven G. Hoffmeyer.
                  ______________________
PLAGER, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Because the result in this case is manifestly contrary
to current Supreme Court instructions for determining
when a statutory time bar is jurisdictional, I respectfully
dissent.
                      Introduction
    The parties have been waiting eight years to resolve
this case. After its convoluted history in this court, the
case is now resolved by dismissing the appeal for want of
2               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE

appellate jurisdiction. In dismissing the appeal, the panel
majority relies on an earlier case, Fedora v. Merit Systems
Protection Board, 1 in which the panel majority held that
the time to appeal in these types of cases was per se
‘mandatory and jurisdictional.’
     But as I explained in my dissent in Fedora (we were
the same three-judge panel in that case as in this one),
the statutory time requirement to appeal a case from an
agency to an Article III court is not per se mandatory and
jurisdictional—the rule is to the contrary. That previous-
ly there may have remained some lingering confusion
about this perhaps is understandable. As my dissent in
Fedora explained, the path the Supreme Court laid down
on this issue has not been a straight one, but if carefully
followed it pointed in the direction the Court was taking.
     But even for the previously unpersuaded, the Su-
preme Court’s 2017 ruling in Hamer v. Neighborhood
Housing Services of Chicago, 2 decided after our Fedora
case, should remove all doubt. The Court in its unani-
mous opinion in Hamer expressly states the rule, dis-
cussed below, that governs, and this court’s decision today
is in direct and obvious conflict with that rule.
    The case in which the Court chose to clarify the issue
and to declare its “clear and easy to apply” governing rule
involved both a statutory background and a Rule of Fed-
eral Procedure. But the Court’s statement of the govern-
ing rule leaves no doubt that it applies to statute-based
time limits as well as to those that are court-based, i.e.,
found in the Federal Rules of Procedure.
   We do not have the power to underrule the Supreme
Court. A dismissal of this case, without a more thorough

    1   848 F.3d 1013 (Fed. Cir. 2017).
    2   138 S. Ct. 13 (2017).
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE                3

consideration of the jurisdiction issue, and without a
decision on the merits, is in my view both incorrect on the
jurisdiction matter and a denial of due process to Ms.
Graviss as well as to the Government.
    Because the original opinion by the panel majority
and my dissent were vacated by the full court when it
took the case en banc (but regrettably then changed its
mind), I restate for the record the background and the
issue that brought the case to this court. Then I address
the error in the panel majority’s current opinion dismiss-
ing this case on jurisdictional grounds, the technical issue
now before the court.
                Background and Merits
     As noted, this case began over eight years ago. In
June 2010, after proceedings before the agency’s deciding
official, Ms. Graviss was removed from her position in the
Government’s employ on the grounds of inappropriate
physical contact with a special needs student—at a school
with explicit rules on that subject, which she violated.
     Subsequently Ms. Graviss’ union filed a grievance
challenging that removal. The grievance was denied, and
the union invoked arbitration. In April 2015, following
discovery, briefing, and a two-day hearing, the arbitrator
rendered his decision upholding the Government’s deci-
sion to remove Ms. Graviss from employment. On June
23, 2015, Ms. Graviss and the union petitioned this court
for review of the arbitrator’s decision. 3
   In June 2016, a three-judge panel of this court held a
hearing on the case. On November 18, 2016, the court

   3    Since the panel majority has dismissed this ap-
peal, we need not address whether the union was a proper
party on appeal to this court.
4               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE

majority, over the dissent, issued its judgment reversing
the arbitrator’s decision. The Government thereafter
timely petitioned for rehearing en banc. The full court, on
October 13, 2017, granted the Government’s petition for
rehearing en banc, vacated the panel’s prior opinions, and
ordered supplemental briefing by the parties; amicus
briefs were invited and received.
    Oral argument before the en banc court was held on
March 8, 2018. The issue presented was whether there
had been improper command interference in the decision-
making by the assigned agency official. It was expected
that the underlying question to be discussed was whether,
as the dissent argued, the original panel majority had
applied a key Federal Circuit case, Stone v. Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp., 4 in an erroneous manner and
thus reached a wrong result.
     However, on March 6, 2018, two days before oral ar-
gument, the court directed the parties to be prepared to
address the court’s jurisdiction over the case. There
appeared to be a question whether the petitioner, Ms.
Graviss, had filed her petition for review of the arbitra-
tor’s decision in the time allowed by the governing stat-
ute, 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(1)(A). This was a new question
raised sua sponte by the court, as neither party had raised
it.
    At the hearing on March 8, the parties vigorously de-
bated the jurisdictional question. Because of some facts
in the case and an ambiguity in a recent amendment to
the governing statute, the issue proved to be rather
complex. Following the hearing, the court, on March 13,
2018, ordered supplemental briefing on the jurisdictional
question.

    4   179 F.3d 1368 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE                5

    Nevertheless, before any decision had been reached on
the jurisdictional question, much less the merits of the
case, a proposal was made and approved by the full court
to dissolve the en banc court and return the case to the
original panel. That action was taken even though the
logical result would be that the original panel majority
would dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction, following
their own earlier decision in Fedora. And that is what
has happened, except that a different explanation for that
result has been offered, one that is still contrary to law.
    From the decision of the panel majority I respectfully
dissent. In my view the panel majority, with the appar-
ent acquiescence of the full court, is acting in a way
clearly contrary to the latest Supreme Court instruction
on the jurisdiction of this court. That result also has
precluded the court from addressing an important merits
question properly before it.
    Ms. Graviss challenged her dismissal on the ground
that she had not timely learned of a communication
regarding her conduct. The communication was between
the immediate supervisor who brought the charges, the
intermediate supervisor who acted as the deciding official,
and a more remote supervisor who had opined about the
case, all before the charges were brought. This court’s
precedent—primarily the Stone case—is less than clear on
the proper rule to apply in such a situation. Government
agencies, as well as employees, would have benefited from
the clarification a decision on the merits would provide; it
is a due process issue that bears importantly on the
administration of government agencies.
   Furthermore, if the time bar is not jurisdictional, this
would seem to be an appropriate case for permitting the
6               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION     v. DEFENSE

petitioner to seek equitable tolling. 5 The Government, by
failing to take note of the time-for-filing problem in its
briefing, would appear to have forfeited its right to chal-
lenge Ms. Graviss’ petition as untimely. 6 At a minimum,
if the time bar is not jurisdictional, petitioner is entitled
to make her best case for equitable tolling under the
circumstances shown on this record, rather than be
barred by the erroneous nunc pro tunc dismissal ordered
by the panel majority.
                 The Jurisdiction Issue
     I turn now to the jurisdictional question and the sup-
posed authority of Fedora which the panel majority cites
as controlling. As I wrote in dissent in Fedora, the major-
ity in that case failed to properly analyze the Supreme
Court’s then-existing case law regarding statutory time
bars and jurisdiction. 848 F.3d at 1017–26 (Plager, J.,
dissenting). Subsequently, four non-panel judges of this
court agreed that Fedora was wrongly decided, and dis-
sented from the denial of a petition for en banc rehear-
ing. 7

    5    Even when a statutory time bar is nonjurisdic-
tional, a party who seeks to have the time bar equitably
tolled ordinarily must independently establish its enti-
tlement to that form of equitable relief. See, e.g., Pace v.
DiGuglielmo, 544 U.S. 408, 418 (2005).
     6   The terms ‘waiver’ and ‘forfeiture’ are sometimes
used interchangeably, but as the Court pointed out in
Hamer they are not synonymous—the correct term here is
‘forfeited.’ See Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 17 n.1.
     7   An eloquent dissent expressed the reasons for
some of the dissenting votes, noting particularly that
§ 7703(b)(1)(A) is not jurisdictional and in an appropriate
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION     v. DEFENSE                  7

    Since Fedora, the dissenting view has been made even
more authoritative by the Supreme Court’s recent deci-
sion in Hamer. There the Court in a unanimous opinion
stated:
    The rule of decision our precedent shapes is both
    clear and easy to apply: If a time prescription
    governing the transfer of adjudicatory authority
    from one Article III court to another appears in a
    statute, the limitation is jurisdictional; otherwise,
    the time specification fits within the claim-
    processing category.
138 S. Ct. at 20 (citations and footnote omitted).
In a lengthy footnote attached to this governing rule, the
Supreme Court explained how to understand this “claim-
processing” category:
    In cases not involving the timebound transfer of
    adjudicatory authority from one Article III court
    to another, we have additionally applied a clear-
    statement rule: “A rule is jurisdictional ‘[i]f the
    Legislature clearly states that a threshold limita-
    tion on a statute’s scope shall count as jurisdic-
    tional.’” . . . In determining whether Congress
    intended a particular provision to be jurisdiction-
    al, “[w]e consider ‘context, including this Court’s
    interpretations of similar provisions in many
    years past,’ as probative of [Congress’ intent].” . . .
    “[I]n applying th[e] clear statement rule, we have
    made plain that most [statutory] time bars are
    nonjurisdictional.”
Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 20 n.9 (citations omitted).

case permits equitable tolling. See 868 F.3d 1336, 1337–
40.
8               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION    v. DEFENSE

    In short, as the Court makes clear, its governing rule
specifically addresses statutory time bars, and provides
that most statutory time bars are not jurisdictional. The
two exceptions are (1) a statute that deals with transfer of
a cause from one Article III court to another Article III
court, or (2) a statute regarding which Congress has
expressly made clear an intention that the time bar be
jurisdictional.
    With regard to the first exception, Ms. Graviss’ case
does not involve the timebound transfer of adjudicatory
authority from one Article III court to another. This case
is an appeal from an agency (in this matter, the arbitrator
at the request of the employee substitutes for the Merit
Systems Protection Board (MSPB), and is treated the
same under the law 8), with an appeal to the Federal
Circuit, an Article III court. This is a clear and easily
understood matter of a nonjurisdictional claim-processing
rule, which means that equitable tolling and forfei-
ture/waiver of the time bar are possible.
    Contrary to their position in Fedora, the panel majori-
ty appears now to accept the correctness of the argument
made by the dissent in Fedora and confirmed by the
Supreme Court’s Hamer decision, that time bars applica-
ble to appeals from an agency to a court, such as is the
case here, are generally treated as nonjurisdictional. But
now, for the first time, the panel majority argues that the
second exception—the ‘clear statement’ rule noted
above—applies to the jurisdictional issue here. According
to the panel majority Congress has provided a “clear”
indication that the relevant statute, 5 U.S.C.
§ 7703(b)(1)(A), should be viewed as jurisdictional.

    8   See 5 U.S.C. § 7121(e) and (f).
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE               9

    There can be no argument that the relevant statute in
this case is § 7703(b)(1)(A). That provision contains two
sentences:
   [1] Except as provided in subparagraph (B) and
   paragraph (2) of this subsection [neither of which
   apply here], a petition to review a final order or
   final decision of the Board shall be filed in the
   United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
   Circuit.
   [2] Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
   any petition for review shall be filed within 60
   days after the Board issues notice of the final or-
   der or decision of the Board.
     With regard to this statutory provision, the panel ma-
jority in its summary opinion offers nothing by way of
legislative history or prior court rulings that might sug-
gest that there exists a ‘clear statement’ by Congress that
would justify excluding this statute from the Supreme
Court’s Hamer doctrine. Instead, the majority reaches for
a different statute, in a different title of the U.S. Code,
that says nothing directly on the subject. The majority’s
theory now is that 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(9) alone constitutes
a ‘clear statement’ by Congress that § 7703(b)(1)(A) is per
se ‘mandatory and jurisdictional’ because the former
references the latter.
    That theory is fatally flawed. The most obvious prob-
lem with the majority’s position is that nothing in Hamer
suggests that, when seeking a ‘clear statement’ about a
governing statute, in our case § 7703(b)(1)(A), we are free
to roam through the corpus of federal statutes looking for
a provision, however related, on which we can piggy-back
a theory, and then to find, simply in the existence of such
a statute, a ‘clear statement’ about the first statute.
There is thus a problem with even considering § 1295(a)
directly relevant to the meaning of the second sentence in
§ 7703(b)(1)(A).
10               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE

    Looking more closely at 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a), it begins:
“The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit shall have exclusive jurisdiction—” and subsection
9 states briefly: “of an appeal from a final order or final
decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board, pursuant
to sections 7703(b)(1) and 7703(d) of title 5.”
    Section 1295(a) contains 14 subsections (some of
which have subdivisions) identifying the specific courts
and agencies whose decisions are eligible to be reviewed
by the Federal Circuit. Several of these jurisdiction-
granting provisions contain the same “pursuant to” lan-
guage found in subsection 9 relating to the MSPB; several
do not have any such references. A few have different
phrases, such as “governed by sections 1291, 1292, and
1294” and “made under section 337.” One has a phrase
“arising under, any Act of Congress relating to.”
     What is clear is that the purpose of § 1295(a) is to
state which cases come to the Federal Circuit, not when
they may come. Reading anything into this mélange of
phrasing that might qualify as a ‘clear statement’ of
congressional intent regarding the jurisdictional status of
a filing deadline provided in a different statute, in any
given circumstance in a case authorized to be heard under
§ 1295(a), without more, requires an especially creative
act of judicial reading. Such a reading seems neither
appropriate nor justified.
    The importance of distinguishing between the juris-
diction-related language in the first sentence of
§ 7703(b)(1)(A) and the time-bar provision stated in the
second sentence was highlighted in the Supreme Court’s
opinion in Kloeckner v. Solis. 9 That opinion examined a
similar time bar issue in a case close to home—the time

     9   568 U.S. 41 (2012).
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE                  11

bar was located in the next subsection in the same stat-
ute, § 7703(b)(2).
    Section 7703(b)(2) constitutes an exception to the gen-
eral rule of § 7703(b)(1)(A) under which appeals from the
Merit Systems Protection Board are taken to this court.
Section 7703(b)(2), which has the same two-sentence
structure as the relevant provision in this case
(§ 7703(b)(1)(A)), states:
   [1] Cases of discrimination subject to the provi-
   sions of section 7702 of this title shall be filed un-
   der section 717(c) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
   (42 U.S.C. 2000e–16(c)), section 15(c) of the Age
   Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (29
   U.S.C. 633a(c)), and section 16(b) of the Fair La-
   bor Standards Act of 1938, as amended (29 U.S.C.
   216(b)), as applicable.
   [2] Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
   any such case filed under any such section must
   be filed within 30 days after the date the individ-
   ual filing the case received notice of the judicially
   reviewable action under such section 7702.
    The issue before the Supreme Court was whether, on
the facts of the case, Ms. Kloeckner’s appeal of her dis-
missal from the agency should go to the district court via
the various sections referenced in § 7703(b)(2), or to the
Federal Circuit under the general rule of (b)(1)(A). There
was a split of authority on how to read the rather convo-
luted statutory sections involved, particularly in light of
the often convoluted facts of these cases.
    The Government’s argument in favor of the Federal
Circuit drew a distinction between cases decided on the
merits and those decided on procedural grounds. To get
there, the Government argued that the second sentence of
§ 7703(b)(2), the timing-for-filing sentence, had substan-
tive meaning that could be used to determine jurisdiction.
12               FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION    v. DEFENSE

     The Supreme Court was unimpressed, and chose a
more straightforward reading of the statute. Said the
Court, the time bar in the second sentence of § 7703(b)(2)
is “nothing more than a filing deadline” rather than
“adding a requirement for a case to fall within the excep-
tion to Federal Circuit jurisdiction.” 568 U.S. at 52. The
Court simply read the separate sentences of § 7703(b)(2)
separately, and did not import the time limitation of the
second sentence into the jurisdictional exception ex-
pressed in the first sentence. In the Court’s words:
     The first sentence defines which cases should be
     brought in district court, rather than in the Fed-
     eral Circuit . . . . The second sentence then states
     when those cases should be brought: “any such
     case . . . must be filed within 30 days” of the date
     the employee “received notice of the judicially re-
     viewable action.” . . . What [the second sentence]
     does not do is to further define which timely-
     brought cases belong in district court instead of in
     the Federal Circuit. Describing those cases is the
     first sentence’s role.
Id. at 53 (quoting 5 U.S.C. § 7703(b)(2)).
    With this analysis in mind, it is important to recog-
nize that both the statutory provision in Kloeckner and
the statutory provision with which we are concerned in
this case contain the same statutory structure: two sepa-
rate sentences that perform separate roles. Even assum-
ing we would agree that § 1295(a) has some bearing on
this case, the cross-reference to § 7703(b)(1) in § 1295(a) is
consistent with a reference to the first sentence of
§ 7703(b)(1)(A), the repetitive jurisdiction-granting sen-
tence which repeats the purpose of § 1295(a). And, as the
Court in Kloeckner observed, it leaves the time-defining
second sentence as a separate time-limiting rule, one that
squarely falls under the Hamer doctrine.
FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION      v. DEFENSE                 13

     The panel majority’s cross-reference argument fails
under either view of § 1295(a)—either the provision does
not apply at all; or if it does, it logically applies only to the
first sentence regarding the jurisdictional grant, leaving
the second sentence—the time-to-file statement—to be
understood in light of Hamer.
    Furthermore, whatever the relationships among these
several statutes, one thing is clear. There is nothing in
§ 1295(a) or § 7703(b)(1)(A) that, either separately or
collectively, qualifies as the ‘clear statement’ exception
from the general rule that a statutory time bar is nonju-
risdictional in the terms required by Hamer. Reading
something into these statutory provisions to get that
result requires finding a congressional intention that is
nowhere expressed.
    I sympathize with the court’s distaste for all too often
having to go en banc to correct our own panels. But for all
the above reasons, I cannot support the court’s disposition
of this case. The panel majority has not undertaken a
reexamination of the several important issues raised by
this appeal, in part because to do so would require recog-
nizing that Fedora is no longer good law. The en banc
court is the only remedy, short of the Supreme Court.
     Ultimately, jurisdiction works both ways. We are
bound to dismiss any case over which we lack jurisdiction.
However, we are equally bound to hear any case over
which we have jurisdiction. As Chief Justice Marshall
observed, “[i]t is most true that this Court will not take
jurisdiction if it should not: but it is equally true, that it
must take jurisdiction if it should. . . . We have no more
right to decline the exercise of jurisdiction which is given,
than to usurp that which is not given.” Cohens v. Virgin-
ia, 19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 264, 404 (1821).
   The question of our jurisdiction in this matter re-
mains to be properly decided. By countenancing this
14             FEDERAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION   v. DEFENSE

summary erroneous dismissal, I regret to say that we fail
that responsibility.