Court Opinion

ID: 211257
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2011-03-13 08:25:22+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:18:18.704317
License: Public Domain

NOTE: Pursuant to Fed. Cir. R. 47.6, this disposition
                   is not citable as precedent. It is a public record.

 United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
                                        06-3045

                                YVONNE C. JOHNSON

                                                Petitioner,

                                           v.

                      OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT,

                                                Respondent.

                           ___________________________

                           DECIDED: May 18, 2006
                           ___________________________

Before MAYER, BRYSON, and DYK, Circuit Judges.

Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge BRYSON. Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit
Judge MAYER.

BRYSON, Circuit Judge.

                                      DECISION

      Yvonne C. Johnson appeals from an order of the Merit Systems Protection

Board, Docket No. PH-0831-04-0568-I-1, in which the Board rejected her claim that she

was entitled to benefits under the Civil Service Retirement System (“CSRS”) based on

the former employment of her deceased husband. We vacate and remand.
                                     BACKGROUND

       Ms. Johnson’s late husband, Maurice P. Johnson, was a federal civil service

employee for more than 20 years, until he left the federal service in 1980. After leaving

the federal service, he applied for disability retirement, but his application was denied.

Thereafter, he filed an application for a refund of the retirement contributions he had

made during his service. On two of his refund applications, dated October 20, 1988,

and December 16, 1988, Mr. Johnson certified that he was not married, even though

Ms. Johnson represents that he was in fact married to her at that time. On December

20, 1988, a refund in the amount of $11,616.16 was authorized to be paid to Mr.

Johnson.

       Mr. Johnson died in 2003. After his death, Ms. Johnson filed an application for

survivor benefits based on Mr. Johnson’s period of federal service.          The Office of

Personnel Management (“OPM”), however, advised her that no benefits were payable

because all of Mr. Johnson’s retirement contributions had previously been refunded to

him. On Ms. Johnson’s request for reconsideration, OPM affirmed its initial decision

denying her request for benefits.

       Ms. Johnson appealed OPM’s reconsideration decision to the Merit Systems

Protection Board.    The administrative judge assigned to her case upheld OPM’s

decision. The judge noted that because Mr. Johnson had withdrawn his retirement

contributions after leaving the federal service, neither he nor any survivor was entitled to

a CSRS annuity. Ms. Johnson argued that she was not informed of Mr. Johnson’s 1988

application for a refund of his retirement contributions, and that OPM was under a duty

to ensure that she was notified of his refund application. In response to that argument,

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the administrative judge held that although the law required that an employee’s spouse

be informed of the employee’s withdrawal of retirement contributions—and the

consequent forfeiture of his retirement annuity rights and her rights to a survivor

annuity—the obligation to provide such notice fell upon the employee, not OPM. The

administrative judge noted that OPM had advised Mr. Johnson that he had an obligation

to notify a current or former spouse of his refund application. The administrative judge

held that OPM had reasonably relied on Mr. Johnson’s statement that he was not

married, even though that statement was false. Therefore, the administrative judge held

that there was no legal basis to grant Ms. Johnson’s request for any relief based on her

lack of notice of Mr. Johnson’s refund application.     After the full Board denied her

petition for review, Ms. Johnson sought review by this court.

                                     DISCUSSION

      The government concedes that the administrative judge erred when he ruled that

OPM was not required to cross-check Mr. Johnson’s refund application with his

personnel file. However, the government argues that the error was harmless and that

the Board’s decision should be upheld on that ground.

      In 1984, the Civil Service Retirement Act was amended to provide that OPM

would pay a lump-sum refund of retirement contributions to an employee “only if any

spouse and any former spouse of the employee . . . are notified of the employee’s . . .

application.” 5 U.S.C. § 8342(j). The statute further provides that the payment of the

lump-sum refund of retirement contributions “shall be subject to the terms of a court

decree of divorce, annulment, or legal separation or any court order or court approved

property settlement agreement incident to such decree” if the decree, order, or

06-3045                                     3
agreement expressly relates to any portion of the lump-sum credit, and if payment of the

lump-sum refund would extinguish the employee’s or the spouse’s right to a CSRS

annuity. Id.

      In Muwwakkil v. Office of Personnel Management, 18 F.3d 921 (Fed. Cir. 1994),

this court held that as a part of the process of refunding retirement contributions, OPM

has a duty to go beyond an employee’s representation that he or she had no spouse or

former spouse. Instead, the court held, OPM must examine the employee’s personnel

file to determine if there was such a spouse or former spouse who might have rights

with respect to the refund or a later survivor annuity that would be forfeited upon

payment of the refund. Accordingly, the court held in the Muwwakkil case that OPM

had failed to comply with its obligations to ensure that Ms. Muwwakkil had been

informed of her former husband’s refund application. The court further held, however,

that in order for Ms. Muwwakkil to obtain any relief as a result of OPM’s failure to

comply with those notification responsibilities, the Board would have to conclude that

she had been harmed by the absence of notification. 18 F.3d at 926. The court noted

that it was not clear whether, if Ms. Muwwakkil had been given timely notice of the

proposed refund, she would have sought, and could have obtained, a modification of

the decree that would have given her rights with respect to her husband’s retirement

contributions. Accordingly, the court remanded the case to the Board to determine if

Ms. Muwwakkil was prejudiced by not being notified about the refund application filed by

her ex-husband.

      This case is not sufficiently different from Muwwakkil to justify a different result.

We therefore adopt the same disposition—to remand to the Board for a harmless error

06-3045                                     4
determination.    The only potentially material difference between this case and

Muwwakkil is that Ms. Muwwakkil was divorced from her federal employee husband,

and there was an existing divorce decree, while Ms. Johnson was apparently separated

from Mr. Johnson but not divorced. The government seizes on that difference and

argues that the divorce decree in Muwwakkil “may have been subject to modification.”

Based on its conclusion that Ms. Johnson had not taken “any apparent action . . . to

preserve any interest in Mr. Johnson’s property,” the government argues that a remand

for a harmless error determination, which was required in Muwwakkil, is not appropriate

in this case.

       We disagree.     So far as the record reflects, neither Ms. Muwwakkil nor Ms.

Johnson had any court order or agreement that gave either of them a legal right to the

proceeds of the refund application at the time they were supposed to be notified.

Nonetheless, this court held that Ms. Muwwakkil was entitled to an opportunity to

demonstrate that if she had been notified of the pending refund application, she would

have taken steps to preserve her interest in the refund. The fact that Ms. Muwwakkil

had a divorce decree that might have been subject to modification is a factor that might

have made it easier for her to find a vehicle through which to protect her interests, but

the presence of a divorce decree in that case and not in this one is not a difference that,

in our view, justifies a different treatment of the two cases.

       Because the Board held that there was no error in this case, it had no occasion

to explore the question whether OPM’s error was prejudicial. Thus, the government has

raised that issue for the first time in this court. The highly factual inquiry into whether

the error in this case was prejudicial is not one that we are in a position to conduct in the

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first instance, at least where the record is as incomplete with respect to the issue of

prejudice as it is in this case. Because we are not in a position, based on the limited

record before us, to make the kind of factual inquiry necessary to determine whether

Ms. Johnson has been prejudiced by the absence of notification of the refund

application, we hold that the proper course, as in Muwwakkil, is to remand this case so

that the Board can address that issue in the first instance and can make whatever

factual findings may be necessary to address the issue of prejudice. Accordingly, we

remand this case to the Board to determine whether OPM’s failure to notify Ms.

Johnson of the pending refund application prejudiced her, or whether the error can be

disregarded as harmless.

      We have examined Ms. Johnson’s other claims and find them to be without merit.

06-3045                                   6
               NOTE: Pursuant to Fed. Cir. R. 47.6, this disposition is
               not citable as precedent. It is a public record.

      United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
                                       06-3045

                               YVONNE C. JOHNSON,

                                                          Petitioner,

                                           v.

                     OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT,

                                                          Respondent.

MAYER, Circuit Judge, dissenting.

      Because vacatur and remand here will require the board to speculate as to

whether there was harmful error, and because I do not believe Muwwakkil v. Office of

Personnel Management, 18 F.3d 921 (Fed. Cir. 1994), requires remand in this case, I

dissent.

      In Muwwakkil, there was an existing divorce decree legally separating the former

spouses’ assets, which was capable of modification by the court and which evidenced

the former spouses’ intent to separate their assets. Here, Johnson does not claim that

she was legally separated from Mr. Johnson, or that there was any court-approved

property settlement agreement awarding her a portion of Mr. Johnson’s property. Thus,

vacatur and remand, given the absence of any court intervention separating the

Johnsons’ assets, will require significant speculation by the board as to whether there

was harmful error, i.e., remand will require the board to decide if Johnson would have

actually sought (and received) either a legal separation or a court-approved property

settlement agreement had she known about the lump-sum payment to Mr. Johnson.