Eby v. United States ( 2020 )


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  • Case: 19-1932    Document: 46     Page: 1   Filed: 07/17/2020
    NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    MICHELLE EBY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellee
    ______________________
    2019-1932
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Court of Federal Claims
    in No. 1:15-cv-00553-CFL, Senior Judge Charles F. Lettow.
    ______________________
    Decided: July 17, 2020
    ______________________
    JACK BRADLEY JARRETT, III, Alan Lescht and Associ-
    ates, PC, Washington, DC, for plaintiff-appellant.
    DANIEL S. HERZFELD, Commercial Litigation Branch,
    Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Wash-
    ington, DC, for defendant-appellee. Also represented by
    ETHAN P. DAVIS, REGINALD THOMAS BLADES, JR., ROBERT
    EDWARD KIRSCHMAN, JR.
    ______________________
    Case: 19-1932     Document: 46     Page: 2     Filed: 07/17/2020
    2                                       EBY   v. UNITED STATES
    Before NEWMAN, O’MALLEY, and CHEN, Circuit Judges.
    O’MALLEY, Circuit Judge.
    Michelle Eby (“Eby”) appeals from an order of the
    United States Court of Federal Claims (“Claims Court”)
    granting the United States’ (“government’s”) motion for
    summary judgment and denying Eby’s cross-motion for
    summary judgment. Eby v. United States, 
    142 Fed. Cl. 293
     (2019). For the reasons explained below, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Eby was employed by the National Institute of Health
    (“NIH”), an agency within the Department of Health and
    Human Services (“HHS”), between 1989 and 2010. The
    NIH promoted Eby to a GS-13 position in 2001, and subse-
    quently to a GS-14 position in 2003. 
    Eby, 142 Fed. Cl. at 296
    . In 2009, Eby filed a complaint with the Equal Em-
    ployment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) against the
    government alleging disability discrimination.
    Id. In April
     2010, the dispute resulted in a settlement agreement be-
    tween Eby and the government, pursuant to which Eby
    agreed to resign and the government agreed that her su-
    pervisor would provide a neutral job reference for any fu-
    ture job applications.
    Upon resigning from the NIH, Eby applied for a posi-
    tion as a Regulatory Health Project Coordinator in the Di-
    vision of Drug Oncology Products in the Food and Drug
    Administration (“FDA”). The position had a maximum pro-
    motion potential to the GS-13 level. Eby asserts that, de-
    spite this, the hiring official at the FDA indicated that, if
    she performed well, she could be promoted to a GS-14 posi-
    tion within “a couple of years.” J.A. 266. Eby did not re-
    ceive a job offer from the FDA after the FDA contacted the
    NIH for a reference.
    In 2011, Eby notified the HHS’s Office of Equal Oppor-
    tunity and Diversity Management that she believed the
    NIH had violated the terms of the settlement agreement.
    Case: 19-1932      Document: 46    Page: 3    Filed: 07/17/2020
    EBY   v. UNITED STATES                                     3
    The HHS determined that the NIH had made a good faith
    effort to comply with the terms of the settlement agree-
    ment. Eby then filed a claim with the EEOC, appealing the
    HHS’s decision and alleging breach of the settlement
    agreement. 
    Eby, 142 Fed. Cl. at 296
    . In April 2012, before
    the EEOC rendered its decision on Eby’s claim, she was
    hired by the FDA as a Consumer Safety Officer—a differ-
    ent position than the one at issue in her claim against the
    HHS—at the GS-13 Step 10 level.
    In May 2013, the EEOC rendered its decision, conclud-
    ing that the HHS and NIH breached the settlement agree-
    ment. The EEOC also found, however, that the settlement
    agreement did not provide a remedy for breach of contract.
    Accordingly, it required that the HHS allow Eby to pursue
    one of two options: (1) reinstate the original EEOC disabil-
    ity discrimination complaint that led to the settlement
    agreement, thereby requiring Eby to return to her position
    at the NIH, return the awarded attorney’s fees, and forego
    administrative leave, or (2) bring a retaliation claim
    against the HHS for failure to provide a neutral reference.
    Eby chose to pursue the retaliation claim before the EEOC.
    Before the EEOC rendered its decision on the retalia-
    tion claim, Eby filed a complaint in the Claims Court, al-
    leging breach of contract and seeking back pay and other
    employment benefits. While both the EEOC action and the
    Claims Court action were pending, the FDA transferred
    Eby to a Health Science Administrator position, again at
    the GS-13 step 10 level. In March 2017, the EEOC ren-
    dered a final judgment in Eby’s favor on her retaliation
    claim and awarded back pay, fringe benefits, and attor-
    ney’s fees. The EEOC also ordered the HHS to place Eby
    in a Regulatory Health Project Coordinator position at the
    FDA, i.e., the position for which she initially applied. Eby,
    however, chose to stay in her then-current position.
    After the EEOC’s decision on the retaliation claim, the
    government moved to dismiss the action before the Claims
    Case: 19-1932    Document: 46     Page: 4     Filed: 07/17/2020
    4                                      EBY   v. UNITED STATES
    Court for mootness. The Claims Court denied the motion
    because Eby had not yet received her back pay and bene-
    fits. 
    Eby, 142 Fed. Cl. at 295
    . Subsequently, although Eby
    received that compensation, she maintained that her claim
    was still viable because the EEOC failed to consider back
    pay that Eby would have received if she had been promoted
    to a GS-14 position two years after she would have begun
    as a Regulatory Health Project Coordinator but for the
    NIH’s retaliation—i.e. in June 2012.
    Id. Eby asserted
     these damages under a breach of contract expectation dam-
    ages theory rather than under the Back Pay Act to which
    the EEOC’s remedy was constrained.
    Id. The Claims
     Court granted limited discovery related to whether Eby
    would have been promoted and when.
    Id. At the
    close of discovery, the government moved for
    summary judgment and Eby filed a cross-motion for sum-
    mary judgment.
    Id. at 295–96.
    The Claims Court granted
    the government’s motion for summary judgment and de-
    nied Eby’s cross motion for summary judgment two years
    later in March 2019. 
    Eby, 142 F.3d at 301
    . The Claims
    Court found that Eby failed to prove she was entitled to a
    promotion to the GS-14 level at any time before March
    2017 and, therefore, had failed to prove she was entitled to
    the damages she requested.
    Id. at 300–01.
    Eby timely ap-
    pealed. 1 We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    § 1295(a)(3).
    DISCUSSION
    Eby raises two issues on appeal: (1) whether Eby
    proved her damages with reasonable certainty, and (2)
    whether the Claims Court incorrectly applied the “duly
    1  Eby was promoted to a GS-14 level in January
    2019, before the Claims Court issued its summary judg-
    ment ruling.
    Case: 19-1932      Document: 46   Page: 5    Filed: 07/17/2020
    EBY   v. UNITED STATES                                    5
    appointed” requirement to a breach of contract claim. 2
    This court reviews the Claims Court’s grant of summary
    judgment de novo. Aviation & Gen. Ins. Co. v. United
    States, 
    882 F.3d 1088
    , 1093 (Fed. Cir. 2018). The Claims
    Court grants “summary judgment if the movant shows that
    there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Rules
    of the Claims Court (“RCFC”) 56(a).
    Contracts with the federal government are generally
    governed by the same contract law that would apply to con-
    tracts between private individuals. Mobil Oil Expl. & Pro-
    ducing Se., Inc. v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 604
    , 607 (2000).
    In common law breach of contract cases, damages are
    awarded to make the non-breaching party whole by giving
    her the benefits she would have received if the breach had
    not occurred. Glendale Fed. Bank, FSB v. United States,
    
    239 F.3d 1374
    , 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2001); Estate of Berg v.
    United States, 
    687 F.2d 377
    , 379 (Ct. Cl. 1982). These “ex-
    pectation damages” are recoverable if they are (1) actually
    foreseen or reasonably foreseeable, (2) caused by the
    breach of the promisor, and (3) proved with reasonable cer-
    tainty. Bluebonnet Sav. Bank, F.S.B. v. United States, 
    266 F.3d 1348
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2001). In this case, the Claims
    Court found that Eby failed to prove she would have been
    promoted to a GS-14 position and therefore failed to prove
    her expectation damages with reasonable certainty. 
    Eby, 142 Fed. Cl. at 301
    .
    On appeal, Eby challenges the Claims Court’s determi-
    nation that she failed to prove with reasonable certainty
    that she would have been promoted to a GS-14 position.
    Eby contends that she would have been promoted to a GS-
    2 Generally, a federal employee is not entitled to the
    benefits of a position to which she has not been duly ap-
    pointed, regardless of the reasons for the non-appointment.
    United States v. Testan, 
    424 U.S. 392
    , 402 (1976).
    Case: 19-1932    Document: 46     Page: 6     Filed: 07/17/2020
    6                                      EBY   v. UNITED STATES
    14 position within two years of being appointed to the GS-
    13 position at the FDA in 2010. The government asserts
    that Eby did not prove with reasonable certainty that she
    would have been promoted to a GS-14 position because the
    position for which she applied had a maximum promotion
    of GS-13 and appointment to a GS-14 position would have
    required Eby to compete with other applicants.
    We conclude that potential discretionary promotions
    that are subject to a competitive process cannot provide the
    requisite reasonable certainty necessary to prove expecta-
    tion damages. In a case involving private parties, the Su-
    preme Court has held that, even where an employee might
    be given preference when applying for a promotion, the
    likelihood of that potential promotion is too speculative to
    sustain an expectation damages award. See Richmond &
    D.R. Co. v. Elliot, 
    149 U.S. 266
    , 268 (1893). In the govern-
    ment employment context, our predecessor court held that
    the possibility of a promotion, or even the probability of a
    promotion, is insufficient to sustain back pay awards at the
    higher pay grade. Power v. United States, 
    597 F.2d 258
    ,
    262 (Ct. Cl. 1979). Government agencies are responsible,
    moreover, for setting the pay grades of each job within the
    agency. An employee may advance to a higher pay grade
    only up to the maximum pay grade advertised in the job
    announcement. Pay & Leave Pay Systems, U.S. Office of
    Personnel Management, https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-
    oversight/pay-leave/pay-systems/general-schedule/. Em-
    ployees may advance to pay grades higher than advertised
    in the job announcement only by competing with other ap-
    plicants on a merit system.
    Id. These precedents
    and the
    nature of government agency pay grades confirm that the
    Claims Court’s resolution of this issue was correct.
    Here, the FDA position at issue identified GS-13 as the
    maximum pay level the employee could attain. To advance
    to a GS-14 position, Eby would have been required to com-
    pete with other applicants. The competitive nature of such
    a promotion, and the discretion that the FDA could exercise
    Case: 19-1932      Document: 46    Page: 7    Filed: 07/17/2020
    EBY   v. UNITED STATES                                     7
    in promoting Eby, make Eby’s claimed damages for GS-14
    wages speculative. Eby contends that it was highly likely
    she would be promoted to a GS-14 position because she had
    worked at that level before and was a desirable employee,
    and that her supervisors represented to her that accepting
    particular GS-13 positions (including the particular Regu-
    latory Health Project Coordinator she applied for in 2010)
    were likely to lead to a promotion to a GS-14 position. We
    do not find these arguments persuasive. These assertions
    do not show, with any degree of certainty, that Eby would
    have been promoted to the GS 14 level. At most they show
    that there was a good chance that Eby would be promoted.
    Missing is a showing of a reasonable certainty of promo-
    tion.
    In this context, we may not rely on Eby’s arguments
    regarding the promotion of other FDA employees. Eby ar-
    gues that, since May 2009, eight out of ten FDA employees
    were promoted from the GS-13 level to the GS-14 level
    within two years of being hired to GS-13 positions. Addi-
    tionally, Eby points to five individuals within the Office of
    Oncology and Hematology that were promoted to the GS-
    14 level within two years of being hired as GS-13 Project
    Coordinators or Project Managers. Again, these examples
    show that there may have been a good chance that Eby
    would be promoted, but they do not satisfy the reasonable
    certainty standard we must employ. In fact, these exam-
    ples lend support to the opposite conclusion: each individ-
    ual to whom Eby points was promoted only after applying
    to a GS-14 vacancy and undergoing a competitive selection
    process. At most, these examples demonstrate that promo-
    tion to a GS-14 level was a competitive process within the
    discretion of the FDA that often resulted in promotion, but
    not always.
    Eby also argues that the Claims Court improperly held
    that an applicant for federal employment may never obtain
    contract damages calculated based on discretionary promo-
    tions. A federal employee allegedly aggrieved by a non-hire
    Case: 19-1932    Document: 46      Page: 8     Filed: 07/17/2020
    8                                       EBY   v. UNITED STATES
    determination is not entitled to the benefit of a position to
    which he or she has not been appointed—this is known as
    the “duly appointed” requirement. 
    Testan, 424 U.S. at 402
    .
    Eby contends that, in ruling against her, the Claims Court
    improperly applied the duly appointed requirement to her
    breach of contract claim. Contrary to Eby’s argument, the
    Claims Court understood that Eby’s damages recovery was
    not subject to the duly appointed requirement because her
    claim stems from a breach of the settlement agreement.
    See 
    Eby, 142 Fed. Cl. at 299
    –300. The Claims Court
    acknowledged that it was required to “consider the parties’
    evidentiary postulates regarding Ms. Eby’s possible promo-
    tion” and therefore considered the competitive nature of
    promotion from the GS-13 Project Coordinator position to
    a GS-14 position and the FDA’s lack of obligation to pro-
    mote a Project Coordinator past the GS-13 level.
    Id. at 300.
          In fact, the Claims Court proceeded on the assumption
    that Eby had in fact been “duly appointed.” The Claims
    Court reasoned that, even if Eby had been duly appointed
    to the GS-13 project coordinator position for which she ap-
    plied, the FDA’s failure to promote her to a GS-14 position
    still would not have been compensable.
    Id. In such
    a sce-
    nario, Eby would be entitled to the salary of the position to
    which she would have been appointed, not the salary of a
    position for which she had to later compete.
    Id. Because the
    Claims Court considered the evidentiary positions of
    the parties on whether Eby proved with reasonable cer-
    tainty that she was entitled to a GS-14 salary, we find no
    error in the court’s analysis.
    We conclude that the Claims Court correctly found that
    Eby failed to prove she would have been promoted with rea-
    sonable certainty and that the government, therefore, was
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Case: 19-1932      Document: 46   Page: 9   Filed: 07/17/2020
    EBY   v. UNITED STATES                                   9
    CONCLUSION
    We have considered the parties’ remaining arguments
    and find them unpersuasive. For the foregoing reasons, we
    affirm the Claims Court’s decision.
    AFFIRMED