Case: 19-2293 Document: 45 Page: 1 Filed: 12/04/2020
United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
______________________
MARIA ESPARRAGUERA,
Petitioner
v.
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY,
Respondent
______________________
2019-2293
______________________
Petition for review of the Merit Systems Protection
Board in No. CB-3592-18-0022-U-1.
______________________
Decided: December 4, 2020
______________________
LUCAS M. WALKER, MoloLamken LLP, Washington,
DC, argued for petitioner. Also represented by JEFFREY A.
LAMKEN; MATTHEW JASON FISHER, Chicago, IL; CONOR
DIRKS, DEBRA LYNN ROTH, Shaw, Bransford & Roth P.C.,
Washington, DC.
MOLLIE LENORE FINNAN, Commercial Litigation
Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Jus-
tice, Washington, DC, argued for respondent. Also repre-
sented by JEFFREY B. CLARK, CLAUDIA BURKE, ROBERT
EDWARD KIRSCHMAN, JR.; NADIA K. PLUTA, Office of Gen-
eral Counsel, United States Office of Personnel Manage-
ment, Washington, DC; JASON R. CHESTER, United States
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2 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
Army Corps of Engineers, United States Department of the
Army, Alexandria, VA.
______________________
Before PROST, Chief Judge, LOURIE and MOORE, Circuit
Judges.
PROST, Chief Judge.
This is a case about jurisdiction. Maria Esparraguera
was removed for performance reasons from her senior ex-
ecutive position as the top labor lawyer at the Department
of the Army (“Army”) and placed instead into another high-
level position at the same agency but outside the Senior
Executive Service (“SES”). On appeal, Ms. Esparraguera
effectively seeks to obtain review of the Army’s removal de-
cision and insists that she was deprived of constitutionally
protected property and liberty interests without due pro-
cess. By statute, Ms. Esparraguera cannot avail herself of
the ordinary appellate provisions of the Merit Systems Pro-
tection Board (“Board”) for this kind of removal. But she
petitions for review of a Board order made under 5 U.S.C.
§ 3592(a), a narrow provision permitting a career senior ex-
ecutive removed for performance reasons to instead “ap-
pear and present arguments” at an “informal hearing.”
The resulting order, however, simply forwarded Ms. Espar-
raguera’s evidence and arguments to her employer, the
Army, for consideration—as well as to the United States
Office of Special Counsel (“OSC”) and Office of Personnel
Management (“OPM”). For the reasons below, the ap-
pealed order—styled an “Order Referring Record”—is not
a “final order or decision” of the Board, as required for our
appellate jurisdiction over her removal. And because we
lack jurisdiction, we must dismiss this appeal.
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ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 3
I
A
The federal civil service is divided into three parts: the
competitive service, the excepted service, and the Senior
Executive Service (“SES”). 5 U.S.C. §§ 2101a, 2102, 2103;
United States v. Fausto,
484 U.S. 439, 441 n.1 (1988). This
case concerns whether the Board can review the perfor-
mance-based removal of employees from the SES.
Because SES cases are rare, a brief background on the
SES itself is useful.
The Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (“CSRA”) re-
formed the federal civil service and “established a compre-
hensive system for reviewing personnel action[s] taken
against federal employees.” Elgin v. Dep’t of the Treasury,
567 U.S. 1, 5 (2012) (quoting
Fausto, 484 U.S. at 455); see
also Pub. L. No. 95-454, 92 Stat. 1111. The SES was de-
signed to “provide the flexibility needed by agencies to re-
cruit and retain the highly competent and qualified
executives needed to provide more effective management of
agencies and their functions, and the more expeditious ad-
ministration of the public business.” CSRA, sec. 3(6),
92 Stat. at 1113. The statutory framework governing the
SES is meant to “ensure that the executive management of
the Government of the United States is responsive to the
needs, policies, and goals of the Nation and otherwise is of
the highest quality.” 5 U.S.C. § 3131. And its administra-
tion is meant to “enable the head of an agency to reassign
senior executives to best accomplish the agency’s mission,”
to “maintain a merit personnel system free of prohibited
personnel practices,” and to “ensure accountability for hon-
est, economical, and efficient Government.”
Id. § 3131(5),
(9), (10).
Senior executives are high-level federal employees who
do not require presidential appointment but who nonethe-
less exercise significant responsibility—including directing
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4 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
organizational units, supervising work, and determining
policy—and who may be held accountable for their projects
or programs.
Id. § 3132(a)(2); Fausto, 484 U.S. at 441 n.1.
Occupying significant positions of trust, senior executives
are selected, in no small part, for their leadership abilities. 1
The SES is but a small arm of the federal civil service:
about 8,000 federal employees are among the SES, whereas
more than 1.8 million are not. 2
There are two relevant mechanisms by which senior
executives may be removed from the SES. First, senior ex-
ecutives may be removed—not only from the SES but from
federal employment entirely—for “misconduct, neglect of
duty, malfeasance, or failure to accept a directed reassign-
ment or to accompany a position in a transfer of function.”
5 U.S.C. § 7543(a). This pathway to removal includes pro-
cedural protections like those available for covered employ-
ees in the competitive and excepted services.
Id. § 7543(b),
(d); cf.
id. §§ 7512, 7513. Second, senior executives may be
removed from the SES under another set of procedures for
“unsatisfactory” or “less than fully successful” perfor-
mance.
Id. §§ 3592(a), 4314(a)(3). Senior executives with
“career” status who are removed in this way are
1 See, e.g., OPM, Senior Executive Service: Executive
Core Qualifications, https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-
oversight/senior-executive-service/executive-core-qualifi-
cations/.
2 See OPM, Senior Executive Service Report 2017, at
3 (2018), https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/data-
analysis-documentation/federal-employment-reports/re-
ports-publications/ses-summary-2017.pdf; OPM, Federal
Executive Branch Characteristics (FEBC) FY 2010–2018,
at 5, https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/data-anal-
ysis-documentation/federal-employment-reports/reports-
publications/federal-executive-branch-characteristics-
2010-2018.pdf.
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ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 5
guaranteed continued federal employment at the same pay
grade.
Id. § 3594. The loss of SES status, however, is ac-
companied by the loss of other benefits—and, of course,
prestige. See, e.g.
, id. §§ 3131(1), 5384, 6304(f).
To gauge performance, each agency is required to es-
tablish a performance appraisal system to rate senior exec-
utives from “outstanding” to “unsatisfactory” in one or
more “critical elements.” 5 U.S.C. §§ 4312, 4314(a);
5 C.F.R. § 430.305; see, e.g., J.A. 13. Performance ratings
are ultimately made by an agency’s “appointing authority,”
see 5 U.S.C. § 4314(c)(3); for the Army, final performance
rating authority has been delegated to the Under Secre-
tary. J.A. 6, 177–78. To assist in making an ultimate per-
formance determination, each agency is also required to
establish one or more performance review boards (“PRBs”).
5 U.S.C. § 4314(c)(1). During performance appraisal, a
senior executive’s supervisor (or other rating official) pro-
vides the PRB with an “initial appraisal.”
Id. § 4314(c)(2).
The senior executive is “provided a copy of the appraisal
and rating . . . and is given an opportunity to respond in
writing and have the rating reviewed by an employee . . .
in a higher level in the agency.”
Id. § 4312(b)(3); see also
5 C.F.R. § 430.311(b)(1); J.A. 55. The PRB then reviews
any “response by the senior executive to the initial ap-
praisal” and may “conduct such further review as the
[PRB] finds necessary.” 5 U.S.C. § 4314(c)(2). The PRB
then “make[s] recommendations to the appropriate ap-
pointing authority” as to the senior executive’s perfor-
mance.
Id. § 4314(c)(1) (emphasis added). OPM is tasked
with ensuring that each agency’s performance appraisal
system is adequate. See 5 U.S.C. § 4312(c)(1), (3); 5 C.F.R.
§ 430.314.
The final rating is significant: its consequences range
from performance awards to removal. See 5 U.S.C.
§ 4314(b)(2)–(4). Nonetheless, a senior executive “may not
appeal any appraisal and rating under any performance
appraisal system.”
Id. § 4312(d).
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6 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
B
1
As Chief Counsel of the Army’s Communication-Elec-
tronics Command (“CECOM”), Ms. Esparraguera facili-
tated the selection of Rick Bechtel to replace a retiring
division chief. The resulting chain of events led to her re-
moval from the Senior Executive Service and, ultimately,
to this appeal.
In 2014, a business-law division chief within CECOM
announced his intent to retire. The resulting open position
required a candidate to have had at least one year of expe-
rience at the GS-14 grade. The selection committee,
chaired by Ms. Esparraguera, interviewed eleven candi-
dates to fill the resulting vacancy. Mr. Bechtel was among
Ms. Esparraguera’s three favored finalists after the inter-
view. But unlike the other ten candidates, Mr. Bechtel was
a few months shy of the required time at GS-14, having
been in his prior position for less than one year and at
CECOM itself only since 2013. The other ten interviewed
candidates were qualified.
No hiring decision, however, was made at that time.
Rather, Ms. Esparraguera proposed an unorthodox—in-
deed, unprecedented—post-interview rotation plan for the
final selection. See J.A. 273. Under the plan, each of the
three finalists, including Mr. Bechtel, would act as the di-
vision chief for thirty days, and the decision would be made
afterward. In three decades of service, Ms. Esparraguera
had never used a post-interview rotation plan to hire any-
one, nor was she aware of anyone in the Army ever using
such a plan. J.A. 250–51.
Ms. Esparraguera consulted with human-resources
specialists, who advised her both that the highly unusual
trial rotation would unfairly advantage Mr. Bechtel (as he
would then satisfy the time-in-grade requirement) and
likely result in complaints, and that a time-in-grade waiver
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ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 7
for Mr. Bechtel would not be approved (as there was no
shortage of qualified candidates). J.A. 239–40, 245–48.
Further, Ms. Esparraguera’s deputy chief counsel advised
that the selection of Mr. Bechtel, who lacked substantial
CECOM experience, would “tear the division apart.”
J.A. 269. As OSC later explained after investigating, a ro-
tation would “delay[] a permanent appointment in an im-
portant leadership position and force[] both employees and
customers to adapt to three leadership changes in a three-
month span.” J.A. 252.
Nonetheless, the trial rotation went forward at Ms. Es-
parraguera’s behest. This three-month delay in selection
meant that, by early 2015, Mr. Bechtel finally satisfied the
time-in-grade requirement. After evaluation under a ru-
bric designed and applied by Ms. Esparraguera, see
J.A. 269, Mr. Bechtel was selected and the other two final-
ists were passed over. Before long, two complaints were
filed with OSC alleging that Ms. Esparraguera had com-
mitted a prohibited personnel practice. J.A. 244.
Shortly thereafter, Ms. Esparraguera was reassigned
within the SES, becoming the Army’s senior-most attorney
on civilian employment matters.
2
OSC investigated the allegations. It concluded that it
“believe[d] Ms. Esparraguera’s actions violated 5 U.S.C.
§ 2302(b)(6).” J.A. 241; see 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(6) (classify-
ing as prohibited personnel practice the granting of “any
preference or advantage not authorized by law, rule, or reg-
ulation to any . . . applicant . . . for the purpose of improv-
ing . . . the prospects of any particular person for
employment”). In October 2016, OSC sent the Army a sum-
mary of its findings. J.A. 238–41. A copy of the summary
was provided a few weeks later to Ms. Esparraguera
through her supervisor. J.A. 43. In the summary, OSC
recommended corrective and disciplinary action. J.A. 241.
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8 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
In February 2018, OSC sent another report to the Sec-
retary of the Army, noting that earlier attempts “to resolve
this matter” had “not been successful.” J.A. 242. At greater
length, the report asserted that there was “no credible busi-
ness reason” for the rotation plan, which was a “dramatic
departure from past practice.” J.A. 251. Finding that the
purpose of the plan was to “provide Bechtel . . . an unfair
advantage,” OSC again recommended corrective and disci-
plinary action. J.A. 254; see also J.A. 115–16, 242.
By the time this report was sent, the performance ap-
praisal process for fiscal year 2017 had already begun.
Ms. Esparraguera received positive initial ratings, but in
early 2018 she received a letter stating that the Army was
holding her final rating in abeyance due to an ongoing in-
vestigation. J.A. 255. As a result of OSC’s reporting, the
Army had begun an internal investigation, and it eventu-
ally interviewed Ms. Esparraguera in May 2018.
J.A. 43–44, 256–57, 282. After its investigation, the Army
reprimanded Ms. Esparraguera, explaining that her “deci-
sion to change the manner of competition in the middle of
the hiring process was harmful to morale and predictably
created a perception of unfairness.” J.A. 38; see also
J.A. 631 (“Though the written reprimand mentioned that
OSC’s report found a prohibited personnel practice as back-
ground information, [it] did not rely on that particular find-
ing . . . , and [the] reprimand is based not on your intent
but on your actions.”). The reprimand was temporary, to
be removed from her file after one year. J.A. 39.
The Army, however, also convened a special PRB to
make a recommendation to the Under Secretary about
Ms. Esparraguera’s final performance rating. The PRB
recommended a “level 1” unsatisfactory-performance rat-
ing for leadership—and only for leadership—because of the
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ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 9
rotation scheme. J.A. 6, 13. 3 The PRB apparently did not
make its rating known to Ms. Esparraguera before for-
warding its recommendation to the Under Secretary.
On September 4, 2018, the Under Secretary adopted
the recommendation and notified Ms. Esparraguera that
she was being removed from the SES for performance rea-
sons—though not from federal service entirely. J.A. 6–8.
The Under Secretary concurred with OSC’s findings, which
he felt “completely undermine[d] [her] credibility to serve”
as “the Army’s chief personnel attorney” and noted that he
had “lost confidence in [her] ability to successfully perform
[her] duties as an Army Executive.” J.A. 6. Because
Ms. Esparraguera was a career appointee in the civil ser-
vice, she was placed into a GS-15 position with the Army—
the highest pay grade in the General Schedule. 4 J.A. 6–7.
3 Under the Army’s SES performance appraisal sys-
tem, a rating from level 1 (unsatisfactory) to level 5 (out-
standing) is assigned to each of five critical elements of
performance. The overall performance rating is calculated
from a weighted average of the five, but if any one element
is “unsatisfactory,” the overall performance rating is also
“unsatisfactory.” See J.A. 13–18.
4 Notably, the Army did not remove Ms. Esparragu-
era for “misconduct” under 5 U.S.C. § 7543. That would be
a different case.
Instead, the Army removed Ms. Esparraguera for poor
performance under § 3592. See also
id. § 4314(b)(3). Alt-
hough such a removal is not accompanied by a statutory or
regulatory right to an appeal, 5 U.S.C. §§ 3592(a), 4312(d);
5 C.F.R. § 359.504; see also infra Section II.A, the decision
to remove her in this manner guaranteed Ms. Esparragu-
era placement into an upper-echelon civil service position
with no loss in current pay and with retention of career
tenure. 5 U.S.C. §§ 3592(a), 3594; J.A. 6–7. Further, a per-
formance-based removal lacks a misconduct charge’s
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10 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
3
At the Army’s invitation, Ms. Esparraguera submitted
a detailed written request for reconsideration. J.A. 442. In
that request, she explained at length her disagreement
with the PRB, with OSC’s account, and with the Army’s
summary of the findings, as well as her subjective intent in
devising the rotation plan. J.A. 103–07, 430–32. The Un-
der Secretary denied the request. J.A. 775. Ms. Esparra-
guera also submitted an administrative grievance of her
reprimand, which was likewise denied. J.A. 471, 630–31.
Ms. Esparraguera then requested an informal hearing
under 5 U.S.C. § 3592(a)(2), which entitled her to “appear
and present arguments” before an “official designated by
the Board.” At that hearing, Ms. Esparraguera submitted
a slew of exhibits designated A through UU into evidence
and read a prepared statement into the record. J.A. 3. The
Army neither presented evidence nor objected to the entry
of these exhibits. J.A. 3. Ms. Esparraguera did not ex-
pressly ask the Board to review her removal—and it did
not. The Board official issued the Order Referring Record
at issue in this case, which summarized the proceedings
and referred the transcript and exhibits to the Army, as
opprobrium. See Harrison v. Bowen,
815 F.2d 1505, 1518
(D.C. Cir. 1987).
It is true that the same conduct might merit either re-
moval pathway. But we have previously recognized that
the agency may elect to pursue either. Berube v. Gen.
Servs. Admin.,
820 F.2d 396, 398–99 (Fed. Cir. 1987), su-
perseded by statute on other grounds as recognized in
Lachance v. Devall,
178 F.3d 1246, 1253 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
Importantly, the government’s choice to pursue a poor per-
formance rating protects the employee from wholesale re-
moval from federal employment.
Case: 19-2293 Document: 45 Page: 11 Filed: 12/04/2020
ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 11
well as to OSC and OPM. J.A. 2; 5 C.F.R. § 1201.144(c).
The Army did not change its mind. This appeal followed.
II
On appeal, Ms. Esparraguera alleges due process vio-
lations surrounding her performance appraisal and re-
moval—including the Army’s purported failure to follow
certain required procedures related to her notice and op-
portunity to respond—and contends that the Board should
have been empowered to review her removal. The govern-
ment contends that the Board cannot review her removal,
that there was no deprivation without due process, and
that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal.
We have jurisdiction to determine our own jurisdiction.
E.g., Rosado v. Wyman,
397 U.S. 397, 403 n.3 (1970). But
we have jurisdiction over the Board only if there is a “final
order or final decision” of the Board that has “adversely af-
fected or aggrieved” an employee. 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(9);
5 U.S.C. § 7703. As we explain below, here our jurisdiction
depends on whether the Board had jurisdiction to review
Ms. Esparraguera’s removal—because if it did not, the ap-
pealed order would not have been a “final order or final de-
cision” that “adversely affected or aggrieved” her. In short,
if the Board cannot review her removal, neither can we.
A
We first consider whether Ms. Esparraguera’s removal
was reviewable by the Board. For the reasons below, we
conclude that the Board cannot review the removal of an
SES employee in an informal hearing under § 3592.
The Board has “only that jurisdiction conferred on it by
Congress.” Dow v. Gen. Servs. Admin.,
590 F.3d 1338,
1341–42 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (quoting Cruz v. Dep’t of the Navy,
934 F.2d 1240, 1243 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (en banc)); see, e.g.,
5 U.S.C. § 7701(a) (appellate jurisdiction over employees’
actions). A career appointee removed from the SES for
“less than fully successful executive performance” is
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12 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
entitled upon request to an “informal hearing” before a
Board-designated official. 5 U.S.C. § 3592(a). We must ac-
cordingly determine whether, through § 3592, Congress
conferred the Board with appellate jurisdiction over the re-
moval itself. 5
We begin with the text, which reads, in relevant part:
[T]he career appointee shall, at least 15 days before
the removal, be entitled, upon request, to an infor-
mal hearing before an official designated by the
Merit Systems Protection Board at which the ca-
reer appointee may appear and present arguments,
but such hearing shall not give the career appoin-
tee the right to initiate an action with the Board
under section 7701 of this title, nor need the
5 Arguing in favor of jurisdiction, Ms. Esparraguera
points to the Board’s regulations conferring original juris-
diction over “removals of career appointees from the Senior
Executive Service for performance reasons.” Appellant’s
Br. 58 n.13 (citing 5 C.F.R. §§ 1201.2, 1201.121(a)). But
these regulations concern the Board’s authority to hold the
informal record-collecting hearing itself, not to review an-
other agency’s actions. This is evident from the Board’s re-
lated procedural regulations, which spell out the nature of
the informal hearing. See 5 C.F.R. §§ 1201.143–.145,
1201.2(b). What Ms. Esparraguera seeks is what the Board
calls appellate jurisdiction, which the regulations do not
confer in this case. See
id. § 1201.3(a)(10) (not listing such
removals among the Board’s SES-related appellate juris-
diction). It is under the “appellate jurisdiction” label that
the Board’s regulations place review of an agency’s removal
decisions generally. See
id. § 1201.3. Regardless, the reg-
ulations could not confer jurisdiction beyond what the stat-
ute grants.
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ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 13
removal action be delayed as a result of the grant-
ing of such hearing.
5 U.S.C. § 3592(a).
The text frames the “informal hearing” as an oppor-
tunity to be heard, not an adversarial forum. By statute,
the appointee is expressly entitled only to “appear and pre-
sent arguments.”
Id. The provision makes no mention of
any other procedural options, such as the right to represen-
tation or the right to call witnesses. It provides no right to
compel the agency to appear. Further, the hearing “shall
not give the career appointee the right to initiate an action
with the Board under [5 U.S.C. §] 7701,”
id., which is the
general provision that governs all appellate proceedings for
covered employees for “any action” that “is appealable to
the Board,”
id. § 7701(a). 6
That short provision is all the CSRA has to say about
informal hearings for performance-based SES removals. In
contrast, the CSRA speaks extensively on the substance
and procedure of appeals of other adverse actions. See, e.g.,
5 U.S.C. § 7701(a) (providing for a right of action for em-
ployee as to “any action which is appealable”), (b)(3) (ex-
pressly providing the Board authority under § 7701 to
mitigate an adverse action), (c) (expressly delineating
standards of review), (d) (explaining intervention rights),
(e) (spelling out finality of decisions), (f)–(h) (permitting
Board control of case consolidation, attorney fees, and
6 Ms. Esparraguera suggests that our appellate ju-
risdiction under § 7703 is not limited to Board orders made
under § 7701. Reply Br. 5–6. That much is true. Horner
v. MSPB,
815 F.2d 668, 671 (Fed. Cir. 1987). But for us to
review the Army’s removal, the Board must have been able
to do so too. And Ms. Esparraguera has pointed to no pro-
vision outside § 7701 conferring the Board with appellate
jurisdiction over agency removal decisions.
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14 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
settlement), (k) (empowering the Board to promulgate reg-
ulations to carry out the purpose of the section);
id.
§ 7543(d) (expressly providing that an SES employee re-
moved for misconduct is “entitled to appeal” substance of
removal);
id. § 3595(c) (expressly providing that SES em-
ployee removed under reduction in force is “entitled to ap-
peal” procedural compliance of removal).
Indeed, the “exhaustive[]” structure of the “comprehen-
sive system” of review established by the CSRA is instruc-
tive. See
Elgin, 567 U.S. at 5, 11. The CSRA “prescribes
in great detail the protections and remedies applicable” to
adverse personnel actions, “including the availability of ad-
ministrative and judicial review.”
Fausto, 484 U.S. at 443.
The Supreme Court has previously stated that, given the
“comprehensive nature of the CSRA,” the fact that Con-
gress “[did] not include [certain employees] in provisions
for administrative and judicial review” was a “considered
congressional judgment” that review on the merits was un-
available.
Id. at 448–49.
We see no reason that Congress would use but two
words—“informal hearing”—to give the Board review au-
thority, thereby leaving the Board in the dark about its pro-
cedure, powers, and standard of review—details that it
took great pains to spell out for other kinds of reviewable
actions. Indeed, if the words of § 3592 were enough to im-
bue review power, we do not see why § 7701 would then be
so detailed, or why Congress would have needed to affirm-
atively spell out in other instances what the Board could
review.
For example, it is significant that the CSRA expressly
gave non-executives the right to appeal performance-based
actions, spelling out specific procedural requirements, but
provided no parallel provision for senior executives. E.g.,
5 U.S.C. § 4303(b) (providing for attorney representation,
notice of specific instances of unacceptable performance,
opportunity to answer orally in writing, and right to
Case: 19-2293 Document: 45 Page: 15 Filed: 12/04/2020
ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 15
written decision specifying instances of unacceptable per-
formance), (e)–(f) (specifying appeal rights). Similarly, the
CSRA expressly conferred on senior executives removed for
misconduct the right to appeal, with similar requirements.
Id. § 7543(b), (d). Further, Congress chose in the CSRA to
make PRB performance ratings simply a “recommenda-
tion” to the appointing authority and expressly made final
performance ratings unappealable.
Id. §§ 4312(d), 4314(c).
Accordingly, we conclude that the Board lacks the author-
ity to review the substance of the removal.
Nor does the Board have the authority to review the
removal for procedural compliance. Elsewhere in the
CSRA, Congress expressly made procedural compliance re-
viewable for career senior executives who were removed
pursuant to a reduction in force. See 5 U.S.C. § 3595(c).
That the CSRA says nothing about reviewability of proce-
dural compliance for performance appraisals confirms that
Congress did not provide for Board review.
Accordingly, the “exhaustive” structure of the CSRA fa-
vors unreviewability. Accord
Fausto, 484 U.S. at 448–49.
Ms. Esparraguera makes two arguments about the
text. She argues that the ordinary meaning of “hearing” is
“a setting in which an affected person presents arguments
to a decision-maker,” and that we should therefore con-
strue “informal hearing” as an “adjudicatory hearing at
which the agency carries the burden of proving its charges
before a neutral adjudicator empowered to overturn the
agency’s action.” Appellant’s Br. 54–55. We disagree. This
is too much to divine from two words, especially in view of
the otherwise exhaustive detail elsewhere in the CSRA.
Second, Ms. Esparraguera contends that because a
post-removal hearing is “widely understood to be a funda-
mental feature of due process,” we should “construe a stat-
utory right to a post-removal ‘hearing’ as providing a
hearing that satisfies the requirements of due process.”
Appellant’s Br. 55 (emphasis omitted). But this argument
Case: 19-2293 Document: 45 Page: 16 Filed: 12/04/2020
16 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
presupposes the deprivation of a due process interest—and
specifically one that would necessitate an adjudicatory
hearing. For the reasons explained above and below, we
cannot reach Ms. Esparraguera’s due process arguments.
But even if Ms. Esparraguera were correct about this in-
terest and its deprivation, the CSRA is “comprehensive.”
Elgin, 567 U.S. at 10–11;
Fausto, 484 U.S. at 448. And the
text and structure of the CSRA are clear enough that we
could not, as a reasonable remedy, expand the Board’s lim-
ited jurisdiction where Congress foreclosed review.
In summary, Congress did not make this kind of re-
moval reviewable by the Board. 7 Accordingly, we hold that
a Board official in a § 3592 hearing has no authority to re-
view an SES appointee’s removal.
B
The jurisdictional question for us remains as follows:
given that the Board lacks review authority under § 3592,
is the Order Referring Record a “final order or decision” of
the Board by which Ms. Esparraguera was “adversely af-
fected or aggrieved”? We conclude that it is not.
We are a court of limited jurisdiction. Morris v. Off. of
Compliance,
608 F.3d 1344, 1346 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (“The ju-
risdiction of this court is ‘limited to those subjects encom-
passed within a statutory grant of jurisdiction.’” (quoting
Ins. Corp. of Ir. v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee,
456 U.S. 694, 701 (1982))). And our jurisdiction over the
Board is restricted to an appeal brought under 5 U.S.C.
§ 7703 from “a final order or final decision.” 28 U.S.C.
7 We are not the first to say so. The Board and at
least one district court have already held that performance-
based SES removals are unreviewable by the Board. See
Greenhouse v. Geren,
574 F. Supp. 2d 57, 67 (D.D.C. 2008)
(citing Charrow v. Fed. Ret. Thrift Inv. Bd.,
102 M.S.P.R.
345, 349 (M.S.P.B. 2005)).
Case: 19-2293 Document: 45 Page: 17 Filed: 12/04/2020
ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 17
§ 1295(a)(9). In turn, § 7703 requires that an “employee or
applicant” be “adversely affected or aggrieved by a final or-
der or decision” of the Board.” 5 U.S.C. § 7703(a).
Ms. Esparraguera argues that because the Order Re-
ferring Record was the last action from the Board related
to her removal, it was “final.” But “final” does not merely
mean “last in time.”
We apply the “final judgment rule” to Board appeals.
Weed v. Soc. Sec. Admin.,
571 F.3d 1359, 1361 (Fed. Cir.
2009) (citing 5 U.S.C. § 7703; 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(9)). That
rule provides that an order or decision is ordinarily “final”
only if it “ends the litigation on the merits and leaves noth-
ing for the court to do but execute the judgment.”
Id. (quot-
ing Allen v. Principi,
237 F.3d 1368, 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2001));
see also Kaplan v. Conyers,
733 F.3d 1148, 1153–54
(Fed. Cir. 2013) (en banc) (“[T]his court lacks jurisdiction
to review non-final Board decisions.”). 8 Finality is a “his-
toric characteristic of federal appellate procedure.” Flana-
gan v. United States,
465 U.S. 259, 263 (1984) (quoting
Cobbledick v. United States,
309 U.S. 323, 324 (1940)).
The Order Referring Record was not “final” with re-
spect to Ms. Esparraguera’s removal. As discussed, the
Board was not empowered under § 3592 to review Ms. Es-
parraguera’s removal, and the proceeding bore none of the
adversarial hallmarks of adjudication. Rather, the Board
simply acted as a ministerial record-developing adjunct to
the Under Secretary, enabling Ms. Esparraguera to enter
her arguments and evidence into the record for the Under
Secretary’s ultimate consideration. See also, e.g., Morrison
8 Alternatively, a “small class” of collateral orders
are “final” for review purposes where they “resolve im-
portant questions separate from the merits.”
Kaplan,
733 F.3d at 1153–54. Ms. Esparraguera makes no argu-
ment that this is such an order.
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18 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
v. Dep’t of the Navy,
876 F.3d 1106, 1109–11 (Fed. Cir.
2017) (deeming order not “final” where the Board simply
forwarded a case to another decisionmaker for further pro-
ceedings). The Order therefore did not dispose of the “case”
of her removal; that case was never before the Board. 9
Finally, Ms. Esparraguera argues that the presump-
tion in favor of judicial review mandates that she have a
forum for her constitutional challenge. And she argues
that, under Elgin, judicial review must occur in the Federal
Circuit in cases involving CSRA-related removals. Appel-
lant’s Br. 3–4; Reply Br. 14 n.3.
We are not persuaded that Elgin requires (or even em-
powers) this court to review the due process question under
these circumstances. To be sure, Elgin held that we, as
opposed to district courts, have jurisdiction over constitu-
tional issues associated with certain challenges to adverse
actions under the CSRA.
See 567 U.S. at 11–12, 18–19, 21.
But that holding was premised on the petitioners in that
9 Ms. Esparraguera also argues that she was “ad-
versely affected or aggrieved” by the Order Referring Rec-
ord because it did not “grant relief from her removal.” See
Appellant’s Br. 2. But the Board had no power to review
her removal in any capacity. A party cannot be “adversely
affected or aggrieved” within the meaning of the statute by
the Board’s failure to grant relief that it had no authority
to grant. The government also suggests that Ms. Esparra-
guera forfeited her arguments by not affirmatively asking
the Board official during her hearing to rule on the merits
or correct a due process violation—in other words, that she
cannot be “adversely affected or aggrieved” by the order be-
cause she did not expressly ask for the relief she now seeks.
Appellee’s Br. 27–29. Our futility doctrine complicates for-
feiture, see Arthrex, Inc. v. Smith & Nephew, Inc.,
941 F.3d
1320, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2019), but we need not reach that
question.
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ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY 19
case being “covered employees challenging a covered ad-
verse employment action” under the CSRA—which meant
that the Board could review the challenged action, and that
this court could review the Board’s decision and the accom-
panying constitutional issues.
Id. at 21. In other words,
under Elgin, the CSRA channels judicial review of an ad-
verse action exclusively through the Federal Circuit only if
it first channels review through the Board.
In contrast, here the Board had no jurisdiction over the
removal and we have no “final order” to review. Cf.
id.
at 18 (noting Federal Circuit’s authority to decide constitu-
tionality “in an appeal from agency action within the
MSPB’s jurisdiction”). And as we have discussed, our ju-
risdiction is limited by statute: we cannot decide a case
simply because a claim arises under the Constitution. So
even assuming that Ms. Esparraguera is correct that she
must be able to present her constitutional claim before a
court, we are unpersuaded that this means our court.
At any rate, we also doubt that our lack of jurisdiction
leaves Ms. Esparraguera’s constitutional claims unreview-
able. We observe, as does the government, that district
courts have indeed been willing even after Elgin to hear
constitutional challenges where Board review of an adverse
employment action is unavailable. E.g., Coleman v. Napo-
litano,
65 F. Supp. 3d 99, 103–05 (D.D.C. 2014) (holding
that a district court had jurisdiction to hear plaintiff’s due
process claim where Board review was unavailable under
the CSRA); Davis v. Billington,
51 F. Supp. 3d 97, 106–09
(D.D.C. 2014) (same); Lamb v. Holder,
82 F. Supp. 3d 416,
422–24 (D.D.C. 2015) (same); accord Semper v. Gomez,
747 F.3d 229, 241–42 (3d Cir. 2014) (concluding that a “fed-
eral employee who could not pursue meaningful relief
through a remedial plan that includes some measure of
meaningful judicial review” would not be precluded by the
CSRA from bringing a district court constitutional chal-
lenge); see also Webster v. Doe,
486 U.S. 592, 603–04 (1988)
(holding that a constitutional claim was reviewable in
Case: 19-2293 Document: 45 Page: 20 Filed: 12/04/2020
20 ESPARRAGUERA v. ARMY
district court even where the substance of the underlying
termination decision was not). To be clear, our holding to-
day does not depend on whether judicial review might be
available elsewhere. That is not the question before us.
The question today concerns only the scope of our narrow
statutory grant of jurisdiction. And our jurisdiction has
clearly been constrained by Congress.
***
In summary, we hold that, with respect to her removal,
Ms. Esparraguera was not adversely affected or aggrieved
by a “final order or final decision of the Merit Systems Pro-
tection Board.” See 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(9); 5 U.S.C.
§ 7703(a)(1). We therefore lack jurisdiction over the due
process question.
III
We have considered Ms. Esparraguera’s remaining ar-
guments and find them unpersuasive. For the reasons dis-
cussed above, the Board lacks jurisdiction to review
Ms. Esparraguera’s removal and, accordingly, so do we.
We therefore dismiss this appeal without reaching the due
process question.
DISMISSED