Gribcheck v. Merit Systems Protection Board , 145 F. App'x 359 ( 2005 )


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  •                  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
    05-3061
    JERRY GRIBCHECK,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD,
    Respondent.
    __________________________
    DECIDED: August 17, 2005
    __________________________
    Before MICHEL, Chief Judge, NEWMAN and LINN, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the court filed by Chief Judge MICHEL. Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit
    Judge NEWMAN.
    MICHEL, Chief Judge.
    Jerry Gribcheck (Gribcheck) petitions for review of the decision of the Merit
    Systems Protection Board (Board), Gribcheck v. United States Postal Service, 
    97 M.S.P.R. 355
     (Sept. 27, 2004), dismissing his appeal as untimely filed without a
    showing of good cause. We affirm the Board’s decision.
    BACKGROUND
    Gribcheck was employed as an Electronics Technician with the United States
    Postal Service (Postal Service or Agency) in Cleveland, Ohio. In February 1998, the
    Agency ordered Gribcheck to submit to a psychiatric fitness-for-duty examination. The
    examining psychiatrist, Dr. Syed, diagnosed Gribcheck with a Paranoid Personality
    Disorder, manifested by inappropriate anger, and perceptions of harassment and
    persecution. The Agency thus informed Gribcheck that he would not be able to return
    to work until he provided a medical report specifying the type of treatment he was
    receiving for his condition, and including a statement from a treating psychiatrist that
    Gribcheck did not pose a hazard to himself or to others.
    Gribcheck responded with a report from another psychiatrist, Dr. Moskovitz,
    stating that Gribcheck was not a danger to himself or others, and that he was fit to
    return to duty. To resolve the conflicting opinions of Drs. Syed and Moskovitz, the
    Agency arranged a third fitness-for-duty examination in August 1998.         Gribcheck
    refused to comply. Accordingly, on September 15, 1998, the Postal Service informed
    him that he could not return to duty until he submitted to the examination.1 On February
    24, 1999, the Agency issued a notice proposing to place Gribcheck on enforced leave
    1
    Gribcheck filed two appeals with the Board, dated September 29, 1998
    and October 2, 1998, respectively. The first appeal challenged the Agency’s refusal to
    allow him to return to duty before submitting to a fitness-for-duty examination. The
    second asserted that the Agency forced him to use sick leave and leave without pay for
    the period at issue in the prior appeal. The administrative judge (AJ) joined the two
    appeals for decision.
    05-3061                                    2
    until the conflict between Dr. Syed’s and Dr. Moskovitz’s opinion was resolved.2 The
    Agency issued a decision placing him on enforced leave effective March 27, 1999.
    On February 17, 2000, Gribcheck completed a fitness-for-duty examination with
    Dr. Kausch, who submitted his report to the Agency on March 6, 2000. In his diagnosis,
    Dr. Kausch concluded that Gribcheck suffered from Personality Disorder Not Otherwise
    Specified with borderline and narcissistic traits.   While Dr. Kausch indicated that
    Gribcheck did not appear to pose an immediate threat to his co-workers, he did
    recommend that Gribcheck be placed in a less stressful position with different peers and
    supervisors.
    On July 19, 2000, the Agency’s Human Resources Manager, Donna Butwin
    proposed several alternative positions to Gribcheck.       He accepted the Agency’s
    proposal on August 31, 2000.      The formal agreement presented to Gribcheck on
    October 25, 2000, however, imposed additional conditions on his return to work, such
    as continuing therapy sessions as well as waiver of any future grievances,
    discrimination complaints, court actions or appeals. Gribcheck refused to accept the
    settlement agreement. The Agency did not return Gribcheck to work until December
    2002.
    2
    On March 24, 1999, Gribcheck filed a third appeal, challenging the
    enforced leave before the Board. On December 17, 1999, the AJ dismissed
    Gribcheck’s first two appeals as moot, yet found that Gribcheck failed to establish his
    affirmative defenses of disability discrimination and retaliation for filing equal
    employment opportunity complaints and a suit in district court. In a separate initial
    decision in Gribcheck’s third appeal, the AJ sustained the agency's action and again
    found that the appellant failed to establish those same affirmative defenses. The full
    Board affirmed. Gribcheck v. United States Postal Serv., 
    87 M.S.P.R. 473
     (2001).
    05-3061                                    3
    On December 11, 2002, shortly before his return to work, Gribcheck filed the
    instant appeal with the Board, alleging that the Postal Service continued to maintain him
    on enforced leave from March 1999. Gribcheck argued that the Agency was obligated
    to return him to work upon receiving the report of Dr. Kausch, establishing Gribcheck’s
    fitness for duty.
    On December 27, 2002, the AJ issued an Acknowledgment Order advising
    Gribcheck that his appeal might be untimely and affording him an opportunity to present
    evidence and argument as to timeliness and good cause. Gribcheck timely responded.
    The Agency moved to dismiss the appeal as untimely.           In an April 2, 2003 Initial
    Decision following a hearing, the AJ determined that the Board had jurisdiction over
    Gribcheck’s appeal. The AJ then reversed the Agency’s action based on its failure to
    provide Gribcheck advance written notice of its adverse action.         The AJ made no
    determination as to the timeliness of Gribcheck’s appeal.
    The full Board reversed on September 27, 2004. The Board explained that once
    an Agency learns that an employee who had been placed on enforced leave pending
    the Agency’s inquiry into his ability to perform is fit for duty, the employee must be
    restored to active duty status. 
    97 M.S.P.R. 355
    , ¶ 6. The Board thus found that the
    Agency should have returned Gribcheck to work as of July 2000, when it determined
    that he could return to work in a different capacity and identified an appropriate position
    for him. The Agency’s failure to restore Gribcheck to duty in July 2000 constituted an
    adverse action appealable to the Board and triggered the 30-day limitation for such an
    appeal prescribed by 
    5 C.F.R. § 1201.22
    (b)(1).
    05-3061                                     4
    The Board next considered whether good cause excused Gribcheck’s delay in
    filing his appeal, finding that while ensuing events may provide good cause for some of
    the delay, they do not excuse the entire period — two years and four months. The
    Board explained that between July and October 2000, Gribcheck and the Agency were
    in communication about his return, which may have led him to believe that the Agency
    would restore him to duty without further resort to the Board. However, the Board found
    that “the agency’s offer of a position contingent on his withdrawing his appeal
    constitutes a clear indication that the agency would not fulfill its obligation to end the
    enforced leave and return him to work, even though it had determined that it could
    safely do so.” 
    97 M.S.P.R. 355
    , ¶ 9. The Board found that Gribcheck failed to explain
    why he did not file his appeal at that time. Nonetheless, the Board noted that Gribcheck
    may have been confused as to the necessity of filing another appeal with the Board,
    given his then-pending appeal of the Agency’s formal March 27, 1999 enforced leave.
    Even so, this excuse expired when the Board issued its decision in Gribcheck’s appeal
    on January 25, 2001. Gribcheck failed to file until December 2002, nearly two years
    later.
    Finally, the Board determined that although Gribcheck received no specific notice
    of the requirement that he appeal in a timely fashion, he was well aware of the Board’s
    appeal process, having participated in it repeatedly. Instead of filing an appeal with the
    Board, however, Gribcheck challenged the Postal Service’s actions in other fora. The
    Board thus dismissed Gribcheck’s appeal as untimely without good cause shown.
    05-3061                                      5
    DISCUSSION
    To establish good cause for a filing delay, an appellant must show that the delay
    was excusable under the circumstances and that the appellant exercised due diligence
    in attempting to meet the filing deadline. Phillips v. United States Postal Serv., 
    695 F.2d 1389
    , 1391 (Fed. Cir. 1982). The factors bearing on whether there is good cause for an
    untimely filing include the length of the delay, whether the appellant was notified of the
    time limit, the existence of circumstances beyond the appellant's control that affected
    his ability to comply with the deadline, the appellant’s negligence, if any, and any
    unavoidable casualty or misfortune that may have prevented timely filing. See Zamot v.
    Merit Sys. Prot. Bd., 
    332 F.3d 1374
    , 1377 (Fed. Cir. 2003). The waiver of a regulatory
    time limit based on a showing of good cause “is a matter committed to the Board’s
    discretion and . . . this court will not substitute its own judgment for that of the Board.”
    Mendoza v. Merit Sys. Prot. Bd., 
    966 F.2d 650
    , 653 (Fed. Cir. 1992) (en banc).
    We hold that the Board did not abuse its discretion in dismissing Gribcheck’s
    appeal as untimely. The Board correctly found that the Agency had an obligation to
    restore Gribcheck to work upon learning that he was fit for duty. The Board identified
    that date as July 19, 2000, the date Butwin proposed several alternative positions to
    Gribcheck. That date could just as likely be the earlier date of March 6, 2000, marking
    the Agency’s receipt of Dr. Kausch’s report.      True, the exact date of the Agency’s
    adverse action — or rather its inaction in failing to restore Gribcheck to duty — is
    somewhat elusive. Nonetheless, the Board accurately concluded that Gribcheck should
    have known based on the Agency’s October 25, 2000 settlement agreement that the
    Agency had no intention of returning him to work.
    05-3061                                      6
    Yet Gribcheck waited over two more years before filing his appeal with the
    Board. Importantly, the Board found that he challenged the same set of events in other
    fora. He pursued grievances, filed an unfair labor practice charge, sought review of the
    Board’s decision with the EEOC, and filed suit in state court. Based on this evidence,
    the Board concluded that while not all of the actions Gribcheck pursued involved the
    exact issue of whether his enforced leave was warranted, “they raise[d] issues and facts
    related to the fitness-for-duty examination, the agency’s handling of the matter, and the
    enforced leave.” Gribcheck, 
    97 M.S.P.R. 355
    , at ¶ 11. In sum, the Board concluded
    that Gribcheck was aware of his right to challenge his constructive suspension, but
    chose to do it elsewhere.3
    The Board further determined that Gribcheck knew of the Board’s thirty-day
    appeal deadlines from his multiple prior appeals. Indeed, Gribcheck had filed three
    previous, timely appeals from the Agency’s actions related to his enforced leave.
    Having determined that Gribcheck knew he had a right to appeal and knew the deadline
    for so doing, yet failed to act diligently, the Board certainly acted within its discretion in
    finding Gribcheck’s prolonged delay unexcused.          We see no reason to disturb the
    Board’s determination.
    For these reasons, the decision of the Board is affirmed.
    No costs.
    3
    The dissent cites 
    5 C.F.R. § 1201.21
     to argue that the Agency must
    provide notice of adverse actions and appeal rights. That regulation, however, plainly
    applies only to situations “[w]hen an agency issues a decision notice to an employee on
    a matter that is appealable to the Board. . . .” 
    5 C.F.R. § 1201.21
    . The regulation does
    not apply here, where the Agency took no overt adverse action, but instead failed to
    remove Gribcheck from his enforced leave status. In other words, here, the Agency
    action was a constructive one, no decision notice was issued and, accordingly, no
    appeal deadlines were included.
    05-3061                                       7
    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
    05-3061
    JERRY GRIBCHECK,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD,
    Respondent.
    NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Jerry Gribcheck was placed on enforced leave by the Postal Service, and was never
    informed by the Postal Service that a new adverse action had been taken against him or of
    his appeal rights.   The administrative judge of the MSPB correctly recognized the
    requirement that an agency provide notice of appeal rights when it takes an adverse action.
    The panel majority rules that notice was not required, of either the appeal rights or that an
    adverse action was taken. That is not the law. It is unworkable to develop a new rule of
    "constructive adverse action" whereby the employee's statutory time for appeal is expiring
    although he has no notice that the time is running. I respectfully dissent.
    DISCUSSION
    The events leading to this appeal generally start with a fitness-for-duty examination
    conducted by Otto Kausch, M.D., in 2000, at a time when Mr. Gribcheck had been on
    enforced leave since March 27, 1999 for refusing to submit to an earlier fitness-for-duty
    reexamination. Dr. Kausch, in this third fitness examination, advised against returning Mr.
    Gribcheck to the same work environment but suggested that he be placed in a less
    stressful environment wherein he would work with different peers and supervisors. The
    agency then offered Mr. Gribcheck several possible placements, and he selected one on
    Aug. 31, 2000. A month later, the agency presented Mr. Gribcheck with a formal written
    agreement placing him in the position he had selected, but imposing other conditions on his
    return to work, such as continuing psychotherapy and waiver of all grievances,
    discrimination complaints, and appeals to the Board. Mr. Gribcheck refused to accept the
    proposed agreement. He eventually returned to work at the Postal Service in December
    2002, without signing the proffered agreement.
    On December 11, 2002, shortly before his return to work, Mr. Gribcheck filed the
    appeal to the Board that is now before us. He argued that the agency had improperly kept
    him from work during the period from March 1999 until the time of the appeal. He argued
    that Dr. Kausch's report established his fitness for duty and that the agency had been
    obligated to return him to duty promptly upon its receipt. The administrative judge (AJ)
    agreed, ruling that when an employee is placed on enforced leave, the agency is required
    to return the employee to duty immediately upon learning that the basis for the enforced
    leave no longer exists, citing Mercer v. Department of Health and Human Services, 
    772 F.2d 856
    , 858 (Fed. Cir. 1985). Thus, the AJ reasoned, Mr. Gribcheck's enforced leave
    05-3061                                      2
    ended with Dr. Kausch's report. The AJ ruled that the agency's failure to return him to duty
    constituted a constructive suspension. Since the agency had not provided Mr. Gribcheck
    with the requisite advance written notice of this adverse action, or an opportunity to
    respond before the agency took adverse action, the AJ reversed the agency action and
    ordered reinstatement as of the date of Dr. Kausch's report.
    The full Board granted the government's petition for review. The Board agreed with
    the AJ that the agency should have returned Mr. Gribcheck to duty when it had sufficient
    information to determine that he was fit for duty, and held that the agency made this
    determination "in July 2000." However, the Board also held that Mr. Gribcheck should have
    filed his appeal within thirty days of the agency's internal determination that he was fit for
    duty. Thus the Board dismissed Mr. Gribcheck's appeal for untimely filing. The panel
    majority agrees.
    The propriety of the agency's decision to place Mr. Gribcheck on enforced leave
    when he refused to submit to a third fitness-for-duty examination is not before us. The AJ
    and the full Board ruled that by continuing Mr. Gribcheck in enforced leave after this third
    examination, the agency had taken a new adverse action giving rise to fresh appeal rights;
    that ruling is not disputed by the agency. The Board acknowledged that the agency gave
    Mr. Gribcheck no notice that it was engaging in another adverse action or of his rights to
    appeal. The panel majority does not assign error to these findings. Nonetheless, the court
    now holds that Mr. Gribcheck was required to file an appeal as if he had been given the
    required notice, on the court's theory that he should have known that the enforced leave
    might not end within the month. I cannot agree that this is, or should be, the law. It is
    fundamentally unfair to permit "constructive" adverse actions, with no necessity of notice,
    05-3061                                       3
    yet starting the thirty-day deadline. Thirty days is an extraordinarily short period of
    limitations, whose justification is the explicit requirement that the agency must provide
    notice to the employee when taking adverse action against him.
    Mr. Gribcheck had been engaged in a dispute with the agency over his fitness for
    duty since at least February of 1998, when the agency insisted that he be examined by a
    psychiatrist. He had made repeated efforts to convince the agency that he was fit for duty
    throughout this period without success, yet is now charged with knowing, within thirty days,
    the date upon which the agency changed its mind and concluded he was fit for duty. He is
    charged with the thirty-day deadline although the agency remained silent. Even the Board
    did not specify the date of the agency’s adverse action any more precisely than "in July
    2000." Indeed, the panel majority concedes that "the exact date of the Agency's adverse
    action -- or rather its inaction in failing to restore Gribcheck to duty -- is somewhat elusive,"
    yet the court charges Mr. Gribcheck with knowledge of the agency's silent mindset.
    It is to avoid such bizarre results that agencies are required to provide written notice
    of adverse actions and the accompanying appeal rights and deadlines. See 
    5 C.F.R. §1201.21.1
     Only after the employee is notified of his appeal rights does the duty arise to
    1      
    5 C.F.R. §1201.21
     Notice of appeal rights.
    When an agency issues a decision notice to an employee on a matter that is
    appealable to the Board, the agency must provide the employee with the following:
    (a) Notice of the time limits for appealing to the Board, the requirements of
    §1201.22(c), and the address of the appropriate Board office for filing the appeal;
    (b) A copy, or access to a copy, of the Board's regulations;
    (c) A copy of the appeal form in Appendix I of this part; and
    (d) Notice of any right the employee has to file a grievance, including:
    (1) Whether the election of any applicable grievance procedure will result in
    waiver of the employee's right to file an appeal with the Board;
    (2) Whether both an appeal to the Board and a grievance may be filed on the
    05-3061                                        4
    pursue them timely and diligently. Precedent uniformly so holds. See, e.g., Shiflett v.
    United States Postal Service, 
    839 F.2d 669
    , 674 (Fed. Cir. 1988) ("We hold that the failure
    of the respondent to give notice to petitioner of her appeal rights constituted good cause for
    the late filing by petitioner of her appeal.        An agency must follow all applicable
    procedures."); Casey v. Merit Systems Protection Board, 
    748 F.2d 685
    , 687 (Fed. Cir.
    1984) ("We vacate and remand this case to the Board for its determination as to whether
    Casey acted timely once he received notification of his appeal rights."); Carroll v. United
    States Postal Service, 
    87 M.S.P.R. 570
    , 573 (2001) (excusing an eight year late filing
    because "the agency failed to meet its obligation to provide a notice of appeal rights"). In
    this case, not only was Mr. Gribcheck never notified of his appeal rights, but he was never
    notified that an adverse action was taken.
    The Board acknowledged that Mr. Gribcheck had not been notified that an adverse
    action had been taken or of his rights to appeal, but casually dismissed the notice
    requirement, stating that "[a]lthough the appellant received no specific notice of the
    requirement that he appeal in a timely fashion after the agency determined not to end the
    enforced leave, he was well aware of the Board's appeal process, having participated in it
    very recently." The panel majority agrees: "the Board correctly determined that Gribcheck
    same matter and, if so, the circumstances under which proceeding with one will preclude
    proceeding with the other, and specific notice that filing a grievance will not extend the time
    limit for filing an appeal with the Board; and
    (3) Whether there is any right to request Board review of a final decision on a
    grievance in accordance with §1201.154(d).
    05-3061                                        5
    knew of the Board's thirty day appeal deadlines from his multiple prior appeals." Maj. Op.
    at 7. The majority thus suggests that it was unnecessary to notify Mr. Gribcheck that an
    adverse action had been taken against him, because he had previously filed appeals in
    other actions. By statute and regulation and fundamental fairness, he was entitled to notice
    that there had been an adverse action, and the right to appeal. He cannot be charged with
    constructive notice of the thirty-day appeal period, unless he knew that he had been acted
    against on an appealable issue. From the court's contrary ruling, I respectfully dissent.
    05-3061                                      6