Bruce v. Department of Veterans Affairs , 307 F. App'x 442 ( 2009 )


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  •                      NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    2008-3266
    DEBORHA M. BRUCE
    Petitioner,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS,
    Respondent.
    Deborha M. Bruce, of Fresno, California, pro se.
    Armando Rodriguez-Feo, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil
    Division, United States Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, for respondent. With
    him on the brief were Gregory G. Katsas, Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E.
    Davidson, Director, and Bryant G. Snee, Deputy Director. Of counsel on the brief was
    Donald C. Phillips, Attorney, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of
    Regional Counsel, of Washington, DC.
    Appealed from: Merit Systems Protection Board
    NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    2008-3266
    DEBORHA M. BRUCE,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS,
    Respondent.
    Petition for review of the Merit Systems Protection Board in SF0752070730-I-1.
    ___________________________
    DECIDED: January 9, 2009
    ___________________________
    Before NEWMAN, SCHALL, Circuit Judges, and PATEL, District Judge ∗
    PER CURIAM.
    Deborha M. Bruce, pro se, appeals the decision of the Merit Systems Protection
    Board sustaining the Department of Veterans Affairs’ decision to remove her from her
    position as a medical technician. Bruce v. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs, Docket No. SF-0752-
    07-I-1 (M.S.P.B. Apr. 11, 2008). We affirm.
    ∗
    The Honorable Marilyn H. Patel, United States District Court for the Northern
    District of California, sitting by designation.
    BACKGROUND
    Ms. Bruce worked as a medical technician at the VA’s Central California Health Care
    System in Fresno for more than four years. On July 25, 2007, the VA issued a notice
    proposing her removal, based on three charges: failure to follow instructions, disrespectful
    language, and inappropriate statements. The charges related to two separate incidents.
    The first involved several encounters between Ms. Bruce and her direct supervisor on May
    11, 2007, when Ms. Bruce allegedly failed to follow her supervisor’s instructions not to take
    a patient to the facility’s workout room because it was only open to staff at the time, and
    when Ms. Bruce allegedly used disrespectful language and made inappropriate statements.
    The second incident involved inappropriate statements Ms. Bruce allegedly made about
    her supervisor in front of other employees on June 11, 2007. On August 8, 2007 Ms. Bruce
    made an oral reply to the removal notice to Alan S. Perry, the deciding official and Medical
    Center Director, in a meeting at which a union representative was present. She also
    provided a written reply at that time. On August 12, 2007, Perry issued a decision
    sustaining the charges and removing Ms. Bruce, effective August 27, 2007.
    Ms. Bruce appealed her removal to the MSPB, challenging the factual support for
    the three charges against her, raising affirmative defenses of retaliation for whistleblowing
    and harmful procedural error, and alleging that the penalty did not promote the efficiency of
    the service and was unreasonable. The administrative judge (AJ) held a hearing in Fresno
    on November 19, 2007. Prior to the scheduled hearing, on November 15, 2007 Ms.
    Bruce’s union representative Allan Smith telephoned the AJ to request a continuance of the
    hearing in light of a change in his travel plans, but his request was denied by order of the
    2008-3266                                    2
    AJ on the same date. The record reflects that Mr. Smith did return to Fresno in time for the
    hearing, and represented Ms. Bruce.
    In an initial decision issued December 11, 2007, the AJ addressed the evidence
    presented at the hearing and concluded that the agency met its burden in sustaining each
    of the charges against Ms. Bruce. The AJ particularly examined the testimony of Ms. Bruce
    and other VA employees relating to the alleged incidents on May 11, 2007 and June 11,
    2007. The AJ noted inconsistencies in Ms. Bruce’s testimony, and found more credible the
    testimony of Ms. Bruce’s direct supervisor and of other employees who observed Ms.
    Bruce’s behavior in the workplace, based upon the witnesses’ demeanor, among other
    factors. See Hillen v. Dep’t of Army, 
    35 M.S.P.R. 453
    , 458 (1987) (stating factors to be
    considered in assessing witness credibility); see also Haebe v. Dep’t of Justice, 
    288 F.3d 1288
    , 1301 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (same).
    Turning to the asserted affirmative defenses, the AJ first examined Ms. Bruce’s
    statement that her removal was in retaliation for her complaint to her then-supervisor in
    January 2006 that several of her coworkers were engaging in sexual behavior while on
    duty. The AJ found that Ms. Bruce had failed to identify any violation of law, rule, or
    regulation covered by the Whistleblower Protection Act upon which her alleged protected
    disclosure was based, and that even assuming she had made a protected disclosure, she
    did not meet her burden in showing that her disclosure was a contributing factor in the
    agency’s decision to remove her, particularly in light of the lengthy period of time between
    her disclosure and the removal action, and the lack of involvement by the deciding official in
    the conduct she reported.
    2008-3266                                     3
    The AJ also found no foundation for Ms. Bruce’s allegations of harmful procedural
    error, either based on a “biased investigation” against her, or based on her allegation that
    the deciding official considered matters beyond the charges included in the notice of
    proposed removal in violation of Stone v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., 
    179 F.3d 1368
    ,
    1376 (Fed. Cir. 1999). The AJ also found that the VA met its burden in showing a nexus
    between the sustained charges and the efficiency of the service, and exercised its
    discretion within tolerable limits of reasonableness in imposing the penalty of removal,
    noting especially the seriousness of the behavior, the lack of mitigating factors, and Ms.
    Bruce’s history of similar behavior, including several prior incidents of using disrespectful
    language and making inappropriate statements resulting in a reprimand and a suspension.
    Ms. Bruce filed a petition for review by the full Board, which was denied on April 11,
    2008, rendering the AJ’s initial decision final. She now appeals that decision to this court. 1
    DISCUSSION
    Decisions of the MSPB are reviewed to determine whether they are arbitrary,
    capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law; obtained
    without procedures required by law, rule, or regulation having been followed; or
    unsupported by substantial evidence. 
    5 U.S.C. § 7703
    (c); Cheeseman v. Office of Pers.
    Mgmt., 
    791 F.2d 138
    , 140 (Fed.Cir.1986).
    In her various filings, Ms. Bruce raises several basic arguments. In her initial filing
    she challenges the Board’s fact findings upon which it sustained the three charges,
    1
    We have received, and fully considered, Ms. Bruce’s initial informal brief, as
    well as a supplemental brief received by the court on July 15, 2008, a reply brief received
    August 11, 2008, and a subsequent submission filed by leave of the court on September
    30, 2008, as well as the VA’s informal response filed August 4, 2008.
    2008-3266                                     4
    particularly its credibility determinations favoring the testimony of Ms. Bruce’s supervisor
    and other witnesses over her own testimony. Credibility determinations are within the
    discretion of the Board and, “in general, such evaluations are ‘virtually unreviewable’ on
    appeal.” King v. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    133 F.3d 1450
    , 1453 (Fed. Cir. 1998)
    (quoting Clark v. Dep’t of Army, 
    997 F.2d 1466
    , 1473 (Fed. Cir. 1993)). Ms. Bruce argues
    that her supervisor’s testimony was false, and that the Board should have accepted her
    version of the events. However, she has not provided reason to reject the Board’s
    credibility determinations, which were based on witness demeanor and the consistency of
    the testimony presented in support of the VA’s charges.
    Ms. Bruce argues that the evidence does not support the failure to follow instructions
    charge, which was based on her refusal to follow her supervisor’s instruction not to take a
    patient to the facility’s workout room during hours when access to the room was restricted
    to employees and volunteers. She asserts that neither her supervisor nor any other
    witness observed her enter the workout room with the patient. The AJ found that evidence
    of actual entry was not required, in light of the testimony establishing that Ms. Bruce’s
    supervisor instructed her not to take the patient to the workout room, and that Ms. Bruce
    defied this instruction by removing the key to the room from the wall and leading the patient
    down the hall toward the workout room. Ms. Bruce provides a competing explanation of the
    events of May 11, 2007, but her explanation was fully presented before the AJ, who found
    her testimony less credible than that of several other witnesses. We conclude that
    substantial evidence supported the AJ’s findings on the asserted charges.
    In her supplemental filings Ms. Bruce argues that she requested a postponement of
    the hearing before the AJ because her representative had an intense headache and “could
    2008-3266                                    5
    not function correctly,” and requested that she represent herself, but the AJ unfairly denied
    these requests, preventing the successful cross examination of witnesses. The VA
    responds that Ms. Bruce has not presented any evidence that she made these requests, for
    they are not shown in the record, and that in any event these assertions do not provide a
    basis for relief. Ms. Bruce states that she made the request to remove her representative
    “upon a break and off the record.” This disputed aspect does not establish a denial of
    procedures required by law.
    Ms. Bruce also argues that the deciding official, Mr. Perry, was biased against her.
    This charge appears to concern the same issues considered by the AJ in reference to the
    defense of retaliation. General assertions of bias require some threshold support, not here
    provided, for no error has been shown in the Board’s conclusion that she did not establish a
    protected disclosure, or that she did not establish that her disclosure was a contributing
    factor to the agency’s decision to remove her.
    Ms. Bruce also challenges the facts relating to her prior suspension for being absent
    without leave and her prior reprimand for making other inappropriate statements, and other
    factors the agency stated that it considered in deciding on the appropriate penalty. The AJ
    conducted an analysis to ensure that consideration of her past discipline met the procedural
    requirements stated in Bolling v. Department of the Air Force, 
    9 M.S.P.R. 335
    , 338-39
    (1981). We affirm the AJ’s determination that these prior disciplinary actions could be
    considered in assessing the reasonableness of her removal.
    On the entirety of the record, the Board’s decision must be affirmed.
    No costs.
    2008-3266                                    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2008-3266

Citation Numbers: 307 F. App'x 442

Judges: Newman, Patel, Per Curiam, Schall

Filed Date: 1/9/2009

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2023