Regulations of the Civil Service Commission applicable to
reductions in force of employees of the Federal Government
prescribed the following order of priority for retention of
"permanent employees": (1) A-1 Plus, World War II veterans for a
one-year period after return to duty; (2) A-1, Veteran's preference
employees with efficiency ratings of "good" or better; (3) A-2,
Employees without veteran's preference with efficiency ratings of
"good" or better. Under the regulations, every member of groups A-1
Plus and A-1 was entitled to be retained in preference to those in
group A-2, without regard to length of service. Petitioner was
classified in group A-2 and was notified of a one-year furlough. He
sued for a declaratory judgment, praying that the Commission's A-1
Plus and A-1 classifications be declared void, that he be restored
to his position, and that the Commission be required to rescind the
regulations and promulgate new ones in accordance with law.
Held:
1. In the circumstances of this case, petitioner is entitled to
challenge the validity of the A-1 Plus as well as the A-1
classification. Pp.
334 U. S.
325-328.
2. The A-1 Plus classification is authorized by § 8 of the
Selective Training and Service Act of 1940. Pp.
334 U. S.
328-333.
(a) The mandatory requirement of § 8(b)(A) of the Selective
Training and Service Act of 1940 that the Government rehire its
returning veteran employees is not qualified, as in the case of
private employers under § 8(b)(B), when "the employer's
circumstances have so changed as to make it impossible or
unreasonable to do so." Pp.
334 U. S.
328-330,
334 U. S.
331.
Page 334 U. S. 324
(b)
Trailmobile Co. v. Whirls, 331 U. S.
40, and
Fishgold v. Sullivan Drydock & Repair
Co., 328 U. S. 275,
distinguished. Pp.
334 U. S.
330-333.
(c) The prohibition of § 8(c) of the Selective Training and
Service Act of 1940 against "discharge" of a reemployed war veteran
must be read in light of the different reemployment obligations
imposed on private employers and on the Federal Government. P.
334 U. S.
331.
(d) Section 12 of the Veterans' Preference Act of 1944 did not
so amend § 8 of the Selective Training and Service Act as to
confer upon petitioner retention rights based upon his length of
service. P.
334 U. S.
332.
(e) A one-year furlough, applied to veterans, would be a
"discharge" within the meaning of § 8(c) of the Selective
Training and Service Act. P.
334 U. S.
333.
3. The A-1 classification, which gives all permanent employee
"Veterans with
good' or higher efficiency ratings" retention
preferences over all nonveterans, even over nonveterans with higher
efficiency ratings and longer government service, is authorized by
§ 12 of the Veterans' Preference Act of 1944 in view of that
section's legislative history. Pp. 334 U. S.
333-339.
(a) The "due effect" required by the first clause of § 12
is given to length of service by its consideration in the
determination of retention preferences as between veteran and
veteran and as between nonveteran and nonveteran. Pp.
334 U. S.
335-336.
(b) The question of the wisdom of the policy embodied in a
congressional enactment is not for this Court to determine. P.
334 U. S.
339.
83 U.S.App.D.C. ___, 165 F.2d 251, affirmed.
In a declaratory judgment action by petitioner against the
Secretary of the Navy and the members of the Civil Service
Commission to establish his employment status, the District Court
granted the Government's motion for summary judgment. The Court of
Appeals affirmed. 83 U.S.App.D.C. ___, 165 F.2d 251. This Court
granted certiorari. 333 U.S. 841.
Affirmed, p.
334 U. S.
339.
Page 334 U. S. 325
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case raises questions concerning the relative rights of war
veteran and nonveteran employees to retention in government service
when a program of reduction in the number of government civilian
employees makes it necessary for some to be chosen for discharge.
The acute point of controversy is this: in the treatment of
permanent tenure civil service employees, should qualified
honorably discharged war veterans, merely because they are such, be
retained in preference to nonveterans, even though those
nonveterans have served the Government a substantially longer time
than the veterans. The questions depend upon whether certain
regulations promulgated by the Civil Service Commission are valid
under a proper interpretation of controlling statutes.
The petitioner was for twelve years, from 1934 to 1946, a duly
appointed permanent status civil service employee working in the
Charleston Navy Yard. His work was of such high quality as to earn
him an efficiency rating of "Excellent." By successive promotions,
he arrived at the responsible position of Leadingman Shipfitter at
a basic wage of $12.08 per day. January 7, 1946, shortly after the
post-hostility reduction of governmental employees began,
petitioner was demoted to a position paying $10.08 per day as part
of a reduction in force. This demotion apparently was due in part
to the fact that he did not have a veteran's preference. October 7,
1946,
Page 334 U. S. 326
petitioner was notified that, due to curtailment of work and
funds, it was necessary to eliminate certain positions in his
competitive level, and that, in accordance with civil service
regulations, his name had been reached for action. He was told
that, if he approved, he was then to be placed in a one-year
"furlough status", rather than absolutely separated from service,
because it was hoped that conditions might justify his recall to
duty within the year. He was also informed that his "active
service" had already been terminated and that, unless sooner
recalled to duty, he would be separated for reduction in force at
the end of his one-year furlough period.
The civil service regulations said to require termination of
petitioner's active service divide government employees into three
main groups -- A, B, and C. Group A, which has the highest priority
for retention, is composed of "permanent employees;" groups B and C
are composed of employees with limited tenures of employment. Group
A is divided into five subgroups, the first three of which are of
particular importance here. These three subgroups are:
"Subgroup A-1 Plus (Veterans of World War II) for a one-year
period after return to duty;"
"Subgroup A-1 Veteran's preference employees with 'good' (or
higher) efficiency ratings;"
"Subgroup A-2, Employees without veteran's preference with
'good' (or higher) efficiency ratings. [
Footnote 1]"
The result of these Commission groupings is that A-1 Plus
veterans have the highest retention priority, A-1 the second, and
A-2, in which, not having a veteran's preference, petitioner is
classified, has the third. Thus,
Page 334 U. S. 327
if these regulations are valid, every member of both Subgroup
A-1 Plus and Subgroup A-1 must be retained in preference to
petitioner.
After receiving notice of his one-year furlough, petitioner
filed this complaint in district court for declaratory judgment,
mandamus, and other relief. The defendants were the Secretary of
the Navy and the members of the Civil Service Commission. The
complaint charged that petitioner's demotion and furlough were the
result of the Commission's regulations which prescribed retention
priorities for veterans' preference employees in A-1 Plus and A-1
over all nonveteran employees without regard to the longer periods
of service of some of the nonveteran employees, including
petitioner. The failure of the Commission to consider relative
length of service in establishing these retention priorities was
charged to be "unreasonable, arbitrary, and capricious, without
statutory warrant, and contrary to the express provisions" of
applicable statutes. The petitioner's prayer was that the
Commission's A-1 Plus and A-1 classifications be declared void,
that the Secretary of the Navy be compelled to restore him to his
original position as Leadingman Shipfitter, that the Commission be
required to rescind the regulations and promulgate new ones in
accordance with law, and that "such other and further relief as is
just" be granted him. After answer and certain stipulations of
fact, both parties moved for summary judgment, and the government's
motion was granted. The Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia affirmed. 165 F.2d 251. Importance of the questions raised
prompted us to grant certiorari. 333 U.S. 841.
First. While admitting petitioner's right to challenge
the validity of Subgroup A-1 in this action, the Government
contends that he cannot challenge A-1 Plus. The premise of this
argument is that, even if A-1 Plus were invalid, the veterans
grouped in it would fall within
Page 334 U. S. 328
Subgroup A-1. We find no adequate support for this premise in
the record. Veterans in Subgroup A-1 Plus could not qualify for A-1
unless they had efficiency ratings of "good" or better. But the
language defining A-1 Plus includes veterans of all ratings, even
below "good." And when the summary judgment in this case was
rendered, 61 of the 118 veterans comprising A-1 Plus had not been
rated at all. True, the Government asserts that 60 of these
veterans have now been rated "good" and the sixty-first member has
resigned. But the potential membership of Subgroup A-1 Plus is not
limited to those veterans who were in it when the case was tried.
The classification provides for a continuing status of preference
of one year for all returning veterans who left government
employment for war duty. There is no indication that additional war
veterans qualified for classification under A-1 Plus will not
return to Charleston Navy Yard and reclaim shipfitter jobs in
preference to otherwise qualified nonveteran employees. And the
Government does not claim that this classification has been
repealed or altered so that in the future it can include only those
veterans who have an efficiency rating of "good" or higher. Under
these circumstances, we are unable to say that all members of A-1
Plus could qualify or will be able to qualify as members of A-1.
Therefore, we cannot accept the government's contention that
petitioner's likelihood of injury from A-1 Plus is too remote to
justify his attack on it. If invalid, there is as much reason for
his right to challenge this subgroup as for his right to challenge
Subgroup A-1.
Second. The Government finds support for Subgroup A-1
Plus in § 8 of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940,
54 Stat. 885, 890, 50 U.S.C.App. § 308. That section provides
reemployment rights to any person who under that Act left a
position other than a temporary one in order to perform training
and service in the armed
Page 334 U. S. 329
forces and who satisfactorily completed his training. It further
requires that, upon appropriate application after release from
training, such person, if still qualified to perform the duties of
his old job and "if such position was in the employ of the United
States Government, . . . shall be restored to such position or to a
position of like seniority, status, and pay." Section 8(c) also
provides that a person so restored to his old position "shall not
be discharged from such position without cause within one year
after such restoration."
There appears to be little room for contention that there is
ambiguity in the language that Congress selected to express its
purpose to require the restoration of a former government employee
who entered the armed forces to his old position and to give him
the right to retention for a year. The language is that such an
employee "shall be restored" to his position or to one like it,
supplemented by language that he "shall not be discharged from such
position without cause within one year after such restoration." We
have examined the legislative history of the Selective Training and
Service Act of 1940, and find nothing whatever which faintly
suggests that Congress intended its language to be less mandatory
than implied by the words it used. The command in § 8(b)(A)
that the Federal Government rehire its returning veteran employees
contrasted sharply with the requirement in § 8(b)(B) that a
private employer need not reemploy such a veteran when "the
employer's circumstances have so changed as to make it impossible
or unreasonable to do so." This difference was noted by the
congressional sponsors of the 1940 Act, who thought that the
Federal Government should set an example to private industry by
providing jobs for all returning veteran employees. [
Footnote 2]
Page 334 U. S. 330
Congress, having, thus provided that the veteran who left a
government job must be reemployed, also required his retention by
declaring that he should not be discharged within a year without
cause.
Petitioner contends, however, that this Court's interpretations
of § 8(b)(B) and § 8(c) in
Trailmobile Co. v.
Whirls, 331 U. S. 40, and
in
Fishgold v. Sullivan Drydock & Repair Co.,
328 U. S. 275,
require a holding that the regulations establishing A-1 Plus are
invalid. The
Trailmobile case dealt only with the
obligations of a private employer to veterans after the first year
of their return to his employment, and our holding there is of no
relevance here. In the other case,
Fishgold, following his
discharge from the armed forces, had been restored to his old
position by his former private employer. Within one year
thereafter, temporary layoffs became necessary on each of nine
days. Fishgold was laid off while nonveterans with longer service
were continuously kept at work in accordance with a collective
bargaining agreement which required that "decreases" in the working
force be based primarily upon "length of service." This Court held
that, since Fishgold's layoffs were temporary, he still retained an
employment relationship, and thus had not been "discharged" within
the meaning of § 8(c). The statute was held not to require
that, when slack work compelled a private employer to lay off some
workers temporarily, a veteran restored to his job be given
continuous work for one year after his reinstatement in preference
to other nonveteran employees who, under the terms of company
employer-employee contract, were entitled to such work by reason of
their greater "length of service."
There are several reasons why we cannot accept petitioner's
argument that the
Fishgold case requires the invalidation
of the A-1 Plus classification. In the first place, we are here
concerned with the one-year retention
Page 334 U. S. 331
rights of veterans restored under § 8(b)(A) to their old
jobs with the Federal Government, not, as in the
Fishgold
case, with the rights of veterans restored to jobs in private
industry under § 8(b)(B). We have previously pointed out that
Congress, in § 8(b)(A), imposed a mandatory and unconditional
reemployment obligation upon the Federal Government; in other
words, the section guaranteed that a returning veteran would get
back his job with the Government. But § 8(b)(B) imposed no
such unconditional guarantee that a returning veteran would be
reemployed by his former private employer. For that subsection does
not require restoration of returning veterans to their former
private jobs if "the employer's circumstances have so changed as to
make it impossible or unreasonable" to rehire him.
Thus, Congress, evidently considering that there were
significant differences in industrial and governmental employment
practices and potentialities, imposed obligations to rehire
returning veterans of a markedly different nature upon government
and private employers. It did not define the "impossible or
unreasonable" circumstances that might relieve a private employer
of the duty to rehire veterans, nor need we attempt to do so now.
But it is plain that such circumstances might conceivably be such
as seriously to affect no only the reasonableness and possibility
of rehiring, but also the reasonableness and possibility of
retaining him for a full year's continuous work. For this reason,
among others, interpretation of § 8(c)'s prohibition against
discharge of a returning veteran must be made in light of whether
he returns to a government-guaranteed or to a private
non-guaranteed job. Therefore § 8(c)'s prohibition against
"discharge" by a private employer cannot be accepted as
determinative of the scope of the congressional prohibition against
"discharge" by the Government.
Page 334 U. S. 332
The foregoing distinction is illustrated by the fact that civil
service workers, unlike the private employees in the
Fishgold case, are not confronted by a situation in which
their employer, the Government, has an outstanding contract with
them providing that they shall be retained in service in proportion
to their "length of service" as reductions in force become
necessary. Whatever seniority rights government employees have when
discharges or reductions in force are made depend entirely upon
congressional acts and regulations issued in harmony with them.
See 37 Stat. 555, 5 U.S.C. § 652. We have discovered
no acts or regulations which can be construed to recognize a
nonveteran's length of government service as a factor sufficient to
override the requirement of § 8(b)(A) and § 8(c) that a
veteran must be restored to his old job with the Federal
Government, and cannot be discharged therefrom without cause for
one year. Thus, unlike the employees in the
Fishgold case
whose private employment contract-derived seniority prevented their
being laid off, petitioner has no comparable statutorily derived
seniority rights to his job with the Government. Petitioner argues,
however, that § 12 of the Veterans' Preference Act of 1944, 58
Stat. 390, 5 U.S.C. § 861, in effect amended § 8 and
conferred retention rights upon him based upon his length of
service. For the reasons we give below in discussing the validity
of Subgroup A-1, we think this contention is without merit.
Finally, the
Fishgold decision held only that a
temporary layoff did not violate a veteran's right under §
8(c) not to be discharged without cause for one year after he had
been restored to his old job. Here, the petitioner asserts that the
statutory one-year prohibition against discharge confers upon a
reemployed veteran no security from a furlough for one year without
pay, that such a furlough is not a "discharge" within the meaning
of
Page 334 U. S. 333
§ 8(c). The Commission has here treated a furlough of more
than thirty days as the equivalent of a discharge. This is in
accordance with prior governmental practice which has considered
that the furlough of a veteran with military preference violates
regulations providing that he shall not be "discharged or dropped"
when "reductions in force are being made." [
Footnote 3] Moreover, § 14 of the Veterans'
Preference Act, which safeguards preference eligibles against
administrative denial of their preference rights, specifically
places furloughs and suspensions for more than thirty days without
pay on the same basis as discharges. Thus, the common meaning of
furlough in governmental practice is not the same as that which the
Court in the
Fishgold case found to be the meaning of
"layoffs" and "furloughs" in "industrial parlance." To give this
one-year "furlough" any less meaning than the statutory word
"discharge" would result in depriving government employee veterans
of the entire congressional guarantee of a year's retention in
their old jobs. We hold that the furlough, if applied to veterans,
would be a "discharge" within the meaning of § 8(c).
Consequently, the Commission acted within its statutory duty by
providing veterans a preference against such removals by
establishing Subgroup A-1 Plus.
Third. Petitioner strongly urges invalidity of Subgroup
A-1, which gives all permanent employee "Veterans with "good" or
higher efficiency ratings" retention preferences over all
nonveterans, even over nonveterans with higher efficiency ratings
and longer government service. While conceding that, under some
limited circumstances, veterans with "good or higher ratings" are
granted preference by § 12 of the Veterans' Preference Act of
1944, petitioner
Page 334 U. S. 334
argues that the section does not require, but actually
prohibits, any preference for veterans over nonveterans which fails
to give substantial weight to a nonveteran's longer government
service. The Government urges that the section requires an absolute
retention preference for veterans who have the required efficiency
ratings without regard to the fact that nonveterans may have had
longer government service. An alternative argument is that, whether
absolutely required or not, the Commission's subgrouping is well
within the power to promulgate "rules and regulations" specifically
authorized by § 12. The question presented is therefore one of
interpretation of the relevant language of § 12.
The part of the section on which petitioner particularly relies
reads:
"In any reduction in personnel in any civilian service of any
Federal agency, competing employees shall be released in accordance
with Civil Service Commission regulations which shall give due
effect to tenure of employment, military preference, length of
service, and efficiency ratings:
Provided, That the length
of time spent in active service in the armed forces of the United
States of each such employee shall be credited in computing length
of total service. . . ."
Petitioner interprets this portion of § 12 as a
congressional command that the Commission must invariably give "due
effect" to length of service in determining what employees, whether
veterans or nonveterans, shall first be discharged in a reduction
of force program. In effect, he argues that the above language
provides no other "military preference" in civil service for a
veteran employee over a nonveteran with greater "length of service"
than that defined in the above proviso, namely, that the length of
a veteran's army service shall be credited in computing the length
of his total government service.
Page 334 U. S. 335
The part of § 12 on which the Government supports the
Commission's recognition of a veteran's absolute retention
preference without regard to comparative length of service of
veterans and nonveterans follows immediately after that section's
language on which petitioner relies, and reads:
". . .
Provided further, That preference employees
whose efficiency ratings are 'good' or better shall be retained in
preference to all other competing employees and that preference
employees whose efficiency ratings are below 'good' shall be
retained in preference to competing nonpreference employees who
have equal or lower efficiency ratings. . . ."
The Government interprets this proviso as a special withdrawal
of the proviso-defined classes of veterans from the general terms
of the first clause of § 12 relating to "length of service."
It views this proviso as the congressional creation of classes of
veterans' "preference employees" [
Footnote 4] who "shall," if they have the defined
efficiency ratings, "be retained in preference to all other
competing employees" without regard to length of service as between
veterans and nonveterans. Thus, under the government's
interpretation, length of service would be given the "due effect"
required by the first clause of § 12 by its consideration in
the determination of retention preferences as between veteran and
veteran and as between nonveteran and nonveteran. This
interpretation of the proviso and the section, it is argued, would
give meaning to all the language used in them, is plainly called
for by the language, and harmonizes this portion of the Act with
all its other parts and with the Act's broad purposes. The
interpretation is compelled, so the
Page 334 U. S. 336
Government argues, by the Act's legislative history,
particularly when the proviso and preceding clauses in the section
are viewed in the light of a long series of prior congressional
enactments and authorized executive orders granting preferences in
government employment to veterans and their close relatives. We
agree with the Government that, in the light of the foregoing
factors, no other interpretation of the pertinent parts of the
section can fairly be reached.
In 1876, seventy-two years ago, Congress passed a law which
required any executive department, when making "any reduction of
force," to
"retain those persons who may be equally qualified who have been
honorably discharged from the military or naval service of the
United States and the widows and orphans of deceased soldiers and
sailors."
19 Stat. 143, 169, 5 U.S.C. § 37. [
Footnote 5] In 1912, Congress greatly strengthened the
old 1876 policy by providing that,
"in the event of reductions being made in the force in any of
the executive departments, no honorably discharged soldier or
sailor whose record in said department is rated good shall be
discharged or dropped, or reduced in rank or salary."
37 Stat. 360, 413. [
Footnote
6] There is nothing ambiguous about this 1912 provision. It was
an absolute command that no governmental department should
discharge, drop, or reduce in rank any honorably discharged veteran
government employee with a rating of "good." Length of service in
no way qualified the
Page 334 U. S. 337
preference given the veteran. And subsequent executive orders
not only recognized this provision as giving veterans an absolute
preference, [
Footnote 7] but
also extended the preference to veterans in the field service
[
Footnote 8] and to positions
not under civil service. [
Footnote
9]
Executive Order 4240 of June 4, 1925, as amended by Executive
Order 5068 of March 2, 1929, provided, as does Subgroup A-1 here,
an absolute retention preference for veterans over nonveterans
where the veterans' efficiency ratings were "good," and a similar
absolute preference over nonveterans whose ratings were less than
good if the veterans' ratings were equal to those of the
nonveterans. And, at the time of passage of the Veterans'
Preference Act of 1944, there were 1943 Civil Service Regulations
outstanding [
Footnote 10]
which granted veterans with permanent tenure and with a rating of
"good" or higher precisely the same absolute retention preference
over nonveterans which is now afforded by Subgroup A-1, here
attacked as invalid. Consequently, a holding that veterans with a
rating of "good" no longer have a retention preference over
nonveterans with longer service would mean that passage of the
Veterans' Preference Act in 1944 narrowed the long existing scope
of veterans' preferences in case of reduction in force of
government personnel. The purpose of that Act's sponsors and of
Congress in passing it appears to have been precisely the opposite
-- to broaden, rather than narrow, the preference.
Page 334 U. S. 338
The Senate Civil Service Committee was told by the congressional
sponsor of the measure that
"this bill takes away no existing veterans' preference, either
by statute or Executive order, but it does strengthen, broaden, and
implement the veterans' preference policy heretofore in
effect,"
and that it would "give legislative sanction to existing
veterans' preference, to the rules and regulations in the executive
branch of the Government. . . . ." [
Footnote 11] A member of the Civil Service Commission, in
explaining the bill to the Senate Committee, called the proviso
here involved the "heart of the section," [
Footnote 12] and stated that it "was
substantially the same" as the 1912 Act, [
Footnote 13] which, as before pointed out, provided
for an absolute veterans' retention preference without regard to
length of service. [
Footnote
14] And, in explaining the Bill on the floor of the House, the
sponsor and active proponents of the measure explained
Page 334 U. S. 339
it as strengthening and broadening veterans' preferences then
embodied in statutes and executive orders. [
Footnote 15]
Not only did the friends of the Veterans' Preference Act explain
to the Senate Committee on Civil Service and to the Congress the
broad preferences the Act would grant. Hostile witnesses
graphically pointed out to the Senate Committee what they deemed
would be the unfairness of the Act's effect if passed as written.
One such witness representing the Civil Service Reform League
said:
"I think you ought to give consideration to . . . retention of
veterans in civil service regardless of length of service. I do not
think it is fair, a veteran be retained in service who has been in
the service 6 months as against a person who has been in the
service 25 years. I believe some distinction might be made --
otherwise you would do a grave injustice to those people who have
long years of service in civil service. [
Footnote 16]"
And another witness against the Bill pointed out that, under it
nonveterans would "be the first to be laid off and the last to be
taken on." [
Footnote 17]
Thus, Congress passed the bill with full knowledge that the
longstanding absolute retention preferences of veterans would be
embodied in the Act. Petitioner makes an appealing argument against
this policy. But it is a policy adopted by Congress, and our
responsibility is to interpret the Act, not to overrule the
congressional policy. [
Footnote
18]
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The remaining two subgroups of A, not involved here, are:
"Subgroup A-3, Veterans with efficiency ratings lower than
'good.'"
"Subgroup A-4, Nonveterans with efficiency ratings lower than
'good.'"
5 Code Fed.Reg. (Supp. 1945) § 12.303, now found in 5 Code
Fed.Reg. (Supp. 1947) § 20.3(a).
[
Footnote 2]
Hearings before House Committee on Military Affairs on H.R.
10132, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 80-82, 118, 235; 86 Cong.Rec.
11697.
[
Footnote 3]
See 40 Ops.Att'y Gen. 115 (Sept. 20, 1946) 7, referring
to Opinion, Attorney General Mitchell in 1929, interpreting
Executive Order 5068, March 2, 1929. The substance of that Order is
set out in this opinion at p.
334 U. S.
337.
[
Footnote 4]
The Act not only provides preferences for veterans, but ,under
certain circumstances, grants preferences to veterans' wives,
widows, and mothers. § 2, 5 U.S.C. § 851, as amended by
Pub.L. No. 396, 80th Cong., 2d Sess., Jan.19, 1948.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 1289, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 3.
[
Footnote 5]
Disabled veterans had been granted employment preferences in
1865. 13 Stat. 571. This statutory policy was expressly preserved
by § 7 of the Civil Service Act of 1883, 22 Stat. 403, 406,
was carried forward in other Acts, and has been repeated in a most
comprehensive manner in § 2 of the Veterans' Preference Act of
1944.
[
Footnote 6]
It is of interest that this legislative expression, like the one
before us, was a proviso in a section, and that the section as a
whole had to do with the manner in which the Civil Service
Commission should provide for efficiency ratings in relation to
promotions, demotions, and dismissals of civil service
employees.
[
Footnote 7]
§ 7, Executive Order 3567, October 24, 1921.
[
Footnote 8]
Executive Order 3801, March 3, 1923.
[
Footnote 9]
Departmental Circular 146, U.S. Civil Service Comm'n, October
22, 1936.
[
Footnote 10]
5 Code Fed.Reg. (Supp. 1943) §§ 12.301-12.313. These
regulations, like those attacked here, separated all civil service
employees into different categories according to their tenure, with
permanent employees having the highest retention status. Thus, all
permanent employees, regardless of veteran's preference and of
efficiency rating, enjoyed priority over all employees with limited
tenures.
[
Footnote 11]
Hearings before Senate Committee on Civil Service on S. 1762 and
H.R. 4115, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 8-9.
[
Footnote 12]
Id. at 29.
[
Footnote 13]
Id. at 27, 29.
[
Footnote 14]
Three veterans' organizations collaborated with the legislative
sponsors in drafting the Act. Hearings before Senate Committee on
Civil Service on S. 1762 and H.R. 4115, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 8. A
representative of one of these organizations stated to the
Committee:
"This measure gives to honorably discharged veterans of World
War I and World War II, their widows, and the wives of disabled
veterans who themselves are not qualified, preference in employment
where Federal funds are disbursed. It provides, by law, a definite
preference both in appointment and retention in Federal positions.
While such a preference in many instances now exists by virtue of
Executive orders and Civil Service Commission regulations, this
bill gives such preference a permanent standing that cannot be
changed except by congressional action. The bill likewise does not
take away from the veteran any rights previously granted under any
existing law, Executive order, civil service rule, or regulation of
any department of the Government, but prescribes by law additional
preferences and confirms many now existing by regulation."
Id. at 41-42.
[
Footnote 15]
90 Cong.Rec. 3502, 3503, 3505.
[
Footnote 16]
Hearings before Senate Committee on Civil Service on S. 1762 and
H.R. 4115, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 33-34.
[
Footnote 17]
Id. at 63, 65.
[
Footnote 18]
It is worthy of note, however, that Congress, in recognition of
hardships resulting from replacement of older government employees
by veterans, has passed Acts which grant special pensions to
employees over 55 years of age who have worked for the Government
for 25 years or more and who have been involuntarily separated from
the service in reductions in force. 60 Stat. 939; Pub.L. No. 426,
80th Cong., 2d Sess., Feb. 28, 1948.
See 90 Cong.Rec.
9201-9202, H.R. No. 2443, 79th Cong., 2d Sess. 1, S.Rep. No. 1678,
79th Cong., 2d Sess. 1-2.
MR. JUSTICE REED, concurring.
I agree with the conclusion reached by the Court in this case.
My disagreement with the opinion is limited
Page 334 U. S. 340
to that portion of subdivision Second which indicates that the
rights of a veteran as to discharge after restoration to employment
by the United States differ from the corresponding rights of a
veteran restored to employment by a private employer.
The rights to retention of employment of both veterans are
governed by the same subsection 8(c). 54 Stat. 890. Section 8(c)
specifies the same conditions for retention of employment for all
employees whether they are reemployed by the United States or by
private employers.
Nothing has come to my attention that indicates to me a
congressional purpose to grant to one more rights as to continuity
of employment than to the other. The legislation as to both
depended upon the same constitutional authority -- the War Power. I
can see no reason to attribute to Congress an intention to
guarantee public employment to a returning veteran regardless of
the needs of the public service or to discriminate between equally
deserving veterans.
Compare Fishgold v. Sullivan Drydock &
Repair Corp., 328 U. S. 275.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON join in this
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, concurring.
I concur in the result. But I do so without expressing opinion
concerning the validity of Subgroup A-1 Plus of the Regulations.
That classification, as I understand it and the Court's
construction of it, gives preference for retention for one year in
governmental work to veterans
Page 334 U. S. 341
of World War II over all others, including veterans of World War
I, regardless of efficiency and length of service whether of the
restored veteran or of his competitors. It may be that, upon the
sum of the legislation, Congress intended to give so broad a
priority to returning members of the military services. But, if so,
it is the one instance in which both efficiency and length of
service have been absolutely disregarded. And it is at least
possible, I think, to read the complex series of statutes bearing
on the problem as not having been intended to go so far.
But I do not reach that question, because Subgroup A-1 does take
account of efficiency. It gives preference to veterans unless their
efficiency rating is less than "good." No specific mention of
length of service is made. But while a classification which ignores
all considerations both of efficiency and of length of service
might be found unauthorized under the statutory scheme, [
Footnote 2/1] one which takes due account
of efficiency, which is not wholly unrelated to length of service,
well might be sustained. And, in that event, the Commission's
judgment that veterans with efficiency ratings of "good" or better
should be preferred to all others could hardly be called arbitrary
or in excess of the authority conferred. [
Footnote 2/2]
Page 334 U. S. 342
It is true that, when petitioner was separated from service,
there were some 61 veterans classified A-1 Plus, without efficiency
ratings and in priority to himself. [
Footnote 2/3] But we are informed, and it is not
disputed, [
Footnote 2/4] that 60 of
these men now have received efficiency ratings of "good," and
therefore fall into Group A-1 in any event. The other of the 61 has
resigned. Hence, we are told, and this also is not disputed, that
any order of the District Court purporting to require petitioner's
restoration would mean that he is entitled to displace one of those
veterans.
Since, in my view, Regulation A-1 is valid, regardless of
whether A-1 Plus should stand, and since, on the facts now before
us, Regulation A-1 is sufficient to exclude petitioner from
restoration at this time, I do not think he has made a sufficient
showing to call forth the exercise of our discretionary power in
this proceeding to require the Commission to reformulate the
Regulations. Upon the showing made, the case is not one
appropriate, in my judgment, for application of the discretionary
remedy of a declaratory judgment.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Depending upon whether § 8 of the Selective Training and
Service Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 890, 50 U.S.C.App. § 301,
et
seq., requiring restoration to employment and forbidding
discharge without cause for one year, has been qualified by the
later enactment of § 12 of the Veterans' Preference Act, 58
Stat. 390, 5 U.S.C. Supp. 1946, § 861, quoted in the Court's
opinion, particularly the second proviso.
See 334
U.S. 323fn2/2|>note, 2.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The second proviso,
cf. 334
U.S. 323fn2/1|>note 1, specifies that preference employees
(
i.e., veterans) with efficiency ratings of "good" or
better shall be retained in preference to "all other competing
employees," a designation certainly of the most comprehensive
scope. The very terms of the section appear thus to place much
greater stress upon efficiency ratings than upon length of
service.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The practice in relation to these positions has been to withhold
efficiency ratings, in this case, for a period of six months, and
then to award them on the basis of actual performance.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Ordinarily, of course, rights are to be determined as of the
time the interests involved are adversely affected. But it would
seem hardly consistent with the legislative scheme that employees
with deferred status could defeat the use of a reasonable period to
determine the veteran's efficiency rating by actual performance. In
any event, the discretionary declaratory judgment remedy should not
be applied to oust preference employees entitled to priority over
others, even though their status as preference employees is
established after trial but before final disposition of the cause
of appellate review.