Petitioner was an employee of the Department of the Interior in
a position not designated as "sensitive." He was not a veteran, had
no protected Civil Service status, and could have been discharged
summarily without cause. Purporting to proceed under the Act of
August 26, 1950, Executive Order No. 10450, and departmental
regulations prescribing the procedure to be followed in "security
risk" cases, the Secretary suspended him and served him with
written charges that his "sympathetic association" with Communists
or Communist sympathizers, and other similar alleged activities,
tended to show that his continued employment might be "contrary to
the best interests of national security." At a subsequent hearing
before a security hearing board, no evidence was adduced in support
of these charges and no witness testified against petitioner, but
he and four witnesses who testified for him were subjected to an
extensive cross-examination which went far beyond the activities
specified in the charges. Subsequently, he was sent a notice of
dismissal, effective September 10, 1954, "in the interest of
national security" and for the reasons set forth in the charges. In
1956, he sued for a declaratory judgment that his discharge was
illegal and an injunction directing his reinstatement. While the
case was pending, a copy of a "notification of personnel action,"
dated September 21, 1954, and reciting that it was "a revision of
and replaces the original bearing the same date," was filed in the
court, and a copy was delivered to petitioner. This notification
was identical with one issued September 1, 1954, except that it
omitted any reference to the reason for petitioner's discharge and
to the authority under which it was carried out.
Held: Petitioner's dismissal was illegal, and he is
entitled to reinstatement. Pp.
359 U. S.
536-546.
(a) Having chosen to proceed against petitioner on security
grounds, the Secretary was bound by the regulations which he had
promulgated for dealing with such cases, even though petitioner
could have been discharged summarily and without cause
independently of those regulations. Pp.
359 U. S.
539-540.
Page 359 U. S. 536
(b) The record shows that the proceedings leading to
petitioner's dismissal from Government service on grounds of
national security violated petitioner's procedural rights under the
applicable departmental regulations. Therefore, his dismissal was
illegal, and of no effect. Pp.
359 U. S.
540-545.
(c) Delivery to petitioner in 1956 of the revised "notification
of personnel action" dated September 21, 1954, which was plainly
intended only as a grant of relief to petitioner by expunging the
grounds of the 1954 discharge, cannot be treated as an exercise of
the Secretary's summary dismissal power as of the date of its
delivery to petitioner. Pp.
359 U. S.
545-546.
(d) Petitioner is entitled to reinstatement, subject to any
lawful exercise of the Secretary's authority hereafter to dismiss
him from employment. P.
359 U. S.
546.
102 U.S.App.D.C. 316, 253 F.2d 338, reversed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the legality of petitioner's discharge as an
employee of the Department of the Interior. Vitarelli, an educator
holding a doctor's degree from Columbia University, was appointed
in 1952 by the Department of the Interior as an Education and
Training Specialist in the Education Department of the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands at Koror in the Palau District, a
mandated area for which this country has responsibility.
By a letter dated March 30, 1954, respondent Secretary's
predecessor in office notified petitioner of his suspension from
duty without pay, effective April 2, 1954, assigning as ground
therefor various charges. Essentially, the charges were that
petitioner, from 1941 to 1945,
Page 359 U. S. 537
had been in "sympathetic association" with three named persons
alleged to have been members of or in sympathetic association with
the Communist Party, and had concealed from the Government the true
extent of these associations at the time of a previous inquiry into
them; that he had registered as a supporter of the American Labor
Party in New York City in 1945, had subscribed to the USSR
Information Bulletin, and had purchased copies of the Daily Worker
and New Masses; and that, because such associations and activities
tended to show that petitioner was "not reliable or trustworthy,"
his continued employment might be "contrary to the best interests
of national security."
Petitioner filed a written answer to the statement of charges,
and appeared before a security hearing board on June 22 and July 1,
1954. At this hearing, no evidence was adduced by the Department in
support of the charges, nor did any witness testify against
petitioner. Petitioner testified at length and presented four
witnesses, and he and the witnesses were extensively cross-examined
by the security officer and the members of the hearing board. On
September 2, 1954, a notice of dismissal effective September 10,
1954, was sent petitioner over the signature of the Secretary,
reciting that the dismissal was "in the interest of national
security for the reasons specifically set forth in the letter of
charges dated March 30, 1954." This was followed on September 21,
1954, with the filing of a "Notification of Personnel Action"
setting forth the Secretary's action. The record does not show that
a copy of this document was ever sent to petitioner.
After having failed to obtain reinstatement by a demand upon the
Secretary, petitioner filed suit in the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia seeking a declaration that his
dismissal had been illegal and ineffective, and an injunction
requiring his reinstatement. On October 10, 1956, while the case
was pending in the
Page 359 U. S. 538
District Court, a copy of a new "Notification of Personnel
Action," dated September 21, 1954, and reciting that it was "a
revision of and replaces the original bearing the same date," was
filed in the District Court, and another copy of this document was
delivered to petitioner shortly thereafter. This notification was
identical with the one already mentioned except that it omitted any
reference to the reason for petitioner's discharge and to the
authority under which it was carried out. [
Footnote 1] Thereafter, the District Court granted
summary judgment for the respondent. That judgment was affirmed by
the Court of Appeals, one judge dissenting. 102 U.S.App.D.C. 316,
253 F.2d 338. We granted certiorari to consider the validity of
petitioner's discharge. 358 U.S. 871.
The Secretary's letter of March 30, 1954, and notice of
dismissal of September 2, 1954, both relied upon Exec. Order No.
10450, 18 Fed.Reg. 2489 (1953), the Act of August 26. 1950, 64
Stat. 476, 5 U.S.C. § 22-1
et seq., and Department of
the Interior Order No. 2738, all relating to discharges of
government employees on security or loyalty grounds, as the
authority for petitioner's dismissal. In
Cole v. Young,
351 U. S. 536,
this Court held that the statute referred to did not apply to
government employees in positions not designated as "sensitive."
Respondent takes the position that, since petitioner's position in
government service has at no time been designated as sensitive, the
effect of
Cole, which was decided after the 1954 dismissal
of petitioner, was to render also inapplicable to petitioner
Department of the Interior Order No. 2738, under which the
proceedings relating to petitioner's dismissal were had. It is
urged
Page 359 U. S. 539
that, in this state of affairs, petitioner, who concededly was
at no time within the protection of the Civil Service Act,
Veterans' Preference Act, or any other statute relating to
employment rights of government employees, and who, as a "Schedule
A" employee, could have been summarily discharged by the Secretary
at any time without the giving of a reason, under no circumstances
could be entitled to more than that which he has already received
-- namely, an "expunging" from the record of his 1954 discharge of
any reference to the authority or reasons therefor.
Respondent misconceives the effect of our decision in Cole. It
is true that the Act of August 26, 1950, and the Executive Order
did not alter the power of the Secretary to discharge summarily an
employee in petitioner's status without the giving of any reason.
Nor did the Department's own regulations preclude such a course.
Since, however, the Secretary gratuitously decided to give a
reason, and that reason was national security, he was obligated to
conform to the procedural standards he had formulated in Order No.
2738 for the dismissal of employees on security grounds.
Service v. Dulles, 354 U. S. 363.
That Order, on its face, applies to all security discharges in the
Department of the Interior, including such discharges of Schedule A
employees.
Cole v. Young established that the Act of
August 26, 1950, did not permit the discharge of nonsensitive
employees pursuant to procedures authorized by that Act if those
procedures were more summary than those to which the employee would
have been entitled by virtue of any preexisting statute or
regulation. That decision cannot, however, justify noncompliance by
the Secretary with regulations promulgated by him in the
departmental Order, which, as to petitioner, afford greater
procedural protections in the case of a dismissal stated to be for
security reasons than in the case of dismissal without any
statement of reasons. Having chosen to proceed against petitioner
on security
Page 359 U. S. 540
grounds, the Secretary here, as in
Service, was bound
by the regulations which he himself had promulgated for dealing
with such cases, even though, without such regulations, he could
have discharged petitioner summarily.
Petitioner makes various contentions as to the constitutional
invalidity of the procedures provided by Order No. 2738. He further
urges that, even assuming the validity of the governing procedures,
his dismissal cannot stand, because the notice of suspension and
hearing given him did not comply with the Order. We find it
unnecessary to reach the constitutional issues, for we think that
petitioner's second position is well taken, and must be
sustained.
Preliminarily, it should be said that departures from
departmental regulations in matters of this kind involve more than
mere consideration of procedural irregularities. For, in
proceedings of this nature, in which the ordinary rules of evidence
do not apply, in which matters involving the disclosure of
confidential information are withheld, and where it must be
recognized that counsel is under practical constraints in the
making of objections and in the tactical handling of his case which
would not obtain in a cause being tried in a court of law before
trained judges, scrupulous observance of departmental procedural
safeguards is clearly of particular importance. [
Footnote 2] In this instance, an examination
of the record and of the transcript of the hearing before the
departmental security board discloses that petitioner's procedural
rights under the applicable regulations were violated in at least
three material respects in the proceedings which terminated in the
final notice of his dismissal.
First, § 15(a) of Order No. 2738 requires that the
statement of charges served upon an employee at the time
Page 359 U. S. 541
of his suspension on security grounds
"shall be as specific and detailed as security considerations,
including the need for protection of confidential sources of
information, permit . . . , and shall be subject to amendment
within 30 days of issuance."
Although the statement of charges furnished petitioner appears
on its face to be reasonably specific, [
Footnote 3] the transcript of hearing establishes that the
statement, which was never amended, cannot conceivably be said in
fact to be as specific and detailed as "security considerations . .
. permit." For petitioner was questioned by the security officer
and by the hearing board in great detail concerning his association
with and knowledge of various persons and organizations nowhere
mentioned in the statement of charges, [
Footnote 4] and at length concerning his activities in
Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere after 1945, activities as
to which the charges are also completely silent. These questions
were presumably asked because they were deemed relevant to the
inquiry before the board, and the very fact that they were asked,
and thus spread on the record, is conclusive
Page 359 U. S. 542
indication that "security considerations" could not have
justified the omission of any statement concerning them in the
charges furnished petitioner.
Second, §§ 21(a) and (e) require that
hearings before security hearing boards shall be "orderly," and
that "reasonable restrictions still be imposed as to relevancy,
competency, and materiality of matters considered." The material
set forth in the margin, taken from the transcript, and
illustrative rather than exhaustive, shows that these indispensable
indicia of a meaningful hearing were not observed. [
Footnote 5] It is not an overcharacterization
to say
Page 359 U. S. 543
that, as the hearing proceeded, it developed into a wide-ranging
inquisition into this man's educational, social, and political
beliefs, encompassing even a question as to whether he was "a
religious man."
Page 359 U. S. 544
Third, § 21(c)(4) gives the employee the right "to
cross-examine any witness offered in support of the charges." It is
apparent from an over-all reading of the regulations that it was
not contemplated that this provision should require the Department
to call witnesses to testify in support of any or all of the
charges, because it was expected that charges might rest on
information gathered from or by "confidential informants." We
think, however, that § 21(c)(4) did contemplate the calling by
the Department of any informant not properly classifiable as
"confidential" if information furnished by that informant was to be
used by the board in assessing an employee's status. [
Footnote 6] The transcript shows that
this
Page 359 U. S. 545
provision was violated on at least one occasion at petitioner's
hearing, for the security officer identified by name a person who
had given information apparently considered detrimental to
petitioner, thus negating any possible inference that that person
was considered a "confidential informant" whose identity it was
necessary to keep secret, and questioned petitioner at some length
concerning the information supplied from this source without
calling the informant and affording petitioner the right to
cross-examine. [
Footnote 7]
Because the proceedings attendant upon petitioner's dismissal
from government service on grounds of national security fell
substantially short of the requirements of the applicable
departmental regulations, we hold that such dismissal was illegal,
and of no effect.
Respondent urges that, even if the dismissal of September 10,
1954, was invalid, petitioner is not entitled to reinstatement by
reason of the fact that he was, at all events, validly dismissed in
October, 1956, when a copy of the second "Notification of Personnel
Action," omitting all reference to any statute, order, or
regulation relating to security discharges, was delivered to him.
Granting that the Secretary could at any time after September 10,
1954, have validly dismissed petitioner without any statement of
reasons, and independently of the proceedings taken against him
under Order No. 2738, we cannot view the delivery of the new
notification to petitioner as an exercise of that summary dismissal
power. Rather, the fact that it was dated "9-21-54," contained a
termination of employment date of "9-10-54," was designated as "a
revision" of he 1954 notification, and was evidently filed in
Page 359 U. S. 546
the District Court before its delivery to petitioner indicates
that its sole purpose was an attempt to moot petitioner's suit in
the District Court by an "expunging" of the grounds for the
dismissal which brought October No. 2738 into play. [
Footnote 8] In these circumstances, we would
not be justified in now treating the 1956 action, plainly intended
by the Secretary as a grant of relief to petitioner in connection
with the form of the 1954 discharge, as an exercise of the
Secretary's summary removal power as of the date of its delivery to
petitioner. [
Footnote 9]
It follows from what we have said that petitioner is entitled to
the reinstatement which he seeks, subject, of course to any lawful
exercise of the Secretary's authority hereafter to dismiss him from
employment in the Department of the Interior.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
An affidavit of the custodian of records of the Civil Service
Commission, filed in the District Court together with this revised
notification, sates
"That all records of the said Commission have been expunged of
all adverse findings made with respect to Mr. William Vincent
Vitarelli under Executive Order 10450."
[
Footnote 2]
As already noted, we do not reach the question of the
constitutional permissibility of an administrative adjudication
based on "confidential information" not disclosed to the
employee.
[
Footnote 3]
The substance of the charges has been stated on pp.
359 U. S.
536-536.
supra.
[
Footnote 4]
The statement of charges referred to petitioner's alleged
associations with only three named persons, "F_____, W_____, and
W_____." During the course of the hearing, the security officer,
however, asked
"How well did you know L_____ B_____? . . . Did you ever meet
H_____ B_____ C_____? . . . Did you ever remember meeting a J_____
L_____?"
Further, petitioner was questioned as to his knowledge of and
relationships with a wide variety of organizations not mentioned in
the statement of charges. Thus, he was asked:
"Do you know what Black Mountain Transcendentalism is? . . . Do
you recall an organization by the name of National Council for
Soviet-American Friendship? . . . How about the Southern Conference
for Human Welfare? . . . What is the organization called the Joint
Antifascist Refugee Committee? . . . Have you ever had any contact
with the Negro Youth Congress? . . . How about Abraham Lincoln
Brigade? . . . Have you ever heard of a magazine called
'Cooperative Union'? . . . I was wondering whether you had ever
heard of Consumers Union?"
[
Footnote 5]
"Mr. ARMSTRONG [the departmental security officer, inquiring
about petitioner's activities as a teacher in a Georgia college]:
Were these activities designed to be put into effect by both the
white and the colored races? . . . What were your feelings at that
time concerning race equality? . . . How about civil rights? Did
that enter into a discussion in your seminar groups?"
"Mr. ARMSTRONG: Do I interpret your statement correctly that
maybe Negroes and Jews are denied some of their constitutional
rights at present?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: Yes."
"Mr. ARMSTRONG: In what way?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: I saw it in the South where certain jobs were
open to white people and not open to Negroes because they were
Negroes. . . . In our own university, there was a quota at Columbia
College for the medical students. Because they were Jewish, they
would permit only so many. I thought that was wrong."
"Chairman TOWSON: Doctor, isn't it also true that Columbia
College had quotas by states and other classifications as
well?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: I don't remember that. It may be true."
"Mr. ARMSTRONG: In other words, wasn't there a quota on Gentiles
as well as Jews?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: . . . I had remembered that some Jews seemed to
feel, and I felt, too at the time, that they were being persecuted
somewhat."
"Chairman TOWSON: Did you ever take the trouble to investigate
whether or not they were, or did you just accept their word?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: No, I didn't investigate it."
"Chairman TOWSON: You accepted their word for it."
"Mr. VITARELLI: I accepted the general opinion of the group of
professors with whom I associated and was taught. . . ."
"Chairman TOWSON: I am simply asking you to verify the vague
impression I have that Columbia College puts a severe quota on
residents of New York City, whatever their race, creed or color may
be."
"Mr. VITARELLI: I think that is true. . . ."
"Chairman TOWSON: Otherwise, there would be no students at
Columbia College except residents of New York City."
"Mr. VITARELLI: There may be a few others, but mostly New York
City."
"Chairman TOWSON: Isn't it true that the quota system is
designed by the college in order to make it available to persons
other than live in New York City?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: I believe that is the reason."
"Chairman TOWSON: And any exclusion of a resident of New York
City would be for that reason, rather than the race, creed or
color?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: I think that is the way the policy is
stated."
"Chairman TOWSON: Is it not a fact?"
"Mr. VITARELLI: I don't think so. . . ."
"Chairman TOWSON: Excuse me, Mr. Armstrong."
"Mr. ARMSTRONG: I went to Columbia Law School for two years, and
certainly there was not any quota system there at that time, and
that is a long time ago. All right, we are getting afield."
Petitioner was also asked the following questions by the
security officer during the course of the hearing:
"Mr. ARMSTRONG: I think you indicated in an answer or a reply to
an interrogatory that you at times voted for and sponsored the
principles of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Norman A. Thomas, and
Henry Wallace? . . . How many times did you vote for . . .
[Thomas], if you care to say? . . . How about Henry Wallace? . . .
How about Norman Thomas? Did his platform coincide more nearly with
your ideas of democracy? . . . At one time or two, you were a
strong advocate of the United Nations. Are you still? . . . The
file indicates, too, that you were quite hepped up over the one
world idea at one time; is that right?"
Witnesses presented by petitioner were asked by the security
officer and board members such questions as:
"The Doctor indicated that he was acquainted with and talked to
Norman Thomas on occasions. Did you know about that? . . . How
about Dr. Vitarelli? Is he scholarly? . . . A good administrator? .
. . Was he careless with his language around the students, or
careful? . . . Did you consider Dr. Vitarelli as a religious man? .
. . Was he an extremist on equality of races? . . . In connection
with the activities that Dr. Vitarelli worked on that you know
about, either in the form of projects or in connection with the
educational activities that you have mentioned, did they extend to
the Negro population of the country? In other words, were they
contacts with Negro groups, with Negro instructors, with Negro
students, and so on?"
It is not apparent how any of the above matters could be
material to a consideration of the question whether petitioner's
retention in government service would be consistent with national
security.
[
Footnote 6]
This reading of the provision is supported by § 21(e) of
the Order, which provides in part that,
"if the employee is or may be handicapped by the nondisclosure
to him of confidential information or by lack of opportunity to
cross-examine confidential informants, the hearing board shall take
that fact into consideration,"
thus implying that the employee is to have the right to
cross-examine nonconfidential informants who provide material taken
into consideration by the board.
[
Footnote 7]
The information was to the effect that petitioner had criticized
as "bourgeois" the purchase of a house by a woman associate in
Georgia. Petitioner flatly denied that he had made the remark
attributed to him, and said that he could never have made such a
statement except in a spirit of levity.
[
Footnote 8]
The Secretary successfully took the position in the courts below
that the only possible defect in the 1954 discharge was the
articulation of the "national security" grounds therefor, and that,
since that defect did not void the dismissal as such, an
"expunging" of these grounds gave petitioner the maximum relief to
which he could possibly be entitled.
[
Footnote 9]
Respondent's brief in this Court refers to the 1956 notice as
part of "corrective administrative action which has been taken,"
and as "relief voluntarily accorded [petitioner]." The premise upon
which the dissenting opinion essentially rests -- that the 1956
action was an attempt "to discharge Vitarelli retroactively" --
thus is contrary to the Secretary's own position as to the reason
for that action.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE CLARK, MR. JUSTICE
WHITTAKER and MR. JUSTICE STEWART join, concurring in part and
dissenting in part.
An executive agency must be rigorously held to the standards by
which it professes its action to be judged.
See Securities
& Exchange Commission v. Chenery Corp., 318 U. S.
80,
318 U. S. 87-88.
Accordingly, if dismissal from
Page 359 U. S. 547
employment is based on a defined procedure, even though generous
beyond the requirements that bind such agency, that procedure must
be scrupulously observed.
See Service v. Dulles,
354 U. S. 363.
This judicially evolved rule of administrative law is now firmly
established, and, if I may add, rightly so. He that takes the
procedural sword shall perish with that sword. Therefore, I
unreservedly join in the Court's main conclusion, that the
attempted dismissal of Vitarelli in September, 1954, was abortive
and of no validity, because the procedure under Department of the
Interior Order No. 2738 was invoked but not observed.
But when an executive agency draws on the freedom that the law
vests in it, the judiciary cannot deny or curtail such freedom. The
Secretary of the Interior concededly had untrammelled right to
dismiss Vitarelli out of hand, since he had no protected employment
rights. He could do so as freely as a private employer who is not
bound by procedural restrictions of a collective bargaining
contract. The Secretary was under no law-imposed or self-imposed
restriction in discharging an employee in Vitarelli's position
without statement of reasons and without a hearing. And so the
question is, did the Secretary take action, after the abortive
discharge in 1954, dismissing Vitarelli?
In October, 1956, there was served upon Vitarelli a copy of a
new notice of dismissal which had been inserted in the Department's
personnel records in place of the first notice. Another copy was
filed with the District Court in this proceeding. This second
notice contained no mention of grounds of discharge. If, instead of
sending this second notice to Vitarelli, the Secretary had
telephoned Vitarelli to convey the contents of the second notice,
he would have said:
"I note that you are contesting the validity of the dismissal. I
want to make this very clear to you. If I did not succeed in
dismissing you before,
Page 359 U. S. 548
I now dismiss you, and I dismiss you retroactively, effective
September, 1954."
The Court disallows this significance to the second notice of
discharge because it finds controlling meaning in the suggestion of
the Government that the expunging from the record of any adverse
comment, and the second notice of discharge, signified a
reassertion of the effectiveness of the first attempt at dismissal.
And so, the Court concludes, no intention of severance from service
in 1956 could legally be found, since the Secretary expressed no
doubt that the first dismissal had been effective. But this
document of 1956 was not a mere piece of paper in a dialectic. The
paper was a record of a process, a manifestation of purpose and
action. The intendment of the second notice, to be sure, was to
discharge Vitarelli retroactively, resting this attempted dismissal
on valid authority -- the summary power to dismiss without reason.
Though the second notice could not predate the summary discharge
because the Secretary rested his 1954 discharge on an unsustainable
ground, and Vitarelli could not be deprived of rights accrued
during two years of unlawful discharge, the prior wrongful action
did not deprive the Secretary of the power in him to fire Vitarelli
prospectively. And if the intent of the Secretary be manifested in
fact by what he did, however that intent be expressed -- here, the
intent to be rid of Vitarelli -- the Court should not frustrate the
Secretary's rightful exercise of this power as of October, 1956.
The fact that he wished to accomplish more does not mean he
accomplished nothing.
To construe the second notice to mean administratively nothing
is to attribute to the Secretary the purpose of a mere diarist, the
corrector of entries in the Department's archives. This wholly
disregards the actualities in the conduct of a Department concerned
with terminating the services of an undesired employee as
completely and by
Page 359 U. S. 549
whatever means that may legally be accomplished. If an employer
summons before him an employee over whom he has unfettered power of
dismissal and says to him: "You are no longer employed here,
because I fired you last week," can one reasonably escape the
conclusion that, though the employer was in error, and had not
effectively carried out his purpose to fire the employee last week,
the employer's statement clearly manifests a present belief that
the employee is dismissed and an intention that he be forever after
dismissed? Certainly the employee would have no doubt his
employment was now at an end. Of course, if some special formal
document were required to bring about a severance of a
relationship,
cf. Felter v. Southern Pacific Co.,
359 U. S. 326,
because of noncompliance with the formality, the severance would
not come into being. But no such formality was requisite to
Vitarelli's dismissal.
This is the common sense of it: in 1956, the Secretary said to
Vitarelli:
"This document tells you without any ifs, ands, or buts, you
have been fired right along, and, of course, that means you are not
presently employed by this Department."
Since he had not been fired successfully in 1954, the Court
concludes he must still be employed. I cannot join in an unreal
interpretation which attributes to governmental action the empty
meaning of confetti throwing.