United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________
No. 98-2053
EUGENE E. WIGGINTON,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
REGINALD A. CENTRACCHIO, ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.
____________________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. Mary M. Lisi, U.S. District Judge]
____________________
Before
Torruella, Chief Judge,
Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Pollak,* Senior District Judge.
_____________________
Robert B. Mann and Mann & Mitchell on brief, for appellant.
Leonard J. DePasquale, Staff Judge Advocate, Rhode Island Army
National Guard, and Richard B. Woolley, Assistant Attorney General,
Department of Attorney General, on brief, for appellees.
____________________
* Of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.
March 13, 2000
____________________
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Pollak, District Judge. This case involves a claim by the
plaintiff - the appellant in this court - that his status as a
commissioned officer in the Rhode Island Army National Guard was
wrongfully terminated. Plaintiff challenged that termination by suit
brought, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, in a Rhode Island state court
against two defendants - appellees in this court - the Adjutant General
of the Rhode Island Army National Guard and the State of Rhode Island.
The suit was removed to the United States District Court for Rhode
Island. Following brief discovery, the District Court granted the
Adjutant General's motion for summary judgment and entered judgment in
favor of both defendants. This appeal followed.
I.
A.
The facts giving rise to the plaintiff-appellant's claim are
straightforward and may be quickly stated:
Eugene E. Wigginton served in the United States Marine Corps
from April of 1967 to September of 1970, when he was honorably
discharged. Nine years later - in July of 1979 - the plaintiff
received a commission as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Army
Reserve. As concomitants of his status as a commissioned reserve
officer, Lieutenant Wigginton was appointed an officer of the United
States Army National Guard ("USANG") and of the Rhode Island Army
National Guard ("RIANG"), with assignment to a RIANG Military Police
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unit. As the years went by, Lieutenant Wigginton received periodic
promotions, reaching the rank of major in 1989. In January of 1996,
Major Wigginton (by then assigned as a Public Affairs Officer and
serving as a RIANG Education Officer) was nearing completion of twenty
years of military service (more than three years in the Marines, and
almost seventeen years in USANG and RIANG). In that month he received
from Brigadier General Reginald A. Centracchio, Adjutant General of
Rhode Island, a memorandum captioned "Consideration for Selective
Retention." The memorandum advised Major Wigginton that his status
would be considered in May of 1996 by a Selective Retention Board,
convened pursuant to National Guard Regulation ["NGR"] 635-102 - a
regulation, promulgated in 1988, titled "Personnel Separations OFFICERS
AND WARRANT OFFICERS SELECTIVE RETENTION." The Selective Retention
Board, according to General Centracchio's memorandum, would "consider
commissioned and warrant officers in the grade of colonel and below who
have completed 20 years of qualifying service for retired pay." A
principal goal of the selective retention process is "[e]nsuring that
only the most capable officers are retained beyond 20 years of
qualifying service for assignment to the comparatively few higher level
command and staff positions." NGR 635-102 § 3(a).1 Meeting on May 13,
1 As the District Court explained: "'Selective retention' is a policy
instituted by the United States Army through which officers in the
USANG who have completed 20 years of commissioned service are
reevaluated at regular intervals to determine whether they should be
retained for further service. The program is designed to ensure combat
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1996, the Board convened by General Centracchio considered the records
of ten officers. Major Wigginton (and presumably the other nine
officers) did not appear before the Board; NGR 635-102 states that
"[i]ndividuals are not authorized to appear." Via a memorandum to
General Centracchio dated May 13, the Board recommended that six
officers be retained and that four officers, of whom Major Wigginton
was one, not be retained. On the following day - May 14, 1996 -
General Centracchio sent Major Wigginton a memorandum stating, inter
alia, that "[y]ou have been considered for retention in accordance with
[NGR 635-102] and have not been selected. Accordingly, you will be
separated from the Army National Guard by 13 July 1996." On July 18,
1996, Colonel Anthony J. Zoglio, director of personnel for RIANG, sent
Major Wigginton a memorandum advising him that, effective July 13, he
had been separated from the Army National Guard by honorable discharge.
At the time of his discharge, Major Wigginton was a Public Affairs
Officer, serving as Education Officer of RIANG; he was forty-six years
old.
B.
In September of 1996, Major Wigginton brought suit in the
Rhode Island Superior Court against General Centracchio and the State
readiness throughout the entire National Guard and to inhibit
stagnation in the senior grades."
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of Rhode Island. The suit, in two counts, was brought pursuant to 42
U.S.C. § 1983.
The first count alleged that plaintiff's separation from the
service, and his consequent ineligibility for promotion to lieutenant
colonel, contravened Section 30-3-13 (1994 Reenactment) of Rhode Island
General Laws. Section 30-3-13 provides as follows:
All commissioned officers of the staff corps and
departments, hereafter appointed, shall have had
previous military experience, except chaplains,
officers of the judge advocate general's corps,
and medical corps officers. They shall hold
their positions until they shall have reached the
age of sixty (60) years, unless retired prior to
that time by reason of resignation or disability,
or for cause to be determined by an efficiency
board or a court-martial legally convened for
that purpose. Vacancies among these officers
shall be filled by appointment from the
commissioned officers of the national guard or
from such other civilians as may be specifically
qualified for duty therein.
Major Wigginton's contention was that - absent resignation, disability,
or separation "for cause," none of which has occurred - the quoted
statute had conferred upon him tenure as a commissioned officer of
RIANG (albeit, not of USANG) until he should attain the age of sixty.
It follows - so Major Wigginton contended - that termination of his
tenure as a RIANG officer was abridgement, without due process of law,
of a vested property right.
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The second count, also predicated on § 1983, alleged a denial
of due process of law in that "[a]t no time has the plaintiff ever been
informed of the reasons why he was not selected for retention . . . ."2
By way of relief, Major Wigginton sought "a preliminary and
permanent injunction ordering the defendant3 to reinstate the plaintiff
in the Army National Guard, restore to him all his rights and
privileges to which he is entitled by reason of his commission,
including any back pay, and submit the plaintiff's name to the
promotion board for Lieutenant Colonel." (Although the language of
Major Wigginton's prayer for relief appears broad enough to encompass
reinstatement, and associated entitlements, in USANG as well as in
RIANG, Major Wigginton's brief on appeal expressly acknowledges that
"[t]he relief this Plaintiff seeks is limited to the Rhode Island
National Guard.") The complaint also sought attorney's fees and costs.
Based on plaintiff's federal claims, defendants removed the case to the
United States District Court for Rhode Island. General Centracchio
2 The second count also alleged that "the criteria set forth in
National Guard Regulation 635-102 [to be considered in determining
whether or not a person should be retained in the National Guard] were
not followed with respect to plaintiff's case." However, plaintiff has
not pursued this claim on appeal.
3 Here and elsewhere in his pleadings plaintiff employs the singular
"defendant," notwithstanding that there are two named defendants -
General Centracchio and the State of Rhode Island.
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then moved to dismiss.4 The District Court referred the case to a
Magistrate Judge, who recommended dismissal for lack of justiciability.
The Magistrate Judge was of the view that the case at bar, a § 1983
action brought by a subordinate military officer against a military
superior and arising out of military service, was barred by this
court's decision in Wright v. Park, 5 F.3d 586 (1st Cir. 1993). Wright
v. Park, building on Supreme Court precedent that had barred so-called
"Bivens actions"5 against federal officials for constitutional
violations when such actions arise in a military setting, held that §
1983 actions of the same character against state officials were
likewise barred. The Magistrate Judge concluded that "the Wright court
adopted the following bright-line rule: actions against military
officers for injuries that are 'incident to service' are not
justiciable, whether these actions are filed pursuant to § 1983 or
Bivens." Accordingly, the Magistrate Judge recommended dismissal of
the complaint. Disagreeing with the Magistrate Judge, the District
Court concluded that plaintiff's claims were justiciable. The District
Court held that Wright v. Park is a bar to damage actions but not to
4 The State of Rhode Island did not join in - or file a separate -
motion to dismiss. See infra note 6.
5 The term " Bivens actions" derives from Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal
Agents, 403 U.S. 388 (1971), authorizing damage actions against federal
officials who allegedly engaged in unconstitutional conduct to a
plaintiff's detriment.
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actions - of which Major Wigginton's reinstatement suit is an example -
in which the relief sought is equitable in nature.
Following the District Court's ruling that Major Wigginton's
suit was justiciable, the parties and the District Court turned their
attention to the substance of Major Wigginton's claims.
The claim presented by Major Wigginton's first count was that
termination of his status as a RIANG officer deprived him, without due
process of law, of a property right created by the mandate of Rhode
Island state law. See R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 ("[A]ll commissioned
officers of the staff corps and departments . . . shall hold their
positions until they have reached the age of sixty years.") The
parties were in flat disagreement as to the proper construction of the
Rhode Island statute. The defense contended that the statute was
inapplicable because Major Wigginton was not an officer "of the staff
corps and departments." Major Wigginton contended that he was.
Accordingly, the District Court authorized discovery for the limited
purpose of providing the parties with an enhanced opportunity to
elucidate the meaning of that statutory phrase. At the close of
discovery, both General Centracchio and Major Wigginton moved for
summary judgment.6
6 Notwithstanding that the State of Rhode Island is a named defendant
in this litigation, the State did not join General Centracchio's motion
for summary judgment. See infra note 7.
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The District Court filed an opinion which reaffirmed its
prior ruling on justiciability but found against Major Wigginton on
both counts of his complaint - the first count's due process claim
based on R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 and the second count's claim that the
Selective Retention Board and General Centracchio had denied Major
Wigginton due process by not explaining to him the reasons for his non-
retention. Accordingly, the District Court granted the summary
judgment motion of General Centracchio, denied that of Major Wigginton,
and entered judgment against Major Wigginton and in favor of General
Centracchio and the State of Rhode Island.7
With respect to Major Wigginton's claim under the first count
– i.e., the claim that he had a protected property right arising under
R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 of which he could not be deprived without due
process of law - the District Court stated:
Plaintiff presents the affidavit of Brigadier
General Thomas M. Frazer, RIANG (Ret.), an
authority on Rhode Island military history. At
plaintiff's request, General Frazer reviewed the
Military Code of Rhode Island and found it to be
"archaic and woefully outdated." Although
General Frazer educated the court as to the
historical distinctions between line, staff, and
general officers, he was unfamiliar with any
"staff corps" in the Rhode Island National Guard,
7 The docket sheet establishes that, concurrently with the grant of
General Centracchio's motion for summary judgment, judgment was entered
in favor of both defendants. On this appeal, a single brief has been
filed for General Centracchio and the State of Rhode Island. (The
docket sheet does not reflect any challenge to the inclusion of the
State of Rhode Island as a named defendant).
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and he could only speculate as to what was meant
by "and departments." Speaking specifically
about the text of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13,
Frazer stated quite candidly, "I have no thought
or idea what the writer was trying to convey to
the reader . . . ." The defendant's attempt to
discover the meaning of "staff corps" was no more
fruitful. Colonel Rick Baccus, director of
personnel and speaking on behalf of the RIANG,
was himself hard-pressed to explain to what the
expression "staff corps and departments" refers.
Of course, in this case, it is incumbent on Major
Wigginton to establish that he was a member of
the "staff corps and departments." Even he
cannot say with any conviction that he held any
such commission. In fact, although Major
Wigginton at one time "believed" he was a member
of the staff corps, he now admits that he was
"never an officer of a corps identified as staff
corps officer." On this basis, Major Wigginton's
substantive due process claim must fail.
In addressing Major Wigginton's argument under the second
count that due process required a statement of reasons for his non-
retention, the District Court noted Major Wigginton's reliance on State
v. Ouimette, 367 A.2d 704 (R.I. 1976), a Rhode Island Supreme Court
decision holding that an applicant for parole has a due process
entitlement to a statement in writing of the reasons for denial of
parole. "In so holding," said the District Court, "the [Rhode Island
Supreme Court] balanced the burden of requiring a parole board to give
its explanation for its decision against the seriousness of the right
to have those reasons revealed. . . . Recognizing that Rhode Island
regards due process as a 'flexible concept,' [ Ouimette, 367 A.2d] at
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709, accord Matthews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335 (1976), [this]
court does not find the balance tips in Wigginton's favor."
From the District Court's judgment dismissing his suit Major
Wigginton has appealed.
II.
We have authority to address the issues tendered by Major
Wigginton on this appeal if - but only if - the District Court was
correct in ruling that appellant's suit is justiciable. In their brief
in this court, appellees invoke "well-settled case law that . . .
claims against superior officers by subordinates are not justicible
[sic]." However, appellees' invocation of "well-settled case law"
mandating a finding of non-justiciability appears to be directed only
at appellant's second count, and not at the first count,
notwithstanding that in the District Court the non-justiciability
aspect of General Centracchio's motion to dismiss was addressed to
Major Wigginton's entire complaint, and was so treated by the
Magistrate Judge in recommending to the District Court that Major
Wigginton's complaint be dismissed as presenting claims that were non-
justiciable. Appellees' brief does not undertake to explain why the
issue of justiciability has become narrower in focus between the
District Court and this court.8
8 Possibly, the explanation is traceable to the fact that the District
Court, while disposing of the first count adversely to Major Wigginton
on the merits, did characterize its rejection of both prongs of the
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If appellees, in their brief on appeal, had made no mention
of justiciability, we might have regarded that issue as not before us.
That was the course taken by this court in Charles v. Rice, 28 F.3d
1312, 1316 n.2 (1st Cir. 1994): we there pointed out that certain
issues with respect to which "[t]he district court issued interlocutory
second count as stemming from the conclusion that "[t]hese claims are
not justiciable."
As pointed out in footnote 2, supra, the second count, in addition
to claiming a lack of due process in the failure of the Selective
Retention Board and General Centracchio to recite the reasons
underlying Major Wigginton's non-retention, alleged a failure to follow
"the criteria set forth in [NGR 635-102]." The District Court held, in
reliance on this court's decision in Navas v. González Vales, 752 F.2d
765, 769-70 (1st Cir. 1985), that, because Major Wigginton had not
sought review by the Army Board for the Correction of Military Records
of the challenged selective retention procedures, his claim of non-
compliance with NGR 635-102 "was nonreviewable as a matter of
administrative law." When translated into this court's language in
Navas, the District Court's holding may be taken as signifying that
Major Wigginton's "regulatory claim [was] a nonjusticiable military
matter as he failed to exhaust his intraservice administrative
remedies." 752 F.2d at 771. (Given our ruling in Navas, it is
unsurprising that appellant has not pressed the NGR 635-102 issue on
this appeal).
As noted in the text, supra, the District Court's analysis of Major
Wigginton's claim of due process entitlement to be told the reasons for
non-retention gave some attention to the Rhode Island Supreme Court's
opinion in Ouimette, supra and it also mentioned the United States
Supreme Court's opinion in Mathews v. Eldridge, supra. That aspect of
the analysis could be read as rejecting Major Wigginton's due process
claim as being unpersuasive as a matter of constitutional law.
However, a later portion of the analysis culminated in emphasizing "the
tremendous deference owed to military decision making." In view of
this latter observation, it seems fair to conclude that the District
Court, in stating that "[t]hese [second count] claims are not
justiciable," did indeed mean that no part of the second count was
litigable.
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orders . . . . have not been briefed by the parties on appeal, and we
do not address them in this case"; among those unaddressed issues was
a district court ruling "that plaintiff's case was justiciable." But
since, in the case at bar, justiciability has been preserved as an
issue, we are obligated to address it. Moreover, we are persuaded that
we should address the issue as it relates to both counts of Major
Wigginton's complaint. Since justiciability is an issue which, as
presented to the District Court, posed a question as to the authority
of that court to proceed with any aspect of Major Wigginton's case, we
do not think that appellees' decision to present the issue to this
court in truncated form - directed at the second count of the
complaint but, as we read appellees' brief, not the first count -
should operate to confine our inquiry. We are reinforced in this
conclusion by the fact that we have not identified any readily arguable
doctrinal basis for supposing that appellant's second count may be less
- or more - justiciable than his first count. Accordingly, we turn to
a consideration of the comprehensive submission advanced by General
Centracchio in his motion to dismiss in the District Court: "internal
military personnel decisions concerning a member's fitness for duty
have long been held to be non-reviewable by civilian courts."
The District Court, in its opinion granting summary judgment,
recapitulated its prior ruling in which it had reviewed the
recommendation of the Magistrate Judge:
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that this case should be dismissed as a
nonjusticiable controversy. See Report and
Recommendation at 10 (February 5, 1997) (citing
United States v. Stanley, 483 U.S. 669, 683-84
(1987) and Chappell v. Wallace, 462 U.S. 296, 304
(1983)). By order dated March 31, 1998, this
court declined to accept this recommendation in
toto, finding that only claims for damages
are categorically barred by
the doctrine of intramilitary
immunity and that injunctive
remedies may be available to
state guardsmen. Compare
Wright v. Park, 5 F.3d 586,
589-90 (1st Cir. 1993)
(holding claims for damages on
account of injuries incident
to military service are
barred) with Charles v. Rice,
28 F.3d 1312, 1321 (1st Cir.
1994) (affirming exercise of
federal question jurisdiction
over national guardsman's
claim for reinstatement).
Accordingly, the court ruled
that this matter was
justiciable.
The District Court correctly parsed our decision in Wright
v. Park. That decision built upon the Supreme Court's 1983 decision in
Chappell v. Wallace, supra, and the Court's 1987 decision in United
States v. Stanley, supra. In Chappell, the Supreme Court held that,
"[t]aken together, the unique disciplinary structure of the Military
Establishment and Congress' activity in the field constitute special
factors which dictate that it would be inappropriate to provide
enlisted military personnel with a Bivens-type remedy against their
superior officers." 462 U.S. at 304. (We explained, in Wright v.
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Park, that " Bivens is the case establishing, as a general proposition,
that victims of a constitutional violation perpetrated by a federal
actor may sue the offender for damages in federal court despite the
absence of explicit statutory authorization for such suits." 5 F.3d at
589 n.4). Stanley substantially widened Chappell. Stanley - as we
noted in Wright v. Park - "concluded that the Chappell approach should
apply to all activities performed 'incident to service' rather than
merely to activities performed within the officer/subordinate sphere.
Stanley, 483 U.S. at 680-81." 5 F.3d at 590.9 Our recognition that,
pursuant to Stanley, "no Bivens remedy is available for injuries that
'arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to service,'"
483 U.S. at 146, led us to state in Wright v. Park that "we now join
several of our sister circuits in accepting this bright-line rule as
the definitive statement on the justiciability of civil rights claims
in the military context, including the National Guard." 5 F.3d at 590.
We then went on to point out that "Wright's suit" - the suit at issue
in Wright v. Park - "invoked the Civil Rights Act rather than following
the Bivens route. But, absent a specific statutory provision to the
contrary, there is no principled basis for according state actors sued
9 As we observed in Wright v. Park, 5 F.3d at 590, the Stanley Court
found, see 483 U.S. at 684, that its broadening of Chappell was
required in order to maintain doctrinal symmetry with Feres v. United
States, 340 U.S. 135 (1950), which foreclosed damage actions against
the United States "under the Federal Tort Claims Act for injuries to
servicemen where the injuries arise out of or are in the course of
activity incident to service." Id. at 146.
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under 42 U.S.C. §1983 a different degree of immunity than would be
accorded federal actors sued for an identical abridgement of rights
under Bivens." Wright v. Park, 5 F.3d at 591. Thus, Wright v. Park
precludes § 1983 damage actions that "arise out of or are in the course
of activity incident to service," including National Guard service.
Accordingly, the District Court in the case at bar was correct in its
understanding that all intramilitary damage actions are foreclosed by
Wright v. Park.
Was the District Court also correct in concluding that "only
claims for damages are categorically barred" (emphasis added)? The
District Court gleaned this from Charles v. Rice. That case, as the
District Court pointed out, was an instance of "exercise of federal
question jurisdiction over [a] national guardsman's claim for
reinstatement." However, Charles v. Rice is not binding authority for
the propriety of that exercise of federal question jurisdiction. As we
have already had occasion to point out, in Charles v. Rice the issue of
the justiciability of the reinstatement suit brought by the plaintiff
national guardsman was addressed by the district court in an
interlocutory ruling but was not preserved as an issue on appeal, with
the result that this court expressly refrained from passing on the
issue. 28 F.3d at 1316 n.2. We are satisfied, nonetheless, that in
ruling - contrary to the Magistrate Judge's assessment - that Major
Wigginton's suit was justiciable, the District Court was correct in
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concluding that Wright v. Park is not a bar to a guardsman's
reinstatement suit, whether brought against federal actors or, as in
the case at bar, against state actors pursuant to § 1983. This is so
for two reasons:
The first reason is that, as the foregoing reprise of Wright
v. Park establishes, our opinion in that case was solely concerned with
intramilitary suits for damages, whether brought against federal actors
or, under § 1983, against state actors.
The second, and controlling, reason is that, taken together,
Chappell and Stanley - the Supreme Court decisions Wright v. Park built
upon - make it clear that intramilitary suits alleging constitutional
violations but not seeking damages are justiciable.
In Chappell, the unanimous Court, in an opinion by Chief
Justice Burger, held that a federal district court could not entertain
a Bivens-type damage action in which Navy enlisted personnel complained
of racial discrimination at the hands of the officers in command of the
naval vessel on which the plaintiffs served. In the concluding section
of the opinion, Chief Justice Burger wrote:
Chief Justice Warren had occasion to note
that "our citizens in u n i f o r m m a y n o t b e
stripped of basic rights simply because they have
doffed their civilian clothes." Warren, The Bill
of Rights and the Military, 37 N. Y. U. L. Rev.
181, 188 (1962). This Court has never held, nor
do we now hold, that military personnel are
barred from all redress in civilian courts for
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constitutional wrongs suffered in the course of
military service. See, e.g., Brown v. Glines,
444 U.S. 348 (1980); Parker v. Levy, 417 U.S. 733
(1974); Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677
(1973). But the special relationships that
define military life have "supported the military
establishment's broad power to deal with its own
personnel. The most obvious reason is that
courts are ill-equipped to determine the impact
upon discipline that any particular intrusion
upon military authority might have." Warren,
supra, at 187.
We hold that enlisted military personnel may
not maintain a suit to recover damages from a
superior officer for alleged constitutional
violations.
462 U.S. at 304-05.
Four years later, in Stanley, the Court addressed the
question whether a plaintiff could bring a Bivens-type damage action,
years after having been discharged from the Army, against Army
personnel not all of whom had been his military superiors; the gravamen
of plaintiff's complaint was that, while in service, he had volunteered
to participate in what was represented as being a test of protective
military equipment but was in fact a test of the effects of LSD, and
that as part of the test he had been given doses of what - unbeknownst
to him until years after his discharge - was LSD, with deleterious
consequences. The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, in
distinguishing Chappell and ruling that Stanley's suit was viable,
Stanley v. United States, 786 F.2d 1490, 1495 (11th Cir. 1986), had
quoted Chief Justice Burger's statement in Chappell that "[t]his Court
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has never held, nor do we now hold, that military personnel are barred
from all redress in civilian courts for constitutional wrongs suffered
in the course of military service." Chappell, 462 U.S. at 304. But
the Supreme Court in Stanley, in reversing the Eleventh Circuit, ruled
that Chief Justice Burger's statement was inapposite to Bivens-type
actions such as the one brought by Stanley. "As the citations
immediately following that statement suggest, it referred to redress
designed to halt or prevent the constitutional violation rather than
the award of money damages." 483 U.S. at 683. Justice Brennan, joined
by Justice Marshall, filed an extended opinion, concurring in part and
dissenting in part; but that opinion clearly recognized that the
Court's opinion left undisturbed a military plaintiff's entitlement to
pursue an equitable action to bring constitutional violations to an
end. Justice Brennan's expressed concern was that, for one in
Stanley's circumstances, equitable relief would be unavailing. "Of
course experimentation with unconsenting soldiers, like any
constitutional violation, may be enjoined if and when discovered. An
injunction, however, comes too late for those already injured; for
these victims, 'it is damages or nothing.' Bivens, 403 U.S. at 410
(Harlan, J., concurring)." 483 U.S. at 690.10
10Justice Stevens joined a portion of Justice Brennan's opinion, but
not the portion from which the quotation is taken.
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In short, the lesson implicit in Wright v. Park is express
in Stanley: Major Wigginton's suit alleging federal constitutional
violations and seeking reinstatement in Rhode Island's national guard
is cognizable in a federal district court.
We turn, now, to a consideration of the merits of appellant's
claims.
III.
Appellant, as we have previously explained, makes two claims.
The first claim is that the joint action of the Selective Retention
Board and General Centracchio in terminating his status as a RIANG
officer has deprived him, without due process, of a property right,
conferred by R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13, to continue to "hold [his]
position" as an officer of the Rhode Island guard "until [he] shall
have reached the age of sixty (60) years." The second claim is that
the non-disclosure to Major Wigginton of the reasons for the Selective
Retention Board's recommendation of non-retention - a recommendation
which General Centracchio promptly accepted and acted upon - was, from
a due process perspective, a constitutionally fatal flaw in the non-
retention process.
We will first address appellant's narrowly focused second
claim.11
11In conformity with our ruling that appellant's suit is justiciable
because it is a suit in equity rather than a damage action, we assume,
arguendo, that if (1) we determine that appellant is correct as a
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A.
As noted earlier in this opinion, appellant's second claim -
that he had a due process right to be told the reasons for his non-
retention - invokes the Rhode Island Supreme Court's determination in
Ouimette, supra, that Rhode Island's parole board must, as a matter of
due process, state its reasons when it denies parole. See also Pine v.
Clark, 636 A.2d 1319, 1324 (R.I. 1994); State v. Tillinghast, 609 A.2d
217, 218 (R.I. 1992). Ouimette, decided in 1976, anticipated the
United States Supreme Court's pronouncement three years later in
Greenholtz v. Nebraska Penal Inmates, 442 U.S. 1, 16 (1979), that
"[t]he Nebraska procedure affords an opportunity to be heard, and when
parole is denied it informs the inmate in what respects he falls short
of qualifying for parole; this affords the process that is due under
these circumstances." Cf. id. at 20-21 (Powell, J., concurring in part
and dissenting in part); id. at 38-41 (Marshall, J., joined by Brennan
and Stevens, JJ., dissenting in part). See generally 59 Am. Jur. 2d
Pardon and Parole § 90 (1987) ("Right to Statement of Reasons for
Denial of Parole" (collecting cases)).
matter of legal theory with respect to at least one of his alternative
constitutional claims, and (2) appellant is then found by the District
Court to have established the predicate facts supporting such claim,
the District Court would conclude that appellant would be entitled to
some form of equitable relief. Whether such hypothesized relief might
properly encompass any of the several particularized types of relief
sought in appellant's complaint need not be considered at this stage of
this litigation.
-22-
In his brief on appeal, appellant finds it "ironic" that
appellees should take "the position that a convicted felon is entitled
to greater due process protection from the parole board than a
decorated veteran is from the Rhode Island National Guard." We think,
however, that appellant's submission, while perhaps having some
rhetorical appeal, does not adequately assess the relative interests at
stake of, on the one hand, a person who seeks continuity in employment
and, on the other hand, one who seeks release from confinement. By
conflating, rather than distinguishing between, these two scenarios,
appellant's analysis appears to overlook the fundamental precept that
"[t]he applicability of the guarantee of procedural due process depends
in the first instance on the presence of a legitimate 'property' or
'liberty' interest within the meaning of the Fifth or Fourteenth
Amendment." Arnett v. Kennedy, 416 U.S. 134, 164 (1974) (Powell, J.,
concurring in part and concurring in the result in part).
Reasons for denying parole are required to be stated because
denial of parole is denial of the most basic "'liberty' interest." As
Justice Powell observed in Greenholtz, 442 U.S. at 18, "[l]iberty from
bodily restraint always has been recognized as the core of the liberty
protected by the Due Process Clause from arbitrary governmental
action."
Appellant's interest is of a different sort. On the verge
of completing twenty years of military service - the great bulk of it
-23-
as a commissioned RIANG officer - Major Wigginton wished to be one of
the twenty-year guard officers selected to continue in service (with,
indeed, some possibility of further promotion) pursuant to a program
under which - since there are "comparatively few higher level command
and staff positions"12 - only a portion of the twenty-year officers can
be selected for retention. Manifestly, what was at stake for Major
Wigginton was not a "'liberty' interest." In order to qualify for
procedural due process protection, Major Wigginton's hope for retention
would, therefore, have to be a "'property' interest." But in the
absence of an employment contract for a stated time period, or some
analogous hiring engagement contemplating a form of job tenure,13 Major
Wigginton had no cognizable property interest in continued employment
in RIANG - unless R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13, the statute which underpins
appellant's first count, applies to appellant and vested in appellant
12 See supra note 1 and accompanying text.
13 Academic tenure is, of course, a widespread phenomenon, and
abridgement of tenured employment not infrequently gives rise to
litigation. See, e.g., Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U.S. 589,
592 (1967); Keefe v. Geanakos, 418 F.2d 359, 363 (1st Cir. 1969)
(speaking for this court, then-Chief Judge Aldrich observed: "Academic
freedom is not preserved by compulsory retirement, even at full pay.").
Tenure for a period of years is a standard concomitant of elective
office, see Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.S. 486 (1969); Bond v. Floyd,
385 U.S. 116 (1966), and it is also a usual concomitant of those
appointive offices that are intended not to be subject to direction by
the executive branch. See Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295
U.S. 602 (1935); Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 167-68 ("It
is, then, the opinion of the Court . . . that the appointment conferred
on him a legal right to the office for the space of five years.").
-24-
a property right to hold his RIANG commission until age sixty. In
short, whether appellant has a viable due process claim under the
second count of his complaint depends, in the first instance, on the
answer to the questions of Rhode Island law with respect to the proper
construction of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 that are central to
appellant's claim under the first count of his complaint - the
questions to which we now turn.14
B.
It is Major Wigginton's basic submission - key to the first
count of his complaint, and for the reasons we have just discussed, to
the second count as well - that R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 gave him a
property right, of which he could not be deprived without due process,
to retain his RIANG commission until age sixty. Such a
constitutionally protected property right to retain a public position
for a stated term arises when state law has conferred upon a public
position elements of continuity sufficient to support the conclusion
14 In saying that "whether appellant has a viable due process claim
under the second count" depends on a determination of the proper
construction of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13, we do not mean to suggest
that if appellant's construction of the statute is correct, he
necessarily will prevail on his second count claim. To prevail,
appellant would have to establish that (1) his state law entitlement is
strong enough to constitute a federally protected right, see text infra
at note 15, and (2) by not being informed of the reasons for non-
retention he was denied due process. Whether appellant's due process
argument has merit need not be addressed unless appellant's contention
that R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 conferred upon him a federally protected
right is sustained.
-25-
that, as a matter of federal law, the person asserting the due process
claim has "an enforceable expectation of continued public employment."
Bishop v. Wood, 426 U.S. 341, 345 (1976).15 In order to address Major
Wigginton's contention that the statute establishes such a property
right, it may be helpful to set forth once again the full text of the
statute:
All commissioned officers of the staff corps and
departments, hereafter appointed, shall have had
previous military experience, except chaplains,
officers of the judge advocate general's corps,
and medical corps officers. They shall hold
their positions until they shall have reached the
age of sixty (60) years, unless retired prior to
that time by reason of resignation or disability,
or for cause to be determined by an efficiency
board or a court-martial legally convened for
that purpose. Vacancies among these officers
shall be filled by appointment from the
commissioned officers of the national guard or
from such other civilians as may be specifically
qualified for duty therein.
15 Cf. cases cited supra note 13. "The pretermination process due a
government employee is a matter of federal law, see Rivera-Flores v.
Puerto Rico Tel. Co., 64 F.3d 742, (1st Cir. 1995), whereas the
preliminary question whether a government employee possessed a
protectable 'property right,' or a legitimate expectation of continued
employment, is controlled by the employment contract or state law. See
id." Ortiz-Piñero v. Rivera-Arroyo, 84 F.3d 7, 17 (1st Cir. 1996);
accord Fireside Nissan v. Fanning, 30 F.3d 206, 219 (1st Cir. 1994).
While the "preliminary question whether" an asserted right is a
"protectable 'property right'" is "controlled by . . . state law"
(which defines the ingredients and scope of the asserted right),
whether the asserted right as "controlled by . . . state law"
constitutes a "'property right'" of constitutional dimension is a
federal question. See E.B. v. Verniero, 119 F.3d 1077, 1106 n.27 (3d
Cir. 1997).
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It seems apparent that the quoted statutory language
contemplates some form of continuity in office until age sixty for
those commissioned RIANG officers who are "officers of the staff corps
and departments." Appellant - an officer initially commissioned as a
Military Police Officer, later assigned as a Public Affairs Officer,
and ultimately asked to serve as an Education Officer - contends that
he was an officer of the "staff corps and departments." Appellees
contend that he was not. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the
District Court denied summary judgment in favor of appellant and
granted summary judgment in favor of appellees.
We will now consider the grounds for the summary judgment
rulings.
i.
With a view to elucidating the phrase "staff corps and
departments" - a phrase that appears to have had its genesis in Rhode
Island law in 1956, when a statutory code governing RIANG was enacted16
16 The phrase "staff corps and departments" appears in two other
sections of the statutory code governing RIANG. (For the reader's
convenience the phrase is printed in bold type):
The national guard shall consist of such number of federally
recognized general officers, officers, warrant officers, and
enlisted persons, duly commissioned, warranted, or enlisted
therein, including officers and enlisted persons of the
staff corps and departments, and organized as to branch or
arm of service into such federally recognized units,
organizations, corps, departments, or otherwise as shall be
authorized by the laws of the United States and the
regulations issued thereunder.
-27-
R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-1.
Persons hereafter commissioned as officers of the national
guard shall be selected from the following classes:
(1) Officers or enlisted persons of the national guard;
(2) Officers, active or retired, reserve officers, and
former officers of the United States army, air force, navy,
marine corps, or coast guard, enlisted men and former
enlisted persons of the United States army, air force, navy,
marine corps, or coast guard who have received an honorable
discharge therefrom;
(3) Graduates of any of the United States military and naval
academies;
(4) Graduates of schools, colleges, universities, and
officers' training camps, where they have received military
instruction under the supervision of an officer of the armed
forces on active duty who certified their fitness for
appointment as commissioned officers;
(5) For the technical branches or staff corps and
departments, such other civilians as may be specially
qualified for duty therein; and
(6) Or otherwise, as the above classes shall be changed or
altered by the laws of the United States and the regulations
issued thereunder.
R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-11.
Similar, but not identical, wording is to be found in the first sub-
section (here, in bold type) of a statute dealing with the governor's
authority to organize, and reorganize, units of the Rhode Island
militia:
(a) The governor may organize, alter, increase, divide,
annex, consolidate, reorganize, disband, or decrease any
unit, organization, staff corps, and department whenever in
his or her judgment the efficiency of the state militia will
be thereby increased or to make the state conform to any
table of organization or system of training prescribed by
-28-
- the parties summoned experts:
Brigadier General (Retired) Thomas M. Frazer, former
Assistant Adjutant General for Rhode Island and former Deputy
Commanding General of RIANG, furnished an affidavit on Major
Wigginton's behalf. General Frazer stated that "[i]n my opinion the HQ
STARC position of Education Officer is a Staff position." With
respect to the meaning of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13, General Frazer
said:
This document and booklet called the Military
Code of Rhode Island is an archaic writing and
woefully outdated. However it is still utilized
in current day fashion within the National Guard.
I have no thought or idea what the writer was
trying to convey to the reader and that thought
can be argued into the future. It is my thought
and opinion that the term "All commissioned
officers of the staff corps and departments" was
the laws of the United States or the rules or regulations
prescribed thereunder for the organization and training of
the national guard.
(b) For that purpose, the number of commissioned officers,
warrant officers and enlisted men in any unit, organization,
staff corps, and department may be increased or diminished
and the grades of these commissioned officers, warrant
officers, and enlisted men may be altered to the extent
necessary to conform thereto.
(c) No organization of the national guard shall be disbanded
nor its minimum strength reduced except in conformity with
the laws of the United States.
R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-2-9.
-29-
and is referring to the various Staff Officers of
the National Guard.
General Centracchio's expert was Colonel Rick Baccus, who
gave extensive deposition testimony. At the time of his deposition,
Colonel Baccus was a supervisory logistics management specialist in
RIANG; prior to that assignment he had served as RIANG's personnel
director. When asked "what is your definition of the term commissioned
officers of the states [sic] corps and departments in Rhode Island
General Law 30-3-13?," Colonel Baccus replied:
A. Since I wasn't involved in writing the law, it
would be difficult for me to give you a specific
definition, I can only surmise what I think the
definition is, and, again, it's referring to some
kind of specialty, a special staff position and
that's where I only drew the analogy.
Q. But you really don't know, do you?
A. No, sir, because I was not involved with the
law.
A subsequent colloquy was to the same effect:
Q. We have focused a lot on the meaning of the
words staff corps, there's also the phrase in
there Rhode Island General Law?
A. And departments.
Q. Do you attach any meaning to that phrase?
A. No, not at all. Again, sir, I do not know
what the law, what the, you know, the authors of
the law or what they were basing the previous law
-30-
under. They may have carried that forward from
previous law.
When asked about the meaning of "staff corps and departments" in R.I.
Gen. Laws § 30-3-1 (another provision of the statutory code governing
RIANG in which the phrase appears)17 Colonel Baccus responded:
To be honest, sir, because I was not involved
with writing law, I'm not sure, there is no
equivalent to today's terminology.
After noting that neither General Frazer nor Colonel Baccus
purported to be able to offer a coherent construction of "staff corps
and departments," the District Court ruled as follows:
Of course, in this case, it is incumbent on Major
Wigginton to establish that he was a member of
the "staff corps and departments." Even he
cannot say with any conviction that he held such
commission. In fact, although Major Wigginton at
one time "believed" he was a member of the staff
corps, he now admits that he was "never an
officer of a corps identified as staff corps
officer." On this basis Major Wigginton's
substantive due process claim must fail.
Here we part company with the District Court. On cross-
motions for summary judgment, a plaintiff loses if he cannot produce
evidence tending to establish a fact that, under the governing law, the
plaintiff is required to prove in order to make out his cause of
action. But that was not the situation at the point that the District
Court granted summary judgment against appellant and in favor of
appellees. When the District Court granted summary judgment, no
17 For the text of § 30-3-1, see supra note 16.
-31-
determination had been arrived at as to what the governing law was.
That is to say, neither the meaning of the phrase "staff corps and
departments" as used in R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-13-3, nor the extent of the
rights created by that statute if applicable, had been judicially
resolved. And under those circumstances, there was no way to tell
whether the evidence adduced by Major Wigginton would, if credited by
a fact-finder, suffice as a matter of Rhode Island law to present the
federal constitutional question whether state law rights had been
abridged without due process.18 Accordingly, it was error to grant
summary judgment on the first count in favor of General Centracchio and
the State of Rhode Island. And it would, a fortiori, have been error
to grant summary judgment in favor of Major Wigginton. To prevail on
his motion for summary judgment, it would have been necessary for Major
Wigginton to have established (1) that, as a matter of Rhode Island
law, at the time of his discharge from RIANG, he (a) came within the
embrace of the phrase "staff corps and departments," as used in R.I.
Gen. Laws § 30-3-13, and (b) was, therefore, entitled (in the absence
18 The District Court found it significant that, "although Major
Wigginton at one time 'believed' he was a member of the staff corps, he
now admits that he was 'never an officer of a corps identified as staff
corps officer.'" But neither the fact that Major Wigginton "at one
time 'believed' he was a member of the staff corps" nor the fact that
he subsequently acknowledged "that he was 'never an officer of a corps
identified as staff corps'" could be a datum of any ascertainable legal
significance prior to a time at which the term "staff corps," as used
in the statutory phrase "staff corps and departments," would acquire,
through judicial construction, some concrete legal meaning. Such a
time has not yet arrived.
-32-
of resignation, disability, or dismissal for cause) to continue as a
RIANG officer until age sixty;19 and (2) that, as a matter of federal
law, (a) his state law entitlement to retain his RIANG position until
age sixty constituted "an enforceable expectation of continued public
employment," Bishop v. Wood, supra, 426 U.S. at 345, and (b) he had
been deprived of that constitutionally protected state law entitlement
without due process of law.
Prior to a construction by the District Court of R.I. Gen.
Laws § 30-13-3, neither of the cross-motions for summary judgment was
ripe for disposition.
ii.
As we have just observed, the District Court did not arrive
at a dispositive construction of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13. We can do no
better.
The general thrust of the first two sentences of the statute
is apparent. Those persons who are "commissioned officers of the staff
corps and departments . . . shall hold their positions until they have
reached the age of sixty (60) years, unless retired prior to that time
by reason of resignation or disability, or for cause to be determined
by an efficiency board or a court martial." Major Wigginton - a
19Such entitlement would appear substantial enough to support what the
Supreme Court has characterized as "an enforceable expectation of
continued public employment." Bishop v. Wood, supra, 462 U.S. at 345.
See supra note 15.
-33-
commissioned officer of RIANG who had not reached age sixty, and who
had not been retired by reason of resignation or disability, or for
cause - would appear (absent any other contingencies attached to Major
Wigginton's continued employment by R.I. law) to be within the
protective embrace of the statute if he was an officer of the "staff
corps and departments." But what that latter phrase means remains
unclear. The first sentence of the statute - "All commissioned
officers of the staff corps and departments, hereafter appointed, shall
have had previous military experience, except chaplains, officers of
the judge advocate general's corps, and medical corps officers." -
makes it plain that the phrase "staff corps and departments" connotes
a cohort inclusive of, but broader than, "chaplains, officers of the
judge advocate general's corps, and medical officers." How much
broader? Broad enough to include Major Wigginton, an officer
originally commissioned in the Military Police, later assigned as a
Public Affairs Officer, and ultimately acting as an Education Officer?
We derive no useful textual guidance from the two other provisions of
the statutory code governing RIANG that employ the phrase "staff corps
and departments."20 Appellant and appellees, in their submissions to
20 See supra note 16.
It may be noted that the laws of Massachusetts governing the
Massachusetts guard provide that an officer of the "state staff" is
entitled to "hold his position until he reaches the age of sixty-five
years unless separated prior to that time by resignation, disability,
or for cause by a court-martial legally convened for that purpose."
-34-
this court, have been unable to adduce any useful legislative history
of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 and we have found none. Further, the
parties have not cited any pertinent decisions construing R.I. Gen.
Laws § 30-3-13; and our research confirms that no court (whether a
Rhode Island court, a federal court, or a court of another state) has,
in a reported opinion, construed "staff corps and departments" as
utilized in R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 (or, indeed, as utilized in either
of the two other provisions of the statutory code governing RIANG that
employ the phrase).
Thus, what we have before us is a Rhode Island statute which
is a tabula rasa. Moreover, the state military code of which the
statute is a part is a very special kind of state legislative
enactment, for the code governs the Rhode Island aspects of a joint
state-federal enterprise of great importance - the Rhode Island Army
National Guard. Under these circumstances, in order to achieve a
responsible resolution of the issues presented by this pending appeal,
it plainly would be better to have a current and authoritative
construction of R.I. Gen. Laws § 30-3-13 by the Rhode Island judiciary
than to have a conjectured prophecy by this court of what Rhode
Island's courts might be expected to rule at some future time.
Happily, the Supreme Court of Rhode Island has in place a procedure
Mass. Gen. Laws, ch. 33, § 15(a). However, § 15 goes on to identify,
by specific military designation, the several officers who compose the
"state staff."
-35-
pursuant to which it "may answer questions of law certified to it by .
. . a Court of Appeals of the United States . . . when requested by
the certifying court if there are involved in any proceeding before it
questions of law which may be determinative of the cause then pending
in the certifying court and as to which it appears to the certifying
court there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of this
court." Rhode Island Supreme Court Rules, Art. I, Rule 6, § 1. The
quoted rule precisely describes the circumstance in which this court
finds itself. In the pending appeal, what may prove determinative of
the cause are answers by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island to two
questions of Rhode Island law framed by the facts previously set forth
in this opinion:
1. At the time Major Wigginton was discharged
from RIANG, was he an officer of the "staff corps
and departments" within the meaning of R.I. Gen.
Laws § 30-3-13?
2. If the answer to Question 1 is "Yes," does
that signify that, pursuant to R.I. Gen. Laws §
30-3-13, Major Wigginton was (in the absence of
resignation, disability, or dismissal for cause)
therefore entitled to continue as a RIANG officer
until age sixty, or would Rhode Island's
statutory and/or decisional law attach any other
contingency to Major Wigginton's continued status
as a RIANG officer?
Accordingly, by an appropriate Certification Order
accompanying this opinion, we are certifying these questions of Rhode
Island law to the Supreme Court of Rhode Island.
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