Patricia E. Hubbard v. United States Postal Service

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD PATRICIA E. HUBBARD, DOCKET NUMBER Appellant, AT-0353-13-7341-I-1 v. UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE, DATE: November 25, 2014 Agency. THIS ORDER IS NONPRECEDENTIAL * John R. Macon, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant. Lori L. Markle, Esquire, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for the agency. BEFORE Susan Tsui Grundmann, Chairman Anne M. Wagner, Vice Chairman Mark A. Robbins, Member REMAND ORDER ¶1 The appellant has filed a petition for review of the initial decision, which dismissed her restoration appeal for lack of jurisdiction. For the reasons discussed below, we GRANT the appellant’s petition for review and REMAND the appeal for further adjudication consistent with this Remand Order. * A nonprecedential order is one that the Board has determined does not add significantly to the body of MSPB case law. Parties may cite nonprecedential orders, but such orders have no precedential value; the Board and administrative judges are not required to follow or distinguish them in any future decisions. In contrast, a precedential decision issued as an Opinion and Order has been identified by the Board as significantly contributing to the Board’s case law. See 5 C.F.R. § 1201.117(c). 2 BACKGROUND ¶2 The appellant is a Mailhandler who suffered an on-the-job injury in 2004. Initial Appeal File (IAF), Tab 7 at 77. As a result, she was given a limited-duty assignment for several years. As part of the National Reassessment Process, the appellant was placed off work in August 2010, and she appealed that action to the Board. That appeal was resolved pursuant to a settlement agreement executed in January 2011, under which the appellant was returned to a limited-duty assignment. MSPB Docket No. AT-0353-10-0995-I-1, Initial Decision (Jan. 6, 2011). On August 9, 2013, the agency offered the appellant a set of different limited duties, which she refused on the basis that she believed the duties were outside her medical restrictions, citing a left elbow injury that was being treated by her physician. IAF, Tab 7 at 28-29. Based on the appellant’s refusal to accept its offer, the agency sent her home that day. IAF, Tab 10 at 2-4. In dismissing the ensuing Board appeal for lack of jurisdiction, the administrative judge found that the appellant failed to make a nonfrivolous allegation that she was absent from her position due to a compensable injury, finding that the appellant’s approved injuries were for her neck, back, and shoulders, and that she was not approved for workers’ compensation due to an on-the-job elbow injury. IAF, Tab 12, Initial Decision at 5. ¶3 The appellant filed a timely petition for review, contending that the administrative judge’s findings were in error, and included a determination made by the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs (OWCP) after the issuance of the initial decision. Petition for Review (PFR) File, Tab 1. The agency did not respond to the petition for review. ANALYSIS The administrative judge erred in finding that the appellant’s left elbow injury was not approved for compensation by OWCP. ¶4 As the appellant asserts in her petition for review, PFR File, Tab 1 at 2, 4-6, she presented evidence below that OWCP had approved for compensation an 3 injury to her left elbow. In claim number 062282620, OWCP initially denied the appellant’s claim of injury to her left arm, elbow, and fingers incurred as a result of repairing damaged letters and flats at work. IAF, Tab 10, Exhibit (Ex.) 1 (fax page 19). In a reconsideration decision issued on June 1, 2012, however, OWCP vacated its earlier determination and approved the appellant’s claim for left lateral epicondylitis. Id. at Ex. 2 (fax page 20). Epicondylitis is a “painful and sometimes disabling inflammation of the muscle and surrounding tissues of the elbow caused by repeated stress and strain on the forearm near the lateral epicondyle of the humerus (arm bone).” Mosby’s Medical Dictionary (8th ed. 2009). We thus find that the administrative judge erred in finding that the appellant’s left elbow injury was not approved for compensation by OWCP. ¶5 Even if OWCP had not determined that the appellant had sustained a work-related injury to her left elbow, however, the agency was not free to ignore that condition when reassigning her from one set of limited duties to another. The agency’s Employee and Labor Relations Manual (ELM) recognizes that an individual who is referred for reassignment or reemployment consideration by OWCP may have some degree of concurrent disability that is not caused by or related to the original job injury or disability; the ELM also states that the agency physician or occupational health nurse should carefully evaluate all concurrent disabilities and include their potential impact in their recommendation for reassignment or reemployment to the appointing official. ELM § 546.622. Accordingly, the agency was obligated to consider the appellant’s left elbow condition in any limited-duty assignments it offered the appellant. See Latham v. U.S. Postal Service, 117 M.S.P.R. 400, ¶¶ 12-13, 30-34 (2012) (an agency must comply with its own rules, including ELM provisions, when they provide additional benefits or protections to a partially-recovered individual). 4 The appellant has made a nonfrivolous allegation that the agency arbitrarily and capriciously denied her restoration to employment. ¶6 To establish jurisdiction over an appeal under 5 C.F.R. § 353.304(c), an appellant must prove by preponderant evidence that: (1) she was absent from her position due to a compensable injury; (2) she recovered sufficiently to return to duty on a part-time basis or to return to work in a position with less demanding physical requirements than those previously required of her; (3) the agency denied her request for restoration; and (4) the denial was arbitrary and capricious because of the agency’s failure to perform its obligations under 5 C.F.R. § 353.301(d). Latham, 117 M.S.P.R. 400, ¶ 10. An appellant who makes nonfrivolous allegations of jurisdiction concerning all four prongs of the jurisdictional standard is entitled to a jurisdictional hearing. Paszko v. U.S. Postal Service, 119 M.S.P.R. 207, ¶ 8 (2013). ¶7 It is undisputed that the appellant established the first two of these elements. Regarding the third jurisdictional element, the Board has stated that there is nothing to prevent an agency from assigning a partially-recovered employee from one set of modified duties to another. Id., ¶ 10 n.4. A challenge to such an action would ordinarily not concern a denial of restoration; it would pertain merely to the “details and circumstances” of the restoration, which are not appealable. See id. A job offer that is outside an employee’s medical restrictions, however, does constitute a denial of restoration. Id., ¶ 9. ¶8 With her petition for review, the appellant has included a December 11, 2013 determination by OWCP that the agency’s August 9, 2013 offer of a limited-duty assignment was unsuitable because the physical requirements in the job offer exceeded those listed in the medical report and duty status provided by the treating physician on October 29, 2013, as well as his correspondence dated August 14, 2013. PFR File, Tab 1 at 46. Determinations of the suitability of an offered position are within the exclusive domain of OWCP, and it is that agency, not the employing agency and not the Board, which possesses the requisite 5 expertise to evaluate whether a position is suitable in light of the employee’s particular medical condition. Bynum v. U.S. Postal Service, 112 M.S.P.R. 403, ¶ 23 (2009), aff’d, 382 F. App’x 934 (Fed. Cir. 2010). Accordingly, we find that the appellant has established that she was denied restoration. ¶9 As to the fourth element, the appellant alleged that the tasks entailed in the limited-duty assignment she had been performing until that day continue to be performed by other employees and that these duties did not need to be transferred to other employees in order to provide them with sufficient work. See IAF, Tab 10 at 9. Even though the agency does not appear to have contested those allegations, that does not necessarily establish that the agency acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it sent the appellant home on August 9, 2013, in that the agency may have believed in good faith that it expected a favorable suitability ruling from OWCP. See Paszko, 119 M.S.P.R. 207, ¶ 8. Nevertheless, we conclude that the appellant has made a nonfrivolous allegation that the agency acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying her restoration, which entitles her to a jurisdictional hearing. See id. ORDER ¶10 We REMAND this appeal to the regional office for further adjudication consistent with the above analysis, including a hearing on the issue of jurisdiction. In addition, should the administrative judge find jurisdiction over 6 the appeal, he shall adjudicate the appellant’s claim of disability discrimination. See IAF, Tab 1 at 2; PFR File, Tab 1 at 15. FOR THE BOARD: ______________________________ William D. Spencer Clerk of the Board Washington, D.C.