          In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                        No. 11-200C
                                    (Filed: May 9, 2013)

                                             )
SALVATORE BORTONE,                           )
                                             )
                      Plaintiff,             )       Living Quarters Allowance eligibility
                                             )       under the Overseas Differentials and
v.                                           )       Allowances Act; 5 U.S.C. § 5923;
                                             )       Department of State Standardized
THE UNITED STATES,                           )       Regulations §§ 031.11-.12;
                                             )       Department of Defense Instruction
                      Defendant.             )       1418.1
                                             )


Scott A. Simmons, Richmond, VA, for plaintiff.

Renee Gerber, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, with whom
were Stuart F. Delery, Principal Assistant Attorney General, and Jeanne E. Davidson,
Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, for defendant.

                                         OPINION

FIRESTONE, Judge.

       Pending before the court is the defendant’s (“government”) motion for summary

judgment in this action brought by plaintiff, Mr. Salvatore Bortone, a criminal

investigator for the Europe and Africa Field Office of the Naval Criminal Investigative

Service (“NCIS”) in Naples, Italy, for wrongful denial of $284,000 in living quarter

allowance (“LQA”) plus interest and associated legal costs. 1 LQA is provided under the


1
  Plaintiff claims that he has been wrongfully denied LQA since at least 1981 when NCIS
initially determined that he was ineligible for LQA. The statute of limitations to bring a Tucker
Act claim before this court is six years. 28 U.S.C. § 2501. In recognition of the statute of
                                                 1
Oversees Differential and Allowance Act (the “Act”), 5 U.S.C. §§ 5921 et seq. to

supplement the salary of eligible United States government employees stationed in

foreign areas. Id. § 5923(a)(2). LQA can be provided for rent, heat, light, fuel, gas,

electricity, and water. The Department of State implemented the LQA provisions

through the promulgation of the Department of State Standardized Regulations

(“DSSR”). 2 Mr. Bortone lived in Naples when he was encouraged by NCIS personnel to

apply for a position with the NCIS’s Naples office. He applied for the job at NCIS and

traveled to NCIS’s office in Suitland, Maryland to be hired. Mr. Bortone argues that

under the DSSR, he is eligible for LQA as someone who was “recruited” in the United

States.




limitations, plaintiff only seeks damages for the six years prior to filing this action. In this
connection, the plaintiff has invoked the continuing claims exception. The continuing claims
exception applies in cases against the government where a new claim accrues each time a
payment is due. Burich v. United States, 366 F.2d 984, 986 (Ct. Cl. 1966); see also Adde v.
United States, 81 Fed. Cl. 415, 420 (2008) (“For each paycheck received which did not include a
post allowance, plaintiff has a claim which accrued on the date she received the alleged
underpayment.”). Accordingly, plaintiff seeks damages only for the six years prior to instituting
the instant action and the government has not raised a jurisdictional issue with respect to
plaintiff’s claim.
2
  As discussed infra, under the DSSR, LQA eligibility is determined based on whether the
employee was “recruited” from within or outside of the United States. DSSR §§ 031.11-.12. If
recruited from in the United States to work abroad, the employee may be granted LQA. DSSR §
031.11. If recruited from outside of the United States, (1) the employee’s residence outside of
the United States at the time of recruitment must be “fairly attributable” to the prior employment,
(2) the employee must have been initially recruited from inside the United States by the prior
employer, (3) the employee must have had an agreement with the previous employer that
provided for return to the United States upon completion or separation from that previous job,
and (4) the employment must be “substantially continuous” with the previous employer. DSSR
§ 031.12.

                                                2
       The government argues that the undisputed facts establish that the plaintiff is not

eligible for LQA under the applicable statutory and regulatory scheme because he was

not “recruited” in the United States. Plaintiff argues that there are genuine issues of

material fact relating to his eligibility for LQA which preclude granting summary

judgment.

       For the reasons discussed below, the court finds that there are no genuine issues of

material fact regarding Mr. Bortone’s eligibility for LQA and that Mr. Bortone is

ineligible for LQA under the applicable law. Accordingly, the government’s motion for

summary judgment is GRANTED.

I.     Factual Background

       The following facts are taken from the parties’ briefing and associated exhibits and

are undisputed unless noted otherwise.

       A.     Mr. Bortone’s initial employment with the federal government at the
              Naples, Italy Navy Exchange

       Mr. Bortone was born in Italy in 1934 and moved to the United States in the early

1960s, where he took up residence in New Jersey. In 1968 he was naturalized, becoming

a United States citizen. While living in New Jersey, Mr. Bortone worked as a plumber

for the City of Paterson Board of Education. In July 1974, he traveled to Naples, Italy on

vacation to visit relatives. While in Italy, at the urging of an Air Force major with whom

plaintiff was in contact, Mr. Bortone applied for a security job with the Naples Navy




                                              3
Exchange, a Department of Defense (“DoD”) non-appropriated fund instrumentality. 3

Mr. Bortone returned to New Jersey in August 1974 upon completion of his vacation.

       In October 1974, after his return to New Jersey, plaintiff received a call from his

brother living in Italy who said that the Navy Exchange was attempting to contact Mr.

Bortone with a job offer. Mr. Bortone made contact with the Navy Exchange and was

offered a job as a security guard, which he accepted. Before moving to Italy, he stored

his furniture 4 and forwarded his mail to a friend’s house located at 50 Third Avenue,

Hawthorne, New Jersey. 5 Mr. Bortone never lived at this address either before or after he

stored his furniture there and “maintained that address as a domestic address of record.”

Bortone Aff. ¶ 9, Pl. Ex. C, ECF No. 29-3.

       In November 1974, Mr. Bortone moved to Italy to begin work as a security guard

at the Navy Exchange. The position paid the lowest grade and step hourly wage rate. It

required no prior experience. Mr. Bortone did not receive and was never offered either

LQA or compensated travel rights back to the United States as part of his pay and

benefits at the Navy Exchange. Indeed, the Navy Exchange never deemed Mr. Bortone


3
 Plaintiff states that it is a disputed fact whether Mr. Bortone applied to the Navy Exchange
while on a tourist’s visa, Pl. Opp. 6, but the government states that it does not dispute this fact.
Def. Rep. 1.
4
 Mr. Bortone’s friend, at the request of the Mr. Bortone, sold the furniture in or just after 1981
once Mr. Bortone determined that he would not need the furniture anymore. Bortone Dep. 151,
Pl. Ex. E, ECF No. 29-5. The friend also subsequently sold the house where the furniture had
been stored. Id.
5
  Plaintiff states that it is a disputed fact whether Mr. Bortone was a United States citizen and
resident of New Jersey at the time of his employment by the Navy Exchange, Pl. Opp. 6, but the
government states that it does not dispute these facts. Def. Reply 1.

                                                  4
to be eligible for a compensated return trip upon completion of his employment at the

Navy Exchange. Plaintiff was issued a foreigner’s work permit on January 29, 1975 and

began work 6 at the Navy Exchange where he remained until 1981, eventually becoming a

detective.

       From the time plaintiff moved to Italy in 1974, through late 1979 or early 1980, he

lived with his brother in San Cipriano D’Aversa, Caserta, Italy. Since that time, through

the present, Mr. Bortone has lived at a single address in Castel Volturno, Caserta, Italy. 7

During the roughly six-year period of his employment at the Navy Exchange, Mr.

Bortone made only three trips back to the United States, each lasting about a week. The

first trip was to attend the funeral service for his uncle in New Jersey, the second trip was

to renew his New Jersey driver’s license, and the third trip was to interview and be sworn

in for the NCIS position, which is discussed in more detail in the following section.

       B.      Mr. Bortone’s Naples recruitment and Maryland hiring for
               employment at NCIS’s Naples office

       In 1981 the special agent in charge of NCIS 8 in Naples, Mr. Charles Bickley,

expressed his desire to have Mr. Bortone come work for him in a newly created position

as a drug laboratory support technician. Bortone Dep. 102, Def. Ex. 1, ECF No. 28-1

6
 The parties dispute the exact date of when Mr. Bortone began his work at the Navy Exchange,
with Mr. Bortone stating that he “unofficially” began work prior to the issuance of the January
1975 work permit.
7
 The parties dispute whether Mr. Bortone’s purpose for staying in Italy during this time frame
was solely attributable to his continued employment with the United States government.
8
  At the time, the agency was called the Naval Investigative Service, or NIS. For the purposes
here and for the sake of simplicity, the court will refer to the agency by its current name, NCIS,
regardless of its contemporaneous name during the relevant timeframe.

                                                 5
(“Bickerly [sic], said we want Sal to work with us.”); Bickley Aff. 1, Pl. Ex I, ECF No.

29-9. NCIS believed that Mr. Bortone was particularly well qualified for the position.

Bortone Dep. 102. The job description was written by staff in NCIS’s Suitland,

Maryland office and did not expressly state that the duty station would be in Naples.

NCIS sent the description to Mr. Bortone in Naples. Bortone Dep. 21. Mr. Bickley,

believing that plaintiff would be a good employee, requested plaintiff to complete an

application for the position. Bortone Dep. 103; Bickley Aff. 1. In response to Mr.

Bickley’s overture to apply, plaintiff filled out a personal qualification statement for the

NCIS position, listing his Castel Volturno residence as his address. Personal

Qualification Statement, Def. Appx. 43. Mr. Bortone further noted on the personal

qualification statement that he would only accept a position in Naples. Id. He also noted

that his purpose for leaving his job as a plumber for the Paterson Board of Education—

the job he held just before work began at the Navy Exchange—was because of a death in

the family. 9 Id. Mr. Bortone signed the document on February 24, 1981. During this

period, Mr. Bickley contacted Mr. J. Brian McKee, then the head of the Administration

Department at the Suitland office, and told him that plaintiff was the “only one [who] can

make [the Naples] lab run.” Bortone Dep. 105. Mr. Bortone was told, prior to

interviewing, that the NCIS position “will be your job.” Bortone Dep. 245. The two


9
 Notwithstanding the contemporaneous reason provided for leaving his job as a plumber just
before moving to Italy and taking the Navy Exchange job, plaintiff subsequently denied in his
2010 responses to interrogatories that anyone in his family died in 1974 or 1975. Def. Appx. 21.
Mr. Bortone also states that he actually had been working for a short while at a private firm as a
plumbing contractor just prior to leaving for Italy.

                                                6
agreed that Mr. Bortone would fly to the Suitland office to be sworn into his position.

Mr. Bortone recalls that Mr. Bickley sent him to Suitland “to be hired.” Bortone Dep.

246. Mr. John J. D’Avanzo, who worked at the Suitland office when Mr. Bortone was

hired and subsequently served as Special Agent in Charge of the Naples office, also

remembers Mr. Bortone as a “stateside hire.” D’Avanzo Aff. 1, Pl. Ex. J, ECF No. 29-

10.

       NCIS arranged for plaintiff to fly to the Suitland, Maryland office at his own

expense for what was described as the “recruitment process.” Hiring Memo, Pl. Ex. D,

ECF No. 29-4. Mr. Bortone subsequently interviewed with Mr. McKee, signed his

appointment affidavit, and took his oath of office in Suitland for the Naples laboratory

position on July 20, 1981. He resigned from his Navy Exchange job three days later on

July 23, 1981. 10 On July 24, 1981, NCIS executed a “Request and Authorization for

DOD Civilian Permanent Duty Travel” (“July 24, 1981 Travel Authorization”). See Def.

Appx. 55. The July 24, 1981 Travel Authorization, which was signed by Mr. McKee,

authorized “Travel Between Official Stations” but explicitly noted at the bottom that

there would be “No Cost to the Government.” 11 Id. The box labeled “Return from

Overseas for Separation” remained unchecked. Id.



10
  Plaintiff states that it is a disputed fact whether Mr. Bortone was continuously employed by
the Navy Exchange immediately prior to beginning work at NCIS, Pl. Opp. 7-8, but the
government states that it does not dispute that Mr. Bortone was continuously employed. Def.
Reply 1.
11
   Notwithstanding the language contained in the July 24, 1981 Travel Authorization, plaintiff
contends that “[i]t was Mr. McKee’s intent and expectation that Mr. Bortone . . . would receive
all benefits normally given to such United States citizen employees upon arrival in Italy.”
                                                7
          Despite the paperwork signed in Suitland, Maryland, the Naples personnel office

took issue with the apparent lack of adequate appointment information necessary to

process plaintiff’s (and other employees’) hiring into the Naples location. Ms. Connie

Simone, a personnel staffing specialist who handled Mr. Bortone’s processing in Naples,

expressed concern and frustration with new hires repeatedly arriving in Naples for duty

without the necessary documentation. See Processing Memo, Def. Appx. 58-60.

Accordingly, after his return to Naples from Suitland, Mr. Bortone was asked to sign a

second appointment affidavit—identical to the first he had signed in Suitland—which he

did on July 27, 1981. 12 The second affidavit was signed by Ms. Simone in Naples. In

addition, Mr. Bortone signed a document titled “Transportation Agreement Oversea

Employ.” Mr. Bortone signed the document on August 19, 1981. 13 The Transportation

Agreement Oversea Employ document stated:

          5 U.S.C. 5722 provides, under certain conditions, for travel and
          transportation expenses of the employee and his immediate family,
          movement and storage of household goods and personal effects . . . . Under
          the law, the allowances contained therein shall not be authorized unless the
          employee agrees in writing to remain in the Government service for a
          prescribed period of time. Accordingly, to establish eligibility for travel
          and transportation the following agreement must be executed.

Transportation Agreement Oversea Employ, Def. Appx. 61. The document contained a

number of terms relating to the duration of employment and the circumstances by which



Compl. ¶ 12.
12
  Mr. Bortone has expressed “doubts” as to the authenticity of his signature on this document
and does not recall whether he took the oath of office again in Naples. Bortone Dep. 24-25.
13
     Mr. Bortone asserts that this document was actually signed on July 19, 1981.
                                                  8
an employee may leave the position without forfeiting transportation rights when

otherwise meeting the conditions necessary for such benefits. The agreement stated that

plaintiff’s “Place of Actual Residence at Time of Appointment” was 50 Third Avenue,

Hawthorne, New Jersey—the address of Mr. Bortone’s friend where Mr. Bortone was

storing his furniture. Def. Appx. 61.

       Following a request for LQA in October 1981, the Director of the Navy’s

Consolidated Civilian Personnel Office informed plaintiff and NCIS in a memo that

plaintiff was not eligible for LQA under the DSSR’s eligibility criteria. LQA Eligibility

Modification Memo, Def. Appx. 62-63. The Memo explained that Mr. Bortone was

deemed a “local hire” because he listed his Castel Volturno residence as his address on

the February 24, 1981 personal qualification form, and therefore he was not eligible for

LQA under the regulations governing eligibility for persons recruited in the United

States. Def. Appx. 62. The Memo further stated that Mr. Bortone failed to meet the

criteria necessary to receive LQA as a local hire under the eligibility criteria for persons

recruited outside the United States because he did not have a return travel agreement back

to the United States with the Navy Exchange, his prior employer. Def. Appx. 62.

       C.     Mr. Bortone’s subsequent efforts to obtain LQA before the Navy and
              before the United States Office of Personnel Management

       After the Navy initially denied Mr. Bortone’s request for LQA in 1981, he

continued to seek LQA benefits over the ensuing decades. In 1987 NCIS’s Regional

Director for Operations for Europe rejected plaintiff’s request for LQA on the grounds

that there was no “tangible evidence of residence” in the continental United States at the


                                              9
time of employment at NCIS. 1987 LQA Eligibility Memo, Pl. Ex. N, ECF No. 29-14.

In 1994 the Navy’s Office of Civilian Personnel Management (now the Office of Civilian

Human Resources) (“OCPM”) rejected Mr. Bortone’s request for LQA on the grounds

that Mr. Bortone’s employment appeared to stem from his chosen “home of record” in

Naples and that he did not live in Naples solely for the purpose of his employment at

NCIS. 1994 LQA Eligibility Memo, Pl. Ex. M, ECF No. 29-13. In 1995 OCPM denied

plaintiff’s request to reconsider the conclusions in the 1994 memo. 1995 LQA Eligibility

Memo, Pl. Ex. L, ECF No. 29-12.

       Mr. Bortone did not seek LQA again until 2008, when he filed a claim before the

United States Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”), pursuant to 31 U.S.C. §

3702(a)(2), 14 seeking to set aside the Navy’s denial of his LQA. OPM File No. 08-0098,

Decision (Apr. 16, 2010). Plaintiff claimed that he was entitled to LQA on two

alternative bases identified in the DSSR. First, plaintiff claimed he was entitled to LQA

because he was “recruited” into the NCIS from the United States by virtue of his hiring in

Suitland, Maryland. In the alternative, plaintiff claimed that he was eligible as a “local”

hire because (1) he had been employed with the Navy Exchange immediately before


14
  31 U.S.C. § 3702(a)(2) provides that “The Director of the Office of Personnel Management
shall settle claims involving Federal Civilian employees’ compensation and leave.”
Implementing regulations promulgated by OPM in part 178 of title 5, Code of Federal
Regulations (“C.F.R.”) provide that settlement of such claims before OPM is based only upon
the written record. 5 C.F.R. § 178.105. Where, as here, agency review of a claim arising under
31 U.S.C. § 3702 is limited to a review of the written record and does not afford the federal
employee an opportunity to affirmatively rebut the merits of the opposing party’s case, the
agency’s resulting decision does not preclude the federal employee from pursuing the claim in
the United States Court of Federal Claims. Roberta B. v. United States, 61 Fed. Cl. 631, 635-36
(2004).

                                              10
employment with NCIS, (2) the Navy Exchange had recruited him in the United States,

and (3) the NCIS had provided him with return transportation to the United States.

       OPM rejected each basis for Mr. Bortone’s LQA claim on April 16, 2010. OPM

explained that Mr. Bortone was not eligible for LQA under DSSR § 031.11 reasoning

that because “the claimant was living in Italy at the time he was selected for his [NCIS]

position, his status was that of a local hire when he was appointed to that position.” OPM

File No. 08-0098 at 12. OPM stated that Mr. Bortone’s travel to Suitland, Maryland had

“no bearing on this determination.” Id. With regard to Mr. Bortone’s contention that he

was eligible for LQA as a local hire and recruited outside the United States, OPM

deferred to NCIS’s previous conclusion that Mr. Bortone did not meet the eligibility

requirements under DSSR § 031.12.

       Plaintiff filed the instant action before the United States Court of Federal Claims

on March 30, 2011.

II.    Standard of Review

       When considering a summary judgment motion, the court’s proper role is not to

“weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter,” but rather “to determine

whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S.

242, 249 (1986). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the movant shows that there is no

genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter

of law.” Rule 56(a) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”);

see also DIRECTV Gr., Inc. v. United States, 670 F.3d 1370, 1374-75 (Fed. Cir. 2012).

A material fact is one that “might affect the outcome of the suit,” and a dispute is genuine

                                            11
“if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving

party.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248. In reviewing the facts, “all justifiable inferences are

to be drawn” in favor of the party opposing summary judgment. Id. at 255.

       Once the movant has shown that no genuine issue of material fact exists, the party

opposing summary judgment must demonstrate that such an issue does, in fact, exist.

Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 324 (1986). To establish a genuine issue of

material fact, a party “must point to an evidentiary conflict created on the record; mere

denials or conclusory statements are insufficient.” Radar Inds., Inc. v. Cleveland Die &

Mfg. Co., 424 Fed. Appx. 931, 936 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (quoting SRI Int’l v. Matsushita

Elec. Corp. of Am., 775 F.2d 1107, 1116 (Fed. Cir. 1985)) (internal quotation omitted).

Where there is doubt as to the existence of a genuine issue of material fact, that doubt

must be resolved in favor of the nonmovant. Unigene Labs., Inc. v. Apotex, Inc., 655

F.3d 1352, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (citing Ortho-McNeil Pharm., Inc. v. Mylan Labs., Inc.,

520 F.3d 1358, 1360-61 (Fed. Cir. 2008)).

III.   Discussion

       A.     Legal framework for LQA eligibility

       As discussed above, LQA is authorized under the Overseas Differentials and

Allowances Act, 5 U.S.C. § 5923(a)(2), 15 which established a government-wide

framework for paying certain types of cost of living allowances to eligible civilian


15
   The version of the statute applicable to plaintiff’s employment at both the Navy Exchange and
NCIS is substantially the same with the only difference being a cross reference to another
provision that subsequently changed. See Act of Sept. 6, 1966, Pub. L. 89-554, §5923, 80 Stat.
378, 511 (1966).
                                              12
employees. The Act did not include eligibility requirements and instead granted broad

authority to the President to promulgate regulations governing eligibility. President

Eisenhower delegated this broad authority to the Secretary of State through executive

order. See Exec. Order No. 10903, 1961 WL 8156 (Jan. 9, 1961). Under this authority,

the Secretary of State adopted regulations governing LQA eligibility requirements

through the DSSR. The DSSR include two sets of eligibility requirements depending on

whether the subject employee was recruited within or outside the United States. See

DSSR §§ 031.11-.12.

       DSSR § 031.11 sets the requirements for employees recruited within the United

States, providing in relevant part that “Quarters allowances prescribed in Chapter 100

may be granted to employees who were recruited by the employing government agency

in the United States. . . .” DSSR § 031.11. Section 031.12 provides the minimum

eligibility requirements for employees recruited from outside of the United States.

Section 031.12 provides in relevant part:

       Quarters allowances prescribed in Chapter 100 may be granted to
       employees recruited outside the United States provided that:

       a. the employee’s actual place of residence in the place to which the
       quarters allowance applies at the time of receipt thereof shall be fairly
       attributable to his/her employment by the United States government; and

       b. prior to appointment, the employee was recruited in the United States,
       the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Commonwealth of the Northern
       Mariana Islands, the former Canal Zone, or a possession of the United
       States, by

              (1) the United States Government, including its Armed
              Forces;


                                            13
              (2) a United States firm, organization or interest;

              (3) an international organization in which the United States
              Government participates; or

              (4) a foreign government

       and has been in substantially continuous employment by such employer
       under conditions which provided for his/her return transportation to the
       United States . . . .

DSSR § 031.12.

       Moreover, DSSR § 013 further delegates authority to the heads of other agencies

to implement the applicable LQA provisions promulgated by the Department of State.

Under this sub-delegation, the DoD promulgated DoD Instruction (“DoDI”) 1418.1,

Payment of Differentials and Allowance in Foreign Areas, which “implements” DSSR §§

031.11-.12 and provides “supplemental instructions for determining employee

entitlements” for LQA for all times relevant to this litigation. 16 DoDI 1418.1 ¶ (I)(A).

DoDI 1418.1 provided that eligibility for locally hired DoD employees—those hired

under DSSR § 031.12—“will be determined at the time of hire and redetermined any

time pertinent changes in circumstances occur.” DoDI 1418.1 ¶ (B)(1)(a).

       B.     Legal framework for review of agency interpretation of regulations

       The framework established in Chevron, U.S.A. v. Natural Resources Defense

Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984), sets the standard by which courts determine whether

an agency’s statutory interpretation is reasonable. Under Chevron, the court first

determines “whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue.” Id. at

16
 DoDI 1418.1 was cancelled on November 24, 1981 and superseded by DoD Civilian personnel
Manual 1400.25-M.
                                             14
842. The court looks to the language of the statute itself to determine Congressional

intent. Delverde, SrL v. United States, 202 F.3d 1360, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Beyond

the statute’s text, the court may use other tools of statutory construction to determine the

intent of Congress. Heino v. Shinseki, 683 F.3d 1372, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2012). If

Congress’ intent is clear, the inquiry ends. If, however, the court cannot ascertain the

intent of Congress, the court asks whether the implementing agency’s interpretation of

the statute is reasonable. Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843; Heino, 683 F.3d at 1377.

       Where the agency’s decision is based on an interpretation of its own regulations

rather than on the statute, its interpretation is controlling “unless plainly erroneous or

inconsistent with the regulation.” Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 461 (1997). Under the

Auer standard, “an agency’s interpretation need not be the only possible reading of a

regulation—or even the best one—to prevail.” Decker v. Nw. Envtl. Def. Ctr., 133 S. Ct.

1326, 1337 (2013). Rather, the court will consider whether the agency’s interpretation of

the regulation is a “fair and considered judgment on the matter in question.” Auer, 519

U.S. at 462. While deference is generally only afforded to an agency’s interpretation of

its own rules and regulations, Allegheny Teledyne, Inc. v. United States, 316 F.3d 1366,

1378 (Fed. Cir. 2003), courts will give deference to an agency’s interpretation of

regulations drafted by another agency where, as here, the interpreting agency adopts and

administers the subject regulations. Sec’y of Labor v. Excel Mining, LLC, 334 F.3d 1, 7

(D.C. Cir. 2003). This is particularly true when an agency is given authority to

implement the regulations of another agency. Paralyzed Veterans of Am. v. D.C. Arena

L.P., 117 F.3d 579, 585 (D.C. Cir. 1997).

                                              15
       C.     Mr. Bortone is not entitled to LQA under DSSR § 031.11

       The government argues that summary judgment is appropriate with regard to Mr.

Bortone’s eligibility under DSSR § 031.11 because the undisputed facts demonstrate that

the Navy reasonably determined that Mr. Bortone was “a local hire” and thus ineligible

for LQA under DSSR § 031.11. Plaintiff argues that summary judgment is not

appropriate because there are genuine issues of material fact in dispute over whether

plaintiff was “recruited” in the United States within the meaning of DSSR § 031.11.

Specifically, plaintiff asserts that his travel to Suitland, Maryland to be sworn in to the

NCIS position, together with Mr. McKee’s, Mr. Bickley’s, and Mr. D’Avanzo’s

statements regarding his status as a “stateside hire” establish that he was “recruited” in

the United States. The government argues in response that the above-noted facts

regarding Mr. Bortone’s travel to Suitland, Maryland are not disputed but instead are

immaterial. The government argues that a reasonable reading of DSSR § 031.11 supports

the Navy’s determination that Mr. Bortone, who identified himself as a resident of

Naples, Italy, and who was encouraged and applied for an NCIS job in Naples, Italy was

a “local hire” and was not “recruited” inside the United States as required by DSSR §

031.11. For the reasons that follow, the court agrees with the government and holds,

taking all of the facts into account, that Mr. Bortone was not eligible for LQA under

DSSR § 031.11 because the Navy reasonably determined that he was a “local hire” and

not recruited inside the United States.

       As stated above, DSSR § 031.11 provides that LQA “may be granted to

employees who were recruited by the employing government agency in the United States

                                              16
. . . .” The government agrees that Mr. Bortone, under the Navy’s application of the

subject regulations, would be eligible for LQA if he was in fact “recruited” in the United

States. The central issue, therefore, is whether Mr. Bortone was “recruited” in the United

States. The term is not defined in either the Act or the DSSR. Accordingly, the court

must determine whether the Navy properly construed the phrase “recruited in the United

States” to exclude individuals who live abroad, are encouraged to apply for a job and then

apply for a job in the foreign location but travel to the United States for the purposes of

being formally hired and sworn in.

       The word “recruit” does not appear in 5 U.S.C. § 5923, the statutory provision

authorizing LQA, or in 5 U.S.C. § 5922, the provision granting the President authority to

promulgate regulations governing the administration of LQA. The word “recruitment”

does appear, however, in the “purposes” Section of the Overseas Differentials and

Allowances Act. This Section states that LQA should be used to “facilitat[e] for the

Government the recruitment and retention of the best qualified personnel for civilian

service overseas.” Overseas Differentials and Allowances Act of 1960, Pub. L. 86-707, §

101(4), 74 Stat. 792, 792 (1960) (emphasis added). Thus, while the word “recruitment”

is not defined in the Act, it appears from the statute that the purpose of LQA is to provide

an incentive to prospective employees to move overseas to work for the federal

government. See Acker v. United States, 620 F.2d 802, 806 (1980) (“Acker I”) (finding

that the goal of offering LQA to employees “recruited in the United States” is to provide

compensation for additional costs associated with living abroad). Accordingly, the Act’s

purposes indicate that only prospective employees who actually live in the United States

                                             17
need LQA as an incentive to move abroad. Acker v. United States, 6 Cl. Ct. 503, 508

(1984) (“Acker II”). Those who voluntarily live abroad do not need to be “enticed” by

the offer of LQA to leave the United States. Id.; see also Tyler v. United States, 220 Ct.

Cl. 387, 389 (1979) (stating that LQA would be a “bonus” for employees already living

abroad). Construing the term “recruitment” in the context of the Act’s purposes therefore

supports the Navy’s view that to be “recruited in the United States” requires evidence that

plaintiff was not a local resident, already living in the area of his prospective

employment.

       The Navy’s interpretation is also supported by the ordinary meaning of the word

“recruitment.” It is well-settled that when a statute or regulation does not provide the

definition of a term, courts construe the term in accordance with its ordinary or natural

meaning. Taniguchi v. Kan Pac. Saipan, Ltd., 132 S. Ct. 1997, 2002 (2012); Cardiac

Pacemakers, Inc. v. St. Jude Medical, Inc., 576 F.3d 1348, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2009).

Dictionaries can serve as the basis for determining the plain meaning. See, e.g. Fed. Exp.

Corp. v. Holowecki, 552 U.S. 389, 408 (2008). The third edition of Webster’s New

International Dictionary (“Webster’s Third”), published just after Congress passed the

Act, defines “recruitment” as “an act of offering inducement to qualified personnel to

enter a job or profession.” Webster’s Third 1899 (3d. 1961). Thus, the contemporaneous

understanding of the word “recruitment” supports the Navy’s contention that LQA is not

available under DSSR § 031.11 to individuals already living in the local area and

therefore do not need to be induced to live abroad to work for the federal government.



                                              18
       The plaintiff challenges this reading of the word “recruitment” by arguing that

other and apparently more recent definitions of “recruitment” include the concept of

“hiring” and here there is no dispute that plaintiff was “hired” in the United States. Pl.

Resp. 10 (citing Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary (9th ed. 1987) (defining “recruit”

as “to secure the services of: ENGAGE, HIRE”)).

       The court finds that plaintiff’s reliance on this definition is not supported to the

extent that the definition suggests that the Navy’s reading of the regulation is

unreasonable. In light of the preceding discussion, plaintiff’s proffered definition—that

“to recruit” or recruiting simply means “to hire” or hiring—is inconsistent with the

contemporaneous definition. 17 Plaintiff’s reading of “recruit” to mean “hire” is also

inconsistent with the stated purposes of LQA. Had Congress intended for recruitment to

mean hiring, it would have used the word “hire” rather than “recruitment.” See Shoshone

Indian Tribe of Wind River Reservation v. United States, 364 F.3d 1339, 1347 (Fed. Cir.

2004) (“[T]here exists a strong presumption that ‘Congress expresses its intent through

the language it chooses’ and that the choice of words in a statute is therefore deliberate

and reflective.”) (quoting INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 U.S. 421, 433 n.12, 436 (1987)).

Moreover, the implementing regulations distinguish between “recruitment” and “hiring.”

For example, to describe the process by which an agency secures new employees, DoD

17
   It is noted here that courts use definitions contemporaneous with the enactment of the relevant
statute or regulation to determine the meaning of undefined terms. Reves v. Ernst & Young, 494
U.S. 56, 77 (1990); see also Nielson v. Shinseki, 607 F.3d 802, 807-08 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (using a
contemporaneous definition of an undefined term to determine Congress’s intent). Plaintiff’s
reliance on a definition from a dictionary published nearly thirty years after the passage of the
Act is of limited value.

                                               19
provides that LQA eligibility is made “at the time of hire,” DoDI 1418.1 ¶ (B)(1)(a),

underscoring that recruitment is different from hiring.

       Further, the Navy’s reading of “recruitment” to mean something other than “to

hire” is consistent with decisions of other agencies that similarly interpreted “recruited in

the United States” to exclude individuals living abroad from LQA eligibility. See In the

Matter of Drach, GSBCA No. 13863-RELO, 98-1 BCA (CCH) ¶ 29,442 (noting that

under DSSR § 031.11, “recruited from the United States meant that the employee resided

permanently in the United States . . . from the time the employee applied for a position

until the date the employee accepted a formal offer.”) (internal quotations removed). In

Drach, the Army denied the claimant LQA on the grounds that she was living abroad

when she applied for the position. Id.

       In view of the foregoing discussion, the court agrees with the government that the

Navy reasonably determined that plaintiff was a “local hire” and therefore ineligible for

LQA under DSSR § 031.11. The undisputed facts establish that Mr. Bickley, the special

agent in charge of the NCIS Naples field office contacted and encouraged Mr. Bortone to

apply for the drug laboratory position while Mr. Bortone was working in Naples for the

Navy Exchange. Thus, Mr. Bortone’s initial contacts with NCIS were all made in Naples

and were initiated by NCIS in Naples. Bortone Dep. 102-03. The facts further establish

that Mr. Bortone did not need incentive to stay in Naples. To the contrary, the

undisputed evidence established that Mr. Bortone stated in his application that he would

only take the NCIS job if it were in Naples. In this connection, it is also not disputed that



                                             20
Mr. Bortone listed his Castel Volturno address as his residence on the personal

qualification statement for the NCIS position.

       Thus, the undisputed facts establish that the Navy reasonably concluded that Mr.

Bortone was “recruited” in Naples, regardless of his trip to Maryland to be “hired.” See

Acker I, 223 Ct. Cl. at 290 (“There is no indication that Congress intended to grant

people already in those foreign areas extra compensation to give them living situations as

though they had come from the United States.”). The Navy reasonably concluded that

the location of Mr. Bortone’s actual hiring was not material to the question of where he

was recruited for purposes of determining LQA.

       It is for these same reasons that plaintiff’s reliance on Mr. McKee’s, Mr. Bickley’s

and Mr. D’Avanzo’s statements identifying plaintiff as a “stateside hire” is misplaced.

None of the statements submitted by the plaintiff indicate that Mr. Bortone was

“recruited” in the United States. None of the statements establish that LQA was ever

offered to Mr. Bortone as an incentive to move to Naples. The fact that Mr. Bortone’s

superiors in Naples later explained that they “intended” for Mr. Bortone to receive LQA

does not bind the government. A federal employee’s reliance on incorrect legal advice or

conclusions from a government representative does not create a legal entitlement to

benefits otherwise not provided by statute or for which the employee is otherwise

ineligible. See, e.g. Poillucci v. Dep’t of Justice, 459 F.3d 1351, 1355-56 (Fed. Cir.

2006) (finding that plaintiff had no legal entitlement to retirement benefits

notwithstanding agency’s expressed view that he was eligible for those benefits) (citing

OPM v. Richmond, 496 U.S. 414, 426 (1990)).

                                             21
        For all of the above-cited reasons, the government is entitled to summary

judgment on Mr. Bortone’s claim for LQA under DSSR § 031.11.

       D.     Mr. Bortone is not entitled to LQA under DSSR § 031.12

       The government argues that it is also entitled to summary judgment on Mr.

Bortone’s claim that he is eligible for LQA as an employee recruited outside the United

States under the terms of DSSR § 031.12(b). The government contends that Mr. Bortone

does not satisfy the criteria for LQA under DSSR § 031.12(b) because he never had a

return travel agreement with the Navy Exchange, his first employer in Italy, and that the

Navy’s resulting conclusion was reasonable. Plaintiff argues that summary judgment

should be denied because there are genuine issues of material fact regarding his eligibility

under DSSR § 031.12(b). Specifically, plaintiff argues that he has presented facts to

show that he meets the eligibility criteria because he was “continuously employed” at the

Navy Exchange, his residency in Naples at the time of his hiring at NCIS was “fairly

attributable” to his prior employment with the Navy Exchange, he was initially living in

the United States when he applied to the Navy Exchange, and that he was entitled to

return travel agreement with the Navy Exchange. Mr. Bortone concedes that he never

had a return travel agreement with the Navy Exchange but argues that his right to an

agreement from the Navy Exchange together with the one he obtained from NCIS

establishes his eligibility. While not disputing any of these facts, the government

responds that Mr. Bortone is not eligible as a matter of law because he did not have a

return travel agreement with the Navy Exchange and the agreement with NCIS does not

satisfy the regulatory criteria for eligibility. The court agrees.

                                              22
       In order to be eligible for LQA as an employee recruited outside the United States,

DSSR § 031.12(b) requires that the new hire demonstrate that he had been employed by

the previous employer “under conditions which provided for his/her return transportation

to the United States.” By its plain language, DSSR § 031.12(b) establishes such a return

agreement as a necessary element of LQA eligibility for employees recruited outside of

the United States. See In Re Pierce, GSBCA No. 15201-RELO, 001 BCA ¶ 30,816

(holding that claimant’s lack of a return agreement for his previous Japan-based

employment precluded him from LQA eligibility under DSSR § 031.12(b) when he

received a new position in Japan). While plaintiff contends that he should have been

granted return transportation to the United States upon his initial employment with the

Navy Exchange in 1974 or 1975, 18 the undisputed facts demonstrate that he had no such

return agreement with the Navy Exchange and that he had worked there for six or seven

years without receiving one. Where, as here, the undisputed facts demonstrate that the

plaintiff had no return agreement with the previous employer, the plaintiff cannot

successfully claim LQA eligibility under DSSR § 031.12 even if all the remaining

elements are established or in dispute. Accordingly, on the facts before the court, Mr.




18
   Plaintiff states that he was “not advised of his right to return travel” by the Navy Exchange and
further states that there is a genuine issue of material fact whether the “circumstances of his
employment [with the Navy Exchange] provided for his return transportation to the United
States, in the language of the DSSR.” Pl. Resp. 8 n.7. The government does not appear to
dispute the factual circumstances related to Mr. Bortone’s employment with the Navy Exchange.
The court notes that plaintiff points to no fact on the record or legal basis to suggest that such a
circumstance resulted in government waiver of the return agreement requirement under DSSR §
031.12.
                                                23
Bortone cannot establish eligibility for LQA as an employee recruited outside the United

States by NCIS.

      Further, the court also agrees with the government that neither the July 24, 1981

Travel Authorization issued by NCIS nor the “Transportation Agreement Oversea

Employ” document Mr. Bortone signed with NCIS establish Mr. Bortone’s LQA

eligibility under DSSR § 031.12. Section 031.12(b) requires that eligibility for LQA

depends on the employee having such an agreement with the previous employer—in this

case the Navy Exchange. Both of these documents, which plaintiff claims provided

return transportation to the United States, were signed in connection to his employment

with NCIS and not with the Navy Exchange. Mr. Bortone had no such agreement with

the Navy Exchange. For this same reason, the mobility agreements Mr. Bortone executed

over the years while employed by NCIS have no impact on this determination. DSSR §

031.12 by its plain terms requires that the employee demonstrate that he had a return

agreement in place with the previous employer. Indeed, DoDI 1418.1 provided that

eligibility for employees hired under DSSR § 031.12 “will be determined at the time of

hire.” DoDI 1418.1 ¶ (B)(1)(a); Angelo Raffin, B-184972, 1976 WL 10295, *3 (Comp.

Gen. May 5, 1976) (noting that determinations of LQA eligibility are made at the time of

appointment absent a change of applicable law). Thus, the subsequent mobility

agreements, even if valid, do not retroactively establish Mr. Bortone’s LQA eligibility

under the DSSR § 031.12 at the time of hire at NCIS.




                                            24
      For all of these reasons, the court holds that the Navy properly found plaintiff

ineligible for LQA under the DSSR § 031.12 and thus the government is entitled to

summary judgment on this claim.

IV.   Conclusion

      For the foregoing reasons, the government’s motion for summary judgment is

GRANTED. Each party shall bear its own costs. The Clerk is directed to enter

judgment accordingly.

IT IS SO ORDERED.


                                                         s/Nancy B. Firestone
                                                         NANCY B. FIRESTONE
                                                         Judge




                                           25
