TIMOTHY J. KELLY, United States District Judge.
Plaintiff Jamie Rudert seeks relief from the Court's decision to grant summary judgment against him and in favor of Defendants on his claims that the Department of Education violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause when it determined that loan payments he made while employed at Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA) did not qualify for loan forgiveness under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) Program. Rudert has moved to alter or amend the Court's judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) after obtaining new evidence —a letter issued by the Department to another former VVA employee—that he contends justifies this extraordinary remedy. However, he has not met the stringent requirements of Rule 59(e) because the new evidence would not have altered the Court's summary judgment decision. Accordingly, and for the reasons explained below, the Court will deny his motion.
The Court's Memorandum Opinion, ECF No. 49 ("Mem. Op."), fully sets forth the factual background underlying Rudert's claims. Accordingly, only some relevant facts are recounted here.
Rudert began working at VVA, a 501(c)(19) not-for-profit organization that provides advocacy and support services to Vietnam veterans, in April 2012. ECF No. 17-2 ¶ 4; AR 315. While employed there, Rudert represented veterans with service-connected disability claims before the Board of Veterans' Appeals. ECF No. 17-2 ¶ 6. In July 2012, Rudert sought confirmation from the Department of Education (the "Department") that he would be eligible to participate in the PSLF Program while employed at VVA by submitting an Employment Certification Form (ECF). Id. ¶ 8. In response, he received a letter from FedLoan Servicing, which manages ECF submissions on behalf of the Department, indicating that his payments made while employed at VVA from April to June 2012 qualified for the PSLF Program. Id. About two years later, in October 2014, he received another letter confirming the same. Id. ¶ 10. Rudert departed VVA as Deputy Director in September 2015. Id. ¶ 11. Subsequently, FedLoan Servicing informed Rudert that, as of January 2015, he had made 30 qualifying payments while employed at VVA. Id. ¶ 10.
Rudert, along with the American Bar Association and three other individual borrowers (collectively, "Plaintiffs"), then sued the Department and the Secretary of Education ("Defendants"). ECF No. 1. In their Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiffs argued that the Department illegally changed its interpretation of the PSLF regulation by adopting three new standards for assessing whether non-501(c)(3) not-for-profit organizations qualify as public service organizations under the PSLF Program. See generally ECF No. 17. According to Plaintiffs, the Department determined that loan payments made by Rudert while employed at VVA were ineligible for the PSLF Program based on its application of a new interpretation of its regulation—described as the Outright Provision of Services standard—under which the Department required qualifying organizations to provide disability-related services directly to the recipient or "outright." Id. at 32-33. Similarly, Plaintiffs alleged that payments made by the other three individual borrowers were wrongfully denied by operation of two other newly-applied interpretations: the Primary Purpose and School-Like Setting standards. Id. at 31-32. As relevant here, Plaintiffs alleged that, under the Primary Purpose standard, the Department required that a qualifying organization provide an otherwise qualifying public service as part of that organization's primary purpose.
On February 22, 2019, the Court entered summary judgment on behalf of Defendants as to Rudert's claims. ECF No. 48. In its accompanying Memorandum Opinion, the Court concluded Plaintiffs had not established that the Outright Provision of Services standard reflected a new interpretation; rather, the record showed that the Department engaged in "a straightforward application of the regulation" when it issued the denial letter to Rudert. Mem. Op. at 39. In contrast, the Court concluded that the other two standards reflected new interpretations by the Department that it adopted in violation of certain APA requirements. On that basis, it entered summary judgment on behalf of the other three individual borrowers and vacated those standards. See id. at 39-44, 53.
In the instant motion, Rudert seeks to alter or amend the Court's judgment based on new evidence purportedly showing that the Department relied upon the now-vacated Primary Purpose standard when it determined that the payments he made while employed at VVA did not qualify
"Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) provides a limited exception to the rule that judgments are to remain final." Leidos, Inc. v. Hellenic Republic, 881 F.3d 213, 217 (D.C. Cir. 2018). Rule 59(e) motions to alter or amend a judgment are "discretionary and need not be granted unless the district court finds that there is an intervening change of controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice." Firestone v. Firestone, 76 F.3d 1205, 1208 (D.C. Cir. 1996). "Rule 59(e) motions on the basis of new evidence are restricted to evidence that is `newly discovered or previously unavailable despite the exercise of due diligence.'" Johnson v. District of Columbia, 266 F.Supp.3d 206, 211 (D.D.C. 2017) (quoting Niedermeier, 153 F. Supp. 2d at 29). And a party moving for relief under Rule 59(e) has not met its burden if the new evidence "would not have changed [the Court's] outcome." Roane v. Gonzales, 832 F.Supp.2d 61, 65 (D.D.C. 2011); see Odhiambo v. Republic of Kenya, 947 F.Supp.2d 30, 36 (D.D.C. 2013) (denying Rule 59(e) motion because the new proffered evidence would not have altered the court's decision).
Rule 59(e) motions "are disfavored and relief from judgment is granted only when the moving party establishes extraordinary circumstances." Niedermeier v. Office of Baucus, 153 F.Supp.2d 23, 28 (D.D.C. 2001). "The strictness with which such motions are viewed is justified by the need to protect both the integrity of the adversarial process in which parties are expected to bring all arguments before the court, and the ability of the parties and others to rely on the finality of judgments." U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. McGraw-Hill Cos., 403 F.Supp.2d 34, 36 (D.D.C. 2005).
Rudert argues that the Court should alter or amend its judgment based on a March 2018 denial letter sent to another borrower, Amanda Radke, who was employed at VVA around the same time.
The problem for Rudert, however, is that this new evidence would not have changed the Court's determination that Defendants were entitled to summary judgment on his claims, for three reasons.
First, Radke's letter can say little, on its own, about whether the Primary Purpose standard played a role in the Department's handling of Rudert's case two years earlier. It is true that in evaluating the parties' motions for summary judgment, the Court considered extra-record evidence that shed light on whether the Department, contrary to its representations, had always applied the standards at issue, or had adopted them in a way that violated the APA. But the language contained in one denial letter, even to a borrower employed by the same organization, is scant evidence from which the Court can divine the Department's reasoning in another case two years earlier.
Second, Radke's letter is not even clear about how the Department reached its determination in her case. Some of the language in it is consistent with what the Department told Rudert. For example, Radke was effectively told that VVA "d[id] not provide a qualifying service for the PSLF program" because it did not "provide[ ] services directly to individuals with disabilities...." See ECF 50-3. The references to the Primary Purpose standard in the letter to Radke, awkwardly tacked onto two sentences, could well reflect the Department's decision to identify that standard in all denial letters following its incorporation of the standard into public guidance to borrowers. See Pl.'s Mot. at 7; Mem. Op. at 34. In short, the letter hardly elucidates precisely how the Department reached its decision in her case.
Third, and most importantly, even assuming that Radke's letter could, in theory, say something about Rudert's case, and the Department did determine that Radke's payments did not qualify for the reasons Rudert alleges, on this entire record, Radke's letter would still not show that Rudert's eligibility determination turned on the application of the Primary Purpose standard. To begin with, Defendants have never indicated that the Primary Purpose standard had anything to do with Rudert's case. The Department informed Rudert that it had reversed its determination because VVA "d[id] not provide a qualifying service."
Rudert also argues that the Court should grant him relief from its judgment because it is "manifestly unjust" in light of the newly available evidence.
For the reasons set forth above, the Court will, in a separate Order, deny Rudert's Motion to Alter or Amend the Judgment (ECF No. 50).