Federal Circuits, D.C. Cir. (April 29, 1976)
Docket number: 74-1211,74-1212
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U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Larionoff, 431 U.S. 864 (1977)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Cir. - Oscar Robertson, William Bradley, Joe Caldwell, Archie Clark, Mel Counts, John Havlicek, Donald Kojis, Jon Mcglocklin, Mccoy Mclemore, Thomas Meschery, Jeffry Mullins, Westly Unseld, Richard Van Arsdale and Chester Walker, Individually and as Representatives of all Present and Future Active Players in the National Basketball Association, Plaintiffs-Appellees, Wilton N. Chamberlain, Clifford Ray and Chester Walker, Objectors-Appellants, v. National Basketball Association, a Joint Venture, Madison Square Garden Center, Inc., Madison Square Garden Corporation, Milwaukee Professional Sports & Services, Inc., the Capital Bullets Basketball Club, Inc. (Formerly the Baltimore Bullets Basketball Club, Inc.), Riko Enterprises, Inc., Kings Professional Basketball Club, Inc. (Formerly Cincinnati Basketball Club Company), Boston Celtic Basketball Club, Inc. (Formerly Trans National Communications, Inc.), Detroit Pistons Basketball Company (Formerly Zollner Corporation), Atlanta Hawks Basketball, Inc., California ..., 556 F.2d 682 (2nd Cir. 1977) William Bradley, Joe Caldwell, Archie Clark, Mel Counts, John Havlicek, Donald Kojis, Jon Mcglocklin, Mccoy Mclemore, Thomas Meschery, Jeffry Mullins, Westly Unseld, Richard Van Arsdale and Chester Walker, Individually and as Representatives of all Present and Future Active Players in the National Basketball Association, Plaintiffs-Appellees, Wilton N. Chamberlain, Clifford Ray and Chester Walker, Objectors-Appellants, v. National Basketball Association, a Joint Venture, Madison Square Garden Center, Inc., Madison Square Garden Corporation, Milwaukee Professional Sports & Services, Inc., the Capital Bullets Basketball Club, Inc. (Formerly the Baltimore Bullets Basketball Club, Inc.), Riko Enterprises, Inc., Kings Professional Basketball Club, Inc. (Formerly Cincinnati Basketball Club Company), Boston Celtic Basketball Club, Inc. (Formerly Trans National Communications, Inc.), Detroit Pistons Basketball Company (Formerly Zollner Corporation), Atlanta Hawks Basketball, Inc., California ...
Stephen Daniel Keeffe, Washington, D. C., for appellants in No. 74-1212 and appellees in No. 74-1211.
Neil H. Koslowe, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., with whom Carla A. Hills, Asst. Atty. Gen., New York City, at the time the brief was filed, Earl J. Silbert, U. S. Atty., and Robert E. Kopp, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellants in No. 74-1211 and appellees in No. 74-1212. Morton Hollander, Atty., Dept. of Justice and Michael A. Katz, Asst. U. S. Atty., Washington, D. C., also entered appearances for appellants in No. 74-1211 and appellees in No. 74-1212.Before RICHARD T. RIVES,* Senior Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, WRIGHT and McGOWAN, Circuit Judges.McGOWAN, Circuit Judge:Congress has been continuously concerned from its inception with the problem of maintaining an adequately manned military establishment for the protection of our national interests. Although one controversial response to that problem has been the operation of a system of compulsory military service, Congress has also especially in recent years attempted to provide a sufficient monetary incentive to attract men and women to careers in the military. One approach that has frequently been chosen by Congress is the award of a monetary bonus recently labeled a "Regular Reenlistment Bonus" to enlisted personnel who reenlist or extend the period of their obligated service.1 Since 1965, Congress has also provided an additional reenlistment bonus a "Variable Reenlistment Bonus" to enlisted personnel whose skills are in critically short supply.2 That Variable Reenlistment Bonus (VRB), which is available to enlisted personnel eligible for a Regular Reenlistment Bonus (RRB), is set by regulation at a multiple of the RRB.3The seven named plaintiffs who filed this class suit in the District Court are enlisted personnel in the United States Navy who claim that they are entitled by contract or under the doctrine of promissory estoppel to receive VRBs equal to four times the amount of their respective RRBs. We conclude that the District Court properly asserted jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a) (2),4 and, for the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the District Court ordering payment of VRBs to the named plaintiffs.5 We affirm the District Court's order certifying the suit as a class action under Rule 23(b)(1)(B) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and awarding attorneys' fees of $14,729. And finally, we remand the case to the District Court for further proceedings concerning an award of attorneys' fees for the efforts of counsel directed to this appeal.I. FACTUAL BACKGROUNDOn June 23, 1969 plaintiff Larionoff enlisted in the United States Navy for four years. Shortly thereafter, he underwent a series of tests and interviews to determine his appropriate duty assignment. During the course of those interviews with Navy personnel, Larionoff decided to participate in the Advanced Electronic Field (AEF) training program, successful completion of which would place him in the Communications Technician-Maintenance (CTM) service rating. At the time he decided to enter the AEF program, Larionoff was aware that the CTM rating was classified as a "critical military skill" qualifying for a Variable Reenlistment Bonus equal to four times the amount of an enlisted member's Regular Reenlistment Bonus.6Under applicable Navy regulations, the AEF program involved a six year service obligation, and plaintiff Larionoff consequently executed the following "Agreement to Extend Enlistment":I NICHOLAS JOHN LARIONOFF JR., B 17 77 88, SNJEF, USN having enlisted in the Navy of the United States on 23 JUN 69 for FOUR years, in consideration of the pay, allowances, and benefits which will accrue to me during the continuances of my service, voluntarily agree to extend my enlistment as authorized by Section 5539, of Title 10, United States Code, and the regulations issued pursuant thereto. I voluntarily agree to extend my enlistment for a period of TWO years from the date of expiration thereof, subject to the provisions and obligations of my said contract of enlistment of which this, my voluntary agreement, shall form a part. REASON FOR EXTENSION: "Training (Advanced Electronics Field (AEF) Program BuPers 1tr Pers-B2131-gn-56 of 31 August 1966). I understand this extension agreement becomes binding upon execution and thereafter may not be cancelled except as set forth in BUPERS Manual, Article C-1407."App. at 134 (emphasis added). On that same day, plaintiff Larionoff executed a document requesting assignment to the AEF program and acknowledging his six year obligation:I fully understand that, by virtue of having been enlisted in the U.S. Navy as a SNJC I am guaranteed assignment to either one of a group of service schools or to (sic) duty in a specific apprenticeship field upon successful completion of recruit training. I desire to waive my rights guaranteed by my enlistment contract, and I hereby request that my rate be changed in equal pay grade to SNJEF. This change of rate is requested for the purpose of: Assignment to the advanced electronics field program. The provisions of this program, the category to which my rate will be changed and the six (06) years service obligation have been fully explained to me.App. at 135.On March 9, 1970 Larionoff successfully completed the AEF training program and was advanced to the CTM rating and the E-4 pay grade. He executed a document on that date attesting to his advancement to the E-4 pay grade.7Up to this point in time, neither the Navy nor plaintiff Larionoff had reason to complain about the events that had transpired. The complicating factor, however, was that Larionoff still expected to receive a Variable Reenlistment Bonus once he entered into his period of extended service on June 23, 1973. The Navy cast some doubt on that expectation when it announced on March 24, 1972 that effective July 1, 1972 the CTM rating would no longer be designated as a "critical military skill" eligible for the VRB award. After realizing that the Navy considered him ineligible for a Variable Reenlistment Bonus, Larionoff had his elected representatives in Congress communicate with the Bureau of Naval Personnel concerning his eligibility for the VRB.8 These efforts were unsuccessful; the Bureau asserted that the CTM service rating had been removed from the list of eligible service ratings, thus precluding payment of a VRB to plaintiff Larionoff.9The other six named plaintiffs10 have undergone similar administrative processing by the Navy. They all signed extension agreements11 subsequent to April 20, 1966 (the date the CTM rating was designated as a "critical military skill") extending their enlistments for two years for the purpose of receiving AEF training; executed documents requesting assignment to AEF training and acknowledging their six year obligations; received their training, were advanced to the CTM rating and the E-4 pay grade prior to July 1, 1972; executed documents attesting to their advancement to the E-4 pay grade; entered the extension periods of their enlistments subsequent to July 1, 1972 (the date that the "critical military skill" designation for the CTM rating was terminated); and received their Regular Reenlistment Bonuses.12On March 30, 1973, the named plaintiffs filed this class action13 in the District Court seeking either payment of the VRB award level in effect when the extension agreements were signed or rescission of their extension agreements.14 On September 28, 1973, the District Court certified the action as a class action pursuant to Rule 23(b)(1)(B); granted plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment and ordered payment of VRBs; and awarded plaintiffs' counsel attorneys' fees of $14,729.00 to be obtained from the class recovery. The Government appeals, claiming error with respect to both the grant of the motion for summary judgment and the class certification. The plaintiffs cross-appeal with respect to the failure of the District Court (1) to order rescission, (2) to order disclosure by the government of the names of members of the class, and (3) to compensate adequately plaintiffs' attorneys.II. ENTITLEMENT TO THE VARIABLE REENLISTMENT BONUSPlaintiffs offer two theories to support their contention that they are entitled to receive VRBs. They first argue that they executed their extension agreements "in consideration of the pay, allowances, and benefits" which were to accrue during the period of extended service, see --- U.S.App.D.C. pages --- - ---, 533 F.2d page 1170 supra, and that the term "pay" includes awards of VRB. As an alternative ground, plaintiffs maintain that they are entitled to receive VRBs on a theory of promissory estoppel in that they relied to their detriment on oral representations concerning VRB eligibility made by naval personnel attempting to get them to execute extension agreements. We find it unnecessary to reach the issue of promissory estoppel since we find that under applicable military regulations plaintiffs are entitled to VRBs as part of the "consideration" for which they executed extension agreements.15 Since our interpretation of the relevant regulations depends in part on the legislative history of the statutory provisions delegating to the Secretary of Defense the authority to prescribe eligibility criteria, we turn first to an analysis of the basic statutory provisions establishing the VRB award.A. Statutory ProvisionsAs early as 1795, Congress provided by statute for the payment of a "reenlistment bonus" to members of the armed services who reenlisted within a short period following their separation from the service, and eligibility for that bonus was eventually extended to those who agreed to extend the length of their service obligation prior to the expiration of the period for which they had agreed to serve.16 The method of computing the amount of the bonus has varied, but by 1954 Congress settled on the following formula: the monthly basic pay of the serviceman at the time of discharge or release times the number of years specified in the reenlistment contract. See Act of July 16, 1954, Pub.L.No.506, § 2, 68 Stat. 488.17The Department of Defense eventually recognized that the statutory formula was inefficient since it failed to vary the monetary incentive for reenlistment according to the needs of the armed services for personnel with particular skills. In other words, if a branch of the armed services was adequately manned except for a critical shortage of communications technicians, that branch would nevertheless be prohibited by statute from offering communications technicians a stronger incentive in the form of a larger reenlistment bonus. Consequently, the President's 1965 legislative proposals to Congress concerning increased pay for servicemen included a recommendation that the Department of Defense be authorized to award an additional flexible reenlistment bonus to enable the Department to provide a strong reenlistment incentive to those personnel whose skills were in short supply.18The Defense Department urged both the House and Senate Armed Services Committees to act favorably on this Variable Reenlistment Bonus incentive provision:Additional reenlistments are needed in specialties accounting for about 40 percent of total enlisted force strength in order to achieve all of the services' manning objectives. The problem is much more serious in a smaller portion of our force. In a few of the most critically undermanned specialties, comprising about 5 percent of our force strength, losses of $10,000 or more occur whenever a first termer fails to reenlist and operational capability suffers because of severe shortages of careerists. In these skills, additional reenlistment incentives are clearly needed.The most attractive way to provide a strong reenlistment incentive to first termers in a small part of the force is through a variable reenlistment bonus. A reenlistment bonus concentrates retention money at the reenlistment decision point, thereby getting the most drawing power per retention dollar. A variable bonus can be tailored to fit particular skill retention requirements and can be changed as those requirements change since there are no express or implied commitments about future payments. The present reenlistment bonus does not discriminate among skills and thereby does not help solve the selective retention problem.H.R.Rep.No.549, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 47-48 (1965) (emphasis added). See S.Rep.No.544, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 18 (1965), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1965, p. 2745; Hearings on H.R. 5725 and H.R. 8714 Before the House Comm. on Armed Services, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., ser. 13, at 2545, (1965) (Statement of then Secretary McNamara). Both committees approved the following Variable Reenlistment Bonus award provision:19Under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of Defense, or the Secretary of the Treasury with respect to the Coast Guard when it is not operating as a service in the Navy, a member who is designated as having a critical military skill and who is entitled to a (Regular Reenlistment) bonus . . . upon his first reenlistment may be paid an additional amount not more than four times the amount of that bonus.In the course of the floor debate over what was to become the Uniformed Services Pay Act of 1965, it became quite clear the Department of Defense had convinced the Congress that the VRB provision was cost-justified since it would save the Government the cost of training a replacement whenever a first term enlisted member decided to reenlist.20 See, e. g., 111 Cong.Rec. 17206 (1965) ("(T)he career motivation that will be generated among the hard core elements, specifically the highly technically trained people throughout the services, will more than make up in actual dollars saved for the cost of the legislation.") (remarks of Representative Morton); id. at 17206 ("It is just plain good personnel planning to provide a $4,000 bonus to encourage reenlistment rather than pay $10,000 to train a replacement.") (remarks of Representative Bennett); id. at 17209 (remarks of Representative Dole); id. at 20034 (remarks of Senator Russell). And it is also clear that Congress viewed the VRB provision as an effective incentive to be brought to the attention of enlisted personnel at the point in time when they are choosing whether and how long to continue military service.21 See, e. g., id. at 17201 ("The (variable reenlistment) bonus would channel additional pay into these specialties. It offers the incentive toward career service at just the time that it will be most effective, when an individual decides whether or not to reenlist.") (remarks of Representative Nedzi).With these objectives in mind, Congress enacted the VRB provision as recommended by the House and Senate committees, delegating to the Secretary of Defense the authority to issue regulations for the administration of the VRB program. Act of August 21, 1965, Pub.L.No.89-132, § 3, 79 Stat. 547, as amended, Act of Oct. 22, 1968, Pub.L.No.90-623, §§ 3(1), 5, 82 Stat. 1314-15, as amended, 37 U.S.C. § 308 (Supp. IV, 1974).B. Military Regulations22In interpreting the regulations issued by both the Department of Defense and the Department of the Navy with respect to the VRB program, it is important to emphasize the narrow question at issue. The Government takes the position that under applicable military regulations eligibility for a Variable Reenlistment Bonus attaches at the date of actual entry into the reenlistment or extension period. Brief at 21. The Government does not argue that appellants would not have been entitled to a VRB if the CTM service rating had been designated as a critical military specialty when they entered their periods of extended service.23 Nor does the Government argue that appellants are not entitled to the Regular Reenlistment Bonus that at least until 1974 was automatically paid upon extension or reenlistment.24 The Government simply maintains that appellants are entitled only to the VRB in effect when they actually entered into the period of extended service, which for each appellant amounts to zero.At first glance, the applicable military regulations would seem to support the Government's position. The Department of Defense Directive prescribing policies for award of the VRB deals specifically with the question of reduction and termination of VRB awards:When a military skill is designated for reduction or termination of award an effective date for reduction or termination of awards shall be established and announced to the field at least 90 days in advance. All awards on or after that effective date in military skills designated for reduction of award level will be at the level effective that date and no new awards will be made on or after the effective date in military skills designated for termination of awards.DOD Directive 1304.14, P IV.F. (Sept. 3, 1970). Of course, that Directive is at best ambiguous, in that it is not clear whether a VRB is "awarded" when an enlisted member signs an agreement to extend enlistment or when he or she actually begins to serve the period of extension. Section IV.D.2. of the Directive, however, tells us that "(s)pecific provisions for individual eligibility of enlisted members for receipt of awards" are contained in a separate Department of Defense Instruction.That separate regulation also addresses the question of reduction and termination of awards:Members serving in a military specialty designated for reduction or termination of award under the provisions of subsection IV.F. of reference (a), will receive the award level effective on the date of their reenlistment or extension of enlistment, except as provided in paragraph V.B.1.f. above.Department of Defense Instruction 1304.15, P VI.A. (Sept. 3, 1970) (emphasis added). Were it not for the "except" clause, this regulation would also apparently support the Government's interpretation of the VRB program.25 The question thus becomes whether "paragraph V.B.1.f." leads to a different result.The relevant portion of paragraph V.B.1. provides that "(a)n enlisted member is eligible to receive a Variable Reenlistment Bonus if he . . .f. Attains eligibility prior to the effective date of termination of awards in any military specialty designated for termination of the award. Member must attain eligibility prior to the effective date of a reduction of award level to be eligible for the higher award level. Eligibility attained through any modification of an existing service obligation, including any early discharge granted pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 1171, must have been attained prior to the date the authority approving the modification was notified of the prospective termination or reduction of award in the military specialty.(Emphasis added.) And the regulations issued by the Department of the Navy indicate that an extension of enlistment qualifies as a form of "modification of an existing service obligation":Member must attain eligibility prior to the effective date of a reduction of award level to be eligible for the higher award level. Eligibility attained through an early discharge for the purpose of immediate reenlistment, or extension of enlistment, or other modification of an existing service obligation including any early discharge granted pursuant to article 3840240 of reference (d) (discharge within 3 months of expiration of active obligated service) shall be attained prior to the date the authority approving the modification is notified or the prospective termination or reduction of award in the (service rating). This is the date a command receives the Bureau of Naval Personnel directive announcing termination or reduction of awards in the (service rating).BUPER INST 1133.18E, P 7.h. (Mar. 23, 1972) (emphasis added).Paragraph V.B.1.f. of the Defense Instruction and paragraph 7.h. of the Navy Instruction were apparently designed to prevent enlisted members from receiving the higher award level of a VRB scheduled for reduction merely by modifying their service obligations after learning of the planned reduction but prior to its effective date. Thus, if the Navy announced on March 24, 1972 that a VRB with a multiple of four was to be reduced to a multiple of two for the CTM rating effective July 1, 1972, an enlisted member extending his or her service obligation after March 24, 197226 and entering on the period of extension prior to July 1, 1972 would nevertheless be entitled only to the lower VRB award level with a multiple of two. Only those enlisted personnel modifying their service obligations prior to March 24, 1972 would have attained eligibility for the higher VRB award level with a multiple of four.The application of these regulations to appellants leads us to conclude that they are entitled to the VRB award level in effect on the date they signed their respective agreements to extend enlistment.27 Those agreements were executed prior to March 24, 1972, the date on which the Navy announced termination effective July 1, 1972 of the VRB award for the CTM rating. If appellants are otherwise entitled to receive a VRB award, as the Government concedes they are, that award is not to be determined according to the award level in effect on the date they actually entered into their respective periods of extension, but rather according to the award level in effect when they executed their extension agreements.To hold otherwise would undermine the explicit language of paragraphs V.B.1.f. and 7.h. of the appropriate regulations, in that neither those who extended their enlistments on or after March 24, 1972 nor those who extended their enlistments before March 24, 1972 could attain eligibility for the higher award if they were to begin their extended service on a date after July 1, 1972. The paragraphs referred to above obviously contemplate a situation in which enlisted personnel attain eligibility prior to the point at which they enter into periods of extended service.Moreover, the Government's interpretation would lead to results clearly at odds with the explicit congressional objectives. For example, under the Government's approach an enlisted member who signed an extension agreement when the VRB award level was at a multiple of two but entered into extended service when the multiple was set at four would receive the higher award level. Despite the fact that a bonus with a multiple of two was a sufficient reenlistment incentive for that enlisted member, the Government would apparently award him a windfall in the form of a bonus with a multiple of four.The Government's interpretation would also frustrate congressional objectives by complicating the decision whether to reenlist. The legislative history indicates that Congress intended to offer enlisted personnel a specific sum28 in addition to the automatic Regular Reenlistment Bonus as an incentive to reenlist in skill areas in critically short supply. Under the Government's approach, an enlisted member (with a skill designated as critical) considering extension of service would have to weigh not the current VRB award level, but the VRB award level in effect on the date on which he or she would actually begin serving the period of extension. The latter VRB award level would be a function of the Navy's manpower needs at that time as well as the extent to which the prospect of an uncertain VRB award level had already helped to satisfy those requirements. Information concerning those factors would rarely be readily accessible to enlisted personnel making a reenlistment or extension decision, and we find no evidence in the legislative background of the 1965 amendments to warrant the conclusion that Congress intended enlisted personnel to make reenlistment decisions in the face of such uncertainty.29The Government authored these extensions contracts, and it could easily have inserted a provision limiting an enlisted member's VRB eligibility to the award level in effect on the date of actual entry into the period of extended service. Undoubtedly, if such a provision had been included, the Navy would have witnessed fewer extensions of enlistment.30 But there is no express limitation on eligibility, and the Government is therefore bound by the actual contract terms and the applicable military regulations. Although we recognize that these rather complex military regulations are not free from ambiguity, the factors outlined above lead us to conclude that under a reasonable interpretation of the contracts the appellants are entitled to the VRB award level in effect at the time they signed their extension contracts. Our conclusion in that regard is reinforced by our obligation to construe most strongly against the Government, as against any other drafter of a contract, ambiguous contract terms that are subject to a reasonable and practical interpretation other than that offered by the drafter. United States v. Seckinger, 397 U.S. 203, 210, 90 S.Ct. 880, 25 L.Ed.2d 224 (1970); 3 A. Corbin, Contracts § 559 (1960). Since the regulations at issue recognize that eligibility can be attained prior to actual entry into the period of extended service, and since the Government's interpretation of the regulations, unlike that of the plaintiffs, is at odds with congressional intent,31 we construe the contracts to mean that appellants are entitled to the VRB award level in effect when they signed their extension agreements.32C. The 1974 Repeal of the Variable Reenlistment Bonus ProgramEffective June 1, 1974, Congress repealed the statutory provisions providing for the Regular Reenlistment Bonus and the Variable Reenlistment Bonus and substituted a provision authorizing a new "Selective Reenlistment Bonus" (SRB). Armed Forces Enlisted Personnel Bonus Revision Act of 1974, Pub.L.No.93-277, § 2(1), 37 U.S.C. § 308 (Supp. IV, 1974).33 The 1974 amendments specifically provide that an enlisted member on active duty on the effective date of the amendments "who would have been eligible, at the end of his current or subsequent enlistment, for the (Regular Reenlistment Bonus) as it existed on the day before the effective date of (the amendments) shall continue to be eligible for the (RRB) as it existed on the day before the effective date of (the amendments)." But a similar savings clause was not enacted for enlisted personnel eligible for a Variable Reenlistment Bonus before the effective date of the 1974 amendments. Consequently, although it has not been raised by any of the parties, we are confronted with the question whether named plaintiff Johnson, who was scheduled to enter his period of extended service after the effective date of the 1974 amendments, is no longer entitled to receive a VRB.34Since contractual rights against the government are property interests protected by the Fifth Amendment, Congressional power to abrogate existing government contracts is narrowly circumscribed. Perry v. United States, 294 U.S. 330, 55 S.Ct. 432, 79 L.Ed. 912 (1935); Lynch v. United States, 292 U.S. 571, 54 S.Ct. 840, 78 L.Ed. 1434 (1934); see Federal Housing Administration v. Darlington, Inc., 358 U.S. 84, 97-98, 79 S.Ct. 141, 3 L.Ed.2d 132 (1958) (Harlan, J., dissenting). And although Congress may constitutionally impair existing contract rights in the exercise of a paramount governmental power such as the "War Powers," U.S.Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 11, 12, 14, Congress is "without power to reduce expenditures by abrogating contractual obligations of the United States." Lynch v. United States, supra, 292 U.S. at 580, 54 S.Ct. at 844 (emphasis added); see id. at 579. Compare Schultz v. Clifford, 303 F.Supp. 965 (D.Minn.1968), aff'd, 417 F.2d 775 (8th Cir. 1969), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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