The United States is not liable under the Federal Tort Claims
Act for injuries to members of the armed forces sustained while on
active duty and not on furlough and resulting from the negligence
of others in the armed forces. Pp.
340 U. S.
136-146.
(a) The Tort Claims Act should be construed to fit, so far as
will comport with its words, into the entire statutory system of
remedies against the Government to make a workable, consistent, and
equitable whole. P.
340 U. S.
139.
(b) One of the purposes of the Act was to transfer from Congress
to the courts the burden of examining tort claims against the
Government, and Congress was not burdened with private bills on
behalf of military and naval personnel, because a comprehensive
system of relief had been authorized by statute for them and their
dependents. Pp.
340 U. S.
139-140.
(c) The Act confers on the district courts broad jurisdiction
over "civil actions on claims against the United States, for money
damages," but it remains for the courts to determine whether any
claim is recognizable in law. Pp.
340 U. S.
140-141.
(d) It does not create new causes of action, but merely accepts
for the Government liability under circumstances that would bring
private liability into existence. P.
340 U. S.
141.
(e) There is no analogous liability of a "private individual"
growing out of "like circumstances" when the relationship of the
wronged to the wrongdoers in these cases is considered. Pp.
340 U. S.
141-142.
(f) The provision of the Act making "the law of the place where
the act or omission occurred" govern any consequent liability is
inconsistent with an intention to make the Government liable in
Page 340 U. S. 136
the circumstances of these cases, since the relationship of the
Government and members of its armed forces is "distinctively
federal in character." Pp.
340 U. S. 142-144.
(g) The failure of the Act to provide for any adjustment between
the remedy provided therein and other established systems of
compensation for injuries or death of those in the armed services
is persuasive that the Tort Claims Act was not intended to be
applicable in the circumstances of these cases. Pp.
340 U. S.
144-145.
(h)
Brooks v. United States, 337 U. S.
49, distinguished. P.
340 U. S.
146.
177 F.2d 535 and 178 F.2d 518 affirmed; 18 F.2d 1 reversed.
The cases are stated in the opinion. The orders granting
certiorari in Nos. 9 and 29 are reported at 339 U.S. 910, and in
No. 31 at 339 U.S. 951. The decisions below in Nos. 9 and 29 are
affirmed, and that in No. 31 is
reversed, p.
340 U. S.
146.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, delivered the opinion of the Court.
A common issue arising under the Tort Claims Act, as to which
Courts of Appeals are in conflict, makes it appropriate to consider
three cases in one opinion.
The
Feres case: the District Court dismissed an action
by the executrix of Feres against the United States to
Page 340 U. S. 137
recover for death caused by negligence. Decedent perished by
fire in the barracks at Pine Camp, New York, while on active duty
in service of the United States. Negligence was alleged in
quartering him in barracks known or which should have been known to
be unsafe because of a defective heating plant, and in failing to
maintain an adequate fire watch. The Court of Appeals, Second
Circuit, affirmed. [
Footnote
1]
The
Jefferson case: plaintiff, while in the Army, was
required to undergo an abdominal operation. About eight months
later, in the course of another operation after plaintiff was
discharged, a towel 30 inches long by 18 inches wide, marked
"Medical Department U.S. Army," was discovered and removed from his
stomach. The complaint alleged that it was negligently left there
by the army surgeon. The District Court, being doubtful of the law,
refused without prejudice the Government's pretrial motion to
dismiss the complaint. [
Footnote
2] After trial, finding negligence as a fact, Judge Chesnut
carefully reexamined the issue of law and concluded that the Act
does not charge the United States with liability in this type of
case. [
Footnote 3] The Court of
Appeals, Fourth Circuit, affirmed. [
Footnote 4]
The
Griggs case: the District Court dismissed the
complaint of Griggs' executrix, which alleged that, while on active
duty, he met death because of negligent and unskillful medical
treatment by army surgeons. The Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit,
reversed, and, one judge dissenting, held that the complaint stated
a cause of action under the Act. [
Footnote 5]
Page 340 U. S. 138
The common fact underlying the three cases is that each
claimant, while on active duty and not on furlough, sustained
injury due to negligence of others in the armed forces. The only
issue of law raised is whether the Tort Claims Act extends its
remedy to one sustaining "incident to the service" what under other
circumstances would be an actionable wrong. This is the "wholly
different case" reserved from our decision in
Brooks v. United
States, 337 U. S. 49,
337 U. S.
52.
There are few guiding materials for our task of statutory
construction. No committee reports or floor debates disclose what
effect the statute was designed to have on the problem before us,
or that it even was in mind. Under these circumstances, no
conclusion can be above challenge, but if we misinterpret the Act,
at least Congress possesses a ready remedy.
We do not overlook considerations persuasive of liability in
these cases. The Act does confer district court jurisdiction
generally over claims for money damages against the United States
founded on negligence. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). It does
contemplate that the Government will sometimes respond for
negligence of military personnel, for it defines "employee of the
Government" to include "members of the military or naval forces of
the United States," and provides that "acting within the scope of
his office or employment," in the case of a member of the military
or naval forces of the United States, means "acting in line of
duty." 28 U.S.C. § 2671. Its exceptions might also imply
inclusion of claims such as we have here. 28 U.S.C. § 2680(j)
excepts "any claim arising out of the combatant activities of the
military or naval forces, or the Coast Guard,
during time of
war" (emphasis supplied), from which it is said we should
infer allowance of claims arising from noncombat activities in
peace. Section 2680(k) excludes "any claim arising in a foreign
country." Significance
Page 340 U. S. 139
also has been attributed in these cases, as in the
Brooks case,
supra, at
337 U. S. 51, to
the fact that eighteen tort claims bills were introduced in
Congress between 1925 and 1935, and all but two expressly denied
recovery to members of the armed forces; but the bill enacted as
the present Tort Claims Act, from its introduction, made no
exception. We also are reminded that the
Brooks case, in
spite of its reservation of service-connected injuries, interprets
the Act to cover claims not incidental to service, and it is argued
that much of its reasoning is as apt to impose liability in favor
of a man on duty as in favor of one on leave. These considerations,
it is said, should persuade us to cast upon Congress, as author of
the confusion, the task of qualifying and clarifying its language
if the liability here asserted should prove so depleting of the
public treasury as the Government fears.
This Act, however, should be construed to fit, so far as will
comport with its words, into the entire statutory system of
remedies against the Government to make a workable, consistent and
equitable whole. The Tort Claims Act was not an isolated and
spontaneous flash of congressional generosity. It marks the
culmination of a long effort to mitigate unjust consequences of
sovereign immunity from suit. While the political theory that the
King could do so wrong was repudiated in America, a legal doctrine
derived from it that the Crown is immune from any suit to which it
has not consented [
Footnote 6]
was invoked on behalf of the Republic, and applied by our courts as
vigorously as it had been on behalf of the Crown. [
Footnote 7] As the Federal Government
expanded its activities, its agents caused a multiplying number of
remediless wrongs -- wrongs which would have been actionable if
inflicted by an individual or a corporation but remediless
Page 340 U. S. 140
solely because their perpetrator was an officer or employee of
the Government. Relief was often sought and sometimes granted
through private bills in Congress, the number of which steadily
increased as Government activity increased. The volume of these
private bills, the inadequacy of congressional machinery for
determination of facts, the importunities to which claimants
subjected members of Congress, and the capricious results, led to a
strong demand that claims for tort wrongs be submitted to
adjudication. Congress already had waived immunity and made the
Government answerable for breaches of its contracts and certain
other types of claims. [
Footnote
8] At last, in connection with the Reorganization Act, it
waived immunity and transferred the burden of examining tort claims
to the courts. The primary purpose of the Act was to extend a
remedy to those who had been without; if it incidentally benefited
those already well provided for, it appears to have been
unintentional. Congress was suffering from no plague of private
bills on the behalf of military and naval personnel, because a
comprehensive system of relief had been authorized for them and
their dependents by statute.
Looking to the detail of the Act, it is true that it provides,
broadly, that the District Court "shall have exclusive jurisdiction
of civil actions on claims against the United States, for money
damages. . . ." [
Footnote 9]
This confers jurisdiction to render judgment upon all such
claims.
Page 340 U. S. 141
But it does not say that all claims must be allowed.
Jurisdiction is necessary to deny a claim on its merits as matter
of law as much as to adjudge that liability exists. We interpret
this language to mean all it says, but no more. Jurisdiction of the
defendant now exists where the defendant was immune from suit
before; it remains for courts, in exercise of their jurisdiction,
to determine whether any claim is recognizable in law.
For this purpose, the Act goes on to prescribe the test of
allowable claims, which is, "The United States shall be liable . .
. in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual
under like circumstances . . . ," with certain exceptions not
material here. 28 U.S.C. § 2674. It will be seen that this is
not the creation of new causes of action, but acceptance of
liability under circumstances that would bring private liability
into existence. This, we think, embodies the same idea that its
English equivalent enacted in 1947 (Crown Proceedings Act 1947; 10
and 11 Geo. VI, c. 44, p. 863) expressed,
"Where any person has a claim against the Crown after the
commencement of this Act, and, if this Act had not been passed, the
claim might have been enforced, subject to the grant . . ."
of consent to be sued, the claim may now be enforced without
specific consent. One obvious shortcoming in these claims is that
plaintiffs can point to no liability of a "private individual" even
remotely analogous to that which they are asserting against the
United States. We know of no American law which ever has permitted
a soldier to recover for negligence, against either his superior
officers or the Government he is serving. [
Footnote 10] Nor is there any liability "under
like circumstances," for no private individual has power to
conscript or mobilize a private army with such authorities over
persons as the Government vests in echelons
Page 340 U. S. 142
of command. The nearest parallel, even if we were to treat
"private individual" as including a state, would be the
relationship between the states and their militia. But if we
indulge plaintiffs the benefit of this comparison, claimants cite
us no state, and we know of none, which has permitted members of
its militia to maintain tort actions for injuries suffered in the
service, and, in at least one state, the contrary has been held to
be the case. [
Footnote 11]
It is true that, if we consider relevant only a part of the
circumstances, and ignore the status of both the wronged and the
wrongdoer in these cases, we find analogous private liability. In
the usual civilian doctor and patient relationship, there is, of
course, a liability for malpractice. And a landlord would
undoubtedly be held liable if an injury occurred to a tenant as the
result of a negligently maintained heating plant. But the liability
assumed by the Government here is that created by "all the
circumstances," not that which a few of the circumstances might
create. We find no parallel liability before, and we think no new
one has been created by, this Act. Its effect is to waive immunity
from recognized causes of action, and was not to visit the
Government with novel and unprecedented liabilities.
It is not without significance as to whether the Act should be
construed to apply to service-connected injuries that it makes " .
. . the law of the place where the act or omission occurred" govern
any consequent liability. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). This provision
recognizes and assimilates into federal law the rules of
substantive law of the several states, among which divergencies are
notorious. This perhaps is fair enough when the claimant is not on
duty or is free to choose his own habitat, and thereby limit the
jurisdiction in which it will be possible for federal
Page 340 U. S. 143
activities to cause him injury. That his tort claims should be
governed by the law of the location where he has elected to be is
just as fair when the defendant is the Government as when the
defendant is a private individual. But a soldier on active duty has
no such choice, and must serve anyplace or, under modern
conditions, any number of places in quick succession in the
forty-eight states, the Canal Zone, or Alaska, or Hawaii, or any
other territory of the United States. That the geography of an
injury should select the law to be applied to his tort claims makes
no sense. We cannot ignore the fact that most states have abolished
the common-law action for damages between employer and employee and
superseded it with workmen's compensation statutes which provide,
in most instances, the sole basis of liability. Absent this, or
where such statutes are inapplicable, states have differing
provisions as to limitations of liability and different doctrines
as to assumption of risk, fellow servant rules, and contributory or
comparative negligence. It would hardly be a rational plan of
providing for those disabled in service by others in service to
leave them dependent upon geographic considerations over which they
have no control, and to laws which fluctuate in existence and
value.
The relationship between the Government and members of its armed
forces is "distinctively federal in character," as this Court
recognized in
United States v. Standard Oil Co.,
332 U. S. 301,
wherein the Government unsuccessfully sought to recover for losses
incurred by virtue of injuries to a soldier. The considerations
which lead to that decision apply with even greater force to this
case:
". . . To whatever extent state law may apply to govern the
relations between soldiers or others in the armed forces and
persons outside them or nonfederal governmental agencies, the
scope, nature, legal incidents and consequence of the relation
between
Page 340 U. S. 144
persons in service and the Government are fundamentally derived
from federal sources and governed by federal authority.
See Tarble's
Case, 13 Wall. 397;
Kurtz v. Moffitt,
115 U. S.
487. . . ."
332 U.S. at
332 U. S.
305-306.
No federal law recognizes a recovery such as claimants seek. The
Military Personnel Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 223b, now
superseded by 28 U.S.C. § 2672, permitted recovery in some
circumstances, but it specifically excluded claims of military
personnel "incident to their service."
This Court, in deciding claims for wrongs incident to service
under the Tort Claims Act, cannot escape attributing some bearing
upon it to enactments by Congress which provide systems of simple,
certain, and uniform compensation for injuries or death of those in
armed services. [
Footnote
12] We might say that the claimant may (a) enjoy both types of
recovery, or (b) elect which to pursue, thereby waiving the other,
or (c) pursue both, crediting the larger liability with the
proceeds of the smaller, or (d) that the compensation and pension
remedy excludes the tort remedy. There is as much statutory
authority for one as for another of these conclusions. If Congress
had contemplated that this Tort Act would be held to apply in cases
of this kind, it is difficult to see why it should have omitted any
provision to adjust these two types of remedy to each other. The
absence of any such adjustment is persuasive that there was no
awareness that the Act might be interpreted to permit recovery for
injuries incident to military service.
Page 340 U. S. 145
A soldier is at peculiar disadvantage in litigation. [
Footnote 13] Lack of time and money,
the difficulty, if not impossibility, of procuring witnesses, are
only a few of the factors working to his disadvantage. And the few
cases charging superior officers or the Government with neglect or
misconduct which have been brought since the Tort Claims Act, of
which the present are typical, have either been suits by widows or
surviving dependents, or have been brought after the individual was
discharged. [
Footnote 14]
The compensation system, which normally requires no litigation, is
not negligible or niggardly, as these cases demonstrate. The
recoveries compare extremely favorably with those provided by most
workmen's compensation statutes. In the
Jefferson case,
the District Court considered actual and prospective payments by
the Veterans' Administration as diminution of the verdict.
Plaintiff received $3,645.50 to the date of the court's
computation, and, on estimated life expectancy under existing
legislation, would prospectively receive $31,947 in addition. In
the
Griggs case, the widow, in the two-year period after
her husband's death, received payments in excess of $2,100. In
addition, she received $2,695, representing the six months' death
gratuity under the Act of December 17, 1919, as amended, 41 Stat.
367, 57 Stat. 599, 10 U.S.C. § 903. It is estimated that her
total future pension payments will aggregate $18,000. Thus, the
widow will receive an amount in excess of $22,000 from Government
gratuities, whereas she sought and could seek under state law only
$15,000, the maximum permitted by Illinois for death.
Page 340 U. S. 146
It is contended that all these considerations were before the
Court in the
Brooks case, and that allowance of recovery
to Brooks requires a similar holding of liability here. The actual
holding in the
Brooks case can support liability here only
by ignoring the vital distinction there stated. The injury to
Brooks did not arise out of or in the course of military duty.
Brooks was on furlough, driving along the highway, under compulsion
of no orders or duty and on no military mission. A Government owned
and operated vehicle collided with him. Brooks' father, riding in
the same car, recovered for his injuries, and the Government did
not further contest the judgment, but contended that there could be
no liability to the sons, solely because they were in the Army.
This Court rejected the contention, primarily because Brooks'
relationship while on leave was not analogous to that of a soldier
injured while performing duties under orders.
We conclude that the Government is not liable under the Federal
Tort Claims Act for injuries to servicemen where the injuries arise
out of or are in the course of activity incident to service.
Without exception, the relationship of military personnel to the
Government has been governed exclusively by federal law. We do not
think that Congress, in drafting this Act, created a new cause of
action dependent on local law for service-connected injuries or
death due to negligence. We cannot impute to Congress such a
radical departure from established law in the absence of express
congressional command. Accordingly, the judgments in the
Feres and
Jefferson cases are affirmed, and that
in the
Griggs case is reversed.
Nos. 9 and 29 affirmed.
No. 31 reversed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs in the result.
* Together with No. 29,
Jefferson v. United States, on
certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth
Circuit, argued October 12-13, 1950, and No. 31,
United States
v. Griggs, Executrix, on certiorari to the United States Court
of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, argued October 13, 1950.
[
Footnote 1]
177 F.2d 535.
[
Footnote 2]
74 F. Supp.
209.
[
Footnote 3]
77 F. Supp.
706.
[
Footnote 4]
178 F.2d 518.
[
Footnote 5]
178 F.2d 1.
[
Footnote 6]
The Crown has recently submitted itself to suit,
see
post, p.
340 U. S.
141.
[
Footnote 7]
United States v.
McLemore, 4 How. 286;
Reeside v.
Walker, 11 How. 272,
52 U. S. 290;
Ickes v. Fox, 300 U. S. 82,
300 U. S.
96.
[
Footnote 8]
28 U.S.C. § 1491.
[
Footnote 9]
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). The provisions of the Tort Claims Act
are now found in Title 28, §§ 1291, 1346, 1402, 1504,
2110, 2401, 2402, 2411, 2412, 2671-2680. In recodifying Title 28 of
the United States Code, changes in language were made. The Tort
Claims Act, as originally enacted, 60 Stat. 843, provided in §
410 that the District Court
"shall have exclusive jurisdiction to hear, determine, and
render judgment on
any claim against the United States,
for money only. . . ."
(Emphasis supplied.) We attribute to this change of language no
substantive change of law.
[
Footnote 10]
Cf. 53 U. S.
Wilkes, 12 How. 390, and
Weaver v. Ward, Hobart 135,
80 Eng.Rep. 284 (1616), as to intentional torts.
[
Footnote 11]
Goldstein v. State, 281 N.Y. 396, 24 N.E.2d 97.
[
Footnote 12]
48 Stat. 8 (1933), as amended, 38 U.S.C. § 701 (1946); 48
Stat. 11 (1933), as amended, 38 U.S.C. § 718 (1946); 55 Stat.
608 (1941), 38 U.S.C. § 725 (1946); 57 Stat. 558 (1943), as
amended, 38 U.S.C. § 731 (1946); 62 Stat. 1219, 1220 (1948),
38 U.S.C. (Supp. III) §§ 740, 741 (1950).
[
Footnote 13]
Relief was provided in the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief
Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 1178, 50 U.S.C. App. § 501
et
seq..
[
Footnote 14]
Brooks v. United States, supra, (discharged at time of
suit);
Santana v. United States, 175 F.2d 320, 321 (suit
by sole heirs);
Ostrander v. United States, 178 F.2d 923
(suit by widow);
Samson v. United States, 79 F. Supp.
406 (suit by administrator);
Alansky v. Northwest
Airlines, 77 F. Supp.
556 (suit by widow and son).