Lead Opinion
In 1987, Samuel Trunzo, a Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Air Force, driving a rented automobile while on temporary assignment in Miami, was involved in an auto accident. Adam Abrams sued Trunzo for personal injury caused by the accident. Because Trunzo was operating the vehicle within the scope of his government employment, the United States was substituted as defendant in the action.
The sole issue before this court is whether the United States is a “covered person” within the meaning of Trunzo’s personal insurance policy. In addition to covering Trunzo’s insured vehicle, the policy provides liability, coverage for automobiles driven by Trunzo unless the person or organizаtion seeking coverage hired or owned the automobile involved in the accident. Specifically, the policy provides:
We will pay damages for bodily injury or property damage for which any covered person becomes legally responsible because of an auto accident ... [A covered person is] [f]or any auto or trailer, other than your covered auto, any person or organization but only with respect to legal responsibility for acts or omissions of you or any family member for whom coverage is afforded under this part. This provision applies only if the person or organization does not own or hire the auto or trailer.
In granting USAA’s summary judgment motion, the district court held that “the United States actually hired the vehicle, either directly or through the actions of its agent, Trunzo” and that the Government therefore was not a “covered person” entitled to indemnification pursuant to the terms of Trun-zo’s insurance policy. On appeal, the government contends federal law defines whether the government hires or acquires a vehicle and, by those terms, the United States did not hirе the rented car and thus qualifies as a covered person under Trunzo’s insurance policy.
We must first decide whether to apply federal law or California law in interpreting the provision. While the Federal Torts Claim Act (FTCA) contains directives about which substantive law to apply in litigation under the statute (liability attaches to the United States in accordance with the law оf the place where the tort occurred), it does not directly address which law to apply in claims for indemnity that derive from FTCA suits. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1994). This Circuit recently explained the doctrine under which federal law should be substituted for state law:
The Supreme Court has identified three categories of preemption: (1) “express,” where Congress “define[s] explicitly the extent to which its enactmеnts pre-empt state law,” (2) “field,” in which Congress regulates a field so pervasively, or federal law touches on a field implicating such a dominant federal interest, that an intent for federal law to occupy the field exclusively may be inferred; (3) “conflict,” where state and federal law actually conflict, so that it is impossible for a party simultaneously to comply with bоth, or*1176 state law “stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.” Preemption of any type “fundamentally is a question of congressional intent.”
Teper v. Miller,
The government has misapprehended the federal interest in this matter. We are not asked to address contractual issues between the rental agency and the federal government; we are asked to determine the government’s right to recover as a third-party beneficiary to the insurance agreement between Tranzo and his personal insurance carrier, USAA. The “litigation before us raises no question regarding the liability of the. United States or the responsibilities of the United States” under any contract. Miree v. DeKalb County, Georgia,
The consideration of that substantial interest has led federal courts to apply state lаw in most third-party claims for indemnity or contribution derived from the FTCA. See, e.g., United States v. Government Employees Ins. Co., Inc.,
More relevant here, when the federal government has sought indemnification as a third-party beneficiary to an insurance contract, federal courts in other circuits have applied state law. See, e.g., United States v. Government Ins., Co.,
In United States v. Gilman,
The instant case is easily distinguished from both Seckinger and Gilman. Unlike the former, this ease does not involve a federal government contract and its interpretation; it revolves around the meaning of a provision in a private insurance contract between Trunzo and his insurance policy with USAA. Contrary to the government’s assertions, the case does not offer the possibility of subjecting federal government authority to local control. In Gilman, a strong policy interest in preventing the government from seeking indemnity against its own employees, an interest apparent in the FTCA’s legislative history, defeated the application of state law. While this case does not implicate that policy interest, the government insists that another strong federal interest — federal control over its procurement policies and procedures — should compel the application of federal law in this dispute. As noted previously, however, we reject the government’s description of the nature of the federal interest at stake in this case and, thus, find the application of state law appropriate.
Accordingly, we turn to the question of whether, under California law, the United States “hired” the rented vehicle within the meaning of Trunzo’s insurance policy with USAA. For purpоses of interpreting that California policy, the United States can be deemed to have hired the car if, according to California law, Trunzo acted as its agent, and with actual authority. USAA argues that the car rental was within the course and scope of Trunzo’s agency because “the act was done in the prosecution of the business in which the servant was employed to assist.” Kinney v. Vaccari,
Pursuant to California law, “[ajctual authority is such as a principal intentionally confers upon the agent, or intentionally, or by want of ordinary care, allows the agent to believe himself to possess.” Ca. Civil Code § 2316. California courts have made clear that actual authority may be implied as well as express.1 Hobart v. Hobart Estate Co.,
On the facts of this case, it is clear that Trunzo exercised implied, actual authority, and that the government therefore hired the car through his actions. Trunzo’s sole reason for requiring the use of a rental car is a direct result of his military orders. His travel orders included specific instructions to rent a car from Holiday Payless Rent-A-Car. The car was reserved by the Scheduled Airline Traffic Office (SATO) at McClellan Air Force Base in California. Holiday Pay-less had negotiatеd an agreement with the United States to rent cars on special terms to Government employees on official business. The agreement with Payless provides for discounted car rental rates, establishes a toll free number for reservations, dispenses with the usual requirement of a credit card or cash security deposit, specifies that “[g]ov-ernment travelers on оfficial business will not be subject to any fee for Collision Damage Waiver, and ... will not be subject to any collision damage responsibility,” provides for free liability insurance for the government and its employees, puts on Payless “the entire risk of direct loss of or damage to the vehicles,” and provides for payment by cash,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Drivers Act, codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2679(b), amended the Federal Torts Claim Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671-80(1994), to require substitution of the United States as а party in a civil suit against a government driver for a traffic accident occurring while the employee was operating the vehicle within the scope of employment.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
The question before us is whether the United States “hired” the vehicle that collided with Adam Abrams. If it did, it is not a “covered person” under the driver’s insurance policy, and we must affirm the district court’s denial of the United States’ motion for summary judgment seeking indemnification from the driver’s insurer, USAA. The majority has concluded that the United States hired the car from Payless car rental agency. I would hold otherwise. For an entity to hire a vehicle, it must contract for that vehicle. For us to find that the United States hired the automobile from Payless, therefore, USAA must show that a contract existed between the United Stаtes and Pay-less. It has not done so.
The United States enters into contracts pursuant to federal statutory and regulatory authority; any contract formed contrary to such authority is null and void. See, e.g., S.J. Amoroso Constr. Co., Inc. v. United States,
Contract officers, including members of the armed services delegated “micro-purchase” authority, must be appointed in writing in aсcordance with regulatory procedures. See 48 C.F.R. § 1.603-3 (1997). There is nothing in the record even to suggest that Lieutenant Colonel Trunzo was a duly appointed contract officer carrying out contract officer duties. He thus could not have created a contract binding on the United States under current regulations.
The majority reasons that, under California law,
Before implied authority can be invoked, the agent must first possess express actual authority in the subject area at question. See, e.g., San Pedro v. United States,
USAA presents no evidence, and I find none in the record, to suggest that Lieutenant Colonel Trunzo’s duties as a non-contract officer for the Air Force involved the making of contracts; indeed, they could not undеr federal regulations. There is also no evidence establishing that Trunzo was responsible for procuring transportation for the Air Force, a responsibility that could have involved contracting duties. He therefore could not have possessed the implied authority to bind the United States to a contract to rent a car from Payless.
There being no other possible source of a contract between the United States and Pay-less,
. The majority chаracterizes the issue before the court as one of conflict of laws. There is no conflict here, however: the existence and terms of federal contracts are governed entirely and solely by federal law. A state may not apply its own law to create a contract that binds the United States.
. At one point in the litigation, USAA claimed that an agreemеnt between the United States and Payless providing government employees with discount rates was actually a contract obligating the United States to rent Payless cars. The district court appears to have been persuaded by this argument when it held that "the United States actually hired the vehicle, either directly or through the actions of its agent, Trunzo." (emphasis added). The United States-Payless agree-menl, however, states in its first paragraph that “[t]he Government ... [is] not obligated to purchase any services offered by [Payless] under the terms of this agreement.” I fail to see how the employee discount agreement could be construed as a contract to rent cars even without this quoted language. In light of the disclaimer, USAA certainly cannot argue that the United States intended to contract with Payless for automobiles.
