Piеrre Bostic appeals the dismissal, with prejudice, of his complaint against the District of Columbia, which alleged that a uniformed officer of the United States Capitol Police committed tortious acts when he arrested appellant. He also claims that the trial court prematurely granted аppellee’s motion to dismiss without first ruling on his motion to join the United States Capitol Police as a defendant. We affirm.
Appellant’s complaint alleged that on February 14, 2004, he was falsely arrested, falsely imprisoned, assaulted, battered, and the subject of intentional infliction of emotional distress when Unitеd States Capitol Police Officer Darryl Banks pulled him over “at or near” the intersection of South Capitol and I Streets, S.W., and arrested him for operating a vehicle with a suspended license.
Appellant filed a complaint in Superior Court against the District of Columbia, alleging it was the “employеr” of Capitol Police Officer Banks, and responsible for his hiring, training, and supervision, and therefore, liable for all actions performed by him in his official capacity. The District filed a motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 12(b)(6), stating that the “United States Capitol Police is under the contrоl of the United States Capitol Police Board, Officer Banks is not a D.C. employee, and, as such, the District is not the proper party defendant. Plaintiff has not alleged any acts or omissions by an employee or agent of the District_” Appellant opposed the motion, arguing that the statute authorizing “cooperative agreements” between the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and federal agencies, such as the U.S. Capitol Police, evidenced an agency relationship between the two. See D.C.Code § 5-301 (2001). Appellant also filed a motion to join the U.S. Capitol Policе as a party defendant pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 19(a). The trial court dismissed appellant’s complaint, with prejudice, without ruling on the motion to add the U.S. Capitol Police as a defendant.
II.
Appellant relies primarily on provisions of the D.C.Code governing the allocation of duties and resрonsibilities of federal law enforcement officers working for agencies that have entered “cooperative agreements” with the MPD to assist in carrying out crime prevention and law enforcement activities in the District.
See
D.C.Code §§ 5-133.17(a),
1
-301(a) (2001).
2
Aecord-
Appellant never produced a cooperative agreement between the MPD and thе U.S. Capitol Police, and at oral argument neither party could confirm its existence. We, sua sponte, ordered further briefing on the matter, inviting the United States to file, as amicus curiae, its position on the existence of a cooperative agreement between the MPD and the U.S. Capitol Police. The United States confirmеd, and neither party disputes, that, in fact, there is no cooperative agreement between the MPD and the U.S. Capitol Police. Therefore, appellant cannot rely, as he now concedes, on the cited provisions of the D.C.Code — which govern only federal officers acting pursuаnt to such cooperative agreements — to support his theory that the District is liable for the actions of Capitol Police Officers. We, therefore, leave for another day the interpretation and implication for the District’s liability of the language in D.C.Code § 5-301(a) granting federal police officers acting pursuant to a cooperative agreement with the MPD “the same legal status and immunity from suit as an.MPD officer.”
Appellant nonetheless argues that his case is not doomed because an agency relationship between the MPD (and therefore the District) and the Capitol Poliсe exists as a factual matter, despite the lack of a statutorily-authorized cooperative agreement between the two. He asserts that the District gives its “tacit consent” to the U.S. Capitol Police to act on the District’s behalf and to its benefit, creating a principal-agent relаtionship that renders the District liable for torts committed by the officers of the U.S. Capitol Police while performing duties pursuant to this relationship. Appellant’s argument is not supported by the allegations in his complaint.
The facts alleged do not provide a basis for an agency relationship between the District of Columbia and U.S. Capitol Police Officers, because the authority of the
[the] authority to make arrests and otherwise enforce the laws of the United States, including the laws of the District of Columbia ... within the area ... bounded by the north curb of H Street from 3rd Street, N.W. to 7th Strеet, N.E., the east curb of 7th Street from H Street, N.E., to M Street, S.E., the south curb of M Street from 7th Street, S.E. to 1st Street, S.E., the east curb of 1st Street from M Street, S.E. to Potomac Avenue S.E., the southeast curb of Potomac Avenue from 1st Street, S.E. to South Capitol Street, S.W., the west curb of South Capitol Street from Potomac Avenuе, S.W. to P Street, S.W., the north curb of P Street from South Capitol Street, S.W. to 3rd Street, S.W., and the west curb of 3rd Street from P Street, S.W. to H Street, N.W.
2 U.S.C. § 1967(a)(4), (b)(1). Because, according to appellant’s complaint, he was arrested by a Capitol Police Officer “at or near” the intersection of I Street, S.W. and South Capitоl Street, S.W., which is at least six blocks north and three blocks east of the southern and western boundaries of the jurisdiction accorded to the Capitol Police by statute, the officer who arrested appellant was acting within the authority granted to him, as a member of the Capitol Police, by the United Stаtes Congress, and not pursuant to any authority derived from the District of Columbia.
In any event, the District of Columbia may be sued only for the torts of its agent police officers if there exists a
respondeat superior
relationship between the officers and the District.
See, e.g., Wade v. District of Columbia,
Appellant’s final claim is that the trial court prematurely granted appellee’s motion to dismiss without ruling on its motiоn to join the U.S. Capitol Police as a party defendant.
4
Assuming that the suit against the District should not have been dismissed before the trial court ruled on the motion to add the U.S. Capitol Police as a defendant (because dismissal left no suit for the Capitol Police to join), any procedural misstep was hаrmless. Appellant could not have sued the Capitol Police, an agency of the United States, in D.C. Superior Court; the Federal Tort Claims Act requires that all tort actions against the United States be brought in the federal courts.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1) (2001) (providing that “the district courts ... shall have exclusive jurisdiction of civil actions on claims against the United States, for money damages, for injury or loss of property, or personal injury or death caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or employment ... ”),
discussed in Goddard v. District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Agency,
For all of the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s dismissal of appellant’s complaint against the District of Columbia is hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. Cooperative agreements between federal agеncies and Metropolitan Police Department:
(a) Agreements. Each covered Federal law enforcement agency may enter into a cooperative agreement with the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia to assist the Department in carrying out crime prevention and law enforcement activities in the District of Columbia, including taking appropriate action to enforce subsection (e) of this section [currently recodified at D.C.Code § 22-1323] (except that nothing in such an agreement may be construed to grant authority to the United States tо prosecute violations of subsection (e) of this section).
(b) Contents of agreement. An agreement entered into between a covered Federal law enforcement agency and the Metropolitan Police Department pursuant to this section may include agreements relating to:
(1)Sending personnel of the agency on patrol in areas of the District of Columbia which immediately surround the area of the agency’s jurisdiction, and granting personnel of the agency the power to arrest in such areas;
(2) Sharing and donating equipment and supplies with the Metropolitan Police Dеpartment;
(3) Operating on shared radio frequencies with the Metropolitan Police Department;
(4) Permitting personnel of the agency to carry out processing and papering of suspects they arrest in the District of Columbia; and
(5) Such other items as the agency and the Metropolitan Poliсe Department may agree to include in the agreement.
(c) Coordination with U.S. Attorney's Office. — Agreements entered into pursuant to this section shall be coordinated in advance with the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia.
(d) Covered federal law enforcement agencies described. In this sеction, theterm "covered federal law enforcement agency" means any of the following:
(1)United States Capitol Police....
D.C.Code § 5-133.17(a) (2001).
. Powers and duties of federal law enforcement officers when making arrests for non-federal offenses:
(a) When a federal law enforcement agency has entered into a coopеrative agreement with the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia ("MPD”) to assist the Department in carrying out crime prevention and law enforcement activities pursuant to § 5-133.17, a sworn federal law enforcement officer of a covered federal law enforcеment agency as defined in § 5-133.17(d) ("federal officer”), who in his official capacity is authorized to make arrests, shall, when making an arrest in the District of Columbia for a nonfederal offense, have the same legal status and immunity from suit as an MPD officer if the arrest is made under the following circumstances:
(1) The fedеral officer has probable cause to believe that the person arrested has committed a felony;
(2) The federal officer reasonably believes that the person arrested has committed a misdemeanor in his presence; or
(3) The federal officer is rendering assistance to an MPD officer in an emergency at the request of that MPD officer.
D.C.Code § 5-301 (a) (2001).
.Indeed, appellant seems to have recognized this by the time he filed his supplemental brief, wherein he argues a more generalized theory of agency between Capitol Police Officers and the District (stating that the District gives thе Capitol Police its "tacit consent” to act on its behalf in the District), instead of an employee-employer or respondeat superior relationship. As discussed in the text, this claim also fails because the U.S. Capitol Police officer was acting within the scope of the authority granted by Congress.
. This claim, arguably, has bеen waived because appellant did not preserve his objection in the trial court.
See Thorne v. United States,
. Appellant noted at oral argument and in his supplemental brief that he is undertaking pre
