Applying Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit precedent, we affirm the district court’s ruling that the
Feres
doctrine
(Feres v. United States,
FACTS
David Elliott, Jr., a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army, lived with his wife, Barbara Elliott, a civilian, in an apartment provided for them on the military base at Fort Benning, Georgia. On August 14, 1989, David Elliott received ordinary leave, pursuant to his request, altering his duty status to “on leave” and “absent with authority.” Under the terms of his leave, the Army did not expect Elliott to report to duty until the morning of August 30, 1989.
Before his leave expired, Elliott returned to his apartment at Fort Benning. During the evening of August 28, 1989, Barbara Elliott returned to the apartment from work and went to bed early because she felt nauseous. When Barbara went to bed, David was awake watching television, sitting on the living room sofa. The following day, after Barbara failed to report to work, the Army dispatched military police to the Elliotts’ apartment. Upon breaking into the apartment, the military police discovered Barbara Elliott on the bed and David Elliott on the sofa, unconscious and comatose. Military personnel immediately transported the El-liotts to a hospital at Fort Benning, where the medical staff treated them for carbon monoxide poisoning resulting from a faulty venting system attached to the water heater in the apartment.
David Elliott remained in a coma for two weeks, and on October 20, 1989, the hospital *1557 discharged him to Montgomery Rehabilitative Hospital in Montgomery, Alabama, a private hospital. Barbara Elliott, although comatose upon her admission to the hospital, recovered sufficiently for the hospital staff to discharge her on September 14, 1989. David Elliott suffered serious, permanent, and debilitating injuries from inhaling carbon monoxide.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
After the Army denied their administrative claims, the Elliotts brought this lawsuit for negligence pursuant to the Federal Torts Claims Act in the United States' District Court for the Middle District of Georgia.
1
The government moved to dismiss all of David Elliott’s claims and Barbara Elliott’s claim for loss of consortium, arguing that
Feres v. United States,
Following trial, the district court entered judgment for the Elliotts, finding that the carbon monoxide entered the apartment from a defective and deteriorated hot water heater and vent pipe, which resulted from the Army’s negligent maintenance of the vent pipe. Additionally, the district court concluded that the Army’s failure to properly install, inspect, and maintain the vent pipe violated its own regulations and its duties as a landlord under Georgia law. Finally, the district court found that the evidence proved that the Army’s breach of its statutory and regulatory duties proximately caused the El-liotts’ injuries and damages, including loss of consortium.
Upon finding the government liable, the district court awarded Barbara Elliott damages of $3,010,110.68, including $750,000 for loss of David’s consortium, and awarded David Elliott damages of $8,968,439, including $500,000 for loss of Barbara’s consortium. On January 7, 1993, the United States filed this appeal challenging the district court’s judgment with respect to David Elliott’s claim for damages and Barbara Elliott’s claim for loss of her husband’s consortium. 2
CONTENTIONS
The government contends that the Feres doctrine bars military personnel from filing claims for injuries suffered during an “activity incident to service.” The government further contends that providing David Elliott with free housing is an activity incident to his service in the armed services. Thus, the government argues, because Elliott suffered his injuries while engaging in an activity “incident to service,” the Feres doctrine bars his claims.
The Elliotts contend that the Feres doctrine does not apply in this case because David Elliott did not incur injuries while engaged in an activity incident to his service. Because he was on ordinary leave watching television in his apartment, the Elliotts contend that David was not under the compulsion of military orders or involved in military operations; therefore, the Feres doctrine does not bar his claims. Thus, they argue, because David’s injuries resulted from the Army’s failure to provide a safe and hazard-free apartment, they may recover under the Federal Torts Claims Act.
Alternatively, the Elliotts contend that application of the Feres doctrine to this case violates the Constitution and is inconsistent with recent cases modifying the holding in Feres.
ISSUES
The appeal presents two issues: (1) whether the Feres doctrine denies military persons recovery for injuries incurred while on leave due to an armed forces’s negligent maintenance of on-base housing; and (2) whether the Feres doctrine bars Barbara Elliott’s claim for loss of consortium.
*1558 DISCUSSION
I. THE FEDERAL TORTS CLAIMS ACT
The Federal Torts Claims Act (FTCA) permits private citizens to bring claims and lawsuits against the United States
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, under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) (1988). In passing the FTCA, Congress relaxed the long standing common law doctrine of sovereign immunity which barred certain tort lawsuits against the United States.
Feres,
Within the provisions of the FTCA, Congress limited litigants’ right to sue in certain circumstances. One limitation, contained in 28 U.S.C. § 2680Q), provides government immunity from lawsuits for service member’s injuries “arising out of the combatant activity of the military or naval forces, or the Coast Guard, during time of war.” The FTCA, however, contains no express provision barring claims of military personnel during peacetime.
The
Feres
doctrine has never been held to bar all military personnel lawsuits. Beginning with
Brooks v. United States,
Under
Brooks,
injured service personnel may sue the United States for injuries arising from the negligent conduct of other military personnel.
See United States v. Brown,
II. THE FERES DOCTRINE
Although Congress chose not to expressly prohibit military personnel from suing for injuries incurred during peacetime, the Supreme Court created a doctrine barring recovery where military personnel suffer injuries arising from activities “incident to” their military service.
Feres,
In
Feres,
the Supreme Court held that military personnel may not recover for injuries received during activities incident to military service.
Feres,
To support this judicially created doctrine, the Supreme Court emphasized three policy justifications: (1) the “distinctly federal” relationship between the United States and its military personnel; (2) the presence of an alternative source of compensation; and (3) the fear of disrupting the military disciplinary structure.
See Stencel Aero Eng. Corp. v. United States,
The first of these rationales — the distinctly federal relationship — arises from the notion that it makes little sense to have the United States’s liability depend on the “fortuity of where the soldier happened to be stationed at the time of the injury.” Stencel,
The Court premised its second rationale— alternative source of compensation — on the Veterans Benefit Act, which established a statutory scheme for providing pensions to injured military personnel, without regard to negligence on the part of the government, as a substitute for tort liability.
Feres,
Although these two rationales regularly appear when
Feres
issues arise, they have lost much of their vitality, and provide no help in determining when an injury occurs “incident to service.”
See Parker,
In the last analysis, Feres seems best explained by the ‘peculiar and special relationship of the soldier to his superiors, the effects of the maintenance of such suits on discipline, and the extreme results that might obtain if suits under the Tort Claims Act were allowed for negligent orders given or negligent acts committed in the course of military duty.’
Shearer,
Because preservation of military discipline lies at the heart of the
Feres
doctrine, courts pay significant deference to the “peculiar and special relationship of a soldier to his superiors.”
Muniz,
The circumstances surrounding the Elliotts’ injuries do not implicate these concerns. Contrary to the government’s arguments, the Elliotts’ claims do not involve issues that, if litigated, would harm the military’s disciplinary system.
6
Pierce,
Providing and maintaining single-family housing for military personnel does not involve the federal judiciary in sensitive military affairs or the “second-guessing of military orders.”
Stencel,
Moreover, the Elliotts’ lawsuit did not require Army officers to “testify in court as to each other’s decisions and actions” because providing safe housing does not require that military officers exercise discretion.
Stencel,
Finally, the government’s contention that it provides on-base housing for “important military reasons” does not withstand critical analysis. Enlisted personnel may live off base if they choose and receive a significant housing stipend if the do. If the Army’s “important reasons” for providing military housing really did implicate its decision-making process, or its need for discipline, it is unlikely that the Army would provide service personnel with this off-base housing option.
The circumstances that led to Elliott’s injuries and eventual lawsuit pose no threat to military discipline. In fact, the circumstances militate in favor of allowing the lawsuit. Thus, in determining whether David’s injuries arose from activities incident to his service, the policy considerations underlying the Feres exception cause us to be significantly less constrained.
III. INCIDENT TO SERVICE
To determine whether a rational relationship exists between the activity leading to the service personnel’s injury and military service, this court focuses on three factors: the duty status of the service personnel; the situs of the injury; and, the activity the service personnel were engaged in at the time of the injury.
Parker,
A Duty Status
The particular duty status of service personnel bringing the lawsuit under the FTCA falls along a spectrum. At one end is the individual who has been fully discharged from military service. “If an individual has been discharged from the service, his activities are” generally not considered to be “ ‘incident to service.’”
Parker,
In prior decisions, we considered the duty status of military personnel at the time of the injury pivotal to our determination.
Parker,
When Elliott sustained his injuries, he was “absent with authority,” enjoying full leave from his post. The Army did not expect him to return to service for two more days. The United States argues, however, that Elliott’s duty status at the time of his injury is legally irrelevant because Feres bars claims arising from the provision of military benefits even when military personnel are on leave when the benefits are provided. While we address this contention in more detail below, we note that the holding in Feres severely weakens this argument because the Court barred recovery for three servicemen, in part because they were not on leave or furlough.
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 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 , 52 [69 S.Ct. 918 , 920,93 L.Ed. 1200 ] (1949).
Feres,
B. Situs of the Injury
Although this circuit tends to hold that
Feres
bars recovery when military personnel injuries arise from an activity on the military compound, no bright-line rule exists which compels such an outcome.
Parker,
In
Parker,
we permitted recovery even though the plaintiffs injuries arose from an automobile collision on base. 611 F.2d at
*1562
1015. Reasoning that “where an injury occurred should not be emphasized above all other factors,” we held “[o]nce it is determined that the service members’ duty status might warrant allowing the action but that the injury occurred on the base, the court should go further and inquire into precisely what the person was doing when injured.”
Parker,
In this case, Elliott sustained his injuries while in his apartment, which the Army provided for him and his wife located at Fort Benning. Although the place of Elliott’s injury may suggest the application of Feres, this fact is not dispositive. Under Parker, we must consider the nature of his activity at the time of his injury. 7
C. Nature of the Activity
The last factor we consider is the nature of the activity resulting in the military personnel’s injury. If we are to “adhere ... to the line drawn in the
Feres
case between injuries that did and injuries that did not arise out [of] or in the course of military duty,” we must consider whether the activity from which the injury arose served some military purpose or mission.
Brown,
When injured, Elliott was sitting on a couch in his living room watching television, and his wife was in the bedroom asleep. Elliott did not have to report to duty for two more days, and therefore, like the claimants in both
Parker
and
Pierce,
“was not directly subject to military control; he was not under the compulsion of military orders; he was not performing any military mission.”
Parker,
In most instances, these three factors determine whether the military personnel’s injury arose during an activity incident to service in the military. The government argues, however, that even if Elliott’s claims are not barred under the three-part test, they are barred because he sustained his injuries while occupying military housing, and receipt of such a benefit made his activity “incident to service.” The government argues that Elliott would not have enjoyed the benefit
but for
his status as military personnel, and supports its position with three cases:
Rayner v. United States,
In
Rayner,
the widow of a deceased serviceman brought a medical malpractice action against the United States for the death of her husband,’alleging negligence of the doctors and staff of a military hospital. Based on authority from other jurisdictions, we held that because the provision of benefits to military personnel, due to their status as military personnel, is an activity incident to their service,
Feres
bars suits for medical malpractice.
Rayner,
In
Del Rio,
a military woman brought a lawsuit against Navy medical personnel alleging negligence in the administration of prenatal care.
Del Rio,
Finally, in
Ricks,
we held that the
Feres
doctrine barred a medical malpractice claim for wrongful death. Citing
Rayner,
we de
*1563
nied recovery, concluding that the provision of medical benefits to military personnel, because of their status as military personnel, is an activity incident to service and that military medical care constitutes such a benefit.
Ricks,
The government urges us to extend the reasoning in Rayner, Del Rio, and Ricks to reach all military benefits regardless of how removed from actual military service those benefits may be. 8 We refuse to do so. Because these cases do not involve “other benefits,” as that issue has never come before us, they are distinguishable on their facts.
Feres does not warrant the broad exception to liability which the government suggests. In its plainest terms, Feres involved two medical malpractice lawsuits, addressing the identical issues raised in Rayner, Del Rio, and Ricks. When applying Feres to bar lawsuits in these cases, we neither extended nor modified Feres, but merely applied the existing law to the facts in those cases. The broad extension which the government seeks in this case would not, as we have stated, serve the policy goals underlying Feres. Such a sweeping application would work absurd results because military personnel could not bring lawsuits for injuries related to any benefit they receive, regardless of how tangential, frivolous, or obscure. Because we find no support in Supreme Court precedent or this circuit’s precedent for such a broad extension of the Feres, we reject the government’s all-or-nothing-at-all approach to the “nature of activity” factor.
Finally, the government’s contention that military personnel who receive benefits render their duty status legally irrelevant to the determination of whether they incurred their injuries during activity incident to service, ignores the plain terms of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brown.
In
Brown,
the Court permitted a veteran to recover for negligence of medical personnel at a Veterans Administration hospital because he was no longer on active duty.
Brown,
Applying the three-part test, we conclude and hold that under the totality of the circumstances David Elliott did not incur his injuries while engaged in an activity incident to his service in the military, as contemplated in Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit precedent. Military personnel do not engage in activities incident to service when on leave, even if the military owns the apartment in which the service personnel reside. To hold otherwise would ignore the plain requirements of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Brooks and Brown, our decisions in Parker and Pierce, and the policy considerations underlying the Feres doctrine. Because we conclude that David Elliott’s lawsuit is not barred, his wife is not barred from recovering on her lack of consortium claim.
CONCLUSION
The Elliotts’ injuries did not arise from an activity incident to his service in the military as Feres contemplates. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the district court.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. The parties conducted settlement negotiations on Barbara Elliott’s claims, but could not reach mutually satisfactory terms.
. Pursuant to an order dated September 8, 1993, the United States waived all rights to appeal the district court’s award of damages to Barbara Elliott, excluding her loss of consortium claim, and for David Elliott’s loss of consortium claim.
.
Feres
involved three consolidated appeals, two alleging medical malpractice and the third alleging negligence in providing safe housing and maintaining an adequate fire watch.
Feres v.
*1559
United States,
. As the Supreme Court recognized in
Brooks
the Veterans Benefit Act is neither an exclusive compensation system nor a bar to a serviceman's recovery under the FTCA.
Brooks,
. In the instant case, this justification is not even palatable because the compensation provided for Elliott is woefully inadequate to care for his debilitating injuries.
. The fact that the Army permits civilians such as Barbara Elliott to lease housing on base further weakens the government’s claim that lawsuits of this type undermine military discipline. A civilian lawsuit brought against the Army for injuries incurred in military housing disrupts military discipline no less than service personnel’s lawsuits for identical injuries.
. The government's attempt to analogize
Zoula v. United States,
. The government contends that other circuits unanimously apply
Feres
to bar suits alleging negligent management of military housing.
See Dozler v. United States,
