OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff, a Sergeant in the Police Department of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, seeks to recover damages from the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq., for personal injuries he claims were sustained aboard an Eastern Airlines aircraft.
The pertinent facts of this case may be summarized as follows:
On July 15, 1976, a superior officer ordered the Plaintiff to meet a returning Eastern Airlines flight. He boarded the plane accompanied by two other police officers, whereupon they learned that a child had been assaulted by an adult passenger. Plaintiff was then informed by a crew member as to the identity of the suspected assailant, Mr. Warren J. Campeau. Mr. Campeau was accompanied by two employees of the Veterans Administration who informed Plaintiff that they had the custody of the suspect. Plaintiff then informed one of the Veterans Administration employees that he was going to arrest and handcuff Campeau. The Veterans Administration employee informed him that Campeau had been sedated, that he was not dangerous and that he could not be handcuffed.
Plaintiff proceeded to remove the suspect from his seat and carried him down the aisle of the aircraft. While proceeding down the aisle, Plaintiff became tired and put Campeau down on a seat. It was then that Campeau somehow managed to reach for and remove Plaintiff’s service revolver from its holster, shooting Plaintiff in the back and once again in one hand. Other officers then came to Plaintiff’s aid and managed to subdue Campeau.
The claim against the United States is based on the allegation that the Government agents were negligent when they represented to Plaintiff that Campeau was not dangerous and that he had been sedated.
The question for decision in this case is whether the United States may be held liable under the aforestated circumstances. The Defendant has moved to dismiss contending that the alleged misrepresentation of Defendant’s agents is a cause of action barred by the Federal Tort Claims Act and that Plaintiff’s arrest of Campeau prior to the shooting removed him from under the care and custody of the United States.
Section 2680(h) of Title 28 excludes recovery under the Federal Tort Claims Act upon “[a]ny claim arising out of assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, libel, slander, misrepresentation, deceit, or interference with contract rights . . . ” (Emphasis added).
These are substantive limitations of the Federal Tort Claims Act,
Indian Towing Co. v. United States,
The term “misrepresentation” as set forth in § 2680(h) must be construed according to the traditional and commonly understood legal definition of such tort.
United
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States v. Neustadt,
In interpreting the “misrepresentation” exception of 28. U.S.C. § 2680(h), the Courts have looked to federal rather than local law, and it has been decided that whether recovery on a claim for negligent misrepresentation is precluded by the statute is solely dependent upon what Congress meant by the language of subsection (h), and not upon whether state law would allow recovery under analogous circumstances.
Neustadt,
supra;
United States
v.
Sheehan Properties, Inc.,
Both prior and subsequent to Neustadt, the federal courts have found a wide range of representations to fall within the exception of § 2680(h). By way of example, these decisions have considered negligent testing of livestock resulting in a false report that they were diseased, 2 advice of Veterans Administration officials causing a Plaintiff to lose veterans benefits, 3 negligence in preparing a map which resulted in Plaintiff’s drag line striking a natural gas pipeline, 4 and negligence of government employees in forecasting and warning of impending floods. 5
Notwithstanding this broad application of the statutory exception, recovery has been permitted in two principal areas involving representations by employees of the United States which
proximately
caused injury to the person to whom the representation was made: (a) certain medical malpractice cases, and (b) negligent flight information cases. In the malpractice cases, recovery is predicated on the view that government physicians, apart from any duty to disclose pertinent medical facts, have the affirmative obligation to render proper care in the treatment of physical maladies. Generally, it is the failure to perform this latter duty that takes these cases out of the ambit of the exclusion where such failure is properly pleaded.
6
See,
Beech v. United States,
With these general principles in mind, we shall now proceed to analyze the circumstances present in the case at bar.
Plaintiff submits that the real issue before the Court is whether the exception of § 2680(h) extends to actions for personal injuries. A careful analysis of the pertinent factors involved lead us to answer that question in the affirmative.
It is true that the “misrepresentation” tort has been confined “very largely to the invasion of interests of a financial or commercial character, in the course of business dealings.” Neustadt, supra, n. 26. This general statement, however, does not preclude the application of § 2680(h) to actions for personal injuries based on alleged misrepresentations.
In
Clark v. United States,
“Even though contrary assumptions be indulged, there could be no recovery for negligent misrepresentations of H.A.P. or its employees. 28 U.S.C.A. 2680(h) exempts from the coverage of the Tort Claims Act any claim arising out of misrepresentation. Misrepresentation as used in this section has been held to include negligent as well as intentional misrepresentation.” Id. at p. 452 (citations omitted).
In
Vaughn v. United States,
The case of
Bartie v. United States,
The misrepresentation exception has also been held applicable to a wrongful death action based on a claim that the United States misrepresented the safety of a bridge which collapsed.
In re Silver Bridge Disaster Litigation,
The foregoing reveals that, contrary to the arguments of Plaintiff herein, courts have not hesitated in applying § 2680(h) for
*963
the sole reason that personal damages are claimed. Clearly the exception is just as applicable to actions involving personal injury and wrongful death as it is to those involving only financial or commercial loss, absent any indication that Congress intended such exception to apply only to the latter type of lawsuits.
Lloyd
v.
Cessna Aircraft Co.,
Plaintiff further attempts to have us circumvent the clear Congressional mandate envisaged in § 2680(h) by arguing that the damages caused him were occasioned by the fault or negligence of government agents. It is contended that failure of the representatives of the United States to take the necessary precautions in the discharge of a duty imposed upon them is a fact related to, but independent of the misrepresentation on which Plaintiff’s liability theory is predicated. 11 We fail to grasp the soundness of this argument.
In determining the applicability of the statutory exceptions from the purview of the Federal Tort Claims Act, we must look not to the theory upon which the Plaintiff now elects to proceed, but rather to the substance of the claims which he asserts.
Lambertson v. United States,
“. ... To misrepresent means ‘to give a false, improper or imperfect representation’ and that is the charge against the government employees here.” National Mfg. Co. v. United States, supra, at p. 276.
In view of the foregoing, we hold that this action is barred by 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). That deprives us of subject matter jurisdiction to entertain the cause.
12
Smith v. United States,
WHEREFORE, the Clerk of the Court is instructed to enter Judgment dismissing the Complaint filed in this case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Cf.
Reyes v. Heirs of Sánchez Soto,
.
Hall v. United States,
.
Steinmasel v. United States,
.
Vaughn v. United States,
.
Nat’l Mfg. Co. v. United States,
“The purpose of excepting federal liability on account of negligent misrepresentation necessarily extends to negligent failure to represent which has the same effect as an affirmative misrepresentation. The intent of the section is to except from the Act cases where mere ‘talk’ or failure to ‘talk’ on the part of a government employee is asserted as the proximate cause of damage sought to be recovered from the United States.” Id. at p. 276.
. In view of this, and considering the peculiar factors involved in this type of case, Plaintiff’s reliance upon them appears to be misplaced.
. Contrary to Plaintiffs assertion, this case simply does not warrant our incursion into the quagmires posed by the “operational task” line of cases. The gravamen of the complaint herein is misrepresentation, rather than the negligent performance of operational task. Ingham, supra, at 239.
. This case was cited with approval in
Neustadt,
supra,
. In the rather curious case of
Sánchez Tapia v. United States,
. Plaintiff argues that § 2680(h) does not grant an exception in this case, insofar as it involves a tortious failure of a federal agency to perform a duty imposed upon it by law. The case of
Hicks v. United States,
Without facing the question of the existence
vel non
of such a duty towards Plaintiff herein, we find
Hicks
distinguishable. The Court in
Hicks
upheld liability because of the negligence of the United States in fulfilling an obligation grounded upon much more than the contents of a hospital’s report, in consonance with the malpractice cases mentioned elsewhere in this opinion. Moreover, the Court in
Hicks
distinguished
Neustadt
stating that the complaint, unlike the one filed in this case, was not based up.on injury to Plaintiff due to a negligent misrepresentation to them, upon which they relied.
Hicks,
supra,
. See Paragraphs 11 and 16 of the Complaint.
. Notwithstanding their plausible merits, Defendant’s other contentions need not be reached here, in view of our present holding.
