Plaintiffs, Don Major, as administrator of the estate of Debra Spradlin, and Charles Mauk, appeal from the district court’s order dismissing their consolidated complaints for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1). Both Spradlin and Mauk were enlisted members of the United States Army and had brought suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b) and 2671,
et seq.,
for the death of Spradlin and injuries suffered by Mauk when they were involved in an accident on their military base in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The trial court’s dismissal was predicated on its conclusion that such suits are barred by the
Feres
doctrine,
Feres v. United States,
I.
The facts relative to this appeal are simple and uncontested. At approximately 10:30 p.m. on the evening of March 17, 1983, Spradlin and Mauk were sitting on Mauk’s motorcycle, which was stopped well off one of the roads within the Fort Campbell Military Reservation. An Army non-commissioned officer, William Lane, ran his vehicle off the road and struck the motorcycle, killing Spradlin and severely injuring Mauk. Lane had become intoxicated and his driving impaired at an on-base party held in his company barracks and attended by several others, including some of his superiors. While not actually on duty at the time of the accident, both Spradlin and Mauk were on active duty status and neither were on a pass or furlough.
II.
Our result in this case is reached by an analysis of a series of Supreme Court precedents both leading up to the adoption of the
Feres
doctrine and subsequently giving that doctrine form and substance. In
Brooks v. United States,
*643
One year later, that “wholly different case” arrived in
Feres.
Although
Feres
was comprised of three consolidated cases, the facts in the
Feres
case itself are most illustrative of the Court’s new position on the availability of relief for military personnel under the FTCA. Feres was killed by fire in his barracks while on active duty status. His executor alleged negligence in quartering him in barracks which were known, or should have been known, to be unsafe. The Court in
Feres
gave a much narrower construction to the FTCA’s waiver of sovereign immunity with respect to the military in general and, significantly, it also eschewed any attempt to engage in an individualized interpretation of what constituted an “injury incident to service.” Rather, the Court automatically equated events occurring while an employee was on “active duty” with those “incident to the service,” thereby effectively barring all claims for injuries taking place while one is on active duty.
In the past five years, the Supreme Court has decided four cases under the
Feres
doctrine and in each case it reversed a finding of federal jurisdiction by the court of appeals.
Chappell v. Wallace,
In
Stanley,
plaintiff sued the government after he learned that, while in the Army in the 1950’s, he was secretly administered LSD as part of a program to test the effects of the drug on human subjects.
[a] test for liability that depends on the extent to which particular suits would call into question military discipline and decision-making would itself require judicial inquiry into, and hence intrusion upon, military matters. Whether a case implicates those concerns would often be problematic, raising the prospect of compelled depositions and trial testimony by military officers concerning the details of their military commands. Even putting aside the risk of erroneous judicial conclusions ... the mere process of arriving at correct conclusions would disrupt the military regime.
United States v. Shearer,
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United States v. Johnson,
— U.S.-,
In
Johnson,
plaintiff’s husband was killed in a helicopter crash during a rescue mission due to the alleged negligence of an air traffic controller employed by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The Court once again reversed the court of appeals by applying the
Feres
doctrine, even though the alleged negligence did not involve any military personnel. In the same way it had held that the
situs
of the incident was not determinative in
Shearer,
the Court found that the
status
of the tortfeasor as a civilian governmental employee was similarly insignificant. Since the accident had occurred while the pilot was engaged in a service-related mission, suit was barred because its maintenance would “necessarily implicate[ ] the military judgments and decisions that are inextricably intertwined with the conduct of the military mission.”
III.
Review of these Supreme Court precedents makes it clear that in recent years the Court has embarked on a course dedicated to broadening the
Feres
doctrine to encompass, at a minimum,
all
injuries suffered by military personnel that are even remotely related to the individual’s
status
as a member of the military, without regard to the location of the event, the status (military or civilian) of the tortfeasor, or any nexus between the injury-producing event and the essential defense/combat purpose of the military activity from which
*645
it arose.
2
Although the doctrine itself as well as its recent expansion have been decried by various courts and commentators,
see
authorities cited in
Johnson,
Plaintiffs in the case at bar attempt to distinguish
Shearer
by alleging that the allegation in their complaint as to negligent supervision is merely “alternative” and “collateral”; no military decision-making process is implicated because the relevant “decision” was made when the regulations allegedly prohibiting on-base consumption of alcohol were promulgated, and this suit challenges only the
failure
to follow those regulations; and military discipline would not be impaired because the tortfeasor, Lane, has already been court-martialed.
3
These attempted distinctions are unpersuasive. The district court found, and we agree, that since Spradlin and Mauk were on active duty status at the time of the accident, the actions of their superiors and Lane were “command decisions.” A challenge to these actions would require those superiors either in attendance at the party at which Lane became intoxicated or with knowledge of that gathering to testify about military decisions relating to the provision and/or consumption of alcohol on base as well as disciplinary policies for infractions of such rules. It would also result in judicial prying into the knowledge or lack thereof of any unauthorized practices and would involve second-guessing of military decisions and orders with respect to the operation of the installation. Furthermore, we specifically rejected a similar allegation of Army violation of its own internal regulations as grounds for avoiding the
Feres/Shearer
bar in
Satterfield,
concluding that that claim also impermissi-bly insinuates the civilian judiciary into military disciplinary decisions.
Since we find no supportable basis for concluding that this suit will not “call[] into question basic choices about the discipline, supervision, and control of [servicemen],”
Shearer,
Notes
. Interestingly, Justice Scalia, who authored the Court’s opinion in Stanley, dissented in Johnson. He explained his rationale for this seeming inconsistency as follows:
Today, no more than when we wrote Chap-pell, do we see any reason why our judgment in the Bivens context should be any less protective of military concerns than it has been with respect to FTCA suits, where we adopted an "incident to service" rule. In fact, if anything we might have felt more free to compromise military concerns in the latter context, since we were confronted with an explicit congressional authorization for judicial involvement that was, on its face, unqualified; whereas here we are confronted with an explicit constitutional authorization for Congress ”[t]o make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces,” U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, cl. 14, and rely upon inference for our own authority to allow money damages.
Stanley,
In his dissent in
Johnson,
Justice Scalia found it "strange that Congress' ‘obvious’ intention to preclude
Feres
suits because of their effect on military discipline was discerned neither by the
Feres
Court nor by the Congress that enacted the FTCA (which felt it necessary expressly to exclude recovery for combat injuries).’’
. As Justice Scalia observed in his dissent in
Johnson, Brooks
has neither been overruled nor even expressly disapproved by the Court. Nevertheless, it is obvious that, contrary to the Court assertion in
Brooks,
it has now been "persuaded” that the phrase "any claim” contained in the FTCA
does
mean “any claim but that of servicemen.”
See Brooks,
. At the time this case was briefed, the parties did not have the benefit of the Supreme Court’s opinions in Johnson and Stanley; hence their reliance on Feres and Shearer as setting forth the totality of the law on this question. In fact, plaintiffs specifically cite the courts of appeals’ opinions in both Johnson and Stanley (both subsequently reversed) in support of their position.
Plaintiffs also rely heavily on a factually similar case,
Johnson v. United States,
