Plaintiffs Dorking Genetics and Ian King (together “Dorking”) appeal from orders of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Constantine G. Cholakis, District Judge) dismissing their complaint against defendants the United States and Dr. David A. Evans. Dorking alleged in its complaint that the United States was negligent in certifying that cattle Dorking purchased in New York for export to Zimbabwe met that country’s health requirements. Dorking also alleged that Dr. Evans, the veterinarian who examined the cattle, committed malpractice by failing to detect and report that the cattle had been exposed to bovine leucosis. According to the complaint, the defendants’ acts and omissions proximately caused the destruction of most of Dorking’s entire herd of cattle after Zimbabwean authorities discovered that an imported heifer had bovine leucosis.
BACKGROUND
On a motion directed to the pleadings, we must take as time the facts as alleged in the complaint. Dorking Genetics is a Zimbabwean partnership engaged in breeding cattle with certain genetic profiles. Ian King, a Zimbabwean citizen, is a general partner in Dorking Genetics as well as the owner of a dairy farm which conducts a genetic breeding program separate from Dorking Genetics.
Representing his own interests and those of Dorking Genetics, King traveled on an unspecified date to the United States to purchase cattle suitable for breeding. King selected three heifers from the Mansion Valley Estate Farm (“Mansion Valley”) in De Lan-cey, New York. Dr. Evans, a veterinarian who is authorized and accredited by the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) to certify cattle for export, conducted tests on the heifers. The three heifers tested positive for bovine leucosis and were not purchased.
Subsequently, David Rama, who worked for a cattle broker, selected three different heifers on Dorking’s behalf from the same herd as the previous three. Mansion Valley contracted with Dr. Evans, on behalf of Dorking, to test the cattle for certain diseases and to issue a United States Origin Health Certificate. The three heifers selected by Rama tested negative for bovine leuco-sis, even though they had been exposed to the heifers who had previously tested positive for that disease. Dr. Evans prepared a health certificate incorporating specific Zimbabwean health requirements for imported cattle, including the requirement that the cattle come from a herd with no history of bovine leucosis. Dr. Evans certified that these heifers met that requirement. He then forwarded the certificate and blood tests to Dr. Gerald F. Toms, a USDA veterinarian, who reviewed the certificate and endorsed it. Drs. Toms and Evans also executed a separate Zimbabwean Import Permit, which stated that there was no history of bovine leuco-sis in the herd of origin. Both Dr. Evans and Dr. Toms knew that the first three heifers from the Mansion Valley herd had tested positive for bovine leucosis.
In May 1987, Dorking imported the second set of three heifers into Zimbabwe. In February 1989, one of the heifers began to display clinical symptoms of bovine leucosis and subsequently tested positive for that disease. This was the first appearance of bovine leu-cosis in Zimbabwe. The Zimbabwean Veterinary Department immediately placed Dork-ing Farm under quarantine, allowing only cattle marked for slaughter to leave the farm. Because of the outbreak of bovine leucosis in the herd, Dorking had to slaughter the cattle. The slaughter price was far below the price the cattle would have fetched as healthy breeding stock, resulting in substantial monetary losses.
DISCUSSION
I. Dorking’s Negligence Claim Against the United States
“Absent a waiver, sovereign immunity shields the Federal Government and its agencies from suit.” FDIC v. Meyer, — U.S. -, -,
[T]he 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, under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be hable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.
If a claim is cognizable under § 1346(b), that statute provides the exclusive remedy. Meyer, — U.S. at-,
The district court dismissed Dorking’s claim against the government. In the district court’s view, the aheged negligent acts caused the heifers’ herd history to be misrepresented in the Health Certifícate, and an action for misrepresentation is not cognizable under the FTCA. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). Dorking then filed for leave to amend the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) to state that the United States breached a separate duty to prevent the export of cattle exposed to certain diseases. Finding the proposed amended claim barred by the discretionary-function exception to the FTCA, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a); United States v. Gaubert,
A. Misrepresentation Exception
Congress has specified that its waiver of sovereign immunity in § 1346(b) of the FTCA does not apply to “[a]ny claim arising out of ... misrepresentation.” 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). This exception “applies to claims arising out of negligent, as well as intentional, misrepresentation.” Block v. Neal,
Recovery is not barred by the misrepresentation exception of § 2680(h), however, if the plaintiff alleges the breach of a cognizable duty owed to him which is “distinct from any duty to use due care in communicating information.” Block,
B. Duty to Prohibit Export
Dorking alleges that the government had a distinct duty to prohibit export of diseased cattle, which arises from two sources: (1) 21 U.S.C. § 105, and (2) the government’s voluntary compliance with Zimbabwean health requirements and its undertaking to prohibit the exportation of cattle originating from a herd with a history of bovine leucosis.
In pertinent part, 21 U.S.C. § 105 provides,
The Secretary of Agriculture may cause inspection to be made of all animals described in [§§ 101 to 104] intended for exportation, and provide for the disinfection of all vessels engaged in the transportation thereof ... and if, upon such inspection, any such animals shall be adjudged, under the regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture, to be infected or to have been exposed to infection so as to be dangerous to other animals, the Secretary may prohibit or restrict their placement upon any vessel for exportation.
Dorking claims that the federal government made the determination that exposure to bovine leucosis is “dangerous to other animals,” in part by adopting the Zimbabwean herd history requirements in its origin health certificates. Therefore, in its view, the government owed foreign purchasers of livestock a duty under § 105 to bar the export of the three diseased heifers that ultimately caused Dorking’s herd to be slaughtered. Moreover, Dorking claims that the government’s voluntary incorporation of the Zimbabwean health requirements into its export regime created a Good Samaritan duty to prohibit the export of cattle exposed to bovine leuco-sis.
Although a duty to prohibit export may be distinct from a duty to represent the cattle’s herd history accurately, Dorking has not stated a claim cognizable under the
Therefore, assuming that § 105 did impose a duty on the government to prohibit export of cattle exposed to bovine leucosis and that such a duty was owed to foreign purchasers of cattle, Dorking’s claim for damages would still not be cognizable under the FTCA. “The FTCA’s ‘law of the place’ requirement is not satisfied by direct violations of the Federal Constitution or of federal statutes or regulations standing alone.” Id. (citations omitted); cf. Meyer, — U.S. at-,
We therefore look to the law of New York to determine whether Dorking has stated a cognizable claim against the United States. New York does not recognize a duty of private actors to prohibit export of diseased cattle. Indeed, it is hard to imagine how state law could recognize a duty of a private person to stop international commercial transactions, the regulation of which is reserved exclusively to the federal government. “The FTCA does not extend to conduct ‘governed exclusively by federal law....'" Akutowicz v. United States,
The formula for determining when “one who assumes a duty to act, even though gratuitously, may thereby become subject to the duty of acting carefully” has been articulated by Chief Judge Cardozo as follows: “If conduct has gone forward to such a state that inaction would commonly result, not negatively merely in withholding a benefit, but positively or actively in working an injury, there exists a relation out of which arises a duty to go forward.... The query always is whether the putative wrongdoer has advanced to such a point as to have launched a force or instrument of harm, or has stopped where inaction is at most a refusal to become an instrument for good.”
Nallan v. Helmsley-Spear, Inc.,
A variant of Good Samaritan liability arises when the defendant is negligent in performing an undertaking for the benefit of a third party and the plaintiff is injured thereby. This form of liability, which is recognized in New York, Miller v. Rivard,
One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another which he should recognize as necessary for the protection of a third person or his things, is subject to liability to the third person for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to protect his undertaking, if
(a) his failure to exercise reasonable care increases the risk of such harm, or
(b) he has undertaken to perform a duty owed by the other to the third person, or
(e) the harm is suffered because of reliance of the other or the third person upon the undertaking.
Dorking argues that its FTCA claim is brought under the principles of New York law analogous to subsection (e) of the Restatement. In its reply brief, Dorking argues that “when the Government undertook to comply with Zimbabwe’s health requirements in conducting its regulatory inspection ..., it undertook a Good Samaritan duty under § 324A of the Restatement to carry out its duties in a nonnegligent manner, and [Dorking] relied on the Government to conduct its services properly.”
We do not think Dorking has stated a claim that would be cognizable under the New York common law of Good Samaritan liability. As Dorking seems to realize, it would not be enough to claim that the United States undertook a duty to Zimbabwe authorities to certify that exported cattle met that country’s health requirements; any negligence in that representation, or in the inspections that underlay that certification, would not be cognizable under the misrepresentation exception of 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). See Anglo-American,
As best as we can discern from its arguments, Dorking is claiming that the United States undertook a distinct duty to the Zimbabwean government to prohibit export of cattle which did not meet that country’s health requirements, and Dorking suffered because of its reliance or its government’s reliance upon the undertaking. Even assuming that Dorking could somehow prove reb-anee, which we doubt, it still has failed to
First, to incur Good Samaritan liability the government must be negligent in its actual performance of the undertaking. World Trade Knitting Mills v. Lido Knitting Mills,
Second, even if Dorking could prove that the United States government was negligent in performing the duty it allegedly owed to Zimbabwean authorities to prohibit the export of cattle exposed to leucosis, Dorking’s allegations of reliance are insufficient as a matter of law. Under § 324A(c) of the Restatement, liability arises if the plaintiff suffers harm “because of reliance of the other [Zimbabwe] or the third person [Dorking]” upon the negligently performed undertaking.
Dorking cannot p- ove such reliance. Dorking cannot claim that the harm it suffered resulted from Zimbabwe’s reliance on the alleged undertaking, perhaps in the form of abandonment of its own import-inspection program. To the contrary, the Zimbabwean Import Permit for the three heifers, which was submitted in the record on appeal, specifically requires that “[t]he time of arrival of the animals must be timeously advised to the Director of Veterinary Services so that inspection of the animals can be arranged.” Thus, Zimbabwe has not dispensed with its inspection program in reliance on the United States’ prohibition of the export of infected cattle. Moreover, Zimbabwe does not rely solely on the health certificate from the United States, but requires its own separate health certificate (which addresses infection with bovine leucosis) to be executed. There is thus nothing in the complaint or supporting documents that leads us to believe that Dorking could prove Zimbabwe’s reliance on the United States’ undertaking. Moreover, although it duly claims in conclusory terms its own “reliance” on the United States’ assumption of duty, Dorking does not allege that it took, or declined to take, any action in reliance on the United States’ performance of its duty, i.e., that it would have done anything other than what it in fact did (arrange for a private veterinarian to certify the herd’s compliance with Zimbabwe’s health requirements) if the United States had not promised to bar the export of cattle exposed to bovine leucosis. Absent any reliance, Dorking has at most alleged that it suffered harm because the United St ices withheld the benefit of prohibiting the export of the infected cattle, but merely “withholding a benefit” does not create Good Samaritan liability. Nallar,
Because Dorking’s allegations fail to satisfy the necessary elements of a New York cause of action for breach of an assumed duty, we hold that Dorking has failed to state
II. Dorking’s Malpractice Claim Against Dr. Evans
In Count III of its complaint, Dork-ing asserted a claim of “breach of contract for malpractice” against Dr. Evans, the veterinarian who was hired by the seller, Mansion Valley, to examine the heifers sold to Dorking. Although Dorking captions Count III as “breach of contract” and in places uses language that would suggest a contractual theory of recovery, we, like the district court, construe the complaint as stating a claim of negligence. The fact that the alleged relationship between Dorking and Dr. Evans arose out of contract does not bar Dorking from pursuing a claim of negligence. “Negligent performance of a contract may give rise to a claim sounding in tort as well as one for breach of contract. The two claims may be submitted as alternatives to the jury, as a matter of both New York substantive law and federal procedural law.” Ajax Hardware Mfg. Corp. v. Industrial Plants Corp.,
On a motion by Dr. Evans under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), the district court dismissed Dorking’s malpractice claim because Dorking did not have a “bond [with Dr. Evans] ‘so close as to approach that of privity,’ ” Ossining Union Free Sch. Dist. v. Anderson LaRocca Anderson,
In Ossining, the New York Court of Appeals addressed the privity requirement under New York law. After surveying the deterioration of “the citadel of privity” in this century, the court concluded that a defendant could be held liable for negligent misrepresentation if a plaintiff shows: “(1) awareness that the reports were to be used for a particular purpose or purposes; (2) reliance by a known party or parties in furtherance of that purpose; and (3) some conduct by the defendants linking them to the party or parties and evincing defendant’s understanding of their reliance.” Ossining,
The district court ruled that Dorking’s complaint failed to satisfy the second and third Ossining factors. On the second factor of reliance, the district court reasoned that there was no reliance because Dorking already knew that three other heifers from the herd had already tested positive for leucosis antibodies. Moreover, it determined that the “ ‘end aim’ of [Dr. Evans] services was in furtherance of a public purpose — to verify to the government, not [Dorking], that the heifers were healthy.” The district court declined to impose a duty to Dorking on Dr. Evans when the government owed no such duty.
We cannot say, in review of a dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), that Dorking can prove no set of facts evincing reliance. As admitted in the complaint, Dorking did know
We also cannot say that no duty of Dr. Evans aro: e to Dorking because his services had noth a private and public purpose and because the government owed Dorking no duty. Surely, any duty here would be no different from a duty to a stock issuer that an accountant or corporate lawyer might face for the negligent preparation of a prospectus required by the Securities and Exchange Commission, even if the prospectus primarily served the public purpose of safeguarding potential shareholders. Moreover, the reason the government owes no duty kindred to that Dr. Evans might owe to Dorking is that the government did not contract or otherwise assume a duty to inspect the heifers, and, even if it did, it would have the benefit of the misrepresentation exception of 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h) for any negligence in an inspection leading to an erroneous certification. Neither reason applies to Dr. Evans or justifies dismissal of Dorking’s claim on the basis of lack of reliance.
The district court also found that there was no conduct by Dr. Evans “linking” him to Dorking under the third Ossining factor. The district court interpreted Ossining to require some “conduct that is interactive with the plaintiff and tends to demonstrate the defendants’ awareness of plaintiffs specific reliance.” We do not think that the Court of Appeals intended the term “linking conduct” to be read so narrowly. In Credit Alliance Corp. v. Andersen & Co.,
While the allegations state that [the contracting party] sought to Induce plaintiffs k extend credit, no claim is made that [defendant] Andersen was being employed to prepare the reports with that particular purpose in mind. Moreover, there is no allegation that Andersen had any direct dealings with plaintiffs, had specifically agreed with Smith to prepare the report for plaintiffs’ use or according to plaintiffs’ requirements, or had specifically agreed with Smith to provide plaintiffs with a copy or actually did so. Indeed, there is simply no allegation of any word or action on the part of Andersen directed to plaintiffs, or anything contain d in Andersen’s retainer agreement with Smith which provided the necessary link between them.
Moreover, in Credit Alliance the Court of Appeals was careful to say that the three factors of awareness, reliance, and linking conduct “do not represent a departure from the principles articulated in [our previous cases] but, rather, they are intended to preserve the wisdom and policy set forth therein.”
It is apparent to us that Dorking can prove facts establishing a relationship approximating privity, and therefore the district court’s dismissal of the claim on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion was improper. It would be inappropriate for us to say more, heeding as we do the admonition of the Court of Appeals that “[t]he right of a third person to recover upon a contract made by other parties for his benefit must rest upon the peculiar circumstances of each case rather than upon the law of some other ease.” Seaver v. Ransom,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the dismissal of Dorking’s claims against the United States and the denial of the motion to amend the complaint, reverse the dismissal of Dorking’s claim against Dr. Evans, and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
. Both Dorking and the government assume that New York is the place where the alleged breach of the duty to export occurred, ostensibly because the USDA veterinarian, Dr. Toms, was in Albany, New York when he certified the health certificate prepared by Dr. Evans. We therefore assume for puiposes of this appeal that for the duty to be cognizable it must have a private-party analog under New York law.
. We have yet to decide whether it would be sufficient under the FTCA for a plaintiff to prove breach of a federal statutory duty if the state where the breach took place recognized the doctrine of negligence per se. Cf. Chen,
