The district court rendered summary judgment in favor of the government, dismissing a claim made under Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b), on the ground that the plaintiff, a soldier on active duty at the time of his injury, was barred from recovery because the injury he sustained was incident to his military service, We affirm the judgment, concluding that an injury suffered on a military base by a serviceman on private business during normal duty hours but during a period when he had been given permission to take the day off is incident to his military service and that no remedy is afforded by the Act.
Dwayne G. Warner was an enlisted man in the United States Army, stationed at Fort Bliss. One morning his sergeant gave him permission to take the remainder of the day off. Warner left his duty assignment shortly before noon and proceeded to the residence of a friend in order to repair his own automobile. Upon discovering that he , , , , ,T. j i • needed some auto parts, Warner rode his , . , . , 1, ’ , .... motorcycle back to the Fort Bliss military , , , ,, , J. base to obtain the parts at. the auto craft , ... ... ... , . store on the base. After he had returned to , , , , , ,, the base but before he had reached the , , . . , . .. . . store, he was injured when his motorcycle n-j j -.i , ,., , . , collided with an automobile driven by a „ , . , ., „,. ^ federal employee as a result of the automo- ., . , ,, , ,. bile dnvers alleged negligence.
The Government is not liable under the Federal Tort Claims Act for injuries to servicemen that arise out of or occur “in the course of activity incident to service.”
Feres v. United States,
In
Zoula v. United States,
Warner argues that
Zoula
“is a remarkable example of the misreading of the
Feres
doctrine.”
Zoula,
however, remains the law of this Circuit, having been cited with approval in
Mason
v.
United
States,
TWarner contends that he was not m- . . . .... volved m an activity incident to his military , .. ... .. ,, ... , f duties at the time of the accident, and that, „ ., _ . . . ’ . , therefore, the
Feres
doctrine does not bar .... ’ , . ,. . , his claim. In support of his argument, he ., „ . . ’ cites
Parker v. United States, supra.
Par- , ,, . , , . . ker had requested and received permission ,, , t. . , , „ . to be absent from duty from the end of his . , , , * , nn ... normal duty hours on August 28,1974, until September 2, 1974. After he had finished work on the 28th and was en route home on this leave, but was still on the military base,
*839
he was injured in an accident with a vehicle driven by another serviceman and subsequently died. We held that Parker was not engaged in any activity incident to his military service because he “was not directly subject to military control; he was not under the compulsion of military orders; he was not performing any military mission. Parker was not even attending to person affairs; such as shopping, or engaging in activities arising from life on the base, such as recreational activities. Parker was merely passing through the base on his way home.”
Warner, however, had only an afternoon free. As we stated in
Parker:
“One with only an unexercised right to a pass or
who is only off duty for the day usually is held to be acting ‘incident to service.’”
In a number of other cases, we have held incident to service activities such as those in which Warner was engaged if they occurred during brief off-duty periods. In
Mason v. United States, supra,
the serviceman had been relieved from his routine naval duties and was tending to personal business on his way home. We held that, since Mason was both on active-duty status and on the premises of the Naval Air Station at the time of the accident, he was engaged in activity incident to service. The court emphasized that, although Mason had been relieved of his routine duties, he was still on active duty and on the base, and thus, “he was still subject to all military regulations and discipline and was readily available for emergency service or temporary duties.”
Again in
Watkins v. United States,
Although Warner was attending to his personal affairs when the accident occurred, he was still on active duty. Clearly, his presence on the military base was by virtue of his military status as in Mason, Zoula, and Watkins. The fact that he had been relieved of duty for the rest of the day does not mean that he was in off-duty status as were the servicemen in Brooks (furlough) or Parker (four-day leave). Instead he had merely been released temporarily like the serviceman in Mason (relieved from duties for the day), Zoula (unexercised right to passes) and Watkins (off duty in the evening).
Because no material factual issue existed concerning the applicability of the Feres doctrine and the district court correctly applied the law to the facts in granting summary judgment to the United States, we AFFIRM.
