Donald Sheehan and Ellis Gaspard were servicemen who, under military orders, took part in atmospheric atomic weapons tests during the early 1950’s at Desert Rock Flat, Nevada. Both have developed serious personal disabilities that they allege are a result of hazardous radiation exposure from these tests.
1
Sheehan filed this suit in Federal District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi and Gaspard in the Eastern District of Louisiana. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Both veterans sought relief under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq. Gaspard also filed charges under the U.S. Constitution pursuant to
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
We have consolidated the two cases on appeal to consider whether money damages may be assessed against the military or its officials in favor of veterans who suffered a latent injury while in active service. We conclude that the cases before us were properly dismissed in the district courts. In reviewing the orders of summary dismissal, we accept the plaintiffs’ recitations of the facts as entirely true. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b);
Hughes v. Rowe,
I. Background
The cases before us stem from a program of above-ground atomic weapons tests conducted during the 1950’s at Camp Desert Rock, Nevada. Neither the events at Desert Rock nor the types of tort claims before us today are new to the federal courts.
Lombard v. United States,
On December 18,1950, President Truman approved the testing of nuclear weapons within the continental United States at Camp Desert Rock, Nevada. From January, 1951, through October, 1958, 121 atmospheric atomic weapons tests took place in Nevada. 2
Armed forces personnel and scientific researchers attended most of the Desert Rock tests. The troops at Desert Rock typically were ordered into open trenches shortly before each atomic blast. After the initial shock waves passed, they were ordered to march within 1,000 yards of “ground zero.” The troops then were bused back to camp, where their uniforms were brushed off with ordinary household brooms. Little, if any, special follow-up care was provided. They were assured there was no danger whatsoever from residual post-blast radiation. According to the pleadings, the Army has made little, if any, attempt to follow-up its testing with warnings to the participants of any dangers from radiation exposure. Indeed, the official position of the armed forces continues to be that the personnel at Desert Rock suffered no unhealthy exposure.
Ellis Gaspard enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1946, and served until 1959. In 1955, he took part in at least four atomic bomb tests in the Desert Rock VI series. Dennis Sheehan served in the Army from 1951 through 1953, and from 1955 through 1958. In 1953, he participated in at least three atomic weapons tests in the Desert Rock V series. 3 Both servicemen acknowledge that they were on active duty status at the time of these tests, in uniform, and subject to military orders and discipline. 4
Years after their Army discharges, Gaspard and Sheehan fell seriously ill. Taking, once again, their recitation of the facts, both men have suffered violently painful afflictions sustained as a direct result of their in-service radiation exposures. These include the breakdown of their immune systems, leukemia and other cancers, and many other afflictions. Gaspard died of these diseases in July, 1982. 5
*1100 Mrs. Gaspard and Mrs. Sheehan also are alleged to have suffered greatly from the ordeals of the illnesses. Mrs. Gaspard claims to have suffered two miscarriages as a result of chromosomal damage to her husband. Both Mrs. Sheehan and Mrs. Gaspard have been subjected to the emotional trauma of coping with their husbands’ illnesses, and have suffered loss of consortium.
Both Gaspard and Sheehan filed claims for benefits through the Veterans Administration (VA) for service-connected disabilities. Sheehan’s claim was denied. Gaspard’s, filed in 1979, is still pending in the VA appellate process. Both Gaspard and Sheehan also filed administrative claims against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The FTCA claims did not result in an offer of settlement within six months, see 28 U.S.C. § 2675, and the servicemen filed these timely FTCA suits in federal district court, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b), pursuant to statutory requirements. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 2401, 2675.
Ellis and Opal Gaspard’s pleadings also include claims under the Bivens doctrine for an intentional violation of constitutional rights. 6
In both suits, the FTCA claims were dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1). The Bivens claims in the Gaspard case were dismissed for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). We review these dismissals by addressing the FTCA and the Bivens theories in turn.
II. FTCA Claims
At common law, the sovereign was absolutely immune from suit. Congress has passed certain statutory waivers of this sovereign immunity, among them the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq. The FTCA is a sweeping waiver of immunity for torts committed through the negligence of the government or its employees. Yet this broad waiver does not apply to the tort claims of members of the armed forces who were subject to military discipline at the time of their injury.
Stencel Aero Engineering Corp. v. United States,
The
Feres
doctrine bars a service person’s FTCA claims for in-service injuries whether filed before or after discharge.
See Monaco
v.
United States,
The two former servicemen attempt to fall within the
Brown
exception to the
Feres
doctrine by alleging a separate, post-service tort. They charge on appeal that
*1101
the government had a new and independent duty to warn them of the dangers from radiation as scientific knowledge increased.
See Broudy v. United States,
Gaspard and Sheehan’s fundamental charge is that the government knew at the time of testing that radiation exposure was harmful, even deadly. If this is true, then the duty to warn arose while appellants were in the service, and not after discharge. There is no allegation before us that knowledge increased to the point where a new duty to treat or warn was created. The pleadings allege that the government failed to warn while the two were in the Army, and continued not to warn after they became civilians. The pleadings in this case clearly point to one continuing tort rather than separate pre- and post-discharge failures to warn.
8
This puts the claims squarely within the
Feres
doctrine and leaves us without jurisdiction to entertain the claims.
See Stanley, supra,
The wives of the two servicemen also bring FTCA charges in this case. The wives are careful to frame their FTCA charges as independent torts rather than to attach pendent claims of pain and suffering to their husbands’ charges. They allege that the radiation exposure to their husbands caused them severe emotional distress. Mrs. Gaspard claims that two miscarriages befell her due to her husband’s radiation exposure. Both wives claim that their injuries are severable from their husbands’ claims and were reasonably foreseeable when the government exposed their husbands to radiation.
The
Feres
doctrine also bars the wives’ FTCA claims. Although it might be argued that the need for military discipline is not a controlling factor when examining claims of non-military personnel, the Supreme Court has spoken authoritatively that no claims may be brought under the FTCA for any acts of the armed forces against its military personnel. In
Stencel Aero Engineering Corp. v. United States,
Stencel
clarifies the broad reach of the
Feres
doctrine by showing that it is the need to avoid the
inquiry
into military orders, and not the
consequences
of the inquiry, that justifies the military exclusion from the FTCA.
See also Hatzlachh Supply Co. v. United States,
Courts, therefore, have widely ruled that FTCA relief is not available to family members for claims based on the injuries to their relatives in the armed forces.
Monaco
v.
United States,
This Court has barred claims even where the family member has no alternative remedy under the Veterans Benefits Act.
Scales v. United States,
The remedies of the Veterans Benefits Act are meant to be exclusive, and the need for a strong and capable military overwhelms the factors supporting recovery. We therefore dismiss, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the FTCA claims of these Desert Rock veterans.
Accord, Lombard v. United States,
III. Bivens Claims
Gaspard’s appeal also alleges intentional interference with well-established constitutional rights, raised under the authority of
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
*1103
We find, however, that the rationale behind the
Feres
doctrine bars the
Bivens
claims before us today. The recent case of
Chappell v. Wallace,
- U.S. -,
The rationale behind
Wallace
is much the same as the Court earlier applied in
Feres.
The need for plenary discretion in military affairs and the existence of an adequate, congressionally-imposed compensation scheme instruct us to avoid either imposing
or inquiring into
monetary damages when a service person is injured.
See Jaffee v. United States,
Gaspard also levels Bivens charges against the civilian officials of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), 15 the former government agency which played a major role in the Desert Rock tests. Gaspard claims that even if the Bivens claims for damages are barred as to military officials, they are not barred as to non-military officials. Even if this contention is correct in general terms, 16 it does not apply to this case. The former officials of the AEC are named only for the role they allegedly played in the Desert Rock tests. These tests were planned and conducted by both military and civilian personnel. Clearly then, any involvement of civilian officials must have been in conjunction with military planning and orders. This is not a case involving a purely civilian governmental interference with the established constitutional rights of servicemen. Since an inquiry into the AEC’s role at Desert Rock would necessitate an investigation of military affairs, we hold that Wallace also bars the claims against the civilian officials in this case.
Mrs. Gaspard has filed her own Bivens charges against the same officials, both military and civilian. Her claims, whether pendent to or independent of her husband’s charges, would require an inquiry into military affairs and therefore are also barred as we conclude in Part II of this opinion.
Finally, Gaspard charges on appeal that some of the violations of his constitutional rights stem not from the 1955 Desert Rock tests alone, but also from the refusal of the VA to certify his disability as service-related and grant him a service-related pension. We recognize that the availability of VA pensions and other administrative remedies is, in part, the justification for precluding servicemen from bringing Bivens claims against the government. Gaspard claims, however, that his inability to secure a VA pension either qualifies him to file suit under other legal theories based on his Desert Rock experiences, or constitutes a separate tort that should itself be subject to Bivens scrutiny.
*1105
We must reject these assertions. Gaspard’s inability to secure a VA pension does not open the door to
Bivens
standing to challenge the 1955 Desert Rock tests. It is the
existence
of the VA compensation scheme, and not payment in fact, that lessens the justification for a
Bivens
remedy. We consider the congressionally-authorized military compensation system to be comprehensive and conclusive even when individual claimants may fall between the cracks of the implementing regulations.
See Scales v. United States,
We are perhaps more sympathetic to a charge that remedies are inadequate when the underlying tort is of constitutional dimension. 17 Yet Congress has taken into account the constitutional rights of service personnel in fashioning the available administrative remedies as exclusive. Therefore, denial of a VA pension cannot serve as a ground for an alternative cause of action. 18
Finally, regarding Gaspard’s suggestion that the denial of his VA pension is a separate tort, we note that Gaspard has not named any party to this suit who might be responsible for the denial. 19
In sum, we find no compelling reason in this case to expand the reach of the Bivens action to the inner workings of the military. We therefore affirm the dismissal of the Bivens claims for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). 20
*1106 Finding no jurisdiction against the United States under the FTCA allegations and no valid theory for relief against the government officials under the Bivens claims, we AFFIRM the dismissals in the two cases before us.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Gaspard died after the filing of this case. Mrs. Gaspard indicates that in the event of a remand, she will move to amend the petition to allege wrongful death and to continue his claim as administratrix.
. Between October, 1958 and September, 1961, a voluntary moratorium on testing was set by the United States and the Soviet Union. Between September, 1961 and August, 1963, another 102 atmospheric atomic weapons tests occurred. The tests ceased when the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty was signed by the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union on August 5, 1963.
. Sheehan also attended an army training school in Camp Gifu, Japan, in 1952, where training in biological and radiological warfare exposed him to Cobalt 50, another radioactive agent.
.
Cf. Brooks v. United States,
. See note 1, supra.
.
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
. The
Feres
doctrine does not bar FTCA claims of an active serviceman for torts occurring outside the realm of military discipline. Hence, a soldier who was off duty, out-of-uniform, and not subject to military discipline at the time could maintain an FTCA claim when his car was negligently struck by another army employee.
Brooks v. United States,
. We are aware that other courts facing veterans disability claims have allowed such a separate tort theory to survive a motion to dismiss.
Thornwell v. United States,
. Sheehan’s claims may also be barred by the statute of limitations. FTCA claims must be filed with the appropriate federal agency within two years of discovering the injury. 28 U.S.C. § 2401(b). Sheehan applied for VA disability benefits based on radiation illnesses on March 20, 1979, and this claim was filed on March 26, 1979. A VA diagnosis of radiation-induced illness was made on July 20, 1979, and the FTCA claim was filed on March 24, 1981. If the nature of the illness was known on March 20, 1979, the date of the VA benefits application, then the FTCA claim is barred. If, as Sheehan claims, he could not have known of the connection between the radiation exposures and his illnesses until the VA’s diagnosis on July 20, 1979, then the claim would not be barred under the FTCA’s statute of limitations. We do not attempt to resolve this issue since we are without jurisdiction over the FTCA claim in any event.
See Blakeney v. Blakeney,
. We note additionally that the record on appeal shows no evidence that Mrs. Gaspard or Mrs. Sheehan filed administrative claims under the FTCA separate from those of their husbands. We need not consider whether their husbands’ FTCA claims would be sufficient to preserve their independent tort claims, since we find we have no subject matter jurisdiction over the claims in any event.
. Gaspard’s
Bivens
claims are not barred by the statute of limitations. This Court looks to state law to determine the applicable statute of limitations for
Bivens
actions.
Alford v. United States,
Gaspard evidently first discovered his disability in October, 1979. He gave notice to the Veterans Administration in October, 1979 and to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in November, 1979. He filed the Bivens charges in this suit on October 1, 1980, within one year of discovery. The statute of limitations therefore does not bar his claim.
. The
Wallace
court did acknowledge that
Bivens
would still support a petition for injunctive relief by a serviceman.
See, e.g., Frontiero v. Richardson,
. Congress is in the process of reconsidering the extent to which sovereign immunity should be waived for both constitutional and non-constitutional tort claims. See Madden, Allard, & Remes, Bedtime for Bivens: Substituting the United States as Defendant in Constitutional Tort Suits, 20 Harv.J. on Legis. 469, 470 n. 2, 472-78 (1983). One of the latest attempts, S. 775, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. (1983), would waive sovereign immunity for constitutional torts and eliminate the Bivens action against federal officials. See also, e.g., S. 829, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. (1983); H.R. 595, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. (1983). The bill does not alter the statutory exemption to the FTCA that underlies the Feres doctrine, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(j), but it would allow suit against the government for the constitutional torts of military officials, the so-called Bivens violation. Compare S. 775, § 6(a) (which would leave 28 U.S.C. § 2680(j) unchanged regarding the military exclusion from the FTCA) with id. § 7(a) (which is silent regarding a military exclusion for constitutional torts). The bill is remarkable both for the distinction it raises between common law and constitutional torts, and for its willingness to limit the Feres doctrine to torts of the common law, non-constitutional variety.
The bill seemingly would eradicate the exclusivity of alternative statutory remedies, such as *1104 the Veterans Benefits Act. Until such a bill becomes law, however, we find no support in the existing statutory framework for the Bivens claims before us today. It is the job of Congress and not the judiciary to remedy possible imperfections in a comprehensive statutory framework. This principle is all the more compelling since Congress is making active attempts to redraw the lines defining liability for constitutional torts.
Furthermore, since the attempts at reform would substitute the United States for government officials in Bivens actions, we see congressional adherence to the notion that tort suits against government officials interfere with effective government. See Madden, Al-lard, & Remes, supra, at 473-74. Since there is, at present, no waiver of sovereign immunity for Bivens violations, such suits must be brought against the government officials themselves. The courts have found that this would be an unacceptable development in the military context.
. In a case decided the same day as
Wallace, Bush v.
Lucas,- U.S.-,
. The activities of the former Atomic Energy Commission are now split between the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Department of Energy.
. The Supreme Court was careful in
Bush v. Lucas,
- U.S. -,
. The
Wallace
Court paid homage to the remark of Chief Justice Warren that “our citizens in uniform may not be stripped of basic rights simply because they have doffed their civilian clothes.”
Wallace,
— U.S. at-,
. Normally, administrative adjudications are themselves subject to judicial review, and wrongful denials of entitlements can be remedied through that review process. Individual denials of VA pensions, however, are not subject to judicial review. 38 U.S.C. § 211(a). However, a wrongful denial that rises to the level of an intentional constitutional violation could support a separate Bivens theory against the administrative officials. This could take the form of a Bivens request for mandamus, or perhaps could include a prayer for money damages. Therefore, even without the right to direct judicial appeal of an isolated denial of VA benefits, a constitutional violation could still be subject to judicial scrutiny.
. At oral argument on appeal, counsel for Gaspard raised the thought that the denial of VA benefits is a separate tort, constituting an intentional violation of his constitutional right to compensation for his earlier injuries. He charges that a mere handful of 250,000 atomic test era veterans have succeeded in securing VA benefits for radiation-related disabilities. Gaspard urges that a conspiracy deep within the VA appeals system is not only denying his claim for benefits, but is denying categorically the radiation-related claims of all service personnel. This is a Bivens allegation separate and distinct from the charges stemming from the 1955 radiation exposure. It is a charge of a 1970’s conspiracy to deprive Gaspard and other veterans of important constitutional rights.
This charge, first brought to our attention at oral argument, is neither contained in the pleadings or records of the district court nor raised as an issue on appeal. Officials of the VA are not named in this suit. It therefore is improper for us to consider any such allegations, and we confine our holdings to those issues properly before us.
We do note, however, that such claims would constitute claims by veterans as civilians, not subject to the Feres-Wallace bar on military claims.
. The government officials charged under the Bivens theories in this case were never served, never appeared, and were not represented on appeal. The United States, as amicus curiae for these officials, asks us to dismiss the Bivens *1106 claims summarily because process was never served on the former government officials. We decline to do so. The record shows no evidence that Gaspard was unsuccessful in service of process due to inexcusable neglect. Rather, the evidence suggests that the exact identity and information regarding the whereabouts of these officials may be uniquely in the hands of the government itself. There was notice to the United States and to various government agencies of the existence of the suit. Gaspard contended in the district court that process had not been served on these officials due to the government’s refusal to comply with discovery requests.
Dismissal with prejudice for failure to make service of process is warranted only “in extreme situations where there is a clear record of delay or contumacious conduct by the plaintiff.”
Silas v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
