David Eubank, the husband of appellee Kembra Eubank, died as a result of an electrical burn he sustained while working for the United States General Services Administration (“GSA”). Kembra Eu-bank, individually and on behalf of her two minor children, filed suit in Missouri state court against Kansas City Power and Light Company (“KCP & L”), the compa *426 ny that supplied electricity to the GSA facility where David Eubank was injured. KCP & L then filed a third-party petition seeking indemnity and contribution from David Eubank’s GSA supervisors. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2679(d)(2), the United States was substituted as the third-party defendant in place of the GSA supervisors, and the case was removed to federal court. The district court 1 determined that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the third-party petition, because the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671-2680, did not waive the government’s sovereign immunity in this case. The district court dismissed the third-party petition and remanded the Eubanks’ claim against KCP & L to state court. We affirm.
I.
In August 2006, David Eubank was employed as an equipment specialist by the GSA office responsible for overseeing several unoccupied buildings owned by the GSA in Kansas City, Missouri. The buildings were known collectively as the Hardesty complex. KCP & L supplied electricity to the Hardesty complex through an electrical vault building located on the complex grounds.
The electrical vault building contains two sets of electrical switches, located approximately ten feet above the floor, with switch arms that can be pivoted. These switch arms control the flow of electricity to the vault building; when the arms are in an open position disengaged from the feeder cable that supplies electricity to the vault building, power does not flow to the equipment in the vault building. Even when the switch arms are open, however, the feeder cables supplying electricity to the vault building and the switch arms remain electrified.
In 2006, GSA employees discovered that vandals broke into the vault building on at least two occasions and removed copper from the electrical equipment. On August 10, 2006, Roger Haynes, deputy director of the GSA office, directed David Eubank and another employee to enter the vault building to remove a transformer canister that was left by the vandals. Inside the vault building, David Eubank noticed a chain near the switch arms. When he went to remove the chain, an arc flash was generated, and he was severely burned. David Eubank died eight days later as a result of the burns he suffered at the Hardesty complex.
After her husband’s death, Kembra Eu-bank elected to receive benefits from the United States, pursuant to the Federal Employees’ Compensation Act (“FECA”), 5 U.S.C. §§ 8101-8193. The Eubanks were granted FECA benefits by the Department of Labor retroactive to August 19, 2006. Kembra Eubank, individually and on behalf of her two minor children, also filed suit in Missouri state court against KCP & L for damages suffered as a result of the death of David Eubank.
KCP & L answered the complaint and filed a third-party petition for indemnity and contribution against David Eubank’s GSA supervisors, Haynes and Larry Harkrader, the director of the field office in charge of the Hardesty complex. After determining that the GSA supervisors were acting in the scope of their government employment, the United States substituted itself as the third-party defendant and removed the case to federal court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2679(d)(2).
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The United States moved to dismiss KCP & L’s third-party petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The district court granted the motion and dismissed KCP & L’s indemnity and contribution claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court remanded the Eubanks’ claim against KCP & L to state court. KCP & L appeals, and we review the district court’s decision
de novo. Green Acres Enters., Inc. v. United States,
II.
When the United States substitutes itself as a party in place of government employees who were sued, the FTCA is the exclusive remedy against the United States.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2679(b)(1). Although the United States is generally immune from suit under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, “[t]he FTCA waives federal sovereign immunity and grants federal district courts jurisdiction over a certain category of claims against the United States.”
Green Acres Enters., Inc.,
To establish a waiver of sovereign immunity, KCP & L must have a cause of action against the United States for indemnity and contribution under Missouri law. When determining the scope of Missouri law, we are bound by the decisions of the Supreme Court of Missouri.
See Hope v. Klabal,
A.
Under Missouri law, claims for non-contractual indemnity generally require that the injured plaintiff have a claim of actionable negligence against the third party from whom indemnity is sought.
See Mo. Pac. R.R. v. Whitehead & Kales Co.,
The Supreme Court of Missouri has implicitly recognized an exception to the “actionable negligence” requirement, and allowed a claim for indemnity against an employer of the plaintiff based on the employer’s independent duty to the tortfeasor. In
McDonnell Aircraft Corp. v. Hartman-Hanks-Walsh Painting Co.,
KCP & L relies on the exception to the “actionable negligence” requirement that was recognized in McDonnell. The company asserts that even though the Eu-banks have no claim of actionable negligence against the United States, KCP & L may bring an indemnity claim against the United States, because the government violated an independent duty it owed to KCP & L. KCP & L argues that like the employer in McDonnell, “by requesting and accepting electrical service!,] ... the United States took on an obligation owed to KCP & L to maintain its equipment in a safe condition and to ensure that only trained and experienced employees were allowed into its substation.”
The scope of the “independent duty” exception is not a picture of clarity. The Supreme Court of Missouri explained in
State ex rel. Maryland Heights Concrete Contractors, Inc. v. Ferriss,
Some decisions of the Missouri Court of Appeals have read
Parks
to narrow the exception set forth in
McDonnell
to cases in which there is an express agreement to indemnify.
Martin v. Fulton Iron Works Co.,
There is also some dispute about whether an “independent duty” that triggers a claim for indemnity must be rooted in an express agreement. A federal district court in
Coello v. Tug Manufacturing Corp.,
It is unnecessary to decide the precise reach of Missouri law in this case. Even assuming the broad view of
Coello
that a claim for indemnity may arise from a duty that is based on neither an express agreement to indemnify nor even an express agreement to assume specific duties, there is no independent duty comparable to the product-liability duty recognized in
Coello
that is sufficient to trigger indemnity here. KCP & L asserts that the United States owed a duty to the company based on the government’s status as KCP
&
L’s customer. But the United States has not assumed a duty to KCP
& L
to protect government employees from hazardous electrical equipment simply by choosing KCP & L as an electrical provider. The government’s duty
to its own employees
to maintain a safe workplace is not sufficient to establish an independent duty running from the government to KCP & L.
See Eagle-Picher Indus., Inc. v. United States,
Because the Eubanks have no claim of actionable negligence against the United States, and the United States did not breach an independent duty owed to KCP & L, the company’s indemnity claim against the government is barred under Missouri law. The district court correctly dismissed the claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
B.
KCP & L also asserts that the district court erred in dismissing its contribution claim for a proportionate allocation of liability between the United States and KCP & L. Under Missouri law, a contribution claim generally arises only when “both the party seeking contribution and the defendant against whom contribution is sought [are] ... tortfeasorfs], originally liable to the plaintiff-injured party.”
Gramex Corp. v. Green Supply, Inc.,
In this case, the United States was substituted for the GSA supervisors pursuant to the FTCA. See 28 U.S.C. § 2679(d)(2). As such, the action shall proceed “in the same manner as any action against the United States filed pursuant to [28 U.S.C. § ] 1346(b)[,] ... and shall be subject to the limitations and exceptions applicable to those actions.” Id. § 2679(d)(4). Section 1346(b) provides that the government has waived sovereign immunity for 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, *430 would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.”
The government and the Eubanks assert that no claim of actionable negligence exists between the Eubanks and the United States in this case, because the Eubanks accepted payments under FECA, and the exclusive remedy provision of the statute bars a negligence action against the United States. KCP & L argues that the Eubanks have a cause of action against the GSA supervisors under Missouri law, and that FECA’s exclusive remedy provision does not apply.
KCP & L relies on
Knowles v. United States,
Knowles
was a divided decision, with a dissenting opinion urging that the United States is liable only to the extent that a private
employer
would be liable under the theory of
respondeat superior. Id.
at 1152 (Beam, J., dissenting). At least one other circuit has embraced the dissent,
see Haceesa v. United States,
Whatever the merit and vitality of
Knowles,
it is distinguishable from this case. The court in
Knowles
acknowledged that “FECA supplants liability that would otherwise exist under the FTCA for on-the-job injuries suffered by government employees,” and rested its decision on the conclusion that nothing in
Knowles
“supplanted] the liability imposed by state law and the FTCA.”
Because the Eubanks have no claim of actionable negligence against the United States, KCP & L cannot assert a claim for contribution under Missouri law. Therefore, the district court correctly dismissed KCP & L’s contribution claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Gary A. Fenner, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
