Case Information
*1 Before BALDOCK, KELLY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
MURPHY , Circuit Judge.
This аppeal concerns the breadth of the discretionary-function exception to the waiver of sovereign immunity under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA). Plaintiffs, who owned most of the stock of the Franklin Savings Association (FSA or the Association), sued the United States and the Resolution Trust Corporation [1] (RTC), seeking damages allegedly caused by the RTC’s conduct as FSA’s conservator. Before any discovery, the district court dismissed the suit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) on the basis that plaintiffs’ claims fell within the FTCA’s discretionary-function exception. This court has jurisdiction of plaintiffs’ appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Plaintiffs primarily argue that their claims arise not from the RTC’s performance of a discretionary function, but from its violation of specific, mandatory duties while managing FSA. Those duties include a specific dictate in the order creating the conservatorship that the RTC conserve and not liquidate the Association. Plaintiffs argue that the RTC nonetheless intentionally effected a de facto liquidation of FSA under the guise of conserving it. They thus allege that the RTC acted in subjective bad faith while performing acts which, viewed *3 objectively, fall within the scope of a discretionary function. This poses the question whеther such allegations should bar dismissal under the discretionary- function exception. Because this court concludes that the exception’s purpose compels dismissal of any claim whose ultimate resolution would require judicial AFFIRM . scrutiny of an official’s good faith or subjective decisionmaking, we II. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This is the third appeal to this court and the seventh published opinion
involving disputes over the conservation and liquidation of the long-gone but not
forgotten Franklin Savings Association.
See Franklin Sav. Ass’n v. Office of
Thrift Supervision ,
In 1990 the Director of the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS ) determined
that FSA was “in an unsafe and unsound condition to transact business” and
appointed the RTC as its conservator.
[2]
FSA and its parent, Franklin Savings
*4
Corporation (FSC), filed suit under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery,
and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) to remove the conservator.
See 12
U.S.C. § 1464(d)(2)(E) (1989) (authorizing appointment and judicial review);
see
generally 12 U.S.C. §§ 1461–1470 (1989). While the district court held the
appointment arbitrary and capricious, this court reversed, holding that review of
the decision to appoint a conservator is limited to the administrative record and
that said record supported the decision.
See Franklin I ,
*5
The present action, meanwhile, arose from plaintiffs’ 1993 filing of an
adversary complaint against the RTC in bankruptcy court, in a proceeding
concerning the estate of FSC. See Franklin III ,
On appeal, plaintiffs primarily challenge the dismissal of their FTCA claim. They premise that claim on the RTC’s conduct in 1990–92, while it was acting under an order appointing it “as conservator . . . nоt for the purpose of liquidation.” Plaintiffs argue that the RTC disregarded that specific mandate, ignored various narrower mandates in its own manuals governing conservatorships, and breached its fiduciary duties as a conservator by intentionally effecting a de facto liquidation of the Association.
Plaintiffs specifically decry four sets of transactions from which they infer the RTC’s sub rosa intent to liquidate the Association. Three of these involve allegedly precipitate, all-or-nothing sales of asset portfolios in saturated markets. The fourth involves an omission: before issuing reports on FSA’s capital, the RTC did not exercise its statutory power to repudiate burdensome, high-interest bonds issued by FSA. The capital reports, which reflected asset write-downs that had decreased FSA’s equity, caused the bond trustee to defease the bonds, *6 triggering large losses for FSA. Plaintiffs argue that the RTC engaged in such conduct in order to deplete FSA’s capital and thereby retrospectively justify the OTS’s appointment of a conservator. They allege that the RTC caused FSA to lose some $500 million in potential profits, thus ensuring the Association’s future liquidation rather than its conservation and eventual return to plаintiffs’ control.
III. DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs’ complaint included two damage claims pertinent to this appeal: one against the United States under the FTCA, and one against the FDIC at common law. [5] On appeal, the plaintiffs assert three ways the government has *7 waived sovereign immunity: (1) under the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 106; (2) under the FTCA, because the discretionary-function exception does not apply; and (3) under the RTC’s and FDIC’s sue-and-be-sued clauses. [6]
A.
Plaintiffs Have Waived Reliance on Bankruptcy Code § 106
Plaintiffs’ first argument is easily dispatched, for their complaint did not
allege Bankruptcy Code § 106 as a basis for subject-matter jurisdiction, and they
never sought leave to amend their complaint to do so, or in any way asked the
district court to assume jurisdiction under that provision. Plaintiffs address this
problem by invoking the long-established rule that defects in subject-matter
jurisdiction can never be waived and may be raised at any time on appeal.
See
Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Mich. Ry. v. Swan
,
Plaintiffs attempt to distinguish Daigle . They acknowledge that this court refused to consider a waived argument supporting jurisdiction of Daigle’s suit. They argue, however, that we did so because the argument involved disputed factual issues on which the district court had made no findings. Plaintiffs assert that their bankruptcy argument, by contrast, presents “a pristine legal question.”
Plaintiffs misread Daigle . This court held that we have no duty to consider
waived arguments supporting subject-matter jurisdiction.
See
B. The Discretionary-Function Exception to the FTCA’s Waiver of Sovereign Immunity
1. Standard of Review
The government moved to dismiss the FTCA claims under Rules 12(b)(1)
and (6), and the court treated the motion as one to dismiss for failure to state a
claim under Rule 12(b)(6).
See Franklin III ,
2. Summary of Applicable Law
To avoid dismissal of an FTCA claim under the discretionary-function
exception, a plaintiff must allege facts that place its claim facially outside the
exception. See Kiehn v. United States ,
Under the FTCA, the United States waives its sovereign immunity with respect to certain injuries caused by government employees acting within the scope of their employment. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). The FTCA contains an exception to this broad waiver of immunity, however, for claims “based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency or an employee of the Government, whether or not the discretion involved be abused.” Id. § 2680(a). . . . “The discretionary function exception . . . marks the boundary between Congress’ willingness to impose tort liability upon the United States and its desire to protect certain governmental activities from exposure to suit by private individuals.” United States v. S.A. Empresa de Viacao Aerea Rio Grandense (Varig Airlines) ,467 U.S. 797 , 808 (1984). If the discretionary function exception applies to the challenged governmental conduct, the United States retains its sovereign immunity, and the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to hear the suit. See Johnson v. United States Dep’t of Interior ,949 F.2d 332 , 335 (10th Cir. 1991).
Tippett ,
In dozens of cases in the last decade, this court has determined whether
government conduct was within the exception by using a two-branch analysis
*11
announced in Berkovitz ex rel. Berkovitz v. United States
,
First, we determine whether the governmental conduct at issue “is a matter of choice for the acting employee.” [ Berkovitz , 486 U.S.] at 536. “[C]onduct cannot be discretionary unless it involves an element of judgment or choice. Thus, the discretionary function exception will not apply when a federal statute, regulation, or policy specifically prescribes a course of action for an employee to follow.” Id. (citation omitted). In such a situation, “the employee has no rightful option but to adhere to the directive.” Id.
If the conduct at issue involves an element of judgment or choice, Berkovitz requires us to “determine whether that judgment is of the kind that the discretionary function exception was designed to shield.” Id. Congress preserved governmental immunity for discretionary functions to “prevent judicial ‘second-guessing’ of legislative and administrative decisions grounded in social, economic, and political policy through the medium of an action in tort.” Id. at 536-37. Therefore, the exception “protects only governmental actions and decisions based on considerations of public policy.” Id. at 537.
Bell ,
3. Plaintiffs’ FTCA Claims
Plaintiffs’ general grievance is that the RTC violated the provision in the OTS order that the appointment was “not for the purpose of liquidation.” Notwithstanding that dictate, plaintiffs claim, the RTC proceeded to liquidate FSA. To add specific content to this most general claim, plaintiffs contend that the RTC breached twenty specific, mandatory requirements detailed in several agency manuals and directives which guided RTC employees in managing institutions the RTC was appointed to conserve.
a. Plaintiffs’ claims are not based upon the breach of any specific, mandatory requirements contained in RTC manuals and directives.
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is that the RTC engaged in unwise asset sales without considering all relevant factors. Plaintiffs contend the RTC thereby impaired FSA’s franchise value and failed to maintain the value, or maximize the sale price, of its assets. Plaintiffs ultimately contend that these failures show that the RTC’s intent was never to conserve FSA, but was from the start to liquidate it. In other words, the RTC’s decisions whether, when, and how tо sell or manage various assets are consistent with an intent to liquidate, and inconsistent with an intent to conserve.
Day-to-day decisions in operating a financial institution involve discretion.
Unless a regulation specifically mandates a particular action, such decisions satisfy
the first branch of Berkovitz . See Gaubert ,
To distinguish Gaubert , plaintiffs must identify regulations governing the RTC’s day-to-day management of a savings association that are sufficiently specific and mandatory to eliminate the discretion that such management “plain[ly]” entails. After listing their twenty “specific and mandatory” provisions, plaintiffs challenge the particular sets of transactions discussed supra at 5. They focus on five requirements that the RTC allegedly violated in those transactions.
i. Most of the requirements on which plaintiffs focus are not specific and mandatory.
Four of the five requirements are to maintain asset values, avoid sales that reduce franchise value, maximize value, and schedule sales based on various concerns:
*14 C The RTC’s Asset Management and Disposition Manual has an asset- marketing section, whose “purpose . . . is to establish policy guidelines for the packaging and sale of loans and other assets.” It declares a policy of “tak[ing] the necessary steps to ensure that asset integrity and value are maintained in order to maximize sales opportunities.” C The above section also notes that “[a]sset sales should . . . occur quickly after [a financial] institution is placed into conservatorship if the sale does not negatively impact the franchise value of the institution.” C The “Background” paragraph of a directive on selling and managing securities says that the “RTC is charged with, among other things, the maximization of value in the timely and efficient disposition of securities.”
C The same directive also lists responsibilities of the RTC Capital Markets Branch. It directs the Branch to “[m]anage and schedule timing of securities sales based on needs of institutions, market conditions, type of security, and ease of sale.”
None of the four constitutes a “specific and mandatory requirement” as this court’s precedents define that term. Instead, they all state general goals, or sets of objectives to balance, in precatory rather than mandatory language.
In Tippett this court held that a Park Service policy that “[t]he saving of
human life will take precedence over all other management actions” was “too
general to remove the discretion from [a Park Ranger’s] conduct” in a situation
that threatened human life. See
The four passages above are no more specific or mandatory than those in Tippett and Daigle . The first, which refers to RTC “policy,” leaves it to employees to decide which “steps” are “necessary.” The second mentions asset sales that “negatively impact the franchise value of the institution” as an unelaborated caveat to a provision encouraging sales. It does not mandate any specific process or formula for determining which sales will have such an impact. The third describes “maximization of value” as one RTC duty “among other things.” It neither elaborates that general command nor specifies how to perform the discretionary task of balancing timeliness, efficiency, and return. The final passage lists four broad considerations to balance, in an unspecified calculus, without specifying a course of action for the complex task of managing asset sales.
ii. Plaintiffs failed to allege a damage claim for breach of a specific, mandatory duty to prepare case memoranda.
The lone potentially troubling requirement among the five on which plaintiffs have focused is found in the RTC’s Asset Management and Disposition Manual. It directs employees preparing case memoranda, which are “formal written document[s] used to request authorization to take . . . action on behalf of *16 the RTC,” to compare the proposed action to available alternatives. It specifies that “[a]ll the alternatives must be weighed comprehensively and objectively to determine the course of action in the best interest of the RTC.” There is some question whether that passage would qualify as a “specific and mandatory directive.” [11] Even if it does, however, plaintiffs’ complaint was deficient because, as discussed below, it did not identify the mere failure to physically prepare case memoranda weighing alternatives as the cause of plaintiffs’ injuries.
*17 The government denies that this passage is specific and mandatory. It argues that the passage simply “provides for alternatives to be ‘weighed . . .’” and thus “implicitly granted RTC discretion to identify the pertinent options and determine the weight to attribute to each.” This argument has force insofar as it goes. But the passage does not only concern the discretionary and unquantifiable mental process of weighing alternatives. It also concerns the arguably nondiscretionary and definitely quantifiable physical process of drafting memoranda which weigh alternatives. On review of this Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal, this cоurt must assume that RTC employees did not draft case memoranda seeking authorization for the challenged transactions, or that, if they did, such memoranda failed to identify and weigh alternatives.
While the government has ignored the potential significance of a requirement not just to weigh alternatives but to record the process in writing, plaintiffs have ignored it as well. Their complaint did not attribute any harm to the breach of a specific mandate to draft memoranda, as opposed to a failure to perform the discretionary function of weighing options. In that part of their complaint listing specific, mandatory requirements, plaintiffs simply allege that the RTC “failed to prepare Case Memoranda in the manner specifically mandated” and “failed to comprehensively and objectively weigh the alternative actions available to it as specifically mandated.” Their complaint then details three of the four “liquidation transactions” on which plaintiffs focus on appeal. In describing *18 each transaction, the complaint perfunctorily and identically recites that the RTC acted “without comprehensively and objectively weighing the alternative actions available to it.” Nowhere else in their 28-page complaint or in their response to the government’s motion to dismiss did plaintiffs allude in any way to the specific duty to draft case memoranda.
After the bald assertion that the RTC failed to prepare memoranda weighing alternatives, the only parts of the complaint which in any way linked that requirement to any particular events or injuries simply alleged that the RTC did not “comprehensively and objectively weigh the alternative actions available.” The complaint does not suggest that plaintiffs’ multi-million-dollar injuries flow from a failure to perform the arguably nondiscretionary function of drafting memoranda listing alternatives, and not from neglect of the discretionary function of “comprehensively and objectively weigh[ing] the alternative actions available.” Most importantly, plaintiffs have not argued on appeal that the district court should have read their complaint to allege that a failure to memorialize, as opposed to a failure to weigh options, caused their injuries.
iii. Conclusion . Accordingly, as discussed above and in the district court’s opinion, [12] none of the twenty provisions that the RTC allegedly violated can enable plaintiffs to show that their asserted injuries are based upon nondiscretionary conduct. Those provisions thus afford no basis for reinstating plaintiffs’ dismissed complaint.
b. Plaintiffs cannot avoid the discretionary-function bar by alleging the RTC intentionally ignored its specific mandate to conserve and not liquidate FSA.
Plaintiffs’ main argument is that “[t]he RTC as conservator was required to . . . operate and preserve FSA. Instead, it liquidated FSA and failed to carry out this nondiscretionary obligation.” Plaintiffs note that the OTS order appointed the RTC “as conservator for the Association, not for the purpose of liquidation.” They detail statutory provisions governing the RTC and reflecting a congressional intent “that only receivers, and not conservators, have the power to liquidate.” Compare 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(2)(D) (conservator’s powers) with §§ 1821(c)(13)(B) & (d)(2)(E) (receiver’s powers). Plaintiffs argue that, because their complaint was dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6), this court must assume the truth of their factual allegations, i.e., that the RTC intentionally chose to liquidate rather than conserve *20 the Association, in violation of the OTS order. If so, then the RTC consciously violated the specific duty mandated by that order, stripping itsеlf of the sovereign immunity preserved by the FTCA’s discretionary-function exception.
The specific transactions that plaintiffs challenge as revealing the RTC’s intentional violation of the order to conserve and not liquidate are mainly asset sales. [13] The RTC’s broad authority specifically included power to sell assets of institutions it was appointed to conserve. See 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(2)(G)(i)(II) (authorizing FDIC/RTC as conservator to “transfer any asset or liability” of institution). Plaintiffs do not dispute the discretionary character of asset sales, beyond unsuccessfully invoking the RTC manuals. Two related questions, however, must be resolved: (1) can plaintiffs avoid the discretionary-function bar by alleging that RTC employees performed facially authorized acts with an intent to liquidate; (2) are plaintiffs entitled to discovery to show that the sales were meant not to conserve the Association, but to effect an intentional, de facto liquidation?
*21 i. The purpose of the discretionary-function exception.
At the Rule 12(b) stage, this court cannot simply disbelieve plaintiffs’ factual allegations about RTC officials’ intent, as the Government urges. Nonetheless, the purpose of the discretionary-function exception compels this court to reject plaintiffs’ argument. The argument premises jurisdiction on an allegation that RTC employees intentionally undertook the forbidden function of liquidation rather than the mandated, discretionary function of conservation. The Supreme Court has repeatedly insisted, as discussed below, that FTCA claims are not vehicles to second-guess policymaking. That principle requires a federal court to dismiss an FTCA claim if jurisdiction is so dependent on allegations about government officials’ intent or decisionmaking process that resolving the claim would require judicial inquiry into those subjective matters.
The Supreme Court has consistently relied on the purpose of the
discretionary-function exception in defining its scope.
See Gaubert ,
The Court’s modification of the second branch of Berkovitz to ask whether an exercise of discretion was “susceptible to policy analysis” has lightened the Government’s burden. The change has also served to emphasize that courts should not inquire into the actual state of mind or decisionmaking process of federal officials charged with performing discretionary functions. See, e.g., Bruce A. Peterson & Mark E. Van Der Weide, Susceptible to Faulty Analysis: United States v. Gaubert and the Resurrection of Federal Sovereign Immunity , 72 Notre Dame L. Rev. 447, 464–69, 473 (1997) (counting pre- and post- Gaubert case outcomes to show that eliminating inquiry into actual decisionmaking has made it much easier to get FTCA claims dismissed); Richard H. Seamon, Causation and the Discretionary Function Exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act , 30 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 691, 708–10 (1997) (explaining how Gaubert has “made it even easier for the government to satisfy the second part of the [ Berkovitz ] test”).
The en banc Third Circuit recently read Gaubert broadly to restrict all
inquiry into officials’ subjective decisionmaking.
See Fisher Bros. Sales v. United
*24
States ,
The case involved the FDA Commissioner’s indisputably discretionary decision to bar Chilean grapes from the United States. See id. at 282. The decision followed FDA scientists’ allegedly negligent testing of grape samples, which falsely indicated cyanide. See id. at 282–83. The en banc court concluded that Gaubert ’s rationale requires dismissal of FTCA claims if a protected exercise of discretion immediately caused the damages. See id. at 282, 286–87. The opinion requires dismissal even if plaintiffs disavow any challenge to the exercise of discretion itself. It thus bars suit for negligent performance of nondiscretionary data-gathering functions that preceded a discretionary decision, so long as the decision itself immediately caused the harm. See id. at 286–87. See generally Seamon, supra , at 722–52 (analyzing case).
Despite accepting plaintiffs’ version of the facts and conceding that their claims were in a literal sense “based upon” the negligent testing rather than the Commissioner’s decision, the court nonetheless rejected their theory of proximate cause as “inconsistent with the purpose of the discretionary function exception.” *25 Id. аt 286. The court relied on Gaubert to define the range of inquiry which that purpose forecloses:
[W]here the injury . . . is caused by a regulatory policy decision, . . . there is no difference in the quality or quantity of the interference occasioned by judicial second guessing, whether the plaintiff purports to be attacking the data base on which the policy is founded or . . . challeng[es] the policy itself.
If plaintiffs [could] . . . challeng[e] the manner in which the underlying data was collected, federal courts, of necessity, would be required to examine in detail the decisionmaking process of the policymaker to determine what role the challenged data played in the policymaking . . . . Without such an examination and all of the discovery that would necessarily precede it, a plaintiff . . . would be unable to prove a causal link between the alleged negligence and the alleged injury. Yet this is precisely the kind of inquiry that the Supreme Court sought to foreclose when it ruled out any inquiry into an official’s “subjective intent in exercising the discretion conferred by statute or regulation.”
Id. (quoting Gaubert ,
The court held that policy compelled it to read
Gaubert as an affirmative bar
to any inquiry into officials’ subjective decisionmaking: “[t]he social cost of
permitting the inquiries required by the plaintiffs’ theory are prohibitive.”
Id. The
*26
majority identified three types of social cost: (1) large tort judgments against the
government; (2) demands on the time and attention of an agency’s “most valuable
human resources” when plaintiffs conduct discovery into the bases for officials’
decisions; and (3) the cost, as Seamon puts it, “of having an official’s exercise of
discretion skewed by her desire to avoid the first two kinds of costs.”
Id. at
286–87; Seamon, supra , at 737. Those costs result whether a court examines the
wisdom of the discretionary decision, or merely determines if negligent data-
gathering affected it. See Seamon, supra , at 738–47; Fisher Bros. ,
Unlike a direct challenge to the exercise of a discretionary function, which the FTCA plainly bars, plaintiffs’ theory would not require analysis of whether the RTC was negligent or abused its discretion while trying to perform the function of conservation. And unlike a Fisher Brothers –type claim, it would not require analysis of whether any particular data had affected the exercise of discretion. Plaintiffs’ theory would instead require judicial inquiry into whether the RTC had in fact tried to perform the discrеtionary function of conservation, or had instead intentionally chosen to perform, sub rosa , the function of liquidation. While differing from a direct or a Fisher Brothers –type challenge, plaintiffs’ theory would thus still require a court to permit discovery and make factual findings regarding RTC employees’ state of mind and intent in running the Association. This the discretionary-function exception does not allow.
ii. Analogous doctrines limiting inquiry into officials’ decisionmaking.
Other doctrines applicable to official conduct support a reading of
Gaubert
as an affirmative bar to inquiry into officials’ subjective intent and
decisionmaking. One such doctrine is qualified immunity.
See, e.g., Harlow v.
Fitzgerald ,
In Harlow , the Supreme Court revised the standard for motions to dismiss
based on the doctrine of qualified immunity.
See id. at 814–18. The Court noted
it had crafted the doctrine as a compromise between the need to redress
constitutional harms and the need to minimize disruption of officials’ duties.
See
id. at 813–14. In so doing, it had assumed that qualified immunity “would permit
‘[i]nsubstantial lawsuits [to] be quickly terminated.’”
Id. at 814 (quoting Butz v.
Economou ,
Before Harlow , qualified immunity depended on both the objective
reasonableness and subjective good faith of official conduct.
See Harlow , 457
U.S. at 815 (discussing Wood v. Strickland ,
There are special costs to “subjective” inquiries of this kind. Immunity generally is available only to officials performing discretionary functions. [16] In contrast with the thought processes accompanying “ministerial” tasks, the judgments surrounding discretionary action almost inevitably are influenced by the decisionmaker's experiences, values, and emotions. These variables explain in part why questions of subjective intent so rarely can be decided by summary judgment. Yet they also frame a background in which there often is no clear end to the relevant evidence. Judicial inquiry into subjective motivation therefore may entail broad-ranging *29 discovery and the deposing of numerous persons, including an official's professional colleagues. Inquiries of this kind can be peculiarly disruptive of effective government.
Id. at 816–17 (footnotes omitted). To limit such disruption, the Court adopted a purely objective test for qualified immunity, holding that “bare allegations of malice should not suffice to subject government officials either to the costs of trial or to the burdens of broad-reaching discovery.” Id. at 817–18.
The Court has since emphasized that qualified immunity entails a right to
have suits dismissed at “the earliest possible stage of the litigation,” sparing
officials not only from liability but alsо from discovery and trial.
See Anderson v.
Creighton ,
*31
A ban on FTCA actions which require inquiry into officials’ subjective
decisionmaking also finds support by analogy to a “central tenet of administrative
law.” See Seamon, supra , at 743–44. The tenet is that courts should not “‘probe
the mental processes’” of administrative officials in APA or comparable review.
See United States v. Morgan ,
Unlike qualified immunity under Harlow , however, the Morgan rule has an
exception for cases involving “a strong showing of bad faith or improper
behavior.” See Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Lujan
,
The APA’s purpose is to authorize judicial scrutiny of executive-branch
decisionmaking, with two narrow exceptions; it created a “basic presumption of
*33
judicial review.” See Abbott Labs. v. Gardner ,
Treating bad-faith claims differently under the APA and FTCA also accords
with the divergent remedies under the two statutes. The APA presumptively
authorizes judicial review of almost all administrative acts.
See Abbott Labs , 387
U.S. at 140; see also Block v. Community Nutrition Inst.
,
The possibility of damage awards creates a strong incentive to bring FTCA claims. See Ronald A. Cass, The Discretionary Function Exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act , in 2 Administrative Conf. of the United States, Recommendations and Reports 1503, 1519–27 (1987). This incentive, absent in APA suits, suggests the need for a stricter limit on FTCA litigants’ ability to require federal courts to scrutinize officials’ subjective decisionmaking. The discretionary-function exception provides that limit. The exception must bar all suits dependent on allegations of subjective bad faith if it is to serve its purposes: to protect the separation of powers and executive-branch efficiency from the disruptive discovery and judicial scrutiny that would result if large potential damage awards produced numerous suits, and those suits could not be summarily dismissed because of the factual nature of intent and good faith. Because the APA averts the threat of numerous suits by excluding damages, the narrow bad-faith exception to the rule agаinst examining subjective decisionmaking poses no such risk. [21] Both Harlow and Morgan thus support the view that Gaubert should bar any FTCA claim for which jurisdiction necessarily depends on an employee’s bad faith *35 or state of mind in performing facially authorized acts. In this case, the RTC’s statutory powers as conservator authorized all the acts which plaintiffs challenge as a liquidation. Those acts, if done in good faith, entailed an exercise of discretion. Without probing RTC officials’ intent and good faith, there is no way ultimately to determine whether their acts constituted a covert, intentional liquidation or an effort, perhaps negligent, at conservation.
Faced with the related question whether an official’s acts, if allegedly done
in bad faith, can still be within his or her scope of duty for purposes of official
immunity, the Supreme Court acknowledged the argument that “‘official powers,
since they exist only for the public good, never cover occasions where the public
good is not their aim, and hence . . . to exercise a power dishonestly is necessarily
to overstep its bounds.’” Barr v. Matteo ,
“[T]hat cannot be the meaning of the [scope-of-duty] limitation without defeating the whole [official-immunity] doctrine. What is meant by saying that the officer must be acting within his power [to enjoy official immunity for his acts] cannot be more than that the occasion must be such as would have justified the act, if he had been using his power for any of the purposes on whose account it was vested in him.”
Id. (quoting Gregoire ,
iii.
Conclusion.
The inquiry necessary to decide whether this case involved “negligent,
good-faith conservation” or “intentional, bad-faith liquidation” would entail the
type of judicial second-guessing which led the Gaubert Court to hold that courts
need not consider officials’ actual decisionmaking in FTCA cases.
See
A rule requiring dismissal of FTCA claims which necessarily turn on employees’ intent or subjective bad faith has one potentially troubling effect. It amounts to an irrebuttable presumption that an employee ordered or required by law to perform a discretionary function, and whose acts are facially consistent with that function, did try in good faith to perform it. That irrebutable presumption will inevitably compel dismissal in cases, hopefully rare, in which an official intentionally ignored or subverted a duty, but not in a way discernible from his or her objective acts or omissions. To note this unavoidable cost is to invoke Learned Hаnd’s “classic statement of the rationale for official immunity”:
“[A]n official, who is in fact guilty of using his powers to vent his
spleen upon others, or for any other personal motive not connected
with the public good, should not escape liability for the injuries he
may so cause; and, if it were possible in practice to confine such
complaints to the guilty, it would be monstrous to deny recovery. The
justification for [denying recovery] is that it is impossible to know
whether the claim is well founded until the case has been tried, and
that to submit all officials, the innocent as well as the guilty, to the
burden of a trial and to the inevitable danger of its outcome, would
dampen the ardor of all but the most resolute, or the most
irresponsible, in the unflinching discharge of their duties. Again and
again the public interest calls for action which may turn out to be
founded on a mistake, in the face of which an official may later find
himself hard put . . . to satisfy a jury of his good faith. There must
indeed be means of punishing public officers who have been truant to
their duties; but that is quite another matter from exposing such as
*38
have been honestly mistaken to suit by anyone who has suffered from
their errors. As is so often the case, the answer must be found in a
balаnce between the evils inevitable in either alternative. In this
instance it has been thought in the end better to leave unredressed the
wrongs done by dishonest officers than to subject those who try to do
their duty to the constant dread of retaliation.”
Richard H. Fallon, Jr., et al., Hart & Wechsler’s The Federal Courts and the
Federal System , 1165 (4th ed. 1996) (quoting Gregoire ,
c. The RTC did not engage in nongovernmental activity in commerce barring a conclusion that it exercised the sort of discretion the exception protects.
Plaintiffs’ final FTCA argument addresses the second branch of
Berkovitz
by invoking the Supreme Court’s recent decision in United States v. Winstar
Corp. ,
C. The FTCA Bars Plaintiffs’ Tort Claims Asserted Directly Against the FDIC.
The FDIC’s organic statute empowers the FDIC “to sue and be sued in its
corporate capacity.” 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(b)(9)(E). The district court rejected
plaintiffs’ theory that this section entitled them to bring tort claims directly against
the FDIC, regardless of the limits in the FTCA.
See Franklin III ,
“In order to place torts of ‘suable’ agencies . . . upon precisely the same footing as torts of ‘nonsuable’ agencies, Congress, through the FTCA, limited the scope of sue-and-be-sued waivers such as that contained in [the FDIC’s] organic statute.” Specifically, Congress stated [in the FTCA]:
The authority of any federal agency to sue and be sued in its own name shall not be construed to authorize suits against such federal agency on claims which are cognizable under [the FTCA, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)], and *40 the remedies provided by [the FTCA] in such cases shall be exclusive.
28 U.S.C. § 2679(a). “Thus, if a suit is ‘cognizable’ under § 1346(b) of the FTCA, the FTCA remedy is ‘exclusive’ and the federal agency cannot be sued ‘in its own name,’ despite the existence of a sue-and-be-sued clause.”
Id. (quoting FDIC v. Meyer ,
IV. CONCLUSION
This court AFFIRMS the dismissal of all claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Notes
[1] The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is now a defendant as the RTC’s successor-in-interest. See 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(m)(1).
[2] For a “generalized and simplified overview of the facts” leading to the
conservatorship, see Franklin I ,
[2] (...continued)
account, see Franklin I ,
[3] Plaintiffs also added a claim under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA),
which the court also dismissed. See Franklin III ,
[4] Plaintiffs’ motion to supplement the record on appeal is granted.
[5] Plaintiffs sued in the names of both FSC and FSA. The Government disputed
their right to sue in either capacity. It argued that FSA had not filed an
administrative claim, as the FTCA requires. See Franklin III ,
[5] (...continued)
order to decide mootness, as both questions concern Article III jurisdiction, not
the merits); Cross-Sound Ferry Servs., Inc., v. ICC,
[6] Plaintiffs also briefly argue that dismissal before discovery was premature. They
develop this argument so superficially, however, as to waive it. See, e.g., Sports
Racing Servs., Inc. v. Sports Car Club of Am., Inc.,
[7] Courts may also ignore a waiver “when manifest injustice would otherwise
result.” Daigle ,
[8] This court did note the lack of a fully developed record, but we relied equally on Daigle’s failure to “undoubtedly demonstrate[] an unequivocal waiver of (continued...)
[8] (...continued) sovereign immunity.” Id. at 1540.
[9] The district court thus did not consider two affidavits which the government
filed. See Franklin III ,
[10] The Court rejected the argument “that the challenged actions fall outside the discretionary function exception because they involved the mere application of technical skills and business expertise.” Gaubert ,499 U.S. at 331 . That was “just another way of saying that the considerations involv[ed in] the day-to-day management of a business concern such as [a savings association] are so precisely formulated that decisions at the operational level never involve the exercise of discretion within the meaning of § 2680(a), a notion that we . . . reject[].” Id.
[11] To allow plaintiffs to avoid the discretionary-function bar by alleging that RTC
employees breached a specific duty to report information, even though the
harmful decisions based on the information were themselves discretionary, would
be in tension with precedent. See Johnson v. United States ,
[12] This court agrees with the district court, for substantially the reasons stated in
its opinion, that plaintiffs have not shown that any of the remaining fifteen
requirements is both (a) specific and mandatory and (b) a basis for their claims.
See Franklin III ,
[13] One challenged transaction was not an asset sale. Plaintiffs argue the RTC failed to timely exercise its statutory authority to repudiate burdensome high- interest bonds before it issued reports on FSA’s capital which allegedly triggered the bonds’ defeasance. See 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(1) (giving FDIC/RTC discretion, as conservator, to disaffirm or repudiate any burdensome contract if repudiation will promote orderly administration of institution’s affairs). The RTC thus had statutory authority to perform the omitted act and discretion in exercising that authority. See id. Plaintiffs do not argue that the failure to repudiate breached any duty other than the general duty to conserve and not liquidate. That failure thus raises no issues distinct from those raised by the asset sales.
[14] See Aragon v. United States ,
[15] As a commentator has noted, there is in fact some difference in the “‘quality’”
of interference occasioned by judicial second-guessing if plaintiffs attack not the
discretionary decision itself, but data-gathering that preceded it. See Seamon,
supra , at 735–36 (quoting Fisher Bros. ,
[16] The Court here used the term in its common-law sense, which distinguishes “discretionary” from “ministerial” acts, and not in its distinct but related FTCA sense.
[17] The Court has limited Mitchell , allowing immediate appeal only of denials of
immunity turning on questions of law, not sufficiency of evidence. See Johnson
v. Jones ,
[18] As illustrated by the opinion establishing that municipalities do not share their
employees’ qualified immunity from § 1983 liability, the analogy between
discretionary-function immunity, which limits governmental liability, and
qualified immunity, which limits officials’ personal liability, is imperfect. See
Owen v. City of Independence ,
[18] (...continued)
States v. Kubrick ,
[19] The Morgan rule has a second, very narrow exception for cases in which a lack
of contemporary findings or other administrative record makes effective judicial
review impossible without examining the decisionmaker. See Community for
Creative Non-Violence v. Lujan ,
[20] See Act of June 11, 1946, ch. 324, 60 Stat. 237 (APA) (codified as amended at 5 U.S.C. §§ 701–706); Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946, Pub. L. No. 79–601, tit. IV, 60 Stat. 812, 842 (1946) (FTCA) (codified as amended at 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671–2680).
[21] Because review of bad faith may be available under the APA, moreover, a refusal to permit such inquiry in FTCA suits will not leave all plaintiffs without remedy. See Seamon, supra , at 741 & n.204.
