This is a suit for wrongful death brought against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, which, with limitations that we can ignore, makes the federal government hable for the torts of its employees to the same extent that they would be liable under the law of the place where the tort was committed, in this case Illinois. A trial in the district court resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for $4 million, from which the government appeals.
In August of 1994, a woman named Higgs, babysitting for the family of a Navy enlisted man named Norman who was stationed at the Great Lakes Naval Base near Chicago, abused Norman’s 14-month-old son. The abuse resulted in injuries that required the child’s hospitalization at Great Lakes Naval Hospital, a federal facility. The medical personnel at the hospital, who are federal employees, failed to report the incident to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, as required by the state’s Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act (ANCRA), 325 ILCS 5/1
et seq.
That it is a federal hospital that may or may not be subject to ANCRA is irrelevant to the government’s liability under the tort claims act, for reasons explained in
Carter v. United States,
Higgs said that the child’s injuries had been caused by his falling down “the steps,” presumably accidentally, but the medical personnel should have realized that the child was a victim of abuse rather than of accident. Indeed, they seem to have been suspicious, and asked the child’s father whether he suspected abuse. He said he didn’t know. They asked him whether he wanted them to report the incident as abuse, and he replied, “if that’s what you’re supposed to do, do your job.” Mrs. Norman told her husband, “it doesn’t look like [the child] fell down the steps; he was beat up,” but it is unclear whether she told the medical personnel this.
The Act provides that any of a very long list of persons, ranging from physicians to foster parents, homemakers, and childcare workers and clearly encompassing the medical personnel who examined the Norman child, “having reasonable cause to believe a child known to them in their professional or official capacity may be an abused child or a neglected child shall immediately report or cause a report to be made to the-Department.” 325 ILCS 5/4. The statute provides criminal and disciplinary sanctions for willful violations, id., 5/4.02, but does not specify any purely civil sanctions, such as damages or injunctive relief. The government concedes that the medical personnel at Great Lakes Naval Hospital violated the Act by failing to report possible abuse of the Norman child.
Twenty-eight days after that incident, Higgs babysat for another Navy family at Great Lakes Naval Base, the Cuylers. Higgs abused the Cuylers’ child, inflicting injuries that this time were fatal, and precipitating this lawsuit. (Higgs, though convicted of involuntary manslaughter for the death of the child, is not a defendant in this suit.) The plaintiff argues that her child’s death was caused by the Navy personnel’s violation of the Illinois abuse-notification statute in regard to the Norman child, and that either there is an implied right of action for damages under the statute, or, if not, then because the statute is intended for the protection of children such as the abused Cuyler child a violation of it is prima facie evidence of negligence under the common law of Illinois. The district court agreed with the plaintiffs second ground and therefore did not address the first, but the plaintiff , as is her right asks us to affirm on the first if we disagree with the district court on the *952 second. We begin with the second since it’s the one the district court considered.
A conventional principle of tort law, in Illinois as elsewhere, is that if a statute defines what is due care in some activity, the violation of the statute either conclusively or (in Illinois) presumptively establishes that the violator failed to exercise due care. E.g.,
Abbasi ex rel. Abbasi v. Paraskevoulakos,
Ordinarily the scope of the tort duty of care — whether it extends to bystanders, customers, investors, unforeseeable plaintiffs (as in the famous
Palsgraf
case), and so forth, see
Edwards v. Honeywell, Inc.,
From this analysis it follows that only if the Illinois common law of torts imposed on the medical personnel of the Great Lakes Naval Hospital a duty of care to the Cuylers’ child would the Illinois notification statute specify the level of care that they owed the child' — specify, that is, that due care required taking steps to
*953
prevent Higgs from further babysitting until the circumstances in which the Norman child had been injured were clarified. In general, however, tort law imposes- on people only a duty to take reasonable care to avoid injuring other people, and not a duty to rescue others from injuries by third parties, though there are exceptions. For the rule and its exceptions, see our recent discussion in
Stockberger v. United States,
As we noted in
Stockberger,
“If
A
saw that
B
was about to be struck on the head by a flowerpot thrown from a tenth-story window, and
A
knew that
B
was unaware of the impending catastrophe and also knew that he could save
B
with a shout, yet he did nothing and as a result
B
was killed, still, A’s inaction, though gratuitous (there was no risk or other nontrivial cost to
A)
and even reprehensible, would not be actionable.”
It would be different if
A
had dropped the flowerpot on
B
and a statute provided that due care required avoiding tossing heavy objects out of upper-floor windows. For in that case, as a matter of tort law,
A
would have a duty to
B,
and the statute would show that he hád violated the duty. The common law would create the duty, the statute would define it. That would be a case like
Doe v. Dimovski,
We said there were exceptions to the rule that there is no common law duty to warn or rescue. (We have just mentioned one.) The exception that comes closest to this case is where, as in the famous case of
Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California,
Thus Illinois common law did not impose on the hospital’s employees a tort duty running to the Cuylers’ child, but we must consider whether the Illinois notification statute may have created such a duty. It did not do so expressly. The statute contains no reference to damages or other tort-type remedies. The only sanctions provided are criminal and disciplinary sanctions for willful violations. Nothing in the statute’s text indicates that the legislature meant to expand the scope of tort liability to encompass people who fail to report child abuse and are thus analogous to bystanders who fail to intervene to prevent injuries by third parties. No Illinois case has addressed the question whether, nevertheless, the statute implicitly creates a private right to obtain damages (yet the plaintiff is adamant that we should
not
certify the question to the Supreme Court of Illinois). But an imposing line of cases from other jurisdictions dealing with the private-right question under very similar, indeed materially identical, child-abuse notification statutes, and using a standard similar to that used by the Illinois courts to determine whether to read a damages remedy into a statute (“implication of a private right of action is appropriate when (1) plaintiff is a member of the class for whose benefit the statute was enacted, (2) it is consistent with the underlying purpose of the statute, (3) plaintiffs injury is one the Act was designed to prevent, and (4) it is necessary to provide an adequate remedy for violations of the statute,”
Noyola v. Board of Education,
*955
We think that those decisions are correct (the one outlier,
Landeros,
is not in point, as the court confined private actions to deliberate violations of the statute at issue) and that the Supreme Court of Illinois will fall in line with them, especially given that court’s increasing reluctance to imply private rights of action, a reluctance well illustrated by its very recent decision in
Metzger v. DaRosa,
The fact that the only sanction the legislature has provided is for a
willful
violation (which is not alleged in this case) suggests a reluctance to impose liability for merely negligent violations, and this is understandable for a variety of reasons. One is that the legislators were clearly worried about the harm to people falsely or mistakenly accused of child abuse, and so imposed a criminal penalty for knowingly false reporting. 325 ILCS 5/4. Another is the vast range of persons encompassed by the reporting requirement. A “homemaker” who not willfully but merely carelessly failed to report suspected abuse by a babysitter, perhaps fearing that the babysitter would sue her for defamation, see
Brown v. Farkas,
Maybe such encompassing liability would be a good thing; it would doubtless lead to more reporting. It is usually the case that piling on punishments will increase compliance with a statute. But if that were the only consideration, all statutes would be interpreted to create private rights of action. Such piling on in the case of ANCRA would place even nonprofessionals, such as homemakers, on a razor’s edge, where they could be faced with suit whether they did or did not report an incident that might involve child abuse. It is true that there is a statutory safe harbor for “good faith” mistaken reporting of abuse and even a presumption of good faith, 325 ILCS 5/9, but what is good faith in a particular case remains a litigable issue. It may be significant that since being enacted, the abuse-notification statute has been amended several times, any one of which would have provided an occasion for plugging in a damages remedy had there been legislative sentiment for such a remedy; evidently there was not.
Another point, this one well illustrated by the facts of this case and a possible reason behind the common law’s settled reluctance to create good Samaritan liability (part of a more general conservatism, further illustrated by the common law’s refusing to create a remedy in cases of wrongful death — in Illinois as elsewhere, suits for wrongful death are entirely creatures of statute,
Pasquale v. Speed Products Engineering,
We conclude that the judgment for the plaintiff must be reversed and the suit dismissed.
REVERSED.
