MEMORANDUM OPINION
Now before the Court comes defendant United States of America’s motion [11] to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) or, in the alternative, for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). Upon consideration of the motion, plaintiffs opposition, the reply, the entire record herein, and applicable law, the Court finds that the motion to dismiss will be GRANTED.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Hornbeck Offshore Transportation, LLC (“Hornbeck”) is a limited liability company that owns and operates oil transport vehicles, including the tank barge at issue in this dispute, the “ENERGY 8701.” (ComplY 4.) The United States Coast Guard administers the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 1 (“OPA”) on behalf of defendant the United States of America (“Coast Guard” or “Government”). OPA requires that all newly constructed tank vessels engaged in marine transportation be constructed with double hulls. 46 U.S.C. § 3703a(a). OPA also requires that existing single hull tank vessels be retrofitted with double hulls to qualify for operation on waters of the United States or of the Exclusive Economic Zone of the United States. Id. § 3703a(c). Non-retrofitted tank vessels must be phased out of service in accordance with a statutory schedule based on gross tonnage, hull design, and construction date of the subject vessel. Id. § 3703a(c)(3). A single hull vessel of the ENERGY 8701’s age is subject to phaseout on January 1, 2005 if it weighs at least 5,000 gross tons. See id. § 3703a(c)(3)(A). If it weighs less than 5,000 gross tons, the applicable phase-out date is January 1, 2015. See id. § 3703a(c)(2).
The United States recognizes two measurement systems for calculating gross tonnage.
See id.
§ 3706a(e)(l). The two methods are the “Regulatory” measurement system,
see
46 U.S.C. § 14501
et seq.,
and the “Convention” measurement system,
see id.
§ 14301
et seq.
Typically, the Convention system results in a higher gross tonnage calculation than the Regulatory system.
See Hornbeck Offshore Transp., LLC v. United States Coast Guard,
*208
On August 25, 1976, the ENERGY 8701, which had been built earlier that year, received a gross tonnage measurement of 5,323.19 tons from the Coast Guard using the Regulatory system.
Id.
at 41. Plaintiff acquired the ENERGY 8701 in 2001.
3
Id.
In 2004, in connection with a planned commercial voyage, plaintiff was compelled by international law to obtain a Convention measurement for its vessel.
See id.
Accordingly, in February 2004, the American Bureau of Shipping (“ABS”) determined that the vessel’s gross tonnage was 4,660 tons.
See id.
The ABS issued an International Tonnage Certificate for the ENERGY 8701 and delivered the certificate to the Coast Guard.
Id.
Given that the vessel received a gross tonnage certificate of less than 5,000 tons, plaintiff requested that the Coast Guard establish a phase-out date of January 1, 2015 rather than January 1, 2005.
Id.
On March 29, 2004, the Coast Guard, relying on its interpretation of a 1997 OPA amendment
4
designed to prevent vessel owners from circumventing OPA by employing various strategies to reduce the gross tonnage of their vessels, issued an initial decision denying plaintiffs request.
Id.
at 42;
(see
Mot. to Dismiss at 5.) Plaintiff appealed this decision and, on September 15, 2004, the Coast Guard affirmed its denial.
Hornbeck I,
In Hornbeck I, the court determined that under OPA’s plain language owners may opt to employ either the Convention or Regulatory measurement system, and that the Coast Guard had no authority to prevent recognition of the February 2004 gross tonnage measurement of 4,660 tons for the purposes of setting the ENERGY 8701’s phase-out date. Id. at 57. The court, in granting summary judgment in favor of Hornbeck on March 27, 2006, concluded that pursuant to the APA “the Agency’s refusal to apply the plain language of Section 3703a(e), the entire [OPA] scheme, and the tonnage measurement laws to Plaintiffs vessel was arbitrary, capricious, and otherwise not in accordance with the law....” Id. at 58. On remand, the Coast Guard recognized the lower weight measurement and accordingly assigned the January 1, 2015 phaseout date to the ENERGY 8701. (Comply 38.)
Hornbeck I conclusively addressed the issue of the Coast Guard’s arbitrary and capricious statutory interpretation. That case did not however entertain the issue of whether Hornbeck was entitled to damages incurred as a result of the Coast Guard’s action. 5 Accordingly, on September 12, 2006, plaintiff presented an admin *209 istrative claim to the Coast Guard for damages pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”). (See Administrative Claim, Ex. 7 to Opp.) On February 21, 2007, the Coast Guard denied this claim and stated that “the United States has not waived sovereign immunity for tort claims based on the Coast Guard’s exercise of discretion in making a vessel certification decision.” (See Denial, Ex. 8 to Opp.)
Plaintiff filed this suit on June 8, 2007, seeking damages pursuant to the FTCA. The Government now asks this Court to dismiss plaintiffs claim based on three theories: (1) the Government’s limited waiver of sovereign immunity under the FTCA does not extend to plaintiffs suit here because there is no private party analog at local law for the Coast Guard’s unlawful OPA interpretation; (2) the doctrine of claim preclusion bars plaintiffs FTCA suit; and, (3) the statute of limitations has run on plaintiffs claim.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Legal Standard: Motion to Dismiss
Defendant moves to dismiss pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. When a party files a motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1), “the plaintiff[ ] bear[s] the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the Court has subject matter jurisdiction.”
Biton v. Palestinian Interim Self-Gov’t Auth.,
On a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), this Court will dismiss a claim if the plaintiff fails to plead “enough facts to state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face.”
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
— U.S. -, -,
B. Plaintiff’s Failure to Allege an Actionable FTCA Claim
For the reasons set forth below, the Court determines that it is without jurisdiction to entertain Hornbeck’s FTCA damages suit.
1. Sovereign Immunity and the Private Local Law Analog Requirement
The United States maintains sovereign immunity except to the extent that it consents to be sued, and the terms of its consent define a court’s jurisdiction to hear the suit.
See Lehman v. Nakshian,
[T]he FTCA waives the immunity of the United States only to the extent that a private person in like circumstances could be found liable in tort under local law. It is true that negligent performance of (or failure to perform) duties embodied in federal statutes and regulations may give rise to a claim under the FTCA, but only if there are analogous duties under local tort law.
[Further, it is a] well-established principle that the violation of a federal statute or regulation by government officials does not of itself create a cause of action under the FTCA. This is because the FTCA, by its terms, does not create new causes of action; rather, it makes the United States liable in accordance with applicable local tort law. Duties set forth in federal law do not, therefore, automatically create duties cognizable under local tort law. The pertinent inquiry is whether the duties set forth in the federal law are analogous to those imposed under local tort law.
Art Metal-U.S.A., Inc. v. United States,
2. Local Law Requirement as Applied to Hornbeck
The Court begins its analysis by emphasizing the specific Government action that underlies Hornbeck’s putative claim: negligent withholding of the statutorily mandated January 1, 2015 retirement date. This result occurred because of the Coast Guard’s arbitrary and capricious interpretation of statute, which caused its refusal to recognize the ABS Regulatory system measurement.
See Hornbeck I,
Having narrowed this Court’s focus to the specific factual basis that could subject the Government to liability, the Court— upon review of precedent in this and other circuits — finds this Circuit’s opinion in
Art Metal
particularly instructive in evaluating the Government’s motion to dismiss the instant case. That case involved a government contractor, Art Metal, that had been subject to the General Services Administration’s (“GSA”) unlawful
de facto
debarment from contract awards in clear violation of the agency’s procurement regulations.
See Art Metal,
Like the
Art Metal
court, this Court is unable to find a duty under District of Columbia law — and plaintiffs brief likewise fails to submit one
8
— that is analogous to the duty which the Government allegedly breached — essentially, a duty to accurately interpret statutes. Consequently, Hornbeck’s claim dissolves into nothing more than asserting a negligence claim against the Government for violating requirements of applicable federal law. Without an available private analog in District of Columbia law, such a claim must fail.
See id.
at 1157 (rejecting FTCA liability on this basis);
see also Johnson v. United States,
Having reached the tentative conclusion that it has no authority to entertain plaintiffs FTCA claim, this Court next considers plaintiffs most significant assertions in favor of finding that a cause of action exists in this case. The Court considers arguments that (1) Art Metal is inapplicable to the present case; (2) the FTCA imposes liability for many activities that only the government performs and does so here; (B) a private local law analog is not required; (4) a series of licensing and permit cases support a cause of action for Hornbeck; and, (5) the liberal pleading requirements make dismissal improper. Taking these arguments in turn, the Court explains why each is ultimately unconvincing and confirms that its tentative conclusion is the only possible outcome in this case.
First, plaintiff attempts to distinguish
Art Metal
because complainant there unsuccessfully pursued an FTCA claim based on “the federal due process rights afforded by procurement regulations,” a claim for which the Circuit found there was no private analog. (Opp. at 13-14 (citing
Art Metal,
Plaintiff also contends that courts, rejecting the “core governmental function” argument, “have imposed liability on the United States in many situations in which the government was engaged in activities that have no analogy in the private sector.”
Wells v. United States,
Plaintiff further argues that a District of Columbia private analog is not required to impose FTCA liability. In one regard, plaintiff is correct: an
identical
private analog is not required. The FTCA
will
impose liabihty on the Government to the same extent, and in the same manner, as on a private individual under
like
circumstances, but the Court cannot exercise FTCA jurisdiction when the plaintiff “ ‘can point to no liability of a private individual even remotely analogous to that which [it is] asserting against the United States.’ ”
Employers Ins. of Wausau v. United States,
The Supreme Court has interpreted the FTCA’s imposition of Government liability “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under
like circumstances.”
28 U.S.C. § 2674 (emphasis added). In doing so, the Court has stated that “the words ‘like circumstances’ do not restrict a court’s inquiry to the
same circumstances,
but require it to look further afield.”
See United States v. Olson,
Next, the Court considers Hornbeck’s rebanee on several cases for the proposition that tort actions against the United States are permitted when the Government fails to properly issue a certificate, permit, license, or other authorization.
(See
Opp. at 8-11.) For example, plaintiff cites to three Federal Aviation Administration (“FAA”) cases involving the FAA’s alleged negligent failure to issue airmen medical certificates.
See Harr v. United States,
Likewise, Hornbeck’s reliance on
Berkovitz v. United States
is misguided.
See
Hornbeck is also unable to find relief in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure’s liberal pleading requirements. It is true that a plaintiff generally need only file a complaint narrating a simple direct grievance so that the defendant knows what he has been accused of; the plaintiff is under no obligation to allege in its complaint facts corresponding to each element of a statute.
Doe v. Smith,
While this Court is sympathetic to Hornbeck’s plight, Congress possesses the ultimate responsibility for determining the extent to which the United States will waive its sovereign immunity to allow private parties to seek damages. And, Congress, not this Court, has made the legislative decision to restrict FTCA actions to those plaintiffs seeking to impose liability analogous to that which exists for private parties under local law. To award relief in the current case would require the Court to so leap beyond the outer bounds of the private analog limitation as to effectively abolish it — -an act that this Court is powerless to undertake regardless of the justness of the decision that would result. 19
Having determined that it is without subject-matter jurisdiction to entertain Hornbeck’s suit, the Court has no occasion to consider the Government’s arguments that this case is barred by both the doctrine of claim preclusion and the statute of limitations.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the Government’s motion to dismiss Horn-beck’s complaint shall be GRANTED and this case will be dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
A separate order shall issue this date.
Notes
. Pub.L. No. 101-380, 104 Stat. 484 (1990).
. For a thorough discussion of the history of OPA, gross tonnage measurement systems, and the underlying Government action that yielded the instant case, see
Hornbeck
I,
. When plaintiff acquired the ENERGY 8701, it believed the barge would be phased out of service on January 1, 2005.
See Hornbeck I,
. The Coast Guard specifically relied on amendment language stating that “the gross tonnage of a vessel shall be the gross tonnage that would have been recognized by the Secretary on July 1, 1997, as the tonnage measured under section 14502 of this title [Regulatory measurement], or as an alternate tonnage measured under section 14302 of this title [Convention Measurement] as prescribed by the Secretary under section 14104 of this title.” 46 U.S.C. § 3703a(e)(l).
.Plaintiff alleges damages of $6,578,789.65 for loss of hire, drydocking expenses, costs incurred in taking the vessel out of service and laying it up, and expenses related to returning the vehicle to service, including $155,498.49 in legal costs incurred in challenging the Coast Guard’s unlawful action. (Compl-¶ 39.)
. The Coast Guard's weighing of the ENERGY 8701 is not at issue, as the Coast Guard did not engage in any weighing. The ABS performed that function, the accurate performance of which the parties do not challenge. Thus, the only Coast Guard action at issue here is its failure to properly give effect to the ABS’s 4,660 gross ton calculation.
Cf. Warren v. District of Columbia,
. Art Metal also argued that the agency's actions constituted negligence
per se
under District of Columbia law because the regulations at issue were designed to protect persons in Art Metal’s position against the type of harm Art Metal suffered.
See Art Metal,
. Hornbeck proposes one uncompelling duty by relying on the proposition that a “duty of due care arises when a defendant undertakes to perform an act and injury to the defendant is reasonably foreseeable.”
(See
Opp. at 19);
see also Sec. Nat’l Bank v. Lish,
Plaintiff alternatively attempts to frame its case as an intentional trespass to chattel action.
(See
Opp. at 21-22.) Yet, a trespass to chattel action is quite different from the facts alleged here: it "may be committed by intentionally (a) dispossessing another of the chattel, or (b) using or intermeddling with a chattel in the possession of another.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 217 (1965);
see Pearson v. Dodd,
Hornbeck also seeks to avoid dismissal by alleging that the Government’s wrongful act constitutes "other intentional torts” besides trespass to chattel. (See Opp. at 21.) Yet, even when considering that these proceedings are at an early stage, this vague assertion is insufficient in light of Hornbeck I’s conclusion that the Coast Guard’s failure to properly interpret OPA was the act resulting in plaintiff's injury.
. Art Metal's dispute clearly involved a due process claim.
See Art Metal,
. The
Wells
court, in rejecting the government's reliance on the private liability requirement, stated that “[v]ery few decisions even mention the Act’s private liability requirement and we have found no decisions that rely solely on such a requirement or any 'core governmental function’ doctrine in holding the government immune from suit.”
See Wells,
Given that Wells reached these issues within the context of the government’s "core governmental function” argument while Art Metal reached its quite distinct decision in the context of the Government’s argument — the same argument advanced by the Government here — that plaintiff failed to allege an established cause of action under District of Columbia law, this Court views Art Metal as more instructive than Wells in the current case.
. In
Dupree,
the court indicated that in cases involving adaptable concepts of local law, stripping a given "situation of its governmental foliage, [and] extraction of the tort where one exists is not an insurmountable difficulty.”
. In that case, the United States Forest Service entered into an agreement with the State
*215
of Washington whereby the Forest Service would protect against and suppress fires in the area.
Rayonier, Inc. v. United States,
Recognizing a possible FTCA action, the Supreme Court stressed that "the very purpose of the Tort Claims Act was to waive the Government’s traditional all-encompassing immunity from tort actions and to establish novel and unprecedented governmental liability.” Id. at 319,
. This language is of little comfort to Horn-beck because the Court need look no further than the plain language of the FTCA to find that the Government has not waived its sovereign immunity in this case.
. In fact, this Circuit stated that relying on either case for the proposition that violation of a federal regulation can automatically trigger FTCA liability would "do violence to our prior case law” and "also contradict express congressional intent to make the government liable ‘if a private person would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.’ ” Id. (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)) (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).
. For another example of a case cited by plaintiff but that is easily distinguishable from the issues before this Court,
see Hicks v. United States,
. Defendant couches the distinction between this case and the FAA and other cases in terms of imposing liability for factual errors but not legal errors. (See Mot. to Dismiss at 20.) While this proposed rule may be instructive, the Court remains unaware of any authority drawing such a distinction. Instead, the Court prefers to reference the aforementioned precedent interpreting the FTCA's imposition of Government liability “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances." 28 U.S.C. § 2674 (emphasis added).
.Again, the Court notes that if the Coast Guard's exercise of due care in its weighing were at issue, the Court would entertain an FTCA claim pursuant to Wells. Yet, because misinterpretation of OPA resulted in the Coast Guard's failure to give proper recognition to the Regulatory measurement, which led to the ENERGY 8701's inability to obtain the 2015 phaseout year, Wells does not control this case.
. The Court notes that its decision today is consistent with Congress’ legislative intent. "[A]s the Supreme Court has observed, the entire thrust of the FTCA” is different than that which Hornbeck encourages: " '[ujpper-most in the collective mind of Congress were the ordinary common-law torts. Of these, the example which is reiterate in the course of the repeated proposals for submitting the United States to tort liability is negligence in the operation of vehicles.' "
Jayvee Brand, Inc. v. United States,
. While the Court has no doubt that the United States’ sovereign immunity at times precludes injured plaintiffs from being made whole, the Court finds at least some solace in the fact that in this case Hornbeck acquired the ENERGY 8701 without any expectation of receiving the January 1, 2015 phase-out date.
See Hornbeck I,
