Lоuis Wysinger, a minor, drowned while swimming at a developed swim site in Red Hills Lake, a part of the Sabine National Forest in Texas. The site and the forest are maintained by the Forest Service, an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture. The deceased’s mother, Isie D. Wysinger, brought a wrongful death suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2671 et seq., against the United States Government, alleging failure to provide adequate suрervision and life guards.
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The district court,
The record establishеs that the site at which young Wysinger lost his life has been developed by the Forest Service as a place for swimming. The Forest Service, hоwever, had not maintained a life guard at the site for several years. Three prominent signs were posted which stated: “No Life Guard on Duty — Swim аt Your Own Risk”. Appellant does not raise an issue concerning the inadequacy of the posting of the signs. Rather, the claim is that under Forest Service regulations a life guard had to be maintained at the site or the site had to be “closed or altered”. Since neither closing or alteration of the site had occurred, a legal duty had been violated which did not leave room for discretion. The claim in brief is thаt something was required to be done and nothing had been done.
The application of the term “discretionary function” as an exception to the United States Government’s consent to be sued under the Federal Tort Claims Act stems from the leading case of
Dalehite v. United States,
Appellant urges that two cases decided shortly after the
Dalehite
case shоuld be read as limiting to some extent the sweeping language contained in the
Dalehite
opinion. In
Indian Towing Co. v. United States,
These cases, however, stand only for the proposition that once the government has made a decision to act the government is responsible for acts negligently carried out even though discrеtionary decisions are constantly made as to how those acts are carried out. Thus in accordance with
Indian Towing
and
Rayonier
we held that once the government decided to furnish medical care for dependents of service personnel, negligence in the medical care was actionable even though it is obvious that treatment involves frequent discretionary decisions.
Rise v. United States,
The basic thrust of
Dalehite
was. completely reaffirmed in
United States v. Varig Air Lines,
This Court has broadly interpreted “discretionary function” in accordance with
Dalehite
and
Varig.
In
Ford v. American Motors Corp.,
Appellant’s conclusion in this case that the Forest Service Manual required the Service either to close the site without a lifе guard or to make alterations focuses upon the second step of the Forest Service’s regulation of swim sites. It ignores the first. The Forest Service Manual, Title 2300 — Recreation Management, Section 2335.22, states that “each site must be analyzed to determine the need for life guards.” It then lists a series of factors to take into account in making that decision. Further in the same section the manual provides, “Service-wide, there are relatively few areas where life guards are considered necessary.”
The exercise of discrеtion by the government employees was at this initial level. A determination was made in accordance with the manual that a life guard wаs not necessary at this site. That portion of the manual upon which appellant relies comes into play only when the exerсise of discretion leads to the conclusion that a life guard is “necessary” at a particular site but one will not be provided. Then and only then does the manual require that “other alternatives will be implemented, including altering or closing the site.”
It is clear in this case that the discretionary action which is at issue was the decision of the Forest Service that a life guard was not necessary at this site. Since appellant’s wrongful death claim is based upon failure to have a life guard at the site, the attempt to recover under the Fedеral Tort Claims Act must fail because the governmental decision not to have a life guard at the site fell in the “discretionary function” exception to jurisdiction under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Only if there had been a life guard on duty who acted negligently or the government had negligently failed to warn of dangers at the swimming site would there be jurisdiction under the Federal Tort Claims Act.
The district court was correct in dismissing the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and the decision of that court is
AFFIRMED.
