OPINION
After his unsuccessful cataract surgery, Plaintiff-Appellant Steven Levin brought a claim for battery against the United States government and his United States Navy surgeon. The United States invoked the Gonzalez Act, 10 U.S.C. § 1089, immunizing individual military medical personnel from malpractice liability. We consider for the first time in our circuit whether § 1089(e) of the Gonzalez Act waives the government’s sovereign immunity for common law battery claims. We hold that it does not, and we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Levin’s complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
I
At some point prior to 2003, Levin was referred tо the Ophthalmology Department of the U.S. Naval Hospital on Guam for evaluation of a cataract in his right eye. Lieutenant Commander Frank M. Bishop, M.D., performed the evaluation. He suggested a surgical procedure called “phakoemulsification with intraoсular lens placement.”
After discussing the procedure with Dr. Bishop, Levin gave his informed consent. He signed two consent forms, one entitled “Request for Administration of Anesthesia and for Performance of Operations and Other Procedures,” and another entitled “Consent for Anesthesia Service.” Dr. Bishop performed the eye surgery in March 2003.
Although Levin had previously given his informed consent to the procedure in writing, he claims he twice attempted orally to *1061 withdraw that consent just before the surgery. Levin suffered complications following the procеdure, the full extent of which are unclear. Both sides agree that Levin requires continuing treatment and faces uncertain prospects for success.
Levin filed this suit in the United States District Court for the District of Guam, alleging negligent medical malpractice and battery. Levin cited thе Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) as one of the bases for federal jurisdiction. His complaint named two defendants: Dr. Bishop and the United States. The United States immediately substituted itself for Dr. Bishop, as the Gonzalez Act authorizes.
The parties commenced discovery. Despite many dеadline extensions, Levin was unable to come forward with any expert testimony supporting his malpractice claim. At the close of discovery, the United States filed a motion for summary judgment on both the malpractice and battery claims. The district court recognized thаt, in the absence of expert testimony, there was no triable issue of fact on Levin’s malpractice claim. The court thus granted summary judgment on the claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. The court denied the United States’ motion for summary judgment on the battery claim, however. The court reasoned that a genuine issue of material fact existed as to Levin’s consent to the surgery, thus making summary judgment inappropriate.
After being denied summary judgment on the battery claim, the United States altered its strategy. It filed a motion to dismiss the battery claim for laсk of subject-matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1). The United States argued that the district court lacked jurisdiction because the FTCA expressly preserves sovereign immunity against battery claims. The district court agreed and dismissed the battery claim.
Levin appeals only the dismissal of the battery claim; he does not seek review of the negligent malpractice claim. Proceeding pro se, he argues that the district court still has jurisdiction to hear his battery claim based on the statutory interplay between the FTCA and the Gonzalez Act.
II
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and review de novo the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
See Green v. United States,
III
“The United States, as sovereign, is immune from suit save as it consents to be sued.... ”
United States v. Sherwood,
*1062
Enacted in 1976, the Gonzalez Act is part of a series of statutes protecting government employees from individual tort liability.
United States v. Smith,
Levin centers his argument on a particular subsection of the Gonzalez Act, 10 U.S.C. § 1089(e), which states:
For purposes of this section, the [FTCA’s prеservation of immunity against battery claims] shall not apply to any cause of action arising out of a negligent or wrongful act or omission in the performance of medical, dental, or related health care functions....
Id. Levin interprets subsection (e) to waive sovereign immunity against battery claims by negating the FTCA’s preservation оf sovereign immunity against battery claims. While this appears to be a viable reading at first blush, a more careful review shows that Levin’s argument is untenable for two reasons.
A
First, while we concede that Levin’s reading of the Gonzalez Act is plausible, we hold that it is not the best reading of the statute. Statutory interpretation begins with the statute’s plain language.
Jimenez v. Quarterman,
Looking at the plain language of subsection (e), we are immediately confrontеd with its restrictive introductory clause: “For purposes of this section.... ” 10 U.S.C. § 1089(e). We have already discussed that the primary purpose of the Gonzalez Act is “to protect military medical personnel from malpractice liability”
Smith,
It seems clear that the Gonzalez Act makes the FTCA the exclusive remedy for tort actions against military medical personnel. The Gonzalez Act states that “[t]he remedy against the United States” provided by the FTCA excludes “any other civil action or proceeding” against the military healthcare provider. 10 U.S.C. § 1089(a). But because the FTCA provides no “remedy against the United States” for battery, the Gonzalez Act сould provide wiggle room for clever tort plaintiffs. A plaintiff could argue that with no “remedy against the United States” for battery, a battery remedy must still exist against his individual military healthcare provider. Subsection (e) is best read to foreclose this argument given congressional protection of military medical personnel against malpractice liability. This interpretation is not only consistent with the *1063 purpose of the Gonzalez Act, but also with its legislative history:
Subsection (e) would nullify a provision of the [FTCA] which would otherwise exclude any action for assаult and battery from the coverage of the [FTCA]. In some jurisdictions it might be possible for a claimant to characterize negligence or a wrongful act as a tort of assault and battery. In this way, the claimant could sue the medical personnel in his individual capacity ... simply as a result of how he pleaded his case. In short, subsection (e) makes the [FTCA] the exclusive remedy for any action, including assault and battery, that could be characterized as malpractice.
S.Rep. No. 94-1264, at 9 (1976), 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4443, 4451 (emphasis added). By “nullifying” the FTCA’s preservation of sovereign immunity “for purposes of’ the Gonzalez Act, subsection (e) works to protect military medical personnel from artfully pled malpractice claims. We hold it does not waive sovereign immunity.
B
Second, Levin’s reading runs counter to well-established guidelines for interpreting waivers of sovereign immunity. As stated above, waivers of sovereign immunity “must be unequivocally expressed.”
King,
Levin’s reading of the Gonzalez Act, while plausible, does not “point[ ] to ... an unequivocal waiver of immunity.”
Holloman,
IV
In arguing that the Gonzalez Act waives sovereign immunity, Levin relies heavily on the Tenth Circuit’s decision in
Franklin v. United States,
The [FTCA’s preservation of immunity against battery] shall not apply to any claim arising out of a negligent or wrongful act or omission оf any person described in subsection (a) in furnishing medical care or treatment ... while in the exercise of such person’s duties in or for the [VHA].
38 U.S.C. § 7316(f). The Franklin court read this provision the same way Levin reads the Gonzalez Act’s subsection (e): as a waiver of sovereign immunity for battery claims. We find thе Tenth Circuit’s decision in Franklin unpersuasive for two reasons.
A
First, the
Franklin
court’s interpretation of § 7316, like Levin’s interpretation of the Gonzalez Act, ignores the well-established principle that waivers of sovereign immunity “cannot be implied but must be unequivocally expressed.”
King,
Our sister circuit began its analysis on the right path. It correсtly recognized, as we do, that the language of § 7316(f) has the same purpose as subsection (e) of the Gonzalez Act: prohibiting battery claims against individual medical personnel.
Franklin,
But the Franklin court went a step further. It held that subsection (f), in expressing congressional intent to grant
individual immunity against battery, failed to express legislative intent to preserve sovereign immunity against battery. Id. (postulating different ways Congress “could have” phrased § 7316(f) to more clearly express its intent that sovereign immunity be preserved). Only if Congress had “indicate[d] more generally” that individual immunity for VHA personnel “was not contingent on the existence of a substitute remedy under the FTCA,” would the Tenth Circuit leave plaintiffs “without redress.” Id. (emphasis added). It appears the court thus reasoned that preservations of sovereign immunity — not waivers — must be “unequivocally expressed” in the stаtute. With respect to our colleagues in Franklin, we think this reasoning gets it exactly backwards. It presumes that a statute waives sovereign immunity simply because it does not clearly state the contrary proposition. Such a presumption would turn our circuit’s settled case law оn its head, not to mention the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, and we must respectfully reject it.
B
Second, the
Franklin
court reasoned that “extensions of VA personal immunity should be contingent on the government’s correlative assumption of FTCA liability.”
Id.
Unfortunately for plaintiffs like Levin, the Supreme Court exрressly rejected an identical argument in
Smith. Smith,
The Tenth Circuit attempted to distinguish
Smith
based on a perceived difference in the statute at issue: “[I]n contrast to [statutes such as § 7316 or the Gonzalez Act], the text and history of the [FELRTCA] reflect no intent to offset personal immunity with government liability.”
Franklin,
V
Because Levin’s surgery was performed by Navy personnel, not employees of the VHA, we do not reach his argument that § 7316 applies. The district court properly dismissed Levin’s battery claim for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
AFFIRMED.
