No one can condone the sexual abuse of a young child. Nevertheless, however deplorable such behavior is, the question here is whether someone other than the perpetrator him- or herself is responsible for the resulting injury. Specifically, we must decide whether the United States is liable under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) for a mail carrier’s sexual abuse of a seven-year-old girl who lived in a home on his mail delivery route. The answer is yes only if the United States Postal Service (USPS or Postal Service) undertook a voluntary, Good Samaritan duty to protect the girl and other children from the mail carrier when it temporarily assigned him to desk duty pending the investigation of earlier sexual abuse allegations, and then if it breached that duty when it later reassigned the mail carrier to a delivery route in a nearby suburb. The district court dismissed the complaint filed by the girl’s father on the government’s motion, finding a lack of jurisdiction. FED. R. CIV. P. 12(b)(1). Although we feel great sympathy for the child and family involved, we must affirm the district court’s judgment.
I
LM filed a lawsuit invoking the FTCA, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 2671
et seq.,
after exhausting his administrative remedies by
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submitting a claim to the USPS, and then filing a written request for reconsideration after his claim was denied. The facts set forth in LM’s complaint were properly taken as true by the district court in deciding the government’s motion to dismiss.
Transit Express, Inc. v. Ettinger,
From some time prior to 1990 until after August 11, 1998, the USPS employed a mail carrier, Leslie Tucker. Tucker came to be called “Lester the Molester” by his co-workers because of his notorious sexual abuse of the children who lived along his routes. LM is the father and guardian of KM, a minor, who resides in Park Forest, Illinois. He brought this lawsuit on his daughter’s behalf, alleging that she was sexually abused by Tucker when she was seven years old. LM claimed that on August 11, 1998, a neighbor observed Tucker lure KM behind his truck where he “repeatedly inserted his hands inside her pants, intermittently removing, smelling, and tasting his fingers, before proceeding again numerous times over a period of approximately eight minutes.” The neighbor who witnessed these events called 911. Tucker was subsequently prosecuted by the state, pleaded guilty to criminal charges, and was still in prison at the time LM filed his complaint.
According to LM, during the course of Tucker’s career with the Postal Service, he sexually abused at least 10 minor girls who ranged in age from two to twelve years old. LM further alleged that the USPS learned of Tucker’s inappropriate and criminal conduct toward young girls both through numerous complaints from relatives of his various victims and through notice from the Richton Park police that Tucker was being investigated for sexually molesting a two-year-old girl and a four-year-old girl. LM alleged that at some point in 1990, in response to this information, the USPS removed Tucker from his mail delivery route. During this period Tucker was assigned to desk duty. Some time after 1990, Tucker was reassigned to a postal route. Well before 1998, when the events giving rise to this appeal occurred, the authorities responsible for the Park Forest branch post office were notified by a concerned grandmother that Tucker was a known child molester, and that he was observed delivering mail in Park Forest.
Based on these facts, LM sued, initially claiming that the USPS had negligently hired, screened, and retained Tucker, a known child molester. LM asserted that by removing Tucker from his assigned route, the USPS “assumed responsibility to keep Tucker out of the neighborhoods.” When Tucker was subsequently given another delivery route, LM continued, the Postal Service breached “an affirmative duty to protect the public, given its knowledge of Tucker’s sexual molestation of children while on his carrier routes.” In response to the government’s motion to dismiss his complaint, LM disavowed the portion of his complaint that sought relief for the USPS’s negligent hiring, supervision and retention of Tucker. Instead, he confined himself to the argument that USPS was hable because it had breached an affirmative, voluntarily assumed duty to protect the children who lived along Tucker’s mail carrier route. The district court, finding no support in Illinois law for LM’s claim that the Postal Service undertook a voluntary duty to protect children from harm based on its knowledge of the risk that Tucker may have posed, dismissed LM’s complaint. ■
II
The U.S. government, like other sovereign entities, enjoys sovereign immunity
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from liability for its agents’ tortious acts.
Doe v. United States,
The so-called “assault and battery” exception to the FTCA has been the subject of judicial and scholarly, interpretation because the phrase “arising out of assault, battery” is susceptible to both a broad and narrow interpretation.
Id.
at 399-400,
LM relies heavily on
Sheridan
and
Doe
in support of his claim that the USPS breached a duty that it owed his daughter that was unrelated to its employment relationship with Tucker. In
Sheridan,
an off-duty member of the military injured the plaintiff when he fired shots at the plaintiffs car as the plaintiff drove by the Bethesda Naval Hospital.
Id.
at 393-94. The Court found the government liable for the plaintiffs injuries because earlier in
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the evening several naval corps members found the off-duty serviceman drunk and in possession of a loaded rifle, both in violation of navy rules. Their subsequent failure to take any steps to alert base authorities that the serviceman was drunk and wielding a gun, combined with the Navy’s voluntary decision to draft rules under which such conduct was prohibited, formed the basis of the government’s tort liability. As the Court explained: “the negligence of
other
Government employees who allowed a foreseeable assault and battery to occur may furnish a basis for Government liability that is entirely independent of Carr’s [the off-duty Naval corps member] employment status.”
Id.
at 401,
Four Justices, including Justice White, joined Justice Stevens’s majority opinion in
Sheridan.
Justice White also filed a separate concurring opinion and Justice Kennedy (as a sixth vote) concurred in the Court’s judgment. Justice White’s one-paragraph concurrence expressly disavowed the position that he had taken three years earlier when he joined then-Chief Justice Burger’s plurality opinion in
United States v. Shearer,
Respondent cannot avoid the reach of § 2680(h) by framing her complaint in terms of negligent failure to prevent the assault and battery. Section 2680(h) does not merely bar claims for assault or battery; in sweeping language it excludes any claim arising out of assault or battery. We read this provision to cover claims like respondent’s that sound in negligence but stem from a battery committed by a Government employee. Thus “the express words of the statute” bar respondent’s claim against the Government.
Doe
involved the sexual abuse of young children in a government-run child-care facility. In that case, the facts did not conclusively establish that employees of the facility had abused the children. The
Doe
court accordingly concluded that the harm was visited upon the children by an act of negligence independent of the employment relationship between the government and the day-care providers. We drew a distinction between cases involving harms that result from a breach of a duty that the government assumed prior to the actual assault, which are actionable under the FTCA,
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Sheridan
and
Doe
make clear that there is no
respondeat superior
liability under the FTCA for garden-variety intentional torts.
Sheridan,
Illinois recognizes an affirmative duty of care independent of a special relationship (which LM does not argue exists between the USPS and his daughter) where a voluntary undertaking is shown. See
Rhodes v. Illinois Central Gulf R.R.,
Once a voluntary undertaking exists, it must be performed with reasonable care.
Rowe v. State Bank of Lombard,
The United States contends that LM cannot establish that the Postal Service assumed a voluntary duty to protect KM when it assigned Tucker to a desk position in 1990. It is also the government’s position that even if we find that the USPS assumed such a duty when it stripped Tucker of his mail carrier duties, that duty was not breached several years later when Tucker was assigned to a mail route in Park Forest. While we certainly hope that Tucker was not released upon the community as a known sexual predator, we agree with the district court that knowledge of the risk that Tucker may have posed, without more, is not enough to permit an inference that USPS’s act of assigning him to a desk job was at the same time a voluntary undertaking perpetually to protect the local children from him. Even though we must assume at the motion to dismiss stage that the USPS did in fact remove Tucker from his original route while he was being investigated by the Richton Park police, we simply cannot agree with LM that the procedural posture of this ease warrants the further assumption that Tucker was removed from his route in order to protect .children from abuse. Moreover, there is also nothing in the record to suggest that the reassignment was intended to be permanent, or that USPS communicated any such undertaking to the community.
Not only has LM not cited any case that supports his position that knowledge of a risk, together with the reassignment of a worker, imposes an affirmative duty, but his argument is foreclosed by a decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois. In
Frye v. Medicare-Glaser Corp.,
The district court did not reach the related question whether the USPS negligently performed its voluntary undertaking because it found no duty in the first instance. Nonetheless, we should point out that LM would face a serious hurdle in the test spelled out in § 324A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (which Illinois follows) before he could prove breach of a voluntary duty. To establish negligent performance of a voluntary undertaking under the Restatement, LM would have to prove that the Postal Service’s reassignment of Tucker to a delivery route in Park Forest either: (1) increased the risk of harm that the children faced; (2) relieved a third party of its duty to protect the children who were then left without any protection; or (3) caused the children to suffer harm in reliance on the voluntary undertaking.
Frye,
Ill
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
