In August 2000, plaintiffs were driving along Sacaton Street in Chaves County,
In May 2002, plaintiffs filed their suit in district court under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-80. They alleged that the United States Postal Service (USPS) negligently failed to take proper account of the safety of the driving public when locating the mailboxes. In April 2003, the district court dismissed plaintiffs’ action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, holding that the actions of the USPS were discretionary functions exempt from FTCA liability pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). We review that ruling de novo.
Duke v. Dep’t of Agric.,
I
The FTCA immunizes instrumentalities of the federal government from tort liability based on the performance of “a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency or an employee of the Government.” 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). This restriction is jurisdictional.
Elder v. United States,
The Supreme Court has set forth a two-part test to determine whether conduct is encompassed by the discretionary function exception and thereby immunized from FTCA liability.
Berkovitz v. United States,
The Court clarified the second prong of the
Berkovitz
test in
United States v. Gaubert,
II
In the case before us, plaintiffs contend first' that USPS regulations and administrative policy remove discretion
The New Mexico Administrative Code prohibits any encroachments that present “a danger to the health, safety, or welfare of the motoring public, or which interfere with the operations of the [State Highway] Department.” N.M. Admin. Code tit. 18, § 20.5.9.2. The Code deems a mailbox to be an “encroachment.” Id. § 20.5.7.2. Plaintiffs contend that the mailboxes at issue here constituted a danger within the meaning of the Code. It follows, they argue, that the placement of the mailboxes violated Post Office regulations and falls outside of the FTCA’s discretionary function exception.
However, we agree with the district court that the Code does not remove discretion from the postal service with regard to the location of the mailboxes. As an initial matter, it is far from clear that § 20.5.9.2, standing alone, is sufficiently clear that it could be said to remove discretion from federal officials with regard to the placement of mailboxes. Presumably, all obstructions present some risk, however small, to the public, and determinations regarding the tolerable degree of risk could be said to involve the exercise of discretion.
See Berkovitz,
Plaintiffs note that on November 25, 1992, SHD employee Tim Basler sent a letter to Post Office employee Robert Pan-toja, expressing his concern that “Existing single mailbox locations are causing significant sight restrictions for exiting movements from Sacaton Street and illegal vehicle movements from the postal patrons utilizing these mailboxes.” App. 189. He encouraged the Post Office to relocate them “directly west to our west right-of-way.” Id. Nowhere in the letter, however, did Basler declare the mailboxes to be an unlawful encroachment or a hazardous obstruction. It is hardly conceivable that a state employee would complain about the Postal Service’s failure to comply with state law without citing that law or mentioning that the Postal Service was in violation. Without notification by the SHD that the mailboxes were positioned illegally, the USPS was empowered to exercise its discretion and to determine a suitable location for its mailboxes. In so doing, it was free to take Basler’s expression of concern for sight obstruction into account as one of the many considerations that inform the judgment of where to situate a mailbox.
Ill
Plaintiffs also argue that the placement of the mailboxes was not the type of decision the discretionary function exception was designed to protect because it was a mundane decision not based on “considerations of public policy.”
Berkovitz,
Plaintiffs are correct that a judgment does not necessarily fall within the scope of the discretionary function exception merely because it involves an element of choice. The applicability of the exception will turn on whether or not that choice is susceptible to policy analysis. Therein, however, lies the critical distinction between the facts of
Indian Towing Co.
and the facts of this case. The policy considerations that presumably affect the decision to construct a lighthouse — visibility of location, cost of construction,- volume of ship traffic in adjacent waterways, and so forth — are of a different order than those implicated in maintaining a lighthouse. While maintenance of that lighthouse in good condition may be necessary to the furtherance of the policy objectives behind the lighthouse’s construction, the tasks involved in that maintenance (for example, keeping the light lit) do not involve any of those policy considerations. On the other hand, placement of the mailboxes was susceptible to such policy considerations as timeliness of delivery, efficiency of route, customer satisfaction, and patron and post
The dichotomy between government decisions that are and are not susceptible to policy analysis was clarified by this Court in
Boyd v. United States,
In
Kiehn,
we found that the federal government could not be held liable for its failure to warn rock climbers of potentially unstable climbing conditions in a remote area of Dinosaur National Monument.
Kiehn,
To be sure, there is no clean distinction between decisions susceptible to “policy analysis” and those that are not. Even the maintenance of a lighthouse, at issue in
Indian Towing Co.,
could theoretically involve the allocation of scarce resources amongst competing maintenance needs. Plaintiffs attempt to minimize the amount of policy analysis involved in locating a mailbox by artificially separating the Postal Service’s decisionmaking into two distinct choices: an admittedly policy-fraught choice about how to structure the delivery route itself, and a more mundane choice about how to locate mailboxes along that route.
See
Appellants’ Br. 14 (“While the configuration of the delivery route may implicate a variety of choices, the location of mailboxes along the route does not involve any policy choice.”) But the Supreme Court has foreclosed this kind of distinction between high-level policy setting and low-level “operational” decisions.
See Gaubert,
Whether or not postal officials actually considered policy questions in this case is not legally relevant.
Gaubert,
IV
Finally, Plaintiffs argue that the jurisdictional question in this case is intertwined with the merits of their negligence claim and that, therefore, the district court should have converted the motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction into a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, or a motion for summary judgment.
Sizova v. Nat'l Inst. of Standards & Tech.,
As we find that the USPS decision regarding the location of the mailboxes was a discretionary function within the meaning of the FTCA, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court granting Defendant’s motion to dismiss.
