Appellant Luz Gonzalez claims that, under Puerto Rican law, she was the concubine of Jose Miguel Ruiz, who died of cancer in federal prison. She sought to bring various claims stemming from his death against the United States on behalf of herself and her children. We affirm the district court’s dismissal of her suit because she lacks standing to sue, and the dismissal of her children’s suit for failure to state a claim.
First, Gonzalez lacks standing to sue for any wrongs inflicted on Ruiz, or for any emotional distress she may have suffered as a result thereof. She contends that she may bring these claims because she was either his common-law wife or his “concubine more uxorio,” a status apparently recognized under Puerto Rican law. 1 She has provided us with no authority, however, to suggest that Puerto Rico recognizes common law marriage. Moreover, while she may have held concubine more uxorio status, she has provided us with no authority demonstrating that concubines have the right under Puerto Rican law to sue for wrongful death. Consequently, Gonzalez may not bring any of these causes of action on her own behalf; the only viable claims to consider on their merits are those of her children.
*1231 The district court ruled that Gonzalez’s children failed to state a claim for “loss of associational benefits.” Though their brief asserts that they are appealing this decision, it failed to provide any discussion or argumentation concerning it at all. Consequently, we deem this point waived.
The district court also held that the Bureau of Prison’s conduct for which Gonzalez’s children brought suit was, as a matter of law, insufficiently outrageous to support a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The magistrate judge—whose report and recommendation the district court adopted in its entirety— stated:
Plaintiffs’ factual allegations establish, at most, a series of BOP [United States Bureau of Prisons] deceptions regarding Mr. Ruiz’s terminal medical condition, the BOP’s failure to provide Mr. Ruiz’s family with reasonable access to Mr. Ruiz during his illness, the BOP’s failure to inform Plaintiffs of Mr. Ruiz’s death, the BOP’s conduct in exposing Plaintiffs to Mr. Ruiz’s pain and suffering due to substandard medical care, and the BOP’s delay in transporting Mr. Ruiz’s remains. None of this conduct can be characterized as “atrocious” or “utterly intolerable in a civilized community.”
Gonzalez-Jimenez de Ruiz v. United States,
The district court finally held that Gonzalez’s children had failed to allege sufficient “physical injury as a result of the emotional trauma” necessary under Florida law to support a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Holt v. Rowell,
For these reasons, the district court’s opinion, in its entirety, is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because the United States is the defendant, this suit is being brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346, which requires that the "whole law of the State where the act or omission occurred[,]” including its choice of law rules, be applied.
Richards v. United States,
Under Florida’s choice of law provisions, Florida law governs all substantive issues, including the question of whether an individual has standing and capacity to sue. Under Florida substantive law, a spouse has capacity to sue for' damages to a decedent. Florida law further provides that, even though it does not provide for the creation of common law marriages, it will recognize them if they are "validly created in a jurisdiction recognizing such marriages.”
Am. Airlines, Inc. v. Mejia,
. Furthermore, if the plaintiffs' allegations of deceit are essential to their intentional infliction of emotional distress claim, we lack jurisdiction under the FTCA to entertain that claim.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2680(h);
Metz v. United States,
