Plаintiff-appellant William Magee appeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee, the United States, with respect to his personal injury action under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) (“FTCA”).
Background
This case arose out of an automobile accident in which Peter Puzzanghera, an outpatient at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Bedford, Massaсhusetts (‘VAMC”) rear ended Magee. As a result of the accident, Magee suffered physical injuries and property damage for which he seeks damages from the federal government. By way of background, we describe the relationship between the Veterans Administration (“VA”) and Puzzanghera in order to explain how Magee came to sue the United States.
Puzzanghera has long battled chronic, paranoid schizophrenia. In August, 1988 he was involuntarily committed to Metropolitan State Hospital. In July, 1989, he was transferred to VAMC where he remained as an inpatient until late June, 1990. On June 20, 1990, he was discharged to the Fort Hill Community Care Home and continued to receive treatment at VAMC on an outpatient basis.
Puzzanghera’s treatment at VAMC included periodic intermuscular injections of Prolixin Decanoate (“Prolixin”). VAMC physicians prescribed Prolixin to help Puzzanghera manage his schizophrenia. Following the onset of this treatment, Puzzanghera experienced restlessness and difficulty in moving his tongue, side effects that his doctors have attributed to the Prolixin.
VAMC has established a policy entitled Veterans Driver Evaluation Program for the purрose of aiding veterans in obtaining driver’s licenses from the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles (“RMV”). Pursuant to this policy, VA doctors refer “selected patients whose rehabilitative prospects might be enhanced by having a driver’s permit or license” to a VA psychologist for evaluation as to suitability. Depending on the outcome of this evaluation, the psychologist either determines that the patient is not a suitable candidate for a license, or submits a letter of support to the RMV on behalf of the patient. The letter details the patient’s medical treatment and indicates that beyond the information in the letter, the VA knows of no “contraindication” to the RMV’s consideration of the patient for restoration or continuance of driving privileges. The VA acknowledges in the letter, however, that the final decision regarding a given patient’s driving privileges rests with the RMV.
At some time prior to April 1990, Puzzanghera requested his treating physician, Dr. Albert Gaw, to assist him in obtaining a driver’s license. Dr. Gaw referred Puzzanghera to Dr. Robert Avey, a counselling *3 psychologist at VAMC. After Dr. Avey evaluated Puzzanghera, he sent a lеtter to the RMV on his behalf. Puzzanghera subsequently received driving privileges.
In the afternoon of October 29,1990, while Magee sat in his car at a red light, Puzzanghera rear ended Magee’s car, causing bodily injury to Magee and damage to his vehicle. A police officer who arrived shortly after the accident noted that Puzzanghera appeared “very slow and deliberate in his actions.” The officer performed two field sobriety tests which Puzzanghera “passed with no problem.” Puzzanghera informed the officer that he was an outpatient at VAMC and had recently received a shot of Prolixin. In fact, Puzzanghera had received this shot approximately four hours prior to the accident.
Magee filed a complaint against the United Stаtes under the FTCA in which he alleged that the VA negligently allowed or enabled Puzzanghera to qualify for and obtain a driver’s license while on Prolixin, negligently failed to warn Puzzanghera of the side effects of Prolixin, negligently failed to properly monitor and supervise Puzzanghera’s Prolix-in treatment, and negligently “fail[ed] in other respects that will be shown at trial.” According to Magee, the VA’s nеgligence caused his injuries. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the United States on all of Magee’s allegations. This appeal followed.
Standard of Review
We review the award of summary judgment
de novo. See Ortiz-Pinero v. Rivera-Arroyo,
Discussion
The FTCA vests federal district courts with jurisdiction over claims against the United States for damages caused by
the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or employment, under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be hable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Fourteen statutory exceptions limit this otherwise broad waiver of sovereign immunity. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680. To evaluate a claim brought pursuant to the FTCA, therefore, we must first determine whether an exception precludes the claim, and, if not, whether a privаte actor in the state where the conduct occurred would be hable to the plaintiff under the circumstances. We conclude that the discretionary function exception to the FTCA bars Magee’s claim with respect to the VA’s actions regarding Puzzanghera’s driver’s license. 1 We also conclude that Massachusetts statutory law precludes his claims of negligеnt treatment.
*4 A. The Letter
As indicated, several exceptions limit the breadth of the government’s potential liability under the FTCA One, the discretionary function exception, operates to deprive a district court of jurisdiction over
[a]ny claim ... based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency or an employee of the Government, whether or not the discretion involved be abused.
28 U.S.C. § 2680(a);
see Kelly v. United States,
Though not abundantly clear from the statutory language, ample authority guides our determination of whether the discrеtionary function exception serves to bar a claim against the government.
See, e.g., United States v. Gaubert,
The discretionary nature of governmental conduct depends on whеther that conduct involved an element of judgment or choice.
See Gaubert,
The language of VAMC’s Veterans Driver Evaluation Program contemplates a series of steps VA staff must undertake upon deciding to assist a veteran in obtaining a driver’s license. Thе program, however, cannot be characterized as requiring a particularized course of conduct for the VAMC staff.
See, e.g., Kelly,
The uncontroverted deposition of Dr. Robert Avey, the VA counselling psychologist who wrote on behalf оf Puzzanghera, underscores the discretionary nature of the process. Dr. Avey testified that his evaluation protocol included reviews of patient treatment histories, interviews with patients and consultations with other professionals such as physicians or social workers if necessary, all aimed at gauging the propriety of facilitating the restoration of a givеn patient’s driving privileges. Thus, we are satisfied that VAMC’s program is sufficiently discretionary to meet the first inquiry of the discretionary function exception.
See Gaubert,
Having determined that the action was discretionary, we turn to the second inquiry, whether the decision of VA doctors to assist Puzzanghera in applying for his driver’s liсense was “of the kind that the discretionary function exception was designed to shield.”
Id.
at 322-23,
As the Supreme Court has indicated, “it will most often be true that the general aims and policies of the controlling [program] will be evident from its text.”
Gaubert,
We view VAMC’s decision to аssist Puzzanghera in obtaining a driver’s license as a clear, permissible exercise of policy judgment. As we have already stated, the policy contemplates significant discretion on the part of the VA staff at every step of the process. The Veterans Driver Evaluation Program includes a clearly stated policy objective, “to assist veterans to apply for driving privileges” in cases where driving privileges are likely to enhance the patient’s rehabilitative prospects. This objective folds neatly into the VA’s mission of providing a range of care and assistance for veterans. A series of judgments leading up to the ultimate decision under this program, whether to write to the RMV, all involve considerations of veteran rehabilitation.
Magee unpersuasively argues that VAMC’s assistance to Puzzanghera in obtaining a driver’s license constituted part of his medical treatment. In
Collazo v. United States,
The decision to write a letter to the RMV on Puzzanghera’s behalf fell within the parameters of VAMC’s rehabilitative policy. Puzzanghera, not VAMC physicians, initiated the process by asking for a driver’s license referral. Pursuant to the program, Dr. Avey, a counseling psychologist and not Puzzanghera’s treating psychiatrist, made the ultimate decision to write a letter to the RMV on behalf of Puzzanghera. The program creates a general process applicablе to all patients seeking a license; it did not constitute part of Puzzanghera’s individualized medical treatment. Puzzanghera did not receive his license, for example, to help control his schizophrenia. Rather, the decision to write a letter of support was made in contemplation of his rehabilitative needs.
We conclude that VAMC’s efforts on Puzzanghera’s bеhalf with respect to the Veterans Driver Evaluation Program fall within the discretionary function exception to the FTCA. Accordingly, that exception bars the portion of Magee’s claim that rests on the VA’s efforts on behalf of Puzzanghera’s driver’s license. 2
*6 B. The Prolixin
Magee also claims that the VA’s negligent medical treatment of Puzzanghera caused his injuries. Specifically, Magеe claims that the VA failed to properly monitor and supervise Puzzanghera’s Prolixin treatment and failed to warn him adequately of the adverse side effects he might experience as a result of the Prolixin doses. Magee attributes the accident to that alleged negligent failure to warn Puzzanghera and properly supervise his treatment.
This claim derives from Puzzanghеra’s specific medical treatment, which as we have indicated, falls outside the protection of the discretionary function exception.
See Collazo,
We agree with the district court that Magee failed to provide evidence in the record from which a jury could have found that the VA’s treatment of Puzzanghera caused the accident.
3
See Borden v. Betty Gibson Assoc., Inc.,
Magee does not, however, explain how any of these pieces of evidence, either in isolation or in the aggregate, would allow a jury to conclude that the VA’s alleged negligent treatment of Puzzanghera caused the accident. Nothing in the record suggests, for example, that the restlessness or tongue control side effects somehow caused Puzzanghera to drive into Magee. Nor does the record offer a basis to conclude that the police officer’s charactеrization of Puzzanghera related to his treatment at VAMC. 4 In short, Magee lacks any evidence that would allow a jury to base a conclusion as to causation on anything other than speculation. See id. (indicating that a recovery in negligence cannot be based on speculation as to causation).
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s disposition of Magee’s complaint.
Affirmed. Costs to Appellee.
Notes
. The district court analyzed Magee’s complaint in negligence terms, holding that Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 123, § 36B precluded some of Magee’s claims and that he failed to establish the elements of common law negligence on his remaining claims. In arriving at our conclusion we depart from the reasoning of the district court in determining that the discretionary function exception to the FTCA bars Magee’s claims arising out of the VA’s efforts on behalf of Puzzanghera’s driver’s license. We reiterate, however, that in evaluating an appeal from the grant of summary judgment, we may affirm for any independently sufficient ground supported by the record.
See Mesnick,
. We point out that “where the government is performing a discretionary function, the fаct that the discretion is exercised in a negligent manner does not make the discretionary function exception to the FTCA inapplicable."
Attallah,
. We note that Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 123, § 36B would appear to bear on the question of whether VAMC had any duty to Magee. Given that the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has not yet construed § 36B and our own conclusion that the record fails to support at least one essential element of negligence, we need not determine the applicability of § 36B to this case.
. Magee's expert, Dr. Catherine Larned, points to Puzzanghera's medical records and notes that on one occasion (June 12, 1990) Puzzanghera appeared "somewhat lethargic” at an appointment, and that on another occasion (June 19, 1990) Puzzanghera reported that a nap on his lunch break caused him to return late to work. The record, however, in no way supports even an inference that Puzzanghera was either experiencing these indications at the time of the accident, or that they were caused in any way by Puzzanghera’s treatment at VAMC.
