For the third time, this court is called upon to review the legal proceedings arising out of a tragic accident in which an individual under a personal services contract with the Tennessee Valley Authority (“TVA”) was killed while performing his duties at a TVA facility. After the accident, Maggie Bell Heathcoat, the widow and administratrix of the decedent’s estate, brought a wrongful death action in state court against seven supervisors and staff specialists of the TVA. On June 27, 1984, this state court action was removed by the defendants to the federal court in the Northern District of Alabama.
The first time this court had occasion to review the proceedings in this case was in 1986. In this first appeal,
Heathcoat v. Potts,
After this ruling, the district court stayed the proceedings in the litigation until after the Supreme Court denied the defendants’ petition for certiorari. Upon denial of the defendants’ petition, the district court scheduled the case for trial, which commenced on February 29, 1988. This trial resulted in the plaintiff receiving a two million dollar damage award against the individual defendants.
The defendants filed various motions for post-trial relief, charging,
inter alia,
that they were entitled to absolute immunity. The district court, relying upon the standard adopted by this court in
Heathcoat I
and subsequently endorsed by the Supreme Court in
Westfall v. Ervin,
The denial of these post-trial motions gave rise to our second review of this case in
Heathcoat v. Potts,
The defendants also brought to this court’s attention that enactment of the Federal Employees Liability Reform and Tort Compensation Act of 1988 (“FELRTCA”), H.R. 4612, 100th Cong., 2d Sess. (1988) was imminent, and that they would be seeking appropriate relief under the statute once former President Reagan signed the bill into law. Brief of Defendants-Appellants in
Heathcoat v. Potts,
The plaintiff opposed this proposed application of the FELRTCA on two grounds. First, relying upon a drafting error in the statute, she contended that the TVA was not entitled to raise its own defense of sovereign immunity. 1 Second, she argued that retroactive application of the FELRT-CA in this case would result in manifest injustice.
In an unpublished opinion, a panel of this court rejected these two arguments, reasoning as follows:
The new law contemplates the following scheme. Upon certification by the Attorney General that the named individual defendant was “acting within the scope of his office or employment at the time of the incident out of which the claim arose,” the case at issue will be removed to federal court and the United States will be substituted as the party defendant. See § 6(d)(1), (2). In that capacity, the United States will, of course, be entitled to assert its defense of absolute tort immunity. See § 4. New section 9 sets forth an identical scheme for the TVA, and there can be no doubt, in light of the underlying legislative history, that section 9(4) permits the TVA, as party defendant, to assert the defense of absolute tort immunity.
Because the new law, by its terms, applies to actions “pending on” the date of its enactment, the judgment in the present case must be vacated. The case must be remanded to permit the TVA to assert its immunity defense in accordance with the new law.
Heathcoat II, supra, at 3-4. Mrs. Heath-coat did not challenge this determination either by requesting a rehearing or by seeking Supreme Court review.
On remand, the district court, believing it was constrained by the language used in this opinion, concluded that the TVA was entitled to be substituted as party defen *370 dant for the individual defendants and that the action was due to be dismissed.
In her appeal of this action, the plaintiff takes a different tack from her last appeal in which she implicitly conceded that the TVA was entitled to be substituted for the individual defendants. Now she argues that the FELRTCA, by its very terms, does not provide for the TVA to be substituted as a party defendant in this action. 2
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the conclusion of the district court.
DISCUSSION
As discussed above, Mrs. Heath-coat’s arguments in
Heathcoat II
addressed only the impact that substitution of the TVA as party defendant for the individual defendants would have on the proceedings. This argument, of necessity, implicitly conceded that the TVA could properly be substituted as the sole party defendant: as a precondition to determining the effect that substitution of the TVA would have on the proceedings, a decision would necessarily need to be made as to whether substitution under the Act was permissible.
Cf. Florida Dep’t of Labor and Employment Security v. United States Dep’t of Labor,
The decision in
Heathcoat II
is the law of this case. Under the “law of the case” doctrine, the “findings of fact and conclusions of law by an appellate court are generally binding in all subsequent proceedings in the same case in the trial court or on a later appeal.”
Westbrook v. Zant,
The language of the opinion and the mandate issued in Heathcoat II clearly indicate that the previous panel determined that substitution was appropriate. The opinion in Heathcoat II concluded with this final sentence: “The case must be remanded to permit the TVA to assert its immunity defense in accordance with the new law.” Id., at 4. Prior to deciding that the TVA was entitled to assert its own immunity defenses, the panel necessarily had to conclude that the TVA could properly be substituted for one of its employees. Consequently, unless one of the exceptions to the “law of the case” doctrine is applicable here, this conclusion is binding.
This court has identified three circumstances in which the law of the case doctrine will not preclude a later panel from addressing an issue decided on a prior appeal. “[T]he law of the case doctrine does not apply to bar reconsideration of an issue when (1) a subsequent trial produces substantially different evidence; (2) controlling authority has since made a contrary decision of law applicable to that issue, or (3) the prior decision was clearly erroneous and would work manifest injustice.”
Wheeler,
Having examined the statute, we conclude that application of the FELRTCA in this case would not work a manifest injustice. Relying upon the statute, the prior panel determined that “the new law, by its terms, applies to actions ‘pending on’ the date of its enactment,”
Heathcoat II, supra,
at 4; this fact was sufficient for the panel to reject the “manifest injustice” argument being proffered during that appeal. We do not find this conclusion to be clearly erroneous. We note that another panel in this circuit has recently ruled in
Sowell v. American Cyanamid Co.,
*372
Once the TVA was substituted for the individual defendants, there is no question that dismissal of this action was appropriate, both because Heathcoat received benefits under the FECA, 5 U.S.C. § 8101
et seq.; see Sowell,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This argument concerning the drafting error in the FELRTCA and the resulting purported limitation on the TVA’s ability to raise its own immunity defenses is the subject of a recent published opinion by another panel in this circuit.
See Springer v. Bryant,
. Summarized briefly, her argument proceeds as follows:
The statute allows for three different means by which the TVA may be substituted in for a TVA employee defendant. First, in cases commenced in federal court, the TVA can initiate the substitution process by filing a certification that the defendant employee was acting within the scope of his or her employment at the time of the alleged incident. Section 9(b)(1). Second, in cases commenced in state courts, the TVA can initiate the process by (1) filing the proper certification before trial begins and (2) removing the case to federal district court. Section 9(b)(2). And finally, in the event that the TVA has refused to initiate the substitution process, the defendant employee may do so "at any time before trial.” Section 9(b)(3).
Because this case was originally filed in State court and was then subsequently removed to federal court (albeit long before the FELRTCA was enacted), she contends that the first alternative, which requires that the case be commenced in federal court, is inapplicable. Turning to the second and third alternatives, she argues that both of these provisions require that the substitution process commence prior to trial. Since that did not occur in this case (and, indeed, could not have occurred in this case), she concludes that the Act does not allow for substitution in this case.
. This procedural history, while not immediately apparent from reading the published opinion, has been confirmed by a review of the record by this court.
. Our review of the legislative history of the FELRTCA adds further support to our conclusion that the prior panel's determination was not clearly erroneous. Reviewing the Congressional floor statements concerning enactment of Section 9 (covering the TVA), it is obvious that Congress was aware of and quite concerned about this case. See 134 Cong.Rec. S15599 (daily ed. October 12, 1988) (remarks by Senator Grassley: “Mr. President, I am not just “crying wolf.” The dangerous effects of Westfall are already very tangible. For example, ... on March 5, 1988, a $2 million judgment was entered against six employees of the Tennessee Valley Authority in a wrongful death case”). Although the legislative history is silent as to whether Congress sought to protect the instant individual defendants with the passage of the Act, this inference is supported by both the facts that Congress took immediate action to rectify the situation and that Congress provided that the law was to apply to all pending cases.
Additionally, as strictly a matter of statutory construction, it is not clear that the interpretation of Section 9(b)(2) that Mrs. Heathcoat offers is the only permissible interpretation. According to her interpretation, Section 9(b)(2) provides that substitution of the TVA for an individual TVA employee defendant is permissible only if the certification is submitted by the TVA before trial. A second interpretation of the statute is that the time constraint only limits when
removal
of the action may take place and does not dictate when
substitution
of parties is
*372
permitted.
Cf. Nadler v. Mann,
While this interpretation may or may not be the correct interpretation of the statute, it presents a close enough question that we cannot conclude that the panel that resolved Heathcoat II was clearly erroneous.
. This case was decided prior to the close of business on September 30, 1981, and is binding precedent under
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
