Affirmed by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILLIAMS and Judge HOWARD joined.
OPINION
In preparation for Operation Desert Storm and the Persian Gulf War, the United States military inoculated its servicemen and exposed them to toxins and pesticides in anticipation of possible biological and chemical attacks by Iraq. The wives and children of three servicemen claim in this case that the military negligently administered and used “investigational” and defective drugs on the three servicemen, causing their children, who were born after the War, serious birth defects.
After the Judge Advocate General of the Air Force through delegated authority, see 32 C.F.R. § 842.42, disallowed their claims made under the Military Claims Act, 10 U.S.C. § 2731 et seq., the wives and children filed these three actions against the United States both to review the Judge Advocate General’s decisions and to assert independent negligence claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq.
Because the Constitution grants to Congress and not to the judiciary “plenary control over rights, duties, and responsibilities in the framework of the Military Establishment,” Chappell v. Wallace,
I
Sergeant Brad Minns of the U.S. Army, Chief Petty Officer Brian Walsh of the U.S. Navy, and Private Paul F. Blake of the U.S. Army are veterans of the Persian Gulf War which was fought in 1991. In preparation for the War, they were inoculated with drugs and exposed to pesticides by the military in anticipation of possible biological and chemical attacks by Iraq.
Following the war, each serviceman returned to his wife and fathered a child who was born with serious birth defects. All three children suffer from Goldenhar’s Syndrome, a rare birth defect producing deformity, including asymmetry of the face and body, a partially developed or lopsided ear, internal fistulas, and, in some cases including these children, esophageal malformations and the absence of an anal opening. The families of these children recognize that scientific studies about the effects of the administered drugs and pesticides are in process and will not be concluded until later in 1998 or in 1999. Based on preliminary results from some studies, however, they believe that the toxins to which the servicemen were exposed were possibly stored in the servicemen’s semen and passed on to their wives, where the toxins were stored in fatty tissue and ultimately were released during pregnancy to the fetus. The deformed children were born from one to two-and-one-half years after the servicemen were exposed to the toxins and pesticides.
The wives and children presented claims for damages to the Office of the Judge Advocate General under the Military Claims Act, 10 U.S.C. § 2731 et seq. After the Judge Advocate General disallowed their сlaims, they filed these actions to review the Judge Advocate General’s decisions and to assert claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq.
In substantially similar complaints, the wives and children of these three returning servicemen allege that the United States “negligently administered [to the servicemen! a course of immunizations” and “negligently exposed [the servicemen] to a variety of unreasonably dangerous, toxic pesticides.” The complaints state that the military “failed to supervise, direct and implement thе use and exposure of their products,” which were “hazardous, unreasonably dangerous, [and] defective.” They further allege that the products were used “without proper testing, approval, warnings and directions.” Each mother and child demands $20 million in damages as a result of the United States’ negligence.
The United States filed a motion to dismiss these complaints under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and the district court granted the motion, ruling that the Feres doctrine, as stated in Feres v. United States,
II
Through enactment in 1948 of the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq., Congress waived the sovereign immunity of the United States for
Relying on this operation of the FTCA, the Supreme Court concluded in Feres that even after enactment of that Act, servicemen could not sue the government because “[w]e know of no American law which ever has permitted a soldier to recover for negligence, against either his superiоr officers or the Government he is serving.”
The wives and children of the three servicemen involved in this case do not attempt to take issue with the conclusion that under the Feres doctrine the three servicemen do not have claims against the government for damages under the FTCA. But they argue that, as wives and children of servicemen, they are not barred from prosecuting a claim under the FTCA based on the United States’ negligent acts directed at them. They observe that if they are not allowed to prosecute their tort claims under the FTCA, they have no remedy at all for their damages. To address their argument, we must first examine the scope of the Feres doctrine.
While justifications for the Feres doctrine include the fact that compensation is provided to servicemen through a no fault comprehensive benefit scheme and the fact that a serviceman’s relationship to the government is a “distinctively federal” one, Stencel Aero Engineering Corp. v. U.S.,
Although the Court in Feres based its decision on several grounds, in the last analysis, Feres seems best explained by the peculiar and speciаl relationship of the soldier to his superiors, the effects of the maintenance of such suits on discipline, and the extreme results that might obtain if suits under the Tort Claims Act were allowed for negligent orders given or negligent acts committed in the course of military duty.
United States v. Shearer,
These considerations that prohibit servicemen’s suits against the government also prompt the extension of the Feres doctrine to prohibit non-servicemen’s suits against the government which are derivative of or ancillary to servicemen’s injuries. See Kendrick v. United States,
For this reason, most courts have adopted a “genesis” test for evaluating whether the Feres doctrine applies to derivative genetic injury claims of servicemen’s children based on governmental negligence in exposing the servicemen to dangerous substances. See, e.g., Hinkie v. United States,
Until now, we have not had occasion to address the merits of this test. In Romero v. United States,
Because the genesis test well accords with the primary purpose of the Feres doctrine and is applicable to factual circumstances similar to those presented in this case, we now join the other circuits which have adopted it as their test for evaluating tort claims of non-military personnel that derive from servicemen’s relationships with the government.
Turning to the circumstances before us, the military decided to inoculate its servicemen, including the three servicemen involved in this case, and to expose them to drugs and pesticides in anticipation of possible biological and chemical attacks by Iraq. Even if the military had been negligent in carrying out this program, the families of the servicemen agree that the Feres doctrine prevents the servicemen themselves from suing the United States under the FTCA. They maintain, however, that because they are
Under the chain of causation that these wives and children assert, the military’s negligence in implementing and administering the inoculation program to the seivicemen resulted in making them earners of the toxins to their wives and ultimately to their newborn children. This negligence in implementing and administrating the program to the seivicemen thus was the “genesis” and the “but for” cause of the injuries to the wives and children. To establish the liability of the United States, the wives and children wоuld have to challenge the decisions and acts of military personnel in preparing for war, and their suits would thus entail second-guessing decisions and acts that were indisputably “incident to military service.” If allowed to proceed, their suits would place the courts in exactly the position that the Feres doctrine was designed to avoid.
The wives and children have attempted to bypass this straightforward application of the Feres doctrine in several ways. First, they point out that they have not alleged that the seivicemen were injured, arguing that the only injury аlleged occurred to themselves. But the omission of this allegation is not critical to the Feres analysis. “[T]he focus of Feres is not upon when the injury occurs or when the claim becomes actionable, rather it is concerned with when and under what circumstances the negligent act occurs.” Kendrick,
The plaintiffs also argue that the operative relationship is the contact they had with the dangerous products and that because they were not in the service, their injuries were not incident to military service. But this allegation still does not alter the outcome derived from applying the genesis test. The plaintiffs’ exposure to the chemicals occurred because the servicemen first and nеcessarily were exposed. Because the servicemen’s exposure to the chemicals is the genesis of the plaintiffs’ alleged contact with the chemicals, Feres bars the claims.
The plaintiffs make a separate argument that the government’s failure to warn was an independent act of negligence which was not derivative of servicemen’s claims but which directly affected the plaintiffs. Similarly, however, this allegation arises out of the general failure to warn about the risks associated with a military decision made to protect soldiers during an impending war. Questioning the military’s decision not to warn either the soldiers or their families about the possible risks of inoculation or exposure to pesticides would again create the court-intrusion problem that the Feres doctrine aims to avoid. Courts would be questioning strategies, defense preparations, and the military’s control of information, contrary to their authority. See, e.g., Persons v. United States,
Finally, the plaintiffs argue that some of the underlying rationales for the Feres doctrine do not apply to thеm. They note, for example, that as wives and children they do
Because the wives’ and children’s claims against the United States are derivative of the military’s alleged negligent acts directed at its servicemen, the Feres doctrine, applied through the genesis test, bars them.
Ill
Even were the Feres doctrine not determinative of the United States’ liability to thé wives and children in this case, the wives and children would still have to demonstrate that they did not fall within any of the several exceptions to recovery under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The first of these exceptions states that sovereign immunity is not waived for “[a]ny claim based upon an act or omission of an emplоyee of the Government ... 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) (emphasis added). Plaintiffs argue that the discretionary function exception does not apply because they are alleging the negligent administration of a decision and a negligent failure to. warn. They are adamant in pointing out that they are not alleging negligent policy choices.
Although Congress did not expressly define what it meant by the term “discretionary function,” the Supreme Court has explained that with the discretionary function exception, “Congress wished to prevent judicial ‘second-guessing’ of legislative and administrative decisions grounded in social, economic, and political policy through the medium of an action in tort.” United States v. Varig Airlines,
We should note that when discretionary decisions are ones of professional military discretion, they are due the courts’ highest deference. See Tiffany v. United States,
In applying these principles to the facts of the complaint, we must address three discrete aspects of the plaintiffs’ negligence allegations. First, the plaintiffs allege that the United States was negligent in administering the inoculations and pesticides, principally by using “investigational” drugs, long-stored drugs, defective drugs, or hazardous combinations of drugs. They are careful to note that they are not challenging the underlying policy decision to use the drugs, maintaining that the “operational” decisions of administering drugs are not protected in the same way that “planning” decisions are. Second, the plаintiffs allege that the United States was negligent in providing inadequate warning about the drugs. And finally, they allege that the military lacked governmental authority to make its exposure decisions.
The plaintiffs’ efforts to distinguish between “operational” decisions and “planning” decisions are also not useful to them because the Supreme Court has rejected making a distinction on this basis. In Gaubert, the Court explained that “[a] discretionary act is one that involves choice or judgment; there is nothing in that description that refers exclusively to policy-making оr planning functions.” Gaubert,
On the second aspect of the plaintiffs’ negligence claims, involving a failure to warn, the decision whether to warn soldiers and their families of the potential effects of inoculations and pesticides also amounted to a judgment call. The decision whether to wаrn about the effects of inoculations and pesticides implicates other military decisions such as whether to risk alerting the enemy about war preparations and whether to give a warning that might be harmful to cohesion, particularly when the decision had already been made to use the drugs. This decision falls equally at the core of the discretionary function exception. As the Seventh Circuit has noted, the decision to warn is “replete with choices” and requires “ascertaining the need for a wаrning and its cost,” “determining the group to be alerted, as well as the content and procedure of such notice,” and ultimately, “balanc[ingl safety with economic concerns.” Maas v. United States,
Finally, on the third aspect, which alleged a lack of authority to administer the inoculation program, the plaintiffs have pointed to no statute or regulation that limits the military’s authority to make these policy decisions. Without such a limitation, the military’s decisions are necessarily discretionary.
Because we find that the discretionary function exception in the Federal Tort Claims Act bars the plaintiffs’ suits, we need not consider the other exceptions of the Federal Tort Claims Act raised by the United States, namely, that the decisions involved “combatant activities” and that the negligence occurred in a “foreign country.” See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(j), (k),
IV
Finally, the plaintiffs seek judicial review of the Judge Advocate General’s decision disallowing their claims under the Military Claims Act, 10 U.S.C. § 2731 et seq. They urge that we remand these cases to the Office of the Judge Advocate General to await completion of the pending studies on the effects of the Gulf War inoculations and
We believe that when Congress provided that the decisions of the Judge Advocate General are “final and conclusive,” it placed final discretion over military claims with the military and not with the courts. All of the circuits which have interpreted these provisions agree, concluding that the “final and conclusive” language of § 2735 bars judicial review in all but cases of constitutional error. See Collins v. United States,
V
Our rulings in these cases leave the wives and children of the three returning servicemen withоut a judicial remedy, even if their claims have merit. As the plaintiffs readily acknowledge, scientific studies have not yet demonstrated the necessary causal link between the servicemen’s inoculations and pesticide exposure and their children’s birth defects. If scientists are able to demonstrate that this link exists, the matter might become an appropriate one for the serious consideration of Congress. Congress has a long history of providing warranted relief for the impact of military service on veterans and their families, and to remedy the service-related injuries of our veterans and their families is a proper and noble function of the Legislative Branch. See Chappell, 462 U.S. at 302,
AFFIRMED.
