MEMORANDUM
This action is presently before the Court on motions by all defendants to dismiss on grounds of immunity. The Court has already summarized the factual allegations of the complaint in its January 9, 1978 Memorandum Opinion dealing with venue and service of process objections raised by various defendants.
As presently constituted, this action involves a claim by a former National Guard officer against the United States and four named individuals, all U.S. Army medical officers. Plaintiff’s claim grew out of an incident which occurred while he was on active duty with the Virginia National Guard. Count One of the complaint alleges that the individual defendants, all psychiatrists assigned to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, administered drugs to the plaintiff and kept him confined at Walter Reed against his will and in the absence of medical justification. Plaintiff alleges that these actions violated his fifth amendment rights to liberty and due process of law and requests money damages against each indi *514 vidual defendant in the amount of $250,000. Count Two states a claim for negligent medical treatment against the individual doctors and, under the Federal Tort Claims Act, against the United States as well. The defendants’ motions contend that both counts are barred by the Feres doctrine and principles of intra-military immunity.
In
Feres v. United States,
First, there is no longer any question that
Feres
applies with equal force to members of the National Guard whose injuries are incident to active military duty. The
Stencel
case itself involved a plaintiff injured while assigned for training with the Missouri National Guard.
Plaintiff’s Tort Claims Act malpractice claim is therefore barred by
Feres.
Lower courts have, almost without exception, applied
Feres
principles directly to suits against individual servicemen; plaintiff’s Count Two malpractice claims against the individual doctors are therefore also barred on grounds of
Feres
immunity.
See, e. g., Tirrill v. McNamara,
Although the plaintiff relies heavily on the D.C. Circuit’s decision in
Henderson v. Bluemink,
Count One of the complaint, however, is not grounded on a common law negligence
*515
theory — traditionally the heart of the
Feres
doctrine — but on a cause of action for damages. arising directly under the fifth amendment for deprivation of plaintiff’s rights to liberty and due process of law. This theory must overcome a major preliminary hurdle: the question whether there is a federal cause of action for money damages directly under the fifth amendment in the first place. This is an open question in this circuit.
See, e. g., Cardinale v. Washington Technical Institute,
Many medical malpractice claims against federal officers or employees are susceptible of restatement as constitutional torts, particularly under the fifth amendment’s due process clause.
See generally Paul v. Davis,
Even assuming that Count One does state a valid claim for which money damages can be granted, the question still remains whether the characterization of the malpractice claim in constitutional terms should make any difference in application of the Feres doctrine. The Court concludes that it should not. Any other result would mean that the Feres -based immunity of armed forces medical officers could be abrogated through an exercise in pleading. *
Wholly apart from Feres, which was originally based on sovereign immunity principles and an interpretation of the Federal Tort Claims Act, there is authority to the effect that military personnel acting within the scope of their authority are generally immune from actions brought by other members of the armed forces. In the Feres case the Court explained that there was no analogous private liability (/. e., liability against individual military officers) to the theory of liability there stated against the United States:
We know of no American law which ever has permitted a soldier to recover for negligence, against either his superior officers or the government he is serving. 10
* * * # * *
The military discipline considerations underlying
Feres
were recently rearticulated in
Stencel Aero Engineering Corp. v. United States.
Quoting
United States v. Brown,
These considerations apply with equal force to malpractice actions directly against individual officers, whether those actions be based on common law negligence principles or fifth amendment due process claims. And, as noted in Stencel, upholding this sort of immunity claim will not leave servicemen without a remedy for actual injuries: “the Veterans’ Benefits Act establishes, as a substitute for tort liability,' a statutory ‘no fault’ compensation ■ scheme which provides generous pensions to injured servicemen . . . .” Id. at 671, 97 S.Ct.. at 2058.
The Court therefore concludes that Feres and principles of intra-military immunity bar the particular constitutional claim stated in Count One of the complaint. ■
An order granting defendants’ motion and dismissing the action will accompany this memorandum.
Notes
Cf.
Dinsman v. Wilkes,
On October 8, 1976, Congress enacted legislation which makes a Tort Claims Act action against the United States the sole remedy for injuries “caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission” of military medical personnel. Pub.L.No. 94-464, 90 Stat. 1985 (codified at 10 U.S.C. § 1089 (1976)). The act was not retroactive, id. § 4, and does not apply to the claims in this action.
