This сase turns on the discretionary function exception to the federal government’s waiver of sovereign immunity for tort liability, under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b).
Facts
For about a half century, the Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) has developed and improved King Harbor, in Redondo Beach, California. The original purpose of the project was “to establish a harbor for small-craft navigation.” Section 101, River & Harbor Act of 1950, Pub.L. No. 81-516, 64 Stat. 163, 166 (1950). It did so by building a fourteen foot breakwater, which was completed in 1958.
The fourteen foot breakwater built in 1958 was not high enough to keep waves from damaging boats in the harbor during storms. In the mid sixties, the Corps raised the level of portions of the breakwater to 22 feet. By then the City of Redondo Beach had begun developing this entirely man-made harbor. The City had constructed “moles,” apparently massive deposits in the harbor on which building could take place. By the 1980s, the City of Redondo Beach was colleсting $3.7 million in rent from the harbor, eight million people a year were visiting, and there were numerous restaurants, hotels, apartment complexes, sport fishing and whale watching tours, and boat and bicycle rental and sale facilities, grossing over $59 million a year.
Despite the elevation of portions of the breakwater to 22 feet, winter storms continued to cause damage, more dollars of damage as people developed the moles. After millions of dollars in damages during the winters of 1980 and 1983, the Corps studied possible major improvements, in addition to its annual maintenance. The plan was to increase the remaining 14 foot high portion of the breakwater to 22 feet.
In 1985, the Corps discovered that it had made a mistake in its calculations. The breakwater was not as high as it was supposed to be. The 14 foot section, over which the waves were washing, was only 12 feet high and not 14 feet. The Corps concluded that this was because the seafloor had subsided as a result of oil extraction. Because its measuring devices were out of date, and it had not considered the potential for subsidence, the Corps had failed to discover the growing nonconformity of the breakwater to its design.
The Corps now had to decide whether to do nothing, raise the subsided portion of the breakwater back to fourteen feet, or await the results of an on-going study to decide whether to raise the breakwater in one larger project to 22 feet. Raising the breakwater a couple of feet was a major, not a trivial, engineering project. The Corps decided to leave the breakwater as it was, while it proceeded with studies directed toward more substantial improvement.
This decision was essentially a gamble on the weather. The Corps threw the dice, and the businesses on shore lost. A huge storm, the kind that hits Redondo Beach only once every sixty or seventy years, caused waves up to 21 feet high in January, 1988. They swept over the breakwater and caused almost $4 million dollars worth of damage to Reuben’s Restaurant, whose owner and insurer brought this lawsuit. The theory of their lawsuit is that the government was negligent in failing to discover the subsidence and in failing to do something about it. The district judge held a bench trial, found liability and over $4 million dollars in damages, and awarded $2,485,110 in damages, as limited by the administrativе claim's plaintiffs’ had filed. The government appeals the liability determination, while the insurer appeals the limitation on its damages.
Analysis
The facts above are taken from the district court’s findings of fact as amplified by the exhibits and testimony. They are not at issue on this appeal. The controlling issue is whether the discretionary function exception of the Federal Tort Claims Act barred jurisdiction. The United States has the burden of proving the applicability of the disсretionary function exception. Prescott v. United States,
The Federal Tort Claims Act subjects the United States to liability for torts by its employees, generally in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances:
The United States shall be liable, respecting the provisions of this title relating to tort claims, in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under likе circumstances, but shall not be liable for interest prior to judgment or for punitive damages.
28 U.S.C. § 2674.
Subject to the provisions of chapter 171 of this title, the district courts, together with the United States District Court for the District of the Canal Zone and the District Court of the Virgin Islands, shall have exclusive jurisdiction of civil actions on claims against the United States, for money damages, accruing on and after January 1, 1945, for injury or loss of property, or personal injury or death caused by the nеgligent 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 liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1).
In addition to the statutory condition, that liability be measured by the extent to which a private person would be liable, therе is a statutory exception for performance of discretionary functions:
The provisions of this chapter and section 1346(b) of this title shall not apply to— (a) Any claim based upon an act or omission of an employee of the Government, exercising due care, in the execution of a statute or regulation, whether or not such statute or regulation be valid, or based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exеrcise 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).
As the statute expressly provides, so long as the federal agency or employee was performing a “discretionary function,” the exception applies, even if the discretion was abused. The cases are, if used merely as a source of “rules” in the form of quotations, hard to apply, because they seem on their faсe somewhat contradictory, with a fair amount of backing and filling. Statements of law in cases are not statutes. They are explanations of why the court decided the particular ease as it did. But when the facts of the cases are considered, the pattern becomes clear enough, and this ease is plainly more analogous to the precedents holding that the discretionary function exception applies.
For purposes оf analyzing the discretionary function question, we assume that the government should have discovered that the breakwater was not as high as it was meant to be, and failed to discover it only because it used outdated instruments. We also assume that had the Corps raised the breakwater two feet after discovering in 1985 that it was two feet lower than it was supposed to be, the 1988 storm would have done much less damage to Reuben’s Restaurant. We further assume that the government’s decision to put off the small improvement which would have raised the breakwater to design specifications, while it studied a much larger improvement, was a mistake in judgment and a failure to exercise reasonable care.
Despite these assumptions, we nevertheless feel compelled by controlling precedent to conclude that the discretionary function exception applies. The critical decision to which responsibility for the loss may be attributed was the one in 1985, to put off the smaller improvement while studying the possibility of a larger one. At that time, two and a half years before the storm which wrought the destruction, the Corps became aware of the subsidence, and the inadequate height of the breakwater. The issue, for the Corps, was what if anything to do about it, and when.
“desirability of commencing any and all improvements _ and in the consideration of such works and projects the Board shall have in view the amount and character of commerce ... which will be benefit-fed by the improvement, and the relation of the ultimate cost of such work ... and the public necessity for the work and propriety of its construction, continuance, or maintenance at the expense of the United States.”
33 U.S.C. § 541. Note that the Corps is required by this statute to make a judgment balancing these sometimes conflicting considerations: (1) how much commerce benеfits from the project; (2) what kind of commerce; (3) how much the project will cost; (4) how necessary is the work; (5) should the work be built, continued or maintained by the federal government, or some other entity.
In Dalehite v. United States,
In Indian Towing Co. v. United States,
In United States v. Varig Airlines,
In Berkovitz v. United States,
In United States v. Gaubert,
We applied this complex body of law in ARA Leisure Services v. United States,
In Kennewick Irrigation District v. United States,
In Childers v. United States,
In In re Glacier Bay; United Cook Inlet Drift Association v. Trinidad Corporation,
We are compelled to conclude that this case is more analogous to Dalehite, Varig, Gaubert, Kennewick, Childers, and the guardrail in ARA Leisure, than Berkovitz, Indian Towing, and Glacier Bay, and the road width and shoulder in ARA Leisure. The decision in our case necessarily involved the exercise of discretionary judgment to balance the five statutory factors that are supposed to inform Corps decisions. No regulation or policy required the Corps to do something that it failed to do. No individual violated any specific regulation or policy. People at the planning level, see Gaubert,
There is an element which appears to make this case more like the road width in ARA Leisure than it really is. It was plain in ARA Leisure that the road was supposed to be 28 feet wide and was only 14 feet wide, and was supposed to have firm shoulders but instead had soft shoulders. ARA Leisure,
A word also needs to be said about cost. In ARA Leisure, we said that the agency could not invoke the discretionary function exception based on budgetary considerations, but in Kennewick we said that it could. In this case we also say that it could. These cases can be reconciled; whether the government сan take cost into account depends on the applicable statutes, regulations, and policies. In ARA Leisure, the regulation required the Park Service to maintain the road width and firmness, not to balance that goal against what it would cost. In the ease
Appellee argues that once the government built the breakwater, it was under a duty to maintain it in a safe condition. Thаt may be a correct statement of tort law, but we are not persuaded that it is true as a matter of the discretionary function exception. No statute, regulation or policy required the Corps to do so, and the applicable statute expressly gave the Corps discretion about whether to do so.
None of this is to suggest that the discretionary decision the government made was right. Congress expressly made the discretionary function exception applicable even where there is an “abuse of discretion.” The wrong which makes this case troubling is that the government created a man-made harbor, people invested great fortunes in reliance upon the safety of the harbor, yet because of discretionary decisions made by the government, their property was damaged. But reasonable reliance on the government does not necessarily give rise to governmental duty. Cf. Madera Irr. Dist. v. Hancock,
We therefore conclude that the discretionary function exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act applied, so the district court lacked jurisdiction to award damagеs against the United States. Application of the exception is often troubling, because it may be a shield for carelessness and poor judgment. (We do not intimate that it was in this case.) Private actors generally must pay for the harm they do by carelessness. The government’s power to tax enables it, better than any private actor, to perform its conduct with reasonable care for the safety of persons and property, and to spread the cost over all the beneficiaries if its conduct negligently causes harm. Fairness might seem to suggest that the government should be liable more broadly than private actors. But at its root, the discretionary function exception is about power, not fairness. The sovereign has, by the exercise of its authority, reserved to itself the right to act without liability for misjudgment and carelessness in the formulation of policy.
We do not reach the question whether there was negligence under California tort law, or the question on the cross-appeal of whether the insurer’s recovery was properly limited by its administrative claim.
REVERSED.
