Rеne ALVAREZ, et al., Plaintiff-Appellants, v. UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 16-16479
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
July 17, 2017
1297
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM Lange‘s sentence.
Ray M. Shepard, The Shepard Law Firm, LLC, Glenn Burnie, MD, Nicholas V. Pulignano, Jr., Heath L. Vickers, Marks Gray, PA, Jacksonville, FL, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
Current and former federal law enforcement employees and their spouses deceived into investing in a Ponzi scheme presenting as the Federal Employee Benefits Group, Inc. (“FEBG“) Bond Fund seek relief under the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA“),
I.
Around 1988, Kenneth Wayne McLeod began contracting with various federal agencies to provide retirement advice to federal employees. McLeod founded and ran the FEBG Bond Fund. Most of the Plaintiffs met McLeod at retirement seminars hosted by their agency employer, where McLeod spoke generally about finances and retirement and also pitched his fund. McLeod would sometimes follow up with individual employees, promising high, secure returns in the FEBG Bond Fund. Several Plaintiffs “invested” their life savings.
Around 2008, McLeod‘s company began experiencing financial trouble. In 2010, a duped investor complained to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, and on June 17, 2010, McLeod admitted the fund was a Ponzi scheme. Shortly thereafter, he committed suicide.
Plaintiffs sued the United States under the FTCA. They filed their original complaint on February 19, 2013, alleging five counts against various federal agencies. The United States moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and improper venue, alternatively for a stay. After a hearing, the district court denied the Government‘s motion without prejudice and allowed discovery to proceed, finding that it needed a more developed record to resolve the challenge to jurisdiction. Additional motions,1 another hearing, discovery, an unsuccessful settlement effort, and an amended complaint followed. Notably, Plaintiffs’ amended complaint alleged that McLeod was a government employee, not a contractor, a contention they stood by in defending the court‘s jurisdiction.
Plaintiffs’ amended complaint contained six counts. Count I alleged McLeod was negligent per se for selling unregistered securities which violated the Florida Securities and Investor Protection Act. Count II alleged that government employees aided and abetted McLeod in his sale of unregistered securities. Count III alleged common law negligence, including breach of an employer/employee duty of care, based on a number of theories. Plaintiffs additionally alleged that government employees negligently failed to supervise McLеod. Count IV alleged breach of fiduciary duty by, for example, allowing prohibited commercial solicitation. Count V alleged negligent supervision, and count VI alleged negligent infliction of emotional distress. The Government again moved to
On September 12, 2016, the district court found Plaintiffs’ claims barred by sovereign immunity, focusing its ruling upon the misrepresentation exception to the FTCA. Important to the arguments on appeal, the district court accepted Plaintiffs’ new allegation that McLeod acted as a United States employee for FTCA purposes. As the court recounted:
[P]laintiffs have at times altered their primary theories of liability to try to state a viable FTCA claim. Also, the Court granted plaintiffs an opportunity to conduct extensive jurisdictional discovery to try to support their claims. The current and final iteration of their case is premised on the contention that McLeod was an ‘emрloyee’ of the United States when he committed his wrongs. All causes of action in the amended complaint assume that McLeod was an employee. While this is different from plaintiffs’ earlier contention that McLeod was not an employee [citations omitted], the Court assumes for purposes of testing plaintiffs’ claims that McLeod was an employee of the United States.
Upon analyzing Plaintiffs’ “best case,”2 the district court found that two “paradigm plaintiffs [could not] demonstrate that subject matter jurisdiction [was] proper.” The district court found that Plaintiffs’ injuries from counts I and II—negligence
Plaintiffs appeal.
II.
“We review a district court‘s dismissal of an action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction de novo.”3 Unless it consents, the United States retains sovereign immunity from suit.4 Relevant here, the United States has waived its immunity for claims under the FTCA.5 “[W]hile the FTCA, as a general matter, waives what would otherwise be the federal government‘s sovereign immunity from legal actions for torts committed by its employees, there are exceptions to that general waiver.”6 “[A] court must strictly observe the
[a]ny claim arising out of assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, libel, slander, misrepresentation, deceit, or interference with contract rights ...8
“[A] claim will be deemed to have arisen from a § 2680 excepted tort if the governmental conduct that is essential to the plaintiff‘s cause of action is encompassed by that tort. And this is so even if the plaintiff has denominated, as the basis for the cause of action, a tort not found within § 2680(h)‘s list of excepted torts.”9
One of the excepted torts is misrepresentation. “The Supreme Court has characterized ‘misrepresentation’ as being a breach of the ‘duty to use due care in obtaining and communicating information upon which [another] may reasonably be expected to rely in the conduct of his economic affairs.‘”10 “Accordingly, ‘the essence of an action for misrepresentation, whether negligent or intentional, is the communication of misinformation on which the recipient relies.‘”11 “The misrepresentation exception encompasses failure to communicate as well as miscommunication.”12 “The test in applying the misrepresentation exception is whether the essence of the claim involves the government‘s failure to use due care in obtaining and communicating information.”13 In determining whether the exception applies, “it is ‘the substance of the claim and not the language used in stating it which controls.‘”14
A.
We first turn to the district court‘s dismissal of Plaintiffs’ count I claim against McLeod. Assuming McLeod is a government employee—as Plaintiffs did in their amended complaint—Plaintiffs’ claim of negligence per se for unrеgistered securities arises out of misrepresentation. As the district court correctly explained, “had the FEBG Bond Fund been legitimate, the fact of its being unregistered would have had no effect on plaintiffs. And conversely, if McLeod had registered the fraudulent securities (lying about them to do so since they didn‘t exist), plaintiffs would still have suffered the same harm. Plaintiffs’ injuries flow from the securities and McLeod‘s representations which underlay them being fraudulent, not because they were unregistered.” Said differently, even though Plain-
And even if McLeod is not considered a government employee—which Plaintiffs at times hint at throughout their briefing—then Plaintiffs cannot recover against him under the FTCA, which аllows recovery for only injuries “caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the Government[.]”16 Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ count I claim is either barred by the misrepresentation exception or is not actionable under the FTCA.
B.
Plaintiffs’ other claims are similarly barred by the FTCA‘s intentional tort exception because they “aris[e] out of ... misrepresentation,”17 and, contrary to Plaintiffs’ contention, Sheridan v. United States18 does not save them.
1.
In Zelaya v. United States, plaintiffs were victims of Allen Stanford‘s Ponzi scheme.19 They sued under the FTCA alleging the SEC was negligent for failing to
In reaching this outcome, the Zelaya Court sifted through the applicable case law, separating cases in which the misrepresentation exception applied from those in which it did not, developing guidance for future cases in the process. For instance, failure-to-warn cases which do not involve injuries arising from “commercial decisions based on the governments’ misrepresentations” are not barred by the misrepresentation exception.26 Nor are cases in which the Government‘s breach of an independent “operational” duty causes the injury.27 The Court explained, “if a plaintiff can show that the Government has breached a
Plaintiffs argue that the district court read Zelaya too broadly in finding it applied to bar their claims. They also attempt to distinguish Zelaya by claiming that in that case, “[tjhere was no allegation ... that the persons who failed to notify the [Securities Investor Protection Corporation (“SIPC“)] were not SEC employees or were SEC employees acting outside the scope of their employment.”
The Government responds by defending Zelaya as consistent with Supreme Court doctrine. It argues that in this case, like in Zelaya and others, “misrepresentation is the essence of plaintiffs’ claims[.]” The Government suggests that the alleged omissions during McLeod‘s seminars, which gave Plaintiffs “undue confidence in McLeod‘s credibility,” constitute misrepresentations.
The Zelaya Court made clear that “a claim will be deemed to have arisen from a § 2680 excepted tort if the governmental conduct that is essential to the plaintiff‘s cause of action is encompassed by that tort.”29 Plaintiffs alleged McLeod was a gоvernment employee in their amended complaint. From this premise, it is evident that the governmental conduct essential to Plaintiffs’ causes of action was McLeod‘s false statements about his bond fund—in other words, McLeod‘s misrepresentations.
In this case, it is of no consequence that Plaintiffs characterize the alleged breached duties as other than misrepresentation because “a plaintiff cannot circumvent the misrepresentation exception simply through the artful pleading of its claims.”30 Similarly, it does not matter that Plaintiffs alleged governmental employees other than McLeod breached such duties. On that point, Zelaya was clear: “if the governmental conduct that is essential to proving a plaintiff‘s claim would be covered by the misrepresentation exception, then the Government is shielded from liability by sovereign immunity, no matter how the plaintiff may have framed his claim or artiсulated his theory.”31
In JBP Acquisitions, plaintiffs tried to escape the misrepresentation exception by arguing “that the Government was negligent in selling it [a] loan securing ... Property and then continuing to act as though it had an ownership interest in the Property by negotiating a condemnation award with [the Metropolitan Atlanta Olympic Games Authority].”32 The court rejected the plaintiffs’ argument, finding that it was actually the Government‘s failure to communicate certain information to the plaintiffs and misrepresentations regarding its ownership that constituted the basis of the negligence claims.33 Similarly, the basis of Plaintiffs’ claims in the present case are McLeod‘s misrepresentations about his phony bond fund.
McLeod aside, the alleged negligent conduct of the various agency employees yet falls within the misrepresentation exception. This Court has explained that “[t]he [misrepresentation] exception
In count II, Plaintiffs alleged that various agency employees aided and abetted McLeod in violating the Florida Securities and Investor Protection Act. But, as explained, the underlying violation is barred by the misrepresentation exception, and in any event the alleged aiding and abetting is comprised of governmental miscommunications that McLeod and his services were legitimate.36 In count III, Plaintiffs allege common law negligence in that various agency employees breached emplоyer-based duties and the duty to act carefully by negligently failing to follow a bevy of policies, provisions, and regulations.37 They additionally make claims of negligent failure to vet, investigate, and supervise
The essence of misrepresentation “whether negligent or intentional, is the communication of misinformation on which the recipient relies.‘”39 The Ninth Circuit has described that “[t]he key distinction in this area is between the performance of operational tasks and the communication of information.”40 Although some claims will implicate both,41 the “essence of the complaint” here is the Government‘s miscommunicating McLeod‘s legitimacy.42 Said differently, the Government‘s communication of misinformation here was far more than “collateral.”43
Then there is the requirement of causation. To escape the misrepresentation exception in cases like this, Zelaya requires Plaintiffs not only to “show that the Government has breached a duty distinct from thе duty not to make a misrepresentation” but also, critically, that “that breach ... caused the plaintiff‘s injury.”50 In coming to that conclusion, the Zelaya decision relied on the Supreme Court‘s Block v. Neal decision, which said that the misrepresentation exception “relieves the Government of tort liability for pecuniary injuries which are wholly attributable to reliance on the Government‘s negligent misstatements.... But it does not bar negligence actions which focus not on the Government‘s failure to use due care in communicating information, but rather on the Government‘s breach of a different duty.”51
Plaintiffs cannot make the required showings in this case. Their injuries are “wholly attributable to reliance on” misrepresentations.52 In Zelaya, “[t]he injury Plaintiffs suffered ... was the loss of their investment money, which is an economic injury arising from a commercial decision that Plaintiffs may not have made had the SEC notified SIPC of Stanford Group‘s financial frailty.”53 The injury Plaintiffs
2.
Plaintiffs’ primary argument on appeal is that Sheridan v. United States offers their claims passage through the intentional tort gate.59 In Sheridan, an intoxicated off-duty servicemember injured plaintiffs by shooting a rifle into their car.60 Before doing so, three naval corpsmen had encountered the drunk serviceman inside a hospital.61 “They attempted to take him to the emergency room, but he broke away ... revealing the barrel of [a] rifle. At the sight of the rifle barrel, the corpsmen fled. They neither took further action to subdue [him], nor alerted the appropriate authorities[.]”62 The plaintiffs sued the United States, “alleging that their injuries were caused by the Government‘s negligence in allowing [the serviceman] to leave the hospital with a loaded rifle in his
In a two-part analysis, the Court held that the claim was not barred by the intentional tort exception. In the first part of its analysis, the Court considered a “claim arising out of two tortious acts, one of which is an [intentional tort] and the other of which is a mere act of negligence.”65 The Court acknowledged that “in at least some situations the fact that an injury was directly caused by an [intentional tort] will not preclude liability against the Government for negligently allowing the [intentional tort] to occur.”66
The Court recognized two theories. The first is that a claim does not arise “solely” or “predominantly” out of the intentional tort when there is an allegation of independent, antecedent negligence against the Government.67 “Under this view, the assailant‘s individual involvement would not give rise to Government liability, but antecedent negligence by Government agents could[.]”68 But the Supreme Court expressly declined to rely on this theory.69
The second theory—and the one relied on by the Court—is that “the intentional tort exception is simply inapplicable to torts that fall outside the scope of § 1346(b)‘s general waiver.”70 The Court cited favorably to Justice (then Judge) Harlan‘s reasoning in Panella v. United States,71 which concluded that the intentional tort exception “must be read against the rest of the Act.”72 Accordingly, “[t]he exception should ... be construed to apply only to claims that would otherwise be authorized by the basic waiver of sovereign immunity.”73 Since the FTCA‘s basic waiver only authorizes claims for injuries caused by government employees acting in the scope of their employment,74 an intentional tort by a non-government employee, or a government employee acting outside the scope of employment, could not furnish the basis of an FTCA claim.75 Applied to Sheridan, if the claim only involved the off-duty intoxicated servicemember—i.e., a government employee acting outside the scope of employment—plaintiffs would have had no basis for suing the Government under the FTCA.76 Without a viable
Turning to the first of these two theories, McLeod, who committed the intentional tort of misrepresentation, is akin to the servicemember, who committed the intentional tort of assault. Under the first theory, “[McLeod‘s] individual involvement would not give rise to Government liability, but antecedent negligence by Government agents could[.]”78 However, this Circuit has not adopted this theory, and we have been given no good reason to do so today. Plaintiffs’ negligence claims against agency defendants therefore cannot proceed under the first theory.
Nor can they under the second. The Sheridan Court explained that “[b]y voluntarily adopting [firearm] regulations ... and by further voluntarily undertaking to provide care to a person who was visibly drunk and visibly armed, the Government assumed responsibility to ‘perform [its] “good Samaritan” task in a carеful manner.‘”79 The status of the intoxicated servicemember tortfeasor was irrelevant to this duty. The Court pointed out that the plaintiffs’ allegations included those against “other Government employees who allowed a foreseeable assault and battery to occur,” which “may furnish a basis for Government liability that is entirely independent of [the servicemember‘s] employment status.”80 The Court concluded, “in a
Plaintiffs urge that the agency employees who vouched for McLeod and failed to stop his solicitations are akin to the Navy corpsman in Sheridan who failed to stop the servicemember‘s assault. Just as the Navy corpsman undertook an independent duty of care to protect people from a possible assault, Plaintiffs suggest the agency employees here had an independent duty to protect employees from impermissible solicitations and commercial activity. The Government contends that “McLeod‘s relationship with the government is at the heart of this case.” It asserts that “Plaintiffs’ theory of liability turns on the fact that the government contracted with McLeod‘s employer and that his appearance at government-аrranged seminars
As an initial matter, Plaintiffs’ negligent supervision claims are “rooted in supervisor-supervisee relationships at work,”82 and thus closely related to McLeod‘s employment status. All of Plaintiffs’ other claims—no matter how framed—are similarly connected to McLeod‘s employment status as a governmental employee hired to help discharge the Government‘s duty to provide retirement assistance to its employees. Plaintiffs’ insistence that the Government had antecedent, independent duties unrelated to McLeod‘s employment relationship is incorrect.
Ultimately, since Plaintiffs’ claims arise out of McLeod‘s misrepresentations about his bond fund,
III.
Congress has delineated the Government‘s liability via the FTCA and its attendant exceptions. Concluding that the misrepresentation exception applies to bar Plaintiffs’ claims, we AFFIRM.
ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, concurring specially:
In Oliver Twist, Mr. Bumble famously lamented, “If the law supposes that, the law is a ass—a idiot.”1 Every once in a while, a case comes along where some might find Mr. Bumble‘s philosophy of the law apt. This is one of those cases.
Here, more than 100 federal law-enforcement-agency employees and their family members were swindled out of millions and millions of dollars in their retirement savings by Kenneth Wayne McLeod—a man these plaintiffs’ agencies brought onto federal property for the express purpose of, ironically, financially educating agency employees. Because the agencies allegedly did not follow rules prohibiting speakers from soliciting federal employees and from dispensing personal financial advice, among other safeguards, McLeod was able to abuse his position and take advantage of the federal employees’ trust in their agencies. Now, troublingly, the plaintiffs have no recourse because sovereign immunity precludes suit against the government in these circumstances.
I agree that the panel correctly reaches this same conclusion. But I write separately in an effort to prevent the harsh exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act‘s (“FTCA“) waiver of sovereign immunity from being construed in the future any more broadly than it has been written and that the Supreme Court has interpreted it. In particular, I respectfully disagree with the panel opinion‘s understanding of Sheridan v. United States, 487 U.S. 392, 108 S.Ct. 2449, 101 L.Ed.2d 352 (1988), and with dicta from our decision in Zelaya v. United States, 781 F.3d 1315 (11th Cir. 2015).
I.
As I have noted, I agree that the panel correctly concluded that the FTCA‘s waiver of sovereign immunity does not apply here. As relevant in this case, the FTCA‘s
When we consider whether this exception applies, we must identify the true “essence” of the plaintiff‘s claim, regardless of how the plaintiff may have pled her cause. JBP Acquisitions, 224 F.3d at 1264 (citation omitted). We have explained that the “essence” of negligent misrepresentation “involves the government‘s failure to use due care in obtaining and communicating information.” Id. at 1264 (citing Block v. Neal, 460 U.S. 289, 296, 103 S.Ct. 1089; Neustadt, 366 U.S. at 706-07, 81 S.Ct. 1294). And, more specifically, a claim is for negligent misrepresentation “when the loss suffered by the injured party is caused by the breach of ... the duty to use due care in obtaining and communicating information upon which that party may reasonably be expected to rely in the conduct of his economic affairs.” Neustadt, 366 U.S. at 706, 81 S.Ct. 1294.
Here, all of the plaintiffs’ claims are, at their essence, either claims of intentional misrepresentation or claims of negligent misrepresentation. To the extent that the complaint asserts claims against McLeod, these claims rely, at bottom, on the fact that McLeod defrauded them through material misrepresentations and omissions about what he was doing with their money.
And to the extent that the complaint makes claims against government employees for their independent negligence in vetting and investigating McLeod, in allowing him to solicit employees and offer personal financial investment advice, and in otherwise failing to follow regulations and government policy in permitting McLeod to speak at official agency-sponsored events and on federal property, all of these claims sound in negligent misrepresentation. This is necessarily so because even setting aside McLeod‘s intentional misrepresentations, all of plaintiffs’ losses may be traced to the government‘s alleged “breach of ... the duty to use due care in obtaining and communicating [financial-literacy] information upon which [the plaintiffs] ... reasonably [could have been] expected to rely in the conduct of [their] economic affairs,” id.; that is, to the government‘s own negligent misrepresentations.
Indeed, the entire purpose of the government‘s financial-literacy program was to financially educate federal employees in the hope that they would rely on the information and increase their retirement savings. See
So all of plaintiffs’ claims are, at their essence, claims for either intentional or negligent misrepresentation. As a result,
II.
For this same reason, this case is also distinguishable from Sheridan. There, as the panel correctly notes, an obviously drunken off-duty serviceman fired several shots at the plaintiffs after government employees allowed him to leave a naval hospital with a loaded rifle in his possession. The plaintiffs sued the government for the employees’ negligence in allowing the serviceman to leave the hospital without reporting the situation.
Section 2680(h) excepts assault and battery from the FTCA‘s waiver of sovereign immunity, but it does not except negligence. So, like McLeod‘s intentional misrepresentations here, the assailant‘s tort in Sheridan would have been еxcluded from the FTCA‘s waiver, even had the assailant been acting in the scope of his government employment.
But notably, unlike misrepresentation, assault and battery has no negligent counterpart. And the government employees who let the drunken, armed assailant go without trying to stop him and without reporting the incident engaged in a separate act of negligence, not assault and battery or any other tort that § 2680(h) excepts. So unlike the acts of the government employees here who engaged in the excepted tort of negligent misrepresenta-
This is where I would end my discussion of this case and of Sheridan: unlike in Sheridan, the essence of the government employees’ acts in this case constituted an excepted tort under § 2680(h)—that of negligent misrepresentation. As a result, the FTCA bаrs recovery here.
But the panel‘s interpretation of Sheridan goes further. And I am concerned that some of what the panel says about Sheridan could be broadly construed to impose limitations that Sheridan did not on the FTCA‘s waiver of sovereign immunity. For that reason, I think it important to address two points in the panel‘s Sheridan discussion.
First, I am concerned that the panel‘s interpretation of Sheridan may be read to mistakenly suggest that Sheridan‘s rule allowing claims against government employees for non-excepted torts applies only when the excepted tortfeasor (in the position of the drunken serviceman in Sheridan or McLeod here) did not act within the scope of government employment. And that would be in direct conflict with what Sheridan actually says.
In fact, the government-employee status of the excepted tortfeasor (in the position of the drunken serviceman in Sheridan or McLeod here) makes no difference to whether Sheridan‘s rule applies. The Supreme Court expressly said so: “[the assailant serviceman‘s] employment status is irrelevant to the outcome” of the case. Sheridan, 487 U.S. at 403 n.8, 108 S.Ct. 2449; see also id. (“Because ... [the assailant serviceman‘s] employment status ... has [no] bearing on the basis for petition-
So even accepting the complaint‘s allegations that McLeod was a government employee and that he acted within the scope of his employment, McLeod‘s employment status, in and of itself, does not provide a basis under Sheridan for rejecting plaintiffs’ claims based on other government employees’ alleged breaches of a separate duty to follow government regulations and policy. Instead, plaintiffs’ claims cannot succeed because the independent legal foundation of those claims against the responsible government agencies finds its basis in negligеnt misrepresentation, which is itself an excepted tort—without reference to McLeod‘s intentional tort of intentional misrepresentation.
Second, the panel opinion describes the two theories that the Supreme Court discussed in Sheridan to explain how liability might be imposed against government employees who negligently allowed an intentional tortfeasor to commit his tort. See Op. at 1309-10. As the panel correctly notes, the Supreme Court relied exclusively on the second theory.
Nonetheless, the panel alternatively analyzes this case under the first Sheridan theory. It notes that “McLeod, who committed the intentional tort of misrepresentation, is akin to the servicemember, who committed the intentional tort of assault. Under the first theory, [McLeod‘s] individual involvement would not give rise to Government liability, but antecedent negligence by Government agents could[.]” Id.
In my view, we need not reach this consideration. Even if Sheridan‘s first theory were binding law, it simply would not apply here. As I have noted, the government employees here (other than McLeod) allegedly engaged in negligent misrepresentation, which is an excepted tort, regardless of whether Sheridan‘s first theory is valid. For that reason alone, the government employees’ antecedent negligence at issue here could not give rise to government liability under the FTCA, and Sheridan‘s first theory cannot help plaintiffs.
III.
The panel opinion also invokes our decision in Zelaya in its discussion of causation. See Op. at 1306. And while Zelaya certainly contains some valid and important points, I think no discussion of Zelaya‘s causation analysis is complete without a word of caution about that opinion. Zelaya states, “The phrase ‘arising out of [in § 2680(h)] is interpreted broadly to include all injuries that are dependent upon one of the listed torts having been committed.” 781 F.3d at 1333 (citing United States v. Shearer, 473 U.S. 52, 55, 105 S.Ct. 3039, 87 L.Ed.2d 38 (1985)). But, in my view, this statement of the law and the citation on which Zelaya bases it, are not good law for two reasons.
First, Zelaya relies solely on Shearer for that proposition. But Shearer‘s entire discussion of § 2680(h)‘s exceptions to the FTCA‘s waiver of sovereign immunity appears in Section II-A of the opinion—a part of the opinion that the majority did
And more significantly, the Court‘s holding in Sheridan necessarily rejected the Shearer plurality‘s analysis of the “arising out of” language in § 2680(h). In Shearer, an Army private‘s mother sued the Army for negligence because another serviceman kidnapped and murdered her son. She alleged that the Army knew that the other serviceman was dangerous, yet it failed to control him and to warn others that he was at large. In finding her claim barred, the plurality effectively concluded that where a plaintiff‘s damages “stem from” an excepted tort under § 2680(h), an action based on a non-excepted tort “aris[es] out of” the excepted tort and likewise is prohibited. Sеe id. at 55, 105 S.Ct. 3039.
But Sheridan held that § 2680(h) did not preclude the plaintiffs’ claims there, even though all their injuries were dependent on the drunken serviceman‘s assault and battery—an excepted tort. Had the Shearer plurality‘s reasoning ruled the day, Sheridan could not have reached this conclusion: though the plaintiffs alleged an independent cause of action for negligence against the government, the Shearer plurality would have concluded that their actual injuries “ar[ose] out of” the drunken serviceman‘s assault and battery and were thus barred. So it is clear that any suggestion that § 2680(h) bars all claims for which the injuries arose directly out of an excepted tort is overly broad, incorrect,
Fortunately, however, Zelaya‘s suggestion in this regard is dicta, as our holding in Zelaya was actually based on the fact that all the plaintiffs’ claims there were, at their essence, claims for the excepted tort of misrepresentation. In light of the panel‘s reliance on other aspects of Zelaya, I note this error in that opinion to prevent our opinion hеre from being viewed as endorsing all that Zelaya had to say.
IV.
The outcome in this case is troubling. Yet it is one that the law clearly requires. Nevertheless, I would limit any restraints this opinion could impose on future litigants by confining it to address only what is absolutely necessary. Here, that means holding only that § 2680(h) precludes plaintiffs’ claims because all of them are based on the excepted torts of either intentional misrepresentation or negligent misrepresentation.
James Eric MCDONOUGH
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Katherine FERNANDEZ-RUNDLE, in her official capacity as State Attorney, Eleventh Judicial Circuit, State of Florida, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 15-14642
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
July 12, 2017
