OPINION
We affirm a plaintiff’s judgment under the Federal Tort Claims Act except insofar as we must modify the judgment to limit recovery to the amount of the plaintiff’s previous administrative claim. We reject plaintiff’s argument that the relevant law regarding consideration of inflation in the calculation of damages had changed between the filing of the administrative claim and trial of the lawsuit, and we therefore reject his contention that amendment of the ad damnum clause was properly allowed at trial.
I
Early on the morning of March 27, 1977, Martinez and a group of friends were drinking beer while driving from Diboll, Texas to the Jackson Hill Park swimming area on Sam Rayburn Reservoir. Upon their arrival, Martinez changed his clothеs, ran toward the water, and dived into a very shallow portion of the lake. Martinez did not look at, touch, or in any way inspect the water before his dive. He fractured
In accord with the procedures set forth in the FTCA, Martinez sought redress in 1979 from the federal agency that maintains the reservoir. His administrative claim for $2 million in damages was denied. In 1983, after filing this lawsuit but before trial, Martinez’s complaint was amended to assert damages of $4.5 million. He cites a recent decision of this court as an “intervening fact,” 28 U.S.C. § 2675(b), that would justify the amendment.
In the ensuing bench trial, both sides relied on expert witnesses to support their positions on the issue of govеrnment negligence in maintaining Jackson Hill Park as a swimming area without signs warning about the dangers of diving. The existence of Martinez’s own negligence was not seriously disputed. The district court credited Martinez’s expert and found that the accident was caused by the negligence of both the government and Martinez, 65% and 35% respectively. Total damages were fixed at $4,496,128.34; Martinez was awarded 65% of that sum, or $2,922,483.42.
II
The United States argues that it breached no duty to Martinez because diving into shallow water without first inspecting the lake is obviously dangerous: there is no duty to “warn a person of things he already knows, or of dangerous conditions or activities which are so open and obvious that as a matter of law he will be charged with knowledge and appreciation thereof.”
Halepeska v. Callihan Interests, Inc.,
There is little doubt that Martinez was negligent. The United States accordingly cites a dictum in
Brooks v. United States,
The testimony of Martinez’s expert was found credible by the trial judge, who concluded that both the government and Martinez were negligent. The conclusion that the United States breached a duty it owed to park patrons at the Jacksоn Hill area was sufficiently supported by this evidence.
III
The district court permitted Martinez to proceed on a claim whose
ad damnum
clause was amended to exceed the amount sought in his administrative claim. This is permissible only when there is either newly discovered evidence not reasonably discoverable when the claim was presented to the agency or allegation and proof of intervening facts relating to the amount of the claim. 28 U.S.C. § 2675(b). Martinez offered three grounds for amending his claim. The-first of those grounds—
Texas substantive law, including the elements of damages, applies here. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Texas law has long held that inflation can be considered in setting damages in personal injury cases.
See Weak-ley v. Fischbach & Moore, Inc.,
Assuming, without deciding, that a significant change in the law could in some circumstance be an “intervening fact” under § 2675(b), we reject Martinez’s argument. We note first that the district court correctly and expressly looked to Texas law, which has at all relevant times held that inflation is properly considered in the calculation of tort damages. Texas law was not affected by
Culver,
just as it had not been affected by
Penrod Drilling.
It is true that
Standefer,
and a dictum in
Ferrero v. United States,
IV
Although Martinez’s
ad damnum
clause should have been limited to $2 million, the amount of his administrative claim, he was allowed to prove damages of $4,496,128.34. The district court reduced this to $2,922,-483.42 to reflect the plaintiff’s 35% comparative negligence. We must decide whether the judgment should be reduced to $2 million (the amount сlaimed in the administrative proceeding) or to $1.3 million (65% of $2 million). So far as we are aware, this
The FTCA provides, with two exceptions not applicable here, that a tort action against the United States “shall not be instituted for any sum in excess of the amount of the claim presented to the federal agency.” 28 U.S.C. § 2675(b) (emphasis added). This provision will ordinarily operate to deny recovery of an amount in excess of the claim presented to the administrative agency. In a case like the one at bar, however, this simple result does not necessarily follow. Hаd the plaintiff been denied leave to amend his ad damnum clause upwards and had his proof of damages been limited to $2 million, his recovery would in turn have been limited to 65% of the $2 million damages he alleged and proved. If it was proper, however, to allow the plaintiff to prove his full actual damages, one cоuld argue that he should be allowed to recover 65% of those damages or $2 million, whichever was less. We must therefore decide whether the phrase “shall not be instituted” in § 2675(b) merely precludes a recovery exceeding the amount of the administrative claim, or whether it also precludes a plaintiff from using proof of greater damages to “offset” the effects of a finding that his recovery should be reduced to reflect his own partial fault.
Our effort to decide between these approaches is made difficult by the fact that comparative fault principles were not generally employed when the FTCA wаs enacted in 1946: Congress almost certainly did not contemplate the dilemma that confronts us here today. 1 Furthermore, comparative fault doctrine has developed during an era in which pleadings are routinely amended to conform to the evidence presented. See, e.g., Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b). Consequently, cases deаling with problems analogous to the one presented here are necessarily rare, if they exist at all. We are required, then, to write on what is almost a clean slate and to decide the issue in accord with the statute’s language, its purposes, and generally applicable principles of interрretation. 2
Standing ' alone, the language of § 2675(b), which precludes an action from
We are acutely aware of the settled general principle that statutes partially waiving sovereign immunity must be strictly construed in favor of the sovereign and that they must not be enlarged beyond what the language requires.
See, e.g., Ruckelshaus v. Sierra Club,
Because Congress apparently never considered the question at hand, we must recur to the more general purposes of the settlement procedures in the FTCA: “to ease court congestion and avoid unnecessary litigation” and to provide “fair and equitable treatment of private individuals and claimants.” S.Rep. No. 1327, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. 5-6 (quoting H.R.Rep. No. 1532, 89th Cong., 2d Sess.), reprinted in 1966 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 2515-16. The FTCA already treats plaintiffs rather sternly by limiting their recovery to the amount of the administrative claim even when they can prove damages in excess of that amount. We do not believe that either the efficiency or the fairness of the settlement process would be enhanced by creating a rule imposing even harsher sanctions on some plaintiffs who inadvertently underestimate their damages when they file their administrative claim.
Accordingly, we conclude that an FTCA “claim,”
see
28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2674, 2675(a), is the amount that a plaintiff seeks to recover from the government. Unless the “newly discovered evidence” or the “intervening facts” exception in 28 U.S.C. § 2675(b) is applicable, a plaintiff may nоt recover any sum in excess of the amount of the claim presented to the appropriate federal agency in conformance with 28 U.S.C. § 2675(a). A plaintiff will be free at trial to present proof of damages exceeding this amount; if he does so and if
In the case at bar, Martinez filed an administrative claim for $2 million, proved damages of $4,496,128.34 at trial, and was found to be 35% at fault for the accident, $4,496,128.34 reduced by 35% is $2,922,-483.42, which is more than the administrative claim. We therefore modify the judgment to provide that Martinez be awarded $2 million.
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Notes
. The legislative history of the FTCA, which does not speak directly to the question at issue here, is compatible with either reading of the "shall not be instituted" language in § 2675(b). In summarizing what is now § 2675(b), the House Committee оn the Judiciary said: "Suit may not be instituted upon a claim presented to an agency until it has been finally disposed of by the agency____ In any case, the suit cannot be brought for more than the amount of the claim presented to the agency, in the absence of intervening facts or newly discovered evidence." H.R.Rep. No. 1287, 79th Cong., 1st Sess. 5 (1945) (еmphasis added). When the FTCA was amended in 1966 to expand the authority of federal agencies to settle tort claims without litigation, the "shall not be instituted” language in § 2675(b) was retained without comment. See S.Rep. No. 1327, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1966 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 2515-27.
. In
Dickens v. United States,
