ORDER
This mаtter is before the Court upon the defendant’s motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The defendant seeks an Order dismissing this action on the grounds that the court lacks jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action and that the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The defendant alleges that certain exceptions to the Fedеral Tort Claims Act (hereinafter “FTCA”) bar the plaintiff’s action. The defendant also claims that even if the action is not barred by the FTCA, that no act by the defendant can be said to be the proximate cause of any injuries sustained by plaintiff or his decedent.
This action arises out of the brutal murders of two Columbia teenagers in the fall of 1977. The three men charged with the murders have either pleaded guilty or have been convicted of the October 29, 1977, murders of Thomas Taylor, age 17, and Carlotta Hartness, age 14.
The perpetrators, J. C. Shaw, James T. Roach, and Eugene Mahaffey had been spending that Saturday morning using drugs and drinking beer. Sometime early in the afternoon, according to Mahaffey, the three decided to ride around and “see if we could find a girl to rape.”
They stopped at Polo Park, а baseball park located northeast of Columbia in a rural area off Alpine Road. They came upon a parked car occupied by Thomas Taylor and Carlotta Hartness.
Shaw, who was the driver of the car, pulled up beside the Taylor car in such a way that Roach, who was riding in the front passenger side, was directly across from Taylor. On instructions from Shaw, Roach pointed a .22 сaliber rifle through the car window at Taylor and demanded money. Taylor complied and Shaw and Mahaffey then got out of their car, took the keys out of Taylor’s car, and forced Miss Hartness out of Taylor’s car and into Shaw’s car. Shaw returned to his car, and Roach, at the direction of Shaw, shot and killed Taylor who was still sitting in his car.
Miss Hartness was subsequently taken to a wooded area by Roach, Shaw, and Mahaffey, where she was raped, assaulted, and brutally murdered.
Roach, Shaw, and Mahaffey were arrested on November 3, 1977. Shaw pleaded guilty on all charges, and was sentenced to death. His conviction is on appeal.
At the time of the murders, Private First Class Joseph Carl Shaw was a member of the Armed Forces of the United States, and was assigned to the 130th Military Police Company, stationed at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. It is on the basis that Shaw was a government employee that the plaintiff, father of the victim Taylor, has filed suit. The action, which seeks 1.5 million dollars in damages, was commenced pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) and 28 U.S.C. § 2671 et seq. (1976). 1 The plaintiff alleges that Shaw sought treatment for his drug and psychological problems, but that certain government employees at Fort Jackson failed to provide treаtment, and that they failed to exercise the degree of skill necessary to treat him effectively. The plaintiff further alleges that the government employees responsible for Shaw’s treatment wrongfully and negligently failed to exercise due care in their failure to institutionalize Shaw, or otherwise provide for his proper care and treatment. Plaintiff alleges that as a di *649 rect and proximate result of the government’s negligence, his son was subjected to mental anguish, was mutilated, and was killed.
The defendant, the United States, submits that the action should be dismissed for four reasons:
1. The basis of the suit, the murder of Tommy Taylor, is an assault and battery; section 2680(h) of the FTCA prohibits a tort suit against the United States for “any claim arising out of assault and/or battery.”
2. Shaw was off-duty and outside the scope of his government emрloyment at the time of the incident; therefore, no liability can be imputed to his employer, the United States.
3. Plaintiff’s claim is barred by the discretionary function exception to the tort claims act.
4. No action by this defendant was the proximate cause of the injuries sustained by the decedent.
Because the Court finds that the first issue is dispositive, there is no need to discuss the other three arguments urged by the dеfendant. An analysis of the FTCA, and the many cases based on this well-litigated exception, convince this Court that the defendant’s motion to dismiss must be granted.
Traditionally, the sovereign has always been immune from suit. To alleviate the harshness of this rule, Congress enacted the Federal Tort Claims Act which permits civil actions against the United States for personal injury and property damage caused by the “negligеnt or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or employment.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) (1976). Section 2680 of Title 28, however, lists several claims expressly excepted from the purview of the Act, among which are any claims arising out of an assault or battery.
2
Because the United States has not consented to be sued for these torts, federal courts аre without jurisdiction to entertain a suit based upon them.
Gardner v. United States,
The complaint, therefore, fails for lack of jurisdiction.
U. S. v. Edens,
The plaintiff argues that his claim is not founded upon assault and battery, but rather upon the negligence of the gоvernment. Ever since the passage of the FTCA, litigants have tried to circumvent its exceptions by alleging that harm was caused not by an act for which sovereign immunity remained a bar, but rather by antecedent negligence. These attempts generally failed because the courts looked to the essence of the claim, and ignored the attempts of the plaintiff to characterize it in another way.
See, e. g., Lambertson v. U. S.,
It is true that the claim here is predicated on negligence. However, that negligence would have been without legal significance absent the alleged acts of (the mailman). Without that, there would have been no actionable negligence. It was the attack which served to attach lеgal consequences to defendant’s alleged negligence. Congress could easily have excepted claims for assault. It did not; it used the broader language excepting claims arising out of assault. It is plain that the claim arose only because of the assault and battery, and equally plain that it is a claim arising out of the assault and battery. This being so, the United States has not waived its immunity as respects this claim. Id. at 364.
No doubt the plaintiff has suffered a tremendous loss at the hands of J. C. Shaw and his cohorts. Any sympathy the Court may feel for this plaintiff, however, must be put aside, and the law must be interpreted in accordance with the intent of Congress. It would be much more pleasant to reach a decision based upon what this Court wishes Congress had said, rather than what it did say. However, to allow the plaintiff to recover by “dressing up the substance” of battery in the “garments” of negligence would be to “judicially admit at the back door that which has been legislatively turned away at the front door.”
Laird v. Nelms,
406 U.S.
797,
802,
One must merely examine the pleadings to see that the substance of plaintiff’s complaint is precisely the kind of tort exempted from FTC A coverage by § 2680(h). No legal alchemy can transform it into a negligence action and confer jurisdiction where none exists.
Gaudet v. U. S.,
A number of other courts have examined in grеat detail this seemingly simple exception to the FTCA. Any discussion of this issue would be incomplete without some analysis of the landmark decision in
Panella v. U. S.,
The plain implication of Panella is that had the assault been by a government employe, the action would have been barred even though it was predicated on an allegation of negligence other than the assault itself. Collins v. U. S.,259 F.Supp. at 864 .
A more recent Tenth Circuit opinion further convinces the Court that it is without jurisdiction in this case. In
Naisbitt v. U. S.,
[A] strong thread running through most of these cases is that which recоgnizes the immunity of the government where the assailant is an employee of the government .... The rationale for this appears to be that where the intervening assailant is an employee, the tort with which the government is charged is in fact as well as law an intentional one subject to the § 2680(h) provision. There is a dearth of authority allowing an action to be prosecuted against the government under the Tort Claims Act where the intervening assailant was an employee. In any case in which the employee has intentionally injured another, the tort asserted against the government, regardless of whether it is called negligence, is indeed an intentional tort attributable to the government, (emphasis added).
The Court also suggested that such intentional torts were, as a matter of law, intervening forces that vitiated the causal force of any governmental negligence.
Most of the cases, including the leading opinion of Judge Harlan in Panella, hold that the non-waiver of immunity contained in § 2680(h) is applicable where the intentional tort is committed by an employee. Thus, whether it is explicitly mentioned or not, effect is given to the employee distinction. Perhaps this stems from the proposition that where the employee has committed a tortious intentional act, even though it is not with the approval of his employer, nevertheless he is so closely connected with the government that the intentional act is imputed to the government. Because the government has waived liability only in negligence cases, and has retained its immunity in intentional tort cases in accordance with § 2680(h), an attempt to establish liability on a negligence basis is indeed an effort to circumvent the retention of immunity provided in § 2680(h).
The few cases that have held the government liable despite § 2680(h) can be distinguished on their facts.
In
Fair v. U. S.,
In
Gibson v. U. S.,
Similarly, in
Hicks v. U. S.,
167 U.S.App. D.C. 169,
Plaintiff relies heavily upon a recent Massachusetts decision,
Loritts v. U. S.,
Several cases have held, as does this Court, that where the assault is perpetrated by a government employee, the government is not liable.
See, e. g., Naisbitt
v.
U. S., supra; Pendarvis v. U. S.,
' In a similar case in this district, another court has reached the oрposite conclusion.
Gale v. U. S.,
The Gale court undertook an extensive and thorough analysis of a number of cases, many of them the same opinions cited herein. Major reliance was placed upon the Panella decision. Although that case involved an assault by a non-government employee, the court in Gale found that Panella supported its theory that the exclusion of § 2680(h) should not apply to situations where a private employer in an analogous situation could not be held liable for an assault on a third party. Examples are where the assaulter is not an employee, or where the employee is acting outside his scope of employment. Judge Hawkins found that the Panella court clearly distinguished between claims based solely on a respondeat superior theory and those arising out of the direct negligence of gоvernment employees. Because under a respondeat superior theory the government could not have been liable for the Marine’s off-duty act, the Gale court reasoned that the exclusion provided in § 2680(h) did not apply-
It is important to understand that this Court is not absolutely bound by Judge Hawkins’ determination in
Gale.
While his opinion may be highly persuasive on the issue, a District Court decision “which has not stood the acid test of appellate review cannot be regarded as authoritative, much less dispositive .... ”
Bank of Marin v.
*653
England,
The plaintiff claims that the defendant is collaterally estopped by
Gale
and contends that the issue is
res judicata
in this district. Plaintiff misunderstands these two related principles; they simply do not apply in this case. While the term
“res judicata
in its broаdest sense encompasses collateral estoppel, in a narrower sense these two phrases do carry different although related meanings. Under the principles of
“res judicata”
in the narrower sense, a judgment in a prior suit between the same parties bars a suit on the same cause of action not only as to all matters offered at the first proceeding, but also as to all issues that could have been litigated. Collateral estoppel, however, precludes relitigation only of those issues actually litigated in the original action, whether or not the second suit is based on the same cause of action.
Johnson v. U. S.,
The defendant’s motion to dismiss must be granted. The clear implication of Panel-la and its progeny is that because the fatal assault was perpetrated by a government employee, the action is barred. This Court has no jurisdiction to proceed in this matter, and the action is therefore dismissed.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Prior to institution of this action, plaintiff presented his claim in writing to the United States Department of the Army for damages suffered as a result of defendant’s negligence. The claim was denied by the Department of the Army by letter dated August 28, 1979, and this suit was commenced within six months of the denial of the claim. Plaintiff, therefore, has complied with the prerequisites for bringing suit under the FTCA as set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2675.
. § 2680, in pertinent part, provides as follows:
The provisions of this chapter and section 1346(b) of this title shall not apply to ... (h) Any claim arising out of assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, libel, slander, misrepresentation, deceit, or interference with contract rights.
