UNITED STATES v. BROWN
No. 38
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued November 15, 1954. Decided December 6, 1954.
348 U.S. 110
Lee S. Kreindler argued the cause and filed a brief for respondent.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act,
The Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1935, 48 Stat. 526,
The District Court agreed with the contention of petitioner that respondent‘s sole relief wаs under the Veterans Act and dismissed his complaint under the Tort Claims Act. The Court of Appeals reversed. 209 F. 2d 463. The case is here on a petition for сertiorari which we granted, 347 U. S. 951, because of doubts as to whether Brooks v. United States, 337 U. S. 49, or Feres v. United States, 340 U. S. 135, controlled this case.
The Brooks case held that servicemen were covered by the Tort Claims Act where the injury was not incident to or caused by their military service. 337 U. S. 49, 52. In that case, servicemen on leave were negligently injured on a public highway by a government employee driving a truck of the United States. The fact that compensation was sought and paid under the Veterans Act* was held not to bar recovery under the Tort Claims Act. We refused tо “pronounce a doctrine of election of remedies, when Congress has not done so.” Id., at 53.
The Feres decision involved three cases, in each of which the injury, for which compensation was sought under the Tort Claims Act, occurred while the serviceman was on active duty and not on furlough; and the
The present case is, in our view, governed by Brooks, not by Feres. The injury for which suit was brought was not incurred while respondent was on active duty or subject to military discipline. The injury occurred after his discharge, while he enjoyed a civilian status. The damages resulted from a defective tourniquet applied in a veterans’ hospital. Respondent was there, of course, because he had been in the service and because he had received an injury in the service. And the causal relation of the injury to the service was sufficient to bring the claim under the Veterans Act. But, unlike the claims in the Feres case, this one is not foreign to the broad pattern of liability which the United States undertook by the Tort Claims Act.
That Act provides that, “The United States shall be liable ... in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances ... .”
Congress could, of course, make the compensation system the exclusive remedy. The Court held in Johansen v. United States, 343 U. S. 427, that Congress had done so in the case of the Federal Employees Compensаtion Act, with the result that a civilian employee could not sue the United States under the Public Vessels Act. We noted in the Brooks case, 337 U. S. 49, 53, that the usual workmen‘s compеnsation statute was in this respect different from those governing veterans, that Congress had given no indication that it made the right to compensation the veteran‘s exclusive remedy, that the receipt of disability payments under the Veterans Act was not an election of remedies and did not preclude recovery under the Tort Claims Act but only reduced the amount of any judgment under the latter Act. We adhere to that result. We adhere also tо the line drawn in the Feres case between injuries that did and injuries that did not arise out of or in the course of military duty. Since the negligent act giving rise to the injury in the prеsent case was not incident to the military service, the Brooks case governs and the judgment must be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE MINTON join, dissenting.
In Brooks v. United States, 337 U. S. 49, we held that actions for damages could be brought against the Govern-
For a hospital injury a veteran is entitled to precisely the same disability benefits as if the injury had been inflicted while he was a soldier.* We have previously held, I think correctly, that a soldier injured in a hospital cannot also sue for damages under the Tort Claims Act. Feres v. United States, 340 U. S. 135. But the Court now holds that a veteran can. To permit a veteran to recover damages from the Government in circumstances under which a soldier on aсtive duty cannot recover seems like an unjustifiable discrimination which the Act does not require.
