MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Before the Court is the government’s motion to strike from trial defenses raised *397 by defendants, and defendants’ objections thereto.
I. FACTS 1
Defendant Gatehouse Industries, Inc. (“Gatehouse”) owned a bar and hotel complex in West Springfield, Massachusetts. A part-time employee named Theriaque rented a room in the hotel. On October 29, 1977 Theriaque consumed alcohol over a period of time and was found the next day at the foot of a fire escape leading to the roof of defendant Gatehouse’s hotel. Ther-iaque was rendered a paraplegic by the apparent fall and because of his status as a veteran, received free medical treatment from the Veterans’ Administration Hospital (“VAH”), which is maintained and funded by the federal government. In 1979 Ther-iaque filed suit against Gatehouse to recover damages for his injuries. He later settled with Gatehouse, signing a release.
The United States subsequently filed the present suit against Theriaque, Gatehouse and its insurer, Home Insurance Company, under 42 U.S.C. § 2651(a), the Medical Care Recovery Act (“MCRA”). 2 The complaint seeks recovery of money expended by the United States for Theriаque’s treatment at the VAH. Defendants seek to raise the defenses of statute of limitations, release and comparative negligence. The government now moves to strike each of these defenses.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Statute of Limitations
The parties agree in their memoran-da that 28 U.S.C. § 2415(b) governs the stаtute of Imitations in this case. It allows the government to file complaints for money damages grounded in tort within three years after the right of action first accrues. The accident in this case occurred on October 30, 1977. The complaint was filed on October 30, 1980. Defendants’ рosition appears to be that an action filed on the. last day possible, i.e. precisely three years after the cause of action accrues, is not “within three years.” Defendants offer no support for this claim, and the Court rejects the argument. The statutе of limitations has been satisfied in this case.
Cf. United States v. Gera,
B. Release
The injured Theriaque settled his claim against the hotel and its insurer and signed a release on October 15, 1979. Defendants maintain that the release binds the government, preventing it from now bringing suit under the MCRA.
The government was not part of the negotiatiоns leading to the settlement, nor was it a party to the written release. The government cites three old, yet persuasive, cases holding that, when a tort-feasor has actual or implied notice that the injured party received government-provided medical treаtment for injuries, the injured party’s release does not affect the government so as to prevent it from exercising rights conferred to it under the MCRA.
See United States v. Winter,
A review of the record in this case indicates that defendants Gatehouse Industries, Inc. and Home Insurance Company, through their attоrney, had actual notice that Theriaque received medical services at the VAH for his injuries. Interrogatory answers in preparation for Theriaque’s suit against the hotel show defendants had actual knowledge that Theriaque received hospital services from thе VAH worth ap
*398
proximately $45,500.00.
See
Exhibit B attached to plaintiffs motion for summary judgment. These interrogatory answers predate the date of the release. Knowledge of these VAH services is at least implicit or constructive notice of the government's rights under the MCRA.
See United States v. Guinn,
C. Comparative Negligence
The final defense raised by defendants is far more troubling than the two previously discussed. The MCRA in relevant part, reads:
In any case in which the United States is authorized or required by law to furnish hospital, medical, surgical, or dental care and treatment ... to a person who is injured or suffers a disease ... under circumstances crеating a tort liability upon some third person ... to pay damages therefor, the United States shall have a right to recover from said third person the reasonable value of the care and treatment so furnished or to be furnished and shall, as to this right be sub-rogated to any right or claim that the injured or diseased person ... has against such third person to the extent of the reasonable value of the care and treatment so furnished or to be furnished.
42 U.S.C. § 2651(a) (emphasis added).
The government’s rights under the MCRA appear to be subrogated to those of the injured person and may only be asserted where there is third party liability. To this end, certain state law defenses available to defendants against the injured person bar the government from asserting its rights under the MCRA. Accordingly, the government may not bring suit under the MCRA for costs it incurred from treating victims of automobile accidents in states which have enacted so-called no fault liability laws.
See United States v. Dairyland Insurance Company,
Yet, courts have also held that other types of state law defenses available to defendants against the injured person
do not
apply to prevent the government from suing the tort-feasor under the MCRA. For example, the Third Circuit has held that a state’s family immunity law, preventing a man and his children from suing their wife/mother for injuries caused by her negligent driving, did not bar the government from suing her for thе value of medical services it provided to the husband and children.
See United States v. Moore,
The message from the above-cited cases, and others, is that the United States is not merely a subrogee in suits brought under the MCRA.
See United States v. Housing Authority of the City of Bremerton,
With this backdrop, the question regarding the рresent case becomes clear. Does the Massachusetts comparative negligence law affect the creation of tort liability or does it merely regulate its application?
Massachusetts General Laws chapter 231, section 85 reads in part:
Contributory negligence shall not bar recovery in any action by any person or legal representative to recover damages for negligence resulting in death or injury to person or property, if such negligence was not greater than the total amount of nеgligence attributable to the person or persons against whom recovery is sought, but any damages allowed shall be diminished in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to the person for whose injury, damage or death recovery is made. In determining by what amount the plaintiffs damages shall be diminished in such a case, the negligence of each plaintiff shall be compared to the total negligence of all persons against whom recovery is sought. The combined total of the plaintiffs negligence taken together with аll of the negligence of all of the defendants shall equal one hundred percent.
Language from Massachusetts cases indicates that Mass.Gen. Laws ch. 231 § 85 does not affect the creation of tort liability, even where the plaintiff is more than 50% negligent. Rather, the statute is designed to determine the proportions of plaintiffs recovery for existing tort liability. The statute either reduces the amount of, or bars completely, recovery for the tortious conduct of another. By way of illustration, when a jury decides that a plaintiff is 51% contributorily negligent while applying Mass.Gen. Laws ch. 231 § 85, the effect of such a decision is not that the defendant has been found “not negligent,” but rather, that because of a policy decision, the Mas
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sachusetts legislature has decided that plaintiff may not recover for the 49% negligence оf the defendant. In other words, defendants are not absolved from a finding of tort liability in such a situation, but are shielded from paying for their tortious act.
See Zeller v. Cantu,
Defendants claim that the government stands in the shoes of Theriaque and that if he is found more than 50% liable for his own injuries, then the government may not recover. Similarly, if the jury finds Ther-iaque less than 50% liable, then the government’s recovery must be reduced by the percеntage of Theriaque’s contributory negligence. This argument ignores the fact that the government’s rights under the MCRA are independent of those of the injured party. Because the comparative negligence statute in Massachusetts regulates rather than negates “circumstances creating tort liability upon some third person,” the government’s right to recover the value of the VAH treatment should not be impaired by Theriaque’s negligence, if any, as long as the factfinder finds defendants were negligent with respect to Theriaque’s injuries. This result may seem inequitаble, harsh, and contrary to the policies of various states, as defendants must pay the government the full value of Theriaque’s VAH treatment even if they are found only 1% negligent for Theriaque’s injuries. Yet, it may not be doubted that the MCRA created in the government a federal substantive right to recover medical expenditures where a tort-feasor is found to have caused the injuries requiring the treatment.
See United States v. Moore,
Moreover, under Massachusetts law, one party’s contributory negligence is not imputed to another if the noncontributorily negligent party’s claim is independеnt.
See Goldman v. United States,
III. CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, defendants’ defensеs of statute of limitations, release and comparative negligence will not be allowed. Accordingly, the government’s motion to strike these defenses from trial is GRANTED. Trial will commence on Wednesday, December 2, 1987.
It is So Ordered.
Notes
. The following facts are an abbreviated version of those found by a magistrate and adopted by this Court in its Memorandum and Order denying the government's motion for summary judgment.
See
No. 80-0286-F at 2-4 (D.Mass. Sept. 23, 1986) (order denying summary judgment) [Available on WESTLAW,
. See infra, p. 398, for the relevant text of the MCRA.
While Mr. Theriaque is a named defendant, this Court has dismissed the count against him in a previous order. Theriaque, therefore, is no longer a defendant in this litigation.
. While no court has ever decided the issue, even if defendants were unaware when the release was executed that Theriaque’s medical bills were paid by the government, the government could still file suit against defendants to recover the сost of Theriaque's treatment. This is because, as discussed
infra,
the government's rights according to the MCRA are independent of the injured party's. Thus, the government will not be bound by a release to which it was not a party.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2651(b);
United States
v.
Merrigan,
. Defendants maintain the government is nothing but a subrogee under the MCRA. Yet, this cannot be so. In every case brought under the MCRA, the government seeks to recover money from a defendant in situations where the injured person himself has no such right. Ther-iaque could not sue for the value of the VAH treatment. Accordingly, he has no right to which the government may be subrogated. This is why the government’s rights must be viewed as independent of the injured party’s under the MCRA and why the government is more than a mere subrogee in such situations.
See United States
v.
Greene,
. The Court recognizes dicta in
United States v. Housing Authority of City of Bremerton,
Defendants cite the case of
United States
v.
Fort Benning Rifle and Pistol Club,
