Lanus Ex Rel. Estate of Lanus v. United States , 492 F. App'x 66 ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •               Case: 12-11506    Date Filed: 10/12/2012   Page: 1 of 8
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 12-11506
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 4:11-cv-10078-KMM
    LINDA LANUS, as personal representative
    of the Estate of Eric K. Lanus,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    versus
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (October 12, 2012)
    Before BARKETT, PRYOR and COX, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    This case considers whether a deceased serviceman’s wrongful death claim
    against the United States, brought through a personal representative, can survive a
    Case: 12-11506    Date Filed: 10/12/2012   Page: 2 of 8
    motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under the Feres doctrine.
    The district court determined that Feres barred the court’s jurisdiction to hear the
    case. Accordingly, the court granted the United States’ motion to dismiss. Because
    we cannot meaningfully distinguish this case from the facts considered by the
    Supreme Court in Feres, we affirm.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    U.S. Coast Guard Fireman’s Apprentice Eric K. Lanus returned to his assigned
    housing at Naval Air Station Key West in the early morning hours of February 8,
    2009, a Sunday, after spending the previous evening in Key West. He turned on the
    stove in the kitchen, apparently preparing to cook, and went to his bedroom in the
    apartment’s upper floor. Around 5 a.m., heat from the forgotten stove ignited a fire
    that eventually engulfed the ground floor of the apartment. The fire department
    extinguished the fire an hour later. Serviceman Lanus was found dead in his
    bedroom.
    When he died, Serviceman Lanus had been “on liberty.” Liberty status refers
    to short time periods, often including weekends, when active-duty personnel are not
    on authorized leave from duties but are outside normal working hours. While on
    liberty, crew members may depart from their units and move about as they please
    2
    Case: 12-11506     Date Filed: 10/12/2012    Page: 3 of 8
    until they must return to duty. Serviceman Lanus was scheduled to report for duty that
    Monday.
    His mother, Linda Lanus, brought an action on her son’s behalf for wrongful
    death against the United States acting through the Department of Defense, the
    Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Navy, and the U.S. Coast Guard, which
    could include her son’s superior officers. She claimed that a number of safety
    deficiencies in the apartment had allowed the fire to spread unnoticed, and she
    attributed these safety deficiencies to negligent upkeep of the premises by the United
    States and its failure to warn him of the apartment’s conditions. She brought her
    claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 
    28 U.S.C. § 2674
    .
    The United States responded with a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction under the Feres doctrine, which removes district courts’ jurisdiction for
    a serviceman’s injuries that “arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to
    service,” Feres v. United States, 
    340 U.S. 135
    , 146, 
    71 S. Ct. 153
    , 159 (1950).
    The district court concluded that the Feres doctrine controlled and granted the
    United States’ motion. Ms. Lanus appeals. We affirm.
    II. ISSUE ON APPEAL AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Ms. Lanus contends that the district court erred by determining that her son’s
    death occurred “incident to” his military service. Thus, whether Serviceman Lanus’s
    3
    Case: 12-11506         Date Filed: 10/12/2012         Page: 4 of 8
    death was incident to his service under the Feres doctrine is the issue before us.
    Because the determination involves an application of law to undisputed facts, we
    consider this issue de novo. See Whitley v. United States, 
    170 F.3d 1061
    , 1068 (11th
    Cir. 1999).1
    III. DISCUSSION
    The doctrine of sovereign immunity bars suit against the United States unless
    the United States expressly consents. United States v. Mitchell, 
    463 U.S. 206
    , 212,
    
    103 S. Ct. 2961
    , 2965 (1983). The FTCA represents the United States’ consent to tort
    liability “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like
    circumstances.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2674
    . This consent does not extend, however, to claims
    “arising out of the combatant activities of the military or naval forces, or the Coast
    Guard, during time of war.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2680
    (j).
    In Feres, the Supreme Court took this exception a step further and prohibited
    suits under the FTCA “for injuries to servicemen where the injuries arise out of or are
    in the course of activity incident to service,” regardless of whether the United States
    1
    A party may attack the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction by challenging the
    sufficiency of the complaint (a facial attack) or by challenging the facts themselves (a factual attack).
    In a facial attack, the district court takes as true the complaint’s factual allegations. McMaster v.
    United States, 
    177 F.3d 936
    , 940 (11th Cir. 1999). Here, the court found that it lacked subject matter
    jurisdiction even assuming as true all of Ms. Lanus’s factual allegations. We therefore do the same
    and assume all facts in the complaint are true. Only a disputed application of the Feres doctrine to
    those facts is left for our review.
    4
    Case: 12-11506    Date Filed: 10/12/2012   Page: 5 of 8
    is at war. 
    340 U.S. at 146
    , 
    71 S. Ct. at 159
    . The Feres Court considered the case of
    a serviceman on active duty who died while sleeping. He died after a defect in his
    assigned on-base housing’s heating system ignited a fire and the housing’s emergency
    alarm system failed to operate. 
    Id. at 137
    , 
    71 S. Ct. at 155
    . The Court determined
    that the serviceman’s active-duty status and on-base location rendered the injury
    sufficiently “incident to service” and affirmed the dismissal of the case. 
    Id. at 146
    ,
    
    71 S. Ct. at 159
    .
    As one might imagine, the United States aligns the present case with Feres by
    highlighting the similarities. Both men were outside their normal working hours but
    still on active duty when they died. Both men lived in assigned housing on their
    respective military bases. Both men died while sleeping due to a fire allegedly caused
    by the negligence of the United States in maintaining the premises. These facts led
    the Feres Court to conclude that the serviceman’s injury was incident to his service,
    thus barring suit.
    Ms. Lanus proposes two distinctions. First, she emphasizes that her son was
    “on liberty” when he died. Second, she declares that the housing to which her son
    was assigned was not solely military housing but instead “from time to time” hosted
    “non-military government employees[] and civilian contractors and agents.” (R.1-1
    5
    Case: 12-11506         Date Filed: 10/12/2012         Page: 6 of 8
    at ¶ 13.) These two points, she says, command a different outcome than Feres. We
    disagree.2
    Ms. Lanus first argues that her son enjoyed a different duty status (liberty) at
    the time of his death than the serviceman in Feres. While on liberty, her son had “far
    less restriction than merely being released from the day’s chores” and he did not
    intend “to return to duty for over 24 hours at the time of his death.” (Appellant Br.
    at 14.) She further asserts that her son was not restricted in his ability to travel and
    “was not required to report to any supervisors during the period of his liberty.” 
    Id.
    These characteristics of liberty status, she claims, render it “the functional equivalent
    of being on a furlough or a pass,” 
    id.,
     and courts have decided that injuries sustained
    while on furlough, leave, or pass are not incident to service under the Feres doctrine.
    See, e.g., Brooks v. United States, 
    337 U.S. 49
    , 
    69 S. Ct. 918
     (1949) (holding that a
    serviceman injured while on a requested and authorized furlough could bring suit
    under the FTCA); Pierce v. United States, 
    813 F.2d 349
     (11th Cir. 1987) (holding that
    a serviceman injured while on a requested and authorized “pass” akin to a furlough
    or leave could bring suit under the FTCA).
    2
    Ms. Lanus attempts to rely on a three-factor test our court has developed to evaluate
    potential Feres applications to situations falling between the facts in Feres, barring the claim, and
    those in cases in which the Supreme Court has come to an opposite conclusion, allowing the claim
    to proceed. (See Appellant Br. at 12-13 (citing Whitley, 
    170 F.3d at 1070
    ).) Because we conclude
    that the facts of this case are sufficiently similar to Feres, we find no need to use the test to evaluate
    whether the Feres doctrine bars Ms. Lanus’s claim.
    6
    Case: 12-11506        Date Filed: 10/12/2012        Page: 7 of 8
    This characterization of Serviceman Lanus’s status, however, does not
    materially distinguish Feres. Liberty status includes nights and weekends “off” in the
    sense that the serviceman, though on active duty, is simply not required to perform
    duties at that time.3 Though Feres does not go into detail, the decedent’s status in
    Feres (on active duty and sleeping between on-duty shifts) is functionally similar to
    the active-duty liberty status attributed to Serviceman Lanus. That Serviceman Lanus
    was enjoying a weekend on liberty rather than a single night does not distinguish the
    case.
    Ms. Lanus’s second proposed distinction refers to her son’s assigned housing.
    She argues that injuries in on-base locations accessible to civilians, such as her son’s
    housing unit, support a finding that the injury did not occur incident to service.
    That Serviceman Lanus’s on-base housing occasionally provided a roof for
    civilian government employees, however, also fails to differentiate the case from
    Feres. The Feres Court made no mention of whether the decedent’s barracks also
    housed civilians from time to time, and the relevance of the distinction remains
    unclear. Case law supporting Ms. Lanus’s position is scant.4
    3
    As the Ninth Circuit has put it, liberty status “refers generally to the time between the end
    of normal working hours on one day, and the beginning of normal working hours on the next.”
    Costo v. United States, 
    248 F.3d 863
    , 864 n.1 (9th Cir. 2001).
    4
    Ms. Lanus cited three cases in support of the idea that injuries sustained in on-base
    locations may be distinguishable from the injury in Feres due to the fact that civilians also could
    7
    Case: 12-11506         Date Filed: 10/12/2012         Page: 8 of 8
    As we see no meaningful distinction between the facts before us and the facts
    before the Feres Court, we affirm the district court’s order.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    The facts of this case are substantively similar to the facts in Feres, and we
    therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal for lack of jurisdiction.
    AFFIRMED.
    access the location. Two of the cases are district court cases from outside our circuit and do not
    support her point. See Hall v. United States, 
    130 F. Supp. 2d 825
    , 829 (S.D. Miss. 2000); Ordahl v.
    United States, 
    601 F. Supp. 96
    , 100 (D. Mont. 1985).
    Ms. Lanus’s third case is a district court opinion affirmed by an equally divided court sitting
    en banc. See Elliot ex rel. Elliott v. United States, 
    877 F. Supp. 1569
     (M.D. Ga. 1992), aff’d by an
    equally divided court, 
    37 F.3d 617
     (11th Cir. 1994) (en banc). Though this case is not binding
    precedent, see United States v. Cerceda, 
    172 F.3d 806
    , 812 n.6 (11th Cir. 1999) (en banc), it
    deserves note due to its apparent similarity to this case. In Elliot, a serviceman and his wife sustained
    injuries when their on-base assigned housing at Fort Benning, Georgia developed a carbon
    monoxide leak. 
    877 F. Supp. at 1572
    . In their negligence suit against the United States, the district
    court rejected the contention that Feres barred the serviceman’s claim, determining that, though the
    injury occurred in his assigned on-base living quarters, he had been engaged in a purely personal
    activity (watching television) and—most importantly—had been on requested and authorized leave
    rather than on active duty. 
    Id. at 1575-77
    . Liberty, however, is not furlough, leave, or pass, and it
    is not a requested or authorized reprieve from active duty—indeed, it is not a reprieve from active
    duty at all. Serviceman Lanus was on active duty at the time of his death, a critical distinction from
    Elliott. See Jiminez v. United States, 
    158 F.3d 1228
    , 1229 (11th Cir. 1998) (recognizing that “the
    serviceman’s duty status [i]s the most important criterion in determining whether an injury was
    incident to military service” (citing Parker v. United States, 
    611 F.2d 1007
     (5th Cir. 1980))).
    8