Andrew Billups, III v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •                                   UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 20-1121
    ANDREW J. BILLUPS, III,
    Plaintiff – Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant – Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
    Richmond. David J. Novak, District Judge. (3:19-cv-00646-DJN)
    Argued: March 9, 2021                                          Decided: May 6, 2021
    Before DIAZ, THACKER, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Judge Diaz
    and Judge Thacker joined.
    ARGUED: Christopher L. Spinelli, EMROCH & KILDUFF, LLP, Richmond, Virginia,
    for Appellant. Jonathan Tyler Lucier, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
    Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: William Randolph Robins, Jr., EMROCH
    & KILDUFF, LLP, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. G. Zachary Terwilliger, United
    States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia,
    for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
    Andrew Billups III brought this suit against the United States under the Federal Tort
    Claims Act (“FTCA”) for injuries he sustained when an employee of the United States
    Postal Service blasted a loud truck horn near his head. The district court dismissed
    Billups’s suit for lack of jurisdiction, finding that his claim was based on battery and
    therefore barred by the intentional-tort exception to the FTCA’s waiver of the United
    States’ sovereign immunity. We agree that Billups’s claim, at its core, sounds in battery
    and therefore affirm.
    I.
    A.
    Andrew Billups III brought this suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”),
    
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1346
    (b), 2671 et seq., seeking $3 million in damages for injuries he suffered
    when a postal employee’s prank went seriously wrong. In his complaint, Billups alleged
    that he visited a United States Postal Service (“USPS”) office in Kilmarnock, Virginia, in
    September of 2017. He parked near a Ford F-250 pickup truck that had been backed into
    a parking space, with its front grill facing into the parking lot. As Billups exited his car,
    he heard a loud horn blast from the nearby truck. He approached the vehicle to investigate
    and bent down to examine the truck’s grill. When his head was just a few feet away from
    the grill, the truck’s horn – which had been modified to create an unusually loud noise –
    blasted again. Billups immediately experienced “significant ringing” in both of his ears
    and “moderate deafness.” J.A. 5.
    3
    Billups later learned that the truck was owned by Ronald Cain, a custodian at the
    post office. Cain admitted that he had purposefully triggered the horn with a remote device
    to play a practical joke on Billups, and that some of his colleagues had watched the prank
    through a hole cut in the office’s venetian blinds. Billups has since been diagnosed with
    high-frequency hearing loss and tinnitus in both ears as a result of the horn blast.
    After USPS denied his administrative claim, Billups brought this suit in federal
    court. His complaint specified four separate counts arising from Cain’s activation of the
    truck horn. Billups later conceded before the district court that three of those counts –
    direct liability claims against the United States for negligent supervision, training, and
    retention of Cain – were foreclosed by a recent decision of the Supreme Court of Virginia.
    That left Billups’s fourth claim, the only one before us today: a claim for vicarious liability,
    asserting that the United States was liable for the injuries caused by its employee’s
    “negligent activation of his Truck horn.” J.A. 8.
    The district court dismissed this claim without prejudice for lack of subject-matter
    jurisdiction. Billups v. United States, 
    433 F. Supp. 3d 916
    , 918 (E.D. Va. 2020). 1 While
    the FTCA waives the United States’ sovereign immunity for some torts committed by
    federal employees, the court explained, it specifically excepts from this waiver certain
    intentional torts, including “[a]ny claim arising out of assault [or] battery.” 
    Id. at 921
    (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2680
    (h)). The court recognized that Billups labeled his claim as one
    1
    The district court also dismissed Billups’s direct liability claims with prejudice, in
    light of his concession that those claims could not go forward. Billups, 433 F. Supp. 3d at
    923 n.1. Billups does not appeal this ruling.
    4
    of negligence, not the intentional tort of battery. See id. at 921. But, the court reasoned, it
    “is the substance of the claim and not the language used in stating it which controls,” id. at
    921–22 (internal quotation marks omitted), and the substance of Billups’s claim was clearly
    battery: Billups alleged only intentional actions, taken to “violate the legally protected
    interest of [Billups] in his person,” bringing the claim into the heartland of battery. Id. at
    923.
    Whether Billups could succeed on his battery claim, the court concluded, was not
    the question before it. See id. at 922. According to Billups, his claim could not be treated
    as one for battery because Virginia law has not expressly recognized battery by soundwave,
    rather than physical touching. Id. But the FTCA’s intentional-tort exception, the court
    explained, does not require a court to examine a plaintiff’s “likelihood of success” under a
    battery theory. Id. The only question is whether the plaintiff’s claim “aris[es] out of”
    battery. Id. at 921 (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2680
    (h)). Because Billups’s claim did just that,
    the district court held, it fell within § 2680(h)’s jurisdictional bar and should be dismissed.
    See id. at 922–23.
    Billups timely appealed.
    II.
    We review de novo a dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Durden v.
    United States, 
    736 F.3d 296
    , 300 (4th Cir. 2013). For the reasons given below, we agree
    with the district court that Billups’s claim “arises out of” battery for purposes of § 2680(h)
    and thus affirm its dismissal of that claim.
    5
    The FTCA provides a limited waiver of the United States’ sovereign immunity that
    allows plaintiffs to sue the United States “for certain torts committed by federal employees
    acting within the scope of their employment.” Brownback v. King, 
    141 S. Ct. 740
    , 746
    (2021) (internal quotation marks omitted); see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1346
    (b)(1) (waiving sovereign
    immunity for tort claims against the United States “under circumstances where the United
    States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of
    the place where the act or omission occurred”). But the statute carves out from this waiver
    “[a]ny claim arising out of” a list of specified torts, most of which are intentional. 
    28 U.S.C. § 2680
    (h). 2 As relevant here, § 2680(h) provides that the United States has not
    waived sovereign immunity for “[a]ny claim arising out of . . . battery.” Id. The question
    before us, then, is whether Billups’s claim “aris[es] out of . . . battery” and thus falls outside
    of the FTCA’s waiver of sovereign immunity. Like the district court, we find that it does.
    First, as the district court recognized, in assessing whether Billups’s claim is barred
    by § 2680(h), we look to the substance of the conduct alleged and not the label that Billups
    has attached to his complaint. See Talbert v. United States, 
    932 F.2d 1064
    , 1066–67 (4th
    Cir. 1991). If the “gravamen” of Billups’s claim is battery, then “artful[ly] pleading” it as
    negligence will not take it outside of § 2680(h)’s ambit. See id. at 1066. The question for
    2
    This provision is sometimes referred to as the “intentional-tort exception” to the
    FTCA. See, e.g., Durden, 736 F.3d at 300. As the Supreme Court has explained, that
    shorthand label is mostly but not entirely accurate: The provision “does not remove from
    the FTCA’s waiver all intentional torts, e.g., conversion and trespass, and it encompasses
    certain torts, e.g., misrepresentation, that may arise out of negligent conduct.” Levin v.
    United States, 
    568 U.S. 503
    , 507 n.1 (2013) (citation omitted).
    6
    us, in other words, is not whether Billups has pled his claim as battery but whether his
    claim in fact and substance sounds in battery, and thus “arises under” battery within the
    meaning of § 2680(h). See Popovic v. United States, 
    175 F.3d 1015
    , 
    1999 WL 228243
    , at
    *3–4 (4th Cir. 1999) (per curiam) (unpublished table decision).
    Second, whatever else may be said of Billups’s claim – and notwithstanding its label
    – it does not sound in negligence.         Negligence “conveys the idea of heedlessness,
    inattention, [and] inadvertence,” Green v. Ingram, 
    608 S.E.2d 917
    , 923 (Va. 2005) (internal
    quotation marks omitted), and “[i]ntentional conduct is not required,” Mayr v. Osborne,
    
    795 S.E.2d 731
    , 736 (Va. 2017); see also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 282 cmt. d
    (1965). 3 But what Billups alleges, as the district court explained, is classically intentional
    conduct: that Cain purposefully modified his horn to increase its volume and then
    purposefully activated the horn remotely when Billups crouched down next to his truck.
    See Billups, 433 F. Supp. 3d at 922–23. The “gravamen” of that allegation, see Talbert,
    
    932 F.2d at 1066
    , is the kind of “volitional conduct” that takes it plainly outside the realm
    of negligence, see Billups, 443 F. Supp. 3d at 922–23; see also Popovic, 
    1999 WL 228243
    ,
    3
    Both parties assume, as did the district court, that we look to the law of the state
    in which a tort occurs – here, Virginia – to determine whether a claim “arises out of” one
    of the torts listed in § 2680(h). In fact, we have held that the scope of the § 2680(h)
    exception is a “matter of federal, not state, law,” and that the torts specified in that provision
    should be construed by turning to “traditional and commonly understood definition[s]” and
    “consulting such appropriate sources” as the Restatement and federal case law. Talbert,
    
    932 F.2d at 1066
     (internal quotation marks omitted). The source of law question makes no
    difference here, however, because Billups’s claim sounds in battery under either approach.
    7
    at *4 (finding that allegations of intentional conduct are inconsistent with effort to
    characterize claim as negligence for purposes of § 2680(h)).
    And finally, Billups claims not just volitional conduct, but volitional conduct that
    was intended to “violate [his] legally protected interest . . . in his person” – and that claim
    sounds directly in battery. Billups, 433 F. Supp. 3d at 923 (citing Mayr, 795 S.E.2d at 736
    (quoting 1 Fowler V. Harper et al., Gray on Torts § 3.2 (3d ed. 2006))). The gist of
    Billups’s complaint is that Cain intentionally exposed him to contact with an abnormally
    loud horn. It may be, as Billups asserts, that Cain had in mind only a practical joke, and
    did not intend to do physical harm. But at a minimum, according to Billups’s own
    allegations, Cain “intended to violate [his] dignitary interest in being free from offensive
    contact.” Id. That is the essence of a battery claim, see Mayr, 795 S.E.2d at 736 (explaining
    dignitary interest protected by battery), which requires only that a tortfeasor “act[]
    intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact” with another person and that a “harmful
    contact . . . results,” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 13. And it remains a battery claim
    even if the offensive contact is caused indirectly or by an intangible substance like a laser
    beam.     See Adams v. Commonwealth, 
    534 S.E.2d 347
    , 351 (Va. Ct. App. 2000)
    (recognizing battery claim for “touching by intangible substances” in form of laser beam);
    see also United States v. Castleman, 
    572 U.S. 157
    , 170 (2014) (explaining that force used
    in battery need not be applied directly and that battery may be committed with “intangible
    substance” such as a laser beam).
    Still, Billups argues, his claim cannot be characterized as one for battery because,
    so framed, it might not succeed in Virginia courts, which have not recognized expressly
    8
    that battery can be committed by soundwaves. Like the district court, we disagree. For
    one thing, Billups may be reading Virginia law too narrowly. See Adams, 
    534 S.E.2d at 351
     (discussing intangible substances “such as light or sound” together and setting out
    standard for battery based on “contact by an intangible substance”). But in any event, as
    the district court recognized, whether a claim “arises out of” a tort listed in § 2680(h) does
    not turn on whether a plaintiff could succeed under that theory. See Billups, 433 F. Supp.
    3d at 922. In Popovic, for instance, the plaintiff argued that his FTCA claim could not
    sound in defamation – another tort listed in § 2680(h) – because he had not alleged the
    necessary element of falsity. 
    1999 WL 228243
    , at *3. But we rejected that argument,
    reasoning that the “arising out of” language in § 2680(h) is construed broadly, and that it
    was enough that the plaintiff’s claims of reputational damage sounded, in their essence, in
    defamation. See id. at *3–4. Here, too, we ask not whether Billups can recover under a
    battery theory, but rather whether the “gravamen” of his claim sounds in battery. Talbert,
    
    932 F.2d at 1066
    . Because it does, Billups’s FTCA claim is barred by § 2680(h), and the
    district court properly dismissed it for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
    III.
    For the reasons given above, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    9