Legal Sidebari
The Feres Doctrine: Congress, the Courts, and
Military Servicemember Lawsuits Against the
United States
Updated April 5, 2023
The Supreme Court’s 1950 decision i
n Feres v. United States generally
bars individuals from pursuing
tort lawsuits against the United States for injuries
arising from active-duty military service, establishing
what is known as the
Feres doctrine. The
Feres doctrine’s soundness has been a topic of
sustained debate
among lawmakers, judges, and scholars since its inception. The Supreme Court ha
s on several occasions,
however
, declined requests t
o abrogate or modify the doctrine. This Sidebar analyzes the
Feres doctrine,
recent limitations placed on the doctrine by Congress and the courts, and select considerations for
Congress.
The Federal Tort Claims Act and the Feres Doctrine
Under ordinary circumstances, a plaintiff injured by a defendant’s wrongful conduct may
file a tort
lawsuit to attempt to recover money from that defendant. For instance, if a driver causes a car crash by
negligently operating his vehicle, that driver may owe compensatory damages to other persons injured in
the crash. Conventional tort law principles do not necessarily apply when the person who commits the tort
is a federal officer or employee. The legal principle of sovereign immunity ordinarily
bars private citizens
from suing the United States without its consent, although Congres
s may waive the United States’
sovereign immunity in circumstances it deems appropriate. For instance, Congress enacted t
he Federal
Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which allows private parties to pursue tort lawsuits against the United States
under certain conditions.
Although the FTCA waives the federal government’s immunity from a variety of tort lawsuits, the Act
preserves the United States’ immunity from certain types of lawsuit
s. Section 2680 of the FTCA lists the
types of claims that plaintiffs may not pursue against the federal government, notwithstanding the
FTCA’s general waiver of sovereign immunity. For example, the
“discretionary function exception,”
codified at
Section 2680(a), insulates the United States from liability for injuries resulting from a federal
employee’s policy judgments or choices. Another provisi
on, Section 2680(h), prevents plaintiffs from
suing the United States for certain categories of
intentional torts committed by federal employees.
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Additionally—and of particular relevance here
—Section 2680(j) shields the United States from any tort
claim “arising out of t
he combatant activities of the military or naval forces, or the Coast Guard, during
time of war.” Generally, if a lawsuit falls within any of the FTCA’s exceptions, the plaintiff may neither
recover compensation from the United State
s nor recover from the employee who committed the tort in
question.
In addition to the exceptions explicitly set forth i
n Section 2680, the Supreme Court recognized an
additional implicit exception to the FTCA’s waiver of sovereign immunity in the 1950 case of
Feres v.
United States. In that case, which consolidated a number of lawsuits, several active-duty servicemembers
(or their executors) attempted to assert tort claims against the United States. In one suit, the executor of a
servicemember who died in a fire at a military facility claimed that the United States negligently caused
the servicemember’s death by “quartering him in barracks known or which should have been known to be
unsafe because of a defective heating plant” and by “failing to maintain an adequate fire watch.” A second
plaintiff claimed that an Army surgeon negligently left a 30- by 18-inch towel in his stomach during an
abdominal operation. A third servicemember’s executor alleged that Army surgeons administered
“negligent and unskillful medical treatment” that resulted in the servicemember’s death. The Supreme
Court ultimately dismissed all three claims, announcing “that the Government is not liable” under the
FTCA for injuries to active-duty servicemembers “where the injuries arise out of or are in the course of
activity incident to service.”
The Supreme Court based its ruling on inferences from legislative purpose, reasoning that if Congress
intended to waive sovereign immunity for injuries sustained in the course of military service through the
FTCA, it would have said so expressly. The Supreme Court articulated several justifications for the
Feres doctrine. For example, requiring federal courts to adjudicate “suits brought by service members against
the Government for injuries incurred incident to service” would, in the Court’s view, undesirably embroil
“the judiciary in sensitive military affairs at the expense o
f military discipline and effectiveness.” The
Supreme Court also supported the
Feres doctrine with the fact that the government already implements a
uniform system for compensating and providing services to servicemembers harmed in the course of their
duties
. In the Court’s view, Congress would have adjusted these benefits if it intended the FTCA to
“permit recovery for injuries incident to military service.”
The Supreme Court’s holding in
Feres ordinarily
bars military personnel from asserting tort claims
against the United States so long as those claims arise out of active-duty military service. Notably, the
Feres doctrine is significantly more expansive t
han Section 2680(j)—which, as noted above, shields the
federal government from liability “arising out of the
combatant activities of the military or naval forces,
or the Coast Guard,
during time of war.” As compared t
o Section 2680(j), Feres “applies broadly” to
shield the United States from virtually
“all injuries suffered by military personnel that are even remotely
related to the individual’s status as a member of the military.” For instance, courts have generally
concluded that
Feres bars active-duty servicemembers from suing the government for injuries resulting
from
allegedly negligent medical care rendered at military medical facilities, even though such injuries do
not arise out of wartime combatant activities.
Limitations on the Feres Doctrine
The Supreme Court
has stated that Congress may abrogate or modify
Feres by amending the FTCA if it
so chooses. Congress has not yet opted to do so. Both Congress and lower courts have nonetheless limited
the
Feres doctrine to some extent. Congress, for its part, did so in 2022 through th
e Camp Lejeune Justice
Act. Any individual, including a veteran, who was exposed for 30 days or more between August 1, 1953,
and December 31, 1987, to water at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina can sue the
United States “to obtain appropriate relief for harm that was caused by exposure to the water.” The
claimant must first raise their claim before the appropriate federal agency before filing it in federal court.
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Before the court, the claimant must sufficiently prove a causal relationship between exposure to the water
and the harm suffered. Relief awarded under this law is offset by any support an individual receives from
programs administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Medicare, Medicaid, or any other benefit
provided for health care or a disability relating to exposure to water at Camp Lejeune. No punitive
damages are allowed. The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina has exclusive
jurisdiction over these cases. Claims under this law cannot be commenced after the later of the following:
(1) “the date that is two years after the date of enactment of this Act” (it was enacted on August 10, 2022);
or (2) “the date that is 180 days after the date on which the claim is denied” by the appropriate federal
agency “under
[28 U.S.C. 2675].”
Also in 2022, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (Ninth Circuit) ruled i
n Spletstoser v. Hyten
that the
Feres doctrine did not bar a former servicemember from suing the United States and a former
officer for damages resulting from an alleged sexual assault that took place while the servicemember was
on active duty. The Ninth Circuit
stated that “we ‘cannot fathom’ how the alleged sexual assault in this
case could ever be considered an activity ‘incident to [military] service.’”
Considerations for Congress
Commentators have long debated Feres’s desirability and defensibility. Apart from the policy questions of
whether active-duty servicemembers should enjoy the right to sue the United States under the FTCA,
Feres also implicates several significant legal questions. For one,
Feres reflects a broader judicial debate
over
how judges should interpret statutes: should courts attempt to divine Congress’
s purpose in enacting
statutes or should courts restrict themselves to interpreting the statutory
text that Congress enacted? The
Court’s opinion in
Feres exemplifies t
he purposivist approach: even though the FTCA contai
ns no
explicit text barring suits by active-duty servicemembers, the Court inferred that Congress would not have
wanted to subject the United States to potentially wide-ranging liability for torts arising from military
activities “in the absence of [an] express congressional command.”
By contrast, Justice Antonin Scalia’
s dissent in
United States v. Johnson—a case in which a Supreme
Court majority reaffirmed
Feres—illustrates the competing (
and increasingly influential) textualist
approach to statutory interpretation. In Justice Scalia’s view, the
Feres Court should not have recognized
an exception barring servicemembers from bringing FTCA suits because Congress did not expressly enact
one. According to Justice Scalia, the
Feres Court had “no justification . . . to read exemptions into the
[FTCA] beyond those provided by Congress. If the [FTCA] is to be altered, that is a function for the same
body that adopted it.” Pointing t
o Section 2680(j)’s combatant activities exception described above,
Justice Scalia reasoned “that Congress specifically considered, and provided what it thought needful for,
the special requirements of the military,” such that “[t]here was no proper basis for” the
Feres Court “to
supplement—i.e., revise—that congressional disposition.”
Separate from the question of whether the
Feres decision is sound as a matter of statutory interpretation is
the question of whether, and under what circumstances, the Supreme Court could overrule it. The Court
generally follows the rule of
stare decisis—that is, the Supreme Court will typically follow its prior
precedents unless strong grounds to overturn them exist. The Court has repeatedly stated that
“considerations of
stare decisis hav
e added force” in cases interpreting federal statutes because, if the
Court’s interpretation is incorrect, Congress may override the Court’s decision “by amending the statute.”
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Perhaps for that reason, the Court has
repeatedly declined to reconsider the Feres Court’s interpretation of
the FTCA. Recently, the Court
declined to grant certiorari in the case of
Daniel v. United States, in which
the plaintiff alleged that his wife—a Navy Lieutenant on active-duty status—died during childbirth as a
result of negligent medical care rendered at a Navy hospital. The plaintiff attempted to pursue medical
malpractice and wrongful death claims against the United States under the FTCA. The Ninth Circuit
concluded that the
Feres doctrine barred the plaintiff’s tort claims because they arose out of his wife’s
military service. The court stated it reached this decision
“regretfully,” opining that “[i]f ever there were a
case to carve out an exception to the
Feres doctrine, this is it. But only the Supreme Court has the tools to
do so.” The plaintiff asked the Supreme Court t
o overrule Feres “for medical malpractice claims brought
under the [FTCA],” at least with respect to cases that do “not involve any military exigencies, decisions,
or considerations, and where the service member was not engaged in military duty or a military mission at
the time of injury or death.” The Supreme Court
denied the plaintiff’s petition on May 20, 2019, without
comment
. Justice Clarence Thomas, relying on Justice Scalia’
s dissent in Johnson, dissented from the
denial of certiorari, stating that “
Feres was wrongly decided and heartily deserves the widespread, almost
universal criticism it has received.
” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg also voted in favor of granting certiorari,
but did not join Justice Thomas’s dissent or otherwise explain the reasoning for her vote.
The Supreme Court’s determinations signal that legislative action may be the most likely avenue for
potentially addressing individuals’ ability to pursue tort lawsuits against the United States for injuries
sustained incident to active-duty military service. To that end, legislation amending the FTCA to allow
active-duty servicemembers to bring certain lawsuits that
Feres might otherwise prohibit has been
introduced in the past. For instance, subject to certain conditions and limitations, t
he SFC Richard
Stayskal Military Medical Accountability Act of 2019 (H.R. 2422) would have authorized “member[s] of
the Armed Forces of the United States” to pursue claims “against the United States . . . for damages . . .
arising out of a negligent or wrongful act or omission in the performance of medical, dental, or related
health care functions” rendered at specified types of military medical treatment facilities. (This Act, in its
enacted form, ultimately established
a regulatory regime by which servicemembers can seek
compensation from the Department of Defense for injuries suffered while on active duty that resulted
from medical malpractice by military medical providers.) However, legislation proposing to narrow the
scope of the
Feres doctrine may implicate vari
ous public policy considerations discussed i
n other CRS
products.
In addition to modifying the FTCA, Congress also has t
he authority to enact private legislation to
compensate individuals who are barred from obtaining relief from the United States under the FTCA. As
som
e commentators have noted, “Congress has often provided compensation in situations where the
courts have found that the FTCA waiver of immunity provides no relief.”
(Former Legislative Attorney Kevin M. Lewis was the original author of this Legal Sidebar. Future
inquiries from congressional clients on this issue may be submitted to Andreas Kuersten, the author of
this updated version.)
Author Information
Andreas Kuersten
Legislative Attorney
Congressional Research Service
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