July 15, 2023

James E. Pfander (Northwestern University School of Law) & Rex Alley (J.D. Northwestern '22) have posted Federal Tort Liability after Egbert v. Boule: A Textual Case for Restoring the Officer Suit at Common Law (57 pages) on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

Throughout the nineteenth century and much of the twentieth, remedies for federal government misconduct were predicated on rights to sue conferred by such common law forms as trespass, assumpsit, and ejectment. But Erie, merger, and the rise of statutes pushed those common law forms to the side. In 1946, Congress adopted the Federal Tort Claims Act, imposing vicarious liability on the federal government for many of the torts of its officers and employees. Then, in the 1970s, the Supreme Court recognized federal common law rights to sue officers for certain Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Amendment claims. Individuals seeking redress from the federal government now pursue claims under the Bivens doctrine, the FTCA, or both.

Yet Bivens and the FTCA do not provide assured redress. Thus, in Hernandez v. Mesa (2020), the Court declined to recognize a right to sue under the Bivens doctrine even though all agreed that the FTCA did not apply to injuries the plaintiffs suffered across the border in Mexico. Similar remedial gaps have opened across a wide spectrum of government misconduct: members of the military and other federal agencies cannot recover for sexual assault and harassment on the job and individuals have no effective remedy for torture inflicted at the hands of federal government officials. In Egbert v. Boule (2022), the Court confirmed that the Bivens doctrine, lacking a textual foundation, has no gap-filling growing power.

Channeling the textualism of Egbert, this Article calls for the restoration of common law claims as one important solution to gaps in government accountability. In doing so, we rectify a fundamental error in the way federal courts define the immunity conferred by the FTCA’s Westfall Act. Instead of blocking all common law claims against federal officers that arise from conduct within the “scope of employment,” as the overwhelming weight of authority holds, we show that the FTCA applies more narrowly to claims that implicate the “subject matter” of the FTCA. Reclaiming the “subject matter” limits on the scope of preclusion through a close reading of the statute, we show that the Westfall Act preserves the right of victims to sue individual officers as tortfeasors. The Article concludes by sketching the many ways common law tort litigation can revive the system of government accountability as the sun sets on the Bivens doctrine.

(Via Larry Solum at Legal Theory Blog, who says "Highly recommended.")

Posted at 6:48 AM