Donald Cantrell Dorla Cantrell, His Wife v. United States of America, Department of the Army Corps of Engineers

89 F.3d 268, 1996 A.M.C. 2684, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16387, 1996 WL 382285
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1996
Docket95-5895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 F.3d 268 (Donald Cantrell Dorla Cantrell, His Wife v. United States of America, Department of the Army Corps of Engineers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Cantrell Dorla Cantrell, His Wife v. United States of America, Department of the Army Corps of Engineers, 89 F.3d 268, 1996 A.M.C. 2684, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16387, 1996 WL 382285 (6th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Citing an immunity clause in the Flood Control Act of 1938, the district court granted the United States summary judgment on Donald Cantrell’s suit against it for injuries sustained in the crash of an Army Corps of Engineers boat. We reverse, holding that the Flood Control Act does not protect the government from a claim of negligence, even one arising from an accident on a lake used as a flood control reservoir, unless an act constituting part or all of the alleged breach of the duty of care was an act undertaken to control flooding.

I

The United States Army Corp of Engineers (the Corps) uses Fishtrap Lake in Pike County, Kentucky, as a flood control reservoir. Each September, the Corps lowers the water level of the lake by about thirty-two feet so that the lake will be able to store runoff from winter storms. The process of winter “drawdown” causes considerable changes in the size, depth, and navigability of the lake. The surface area decreases by twenty percent (1131 acres to 906 acres), the shoreline changes, and features of the lake-bed hidden in the depths during the summer emerge or lurk just below the surface. The pace of the drawdown is slow; the lake’s level falls by about four inches per day over a three-month period.

Donald Cantrell went fishing on the lake on October 25, 1992. His boat malfunctioned, and Cantrell ended up stranded on an *270 isolated shore. When Cantrell did not return by nightfall, members of the Corps went searching for him. They found him walking along the shoreline, picked him up, and proceeded to make their way back to the marina. It was dark, there was no moon, vapor had condensed on the windows of the boat, and the usual channels across the lake were narrowed by the winter drawdown. (The water table at the time of the accident was thirteen feet below the summer table.) The boat struck part of the newly-exposed shoreline and sank. Cantrell was trapped in the cabin of the boat and sustained serious injuries.

After unsuccessfully seeking administrative remedies, Cantrell sued the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2671. The United States raised several defenses in its answer. After brief discovery, the United States filed a “Motion for Summary Judgement or in the Alternative, Motion to Dismiss” on February 13, 1995. The motion claimed that Cantrell’s action was barred by the immunity clause of the Flood Control Act of 1938, 33 U.S.C. § 702c (“No liability of any kind shall attach to or rest upon the United States for any damage from or by floods or flood waters at any place.”). Cantrell responded by arguing that his injuries were caused by the negligence of the driver of the government’s boat, not by the government’s flood control activities, and therefore were actionable under the general principles of the Federal Tort Claims Act.

The district court granted the government’s motion. It held that the Act prohibited recovery because the part of the shore that the boat hit would have been safely submerged in the summer. That fact, which Cantrell conceded, meant that the winter drawdown was a “but for” cause of the accident, and that Cantrell could not recover. Memorandum Opinion and Order, March 21, 1995, at 43-44. Cantrell moved for reconsideration, arguing that the Corps’s negligent driving had nothing to do with flood control activities, and that any role that the lake level played in his accident was unimportant, in light of the “intervening negligence” of the boat’s driver. The court denied the motion for reconsideration, Order, May 3, 1995, and Cantrell filed a timely notice of appeal.

II

The Flood Control Act of 1938, 33 U.S.C. § 702c, provides that “[n]o liability of any kind shall attach to or rest upon the United States for any damage from or by floods or flood waters at any place.” The Supreme Court in United States v. James, 478 U.S. 597, 610, 106 S.Ct. 3116, 3123-24, 92 L.Ed.2d 483 (1986), interpreted the immunity provision of the Act to cover personal injury claims by people using “flood waters” (or bodies of water used for flood control purposes) for recreation. Ibid. In James, swimmers and boaters were caught in currents caused by release of water from reservoirs. The plaintiffs sued on the theory that the government was negligent in draining the lakes, and negligent in failing to warn recreational users of the dangerous, hidden currents caused by flood control activities. The Court held that these acts of negligence, including the negligent failure to warn, were “part of the ‘management’ of a flood control project,” James, 478 U.S. at 609-10, 106 S.Ct. at 3123-24, and could themselves not be a basis for tort liability. Ibid.

The court below cited James, 478 U.S. at 605 n. 7, 106 S.Ct. at 3121 n. 7, for the proposition that a “but for” nexus between flood control activity and a plaintiffs injury is sufficient to render the government immune. The court then found:

The object which the COE [Corps] boat struck ... would not have been exposed “but for” the release of water from Fish-trap Lake as a part of its annual winter drawdown.

Memorandum Opinion and Order, March 21, 1995, at 2. However, James does not mention a “but for” test. The footnote in James that the district court cites describes two appellate court cases, Morici Corp. v. United States, 681 F.2d 645, 647-48 (9th Cir.1982), and Hayes v. United States, 585 F.2d 701, 702-03 (4th Cir.1978). These cases merely hold that immunity applies when injuries “result from” or are “related to” flood control activity — they do not define the requisite causal relationship in precise terms.

*271 Since James, many appellate courts have addressed the relationship between flood control activity and a plaintiffs injury that is necessary to allow the government to invoke the immunity provision of the Act. The Ninth Circuit has taken the simplest approach. In McCarthy v. United States, 850 F.2d 558 (1987), the Ninth Circuit held that a court has subject matter jurisdiction over a tort claim against the government only if a plaintiffs injuries are “wholly unrelated” to flood control activities. If the accident had anything to do with a flood control lake, or the management of a flood control lake, then the plaintiffs cannot sue. If faced with orn-ease, the Ninth Circuit probably would note that Fishtrap Lake is used for flood control and affirm the dismissal without further inquiry. See McCarthy, 850 F.2d at 562 (1988), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1052, 109 S.Ct.

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89 F.3d 268, 1996 A.M.C. 2684, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16387, 1996 WL 382285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-cantrell-dorla-cantrell-his-wife-v-united-states-of-america-ca6-1996.