Robert Garcia v. United States
This text of 22 F.3d 609 (Robert Garcia v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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An injured motorist appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his tort claim for failing to exhaust administrative remedies. The motorist was injured by an intoxicated federal employee. The United States Attorney certified, under the Westfall Act,1 that the employee acted within the scope of his employment at the time he injured the plaintiff. We conclude that we are bound by an unpublished decision of this Court2 to hold that the federal courts may not review a certification issued under the Westfall Act that a federal employee was acting within his scope of employment at the time he injured the plaintiff. Accordingly, we AFFIRM.
I.
An employee of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) who lived in Dallas was sent to Austin to investigate a possible criminal violation of environmental laws. At 10:00 p.m. on March 7, 1991, the EPA agent concluded his investigative activities for the day. He then drove to an Austin restaurant where he consumed several alcoholic beverages— but no food. He began to feel ill and left the restaurant. He drove to a nearby pharmacy and got sick in the parking lot, then drove away without ever having entered the pharmacy. Shortly thereafter, the EPA agent’s ear collided with a car driven by plaintiff/appellant Robert Garcia. Garcia was injured. A “breathalyzer” test performed at the scene of the accident revealed that the EPA agent’s blood-alcohol level was 0.20, or fully twice the legal limit in Texas.
Garcia sued the EPA agent in Texas state court and also filed an administrative tort claim with the EPA. The U.S. Attorney certified that, at the time of the accident, the EPA agent was acting within the scope of his federal employment. Pursuant to the West-fall Act’s amendments to the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), therefore, the case was removed to federal court and the United [611]*611States was substituted for the federal employee as a party defendant.3
Once in federal court, the United States filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that Garcia had not exhausted his administrative remedies. Garcia countered with a motion to remand the case to state court' on the grounds that the federal employee had not been acting within the scope of his employment and therefore was not entitled to the protection of the FTCA. The district court granted the United States’s motion to dismiss and denied Garcia’s motion to remand.4 Garcia appealed to this Court.
II.
In Mitchell v. Carlson,
Fenelon next contends that the individual defendants were not acting in the scope of their employment at the time of the eon-duct of which she complains. That objection is defeated by the Attorney General’s certification that they were. As we explained in Carlson v. Mitchell [sic], one purpose of the 1988 amendment to the FTCA was “to give the new certification procedure conclusive effect on the issue of whether the employee acted within the scope of employment”.8
Both parties to this case argued that Mitchell v. Carlson did not foreclose judicial review of the scope of employment certification in this case. They noted, for example, that scope of employment was not a disputed issue in Mitchell, and thus any intimation in that ease concerning limits on the federal courts’ power vel non to review a scope certification was obiter dicta. They also pointed out that eight of the nine circuits to squarely consider this question have held that Westfall Act scope of employment certifications are subject to judicial review.9 Nevertheless, in this Circuit all opinions, even unpublished ones, bind subsequent panels absent a contrary decision of the Supreme Court or of this Court en banc.
AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
22 F.3d 609, 1994 WL 202541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-garcia-v-united-states-ca5-1994.