SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge.
This appeal presents a question that has never been decided by a federal court of appeals: whether a cause of action exists for wrongful birth. We hold that it does and affirm the judgment of the district court, which awarded damages to the parents of a child born with defects after a doctor had failed to inform the pregnant mother she had rubella. We reverse the judgment of the district court, however, on two issues raised by the parents in a cross-appeal: the calculation of damages and the method of award of attorneys’ fees.
I
In May, 1972, plaintiffs Anna and Robert Robak visited the OB-GYN clinic at Fort Rucker, Alabama, where Mr. Robak, an enlisted man in the United States Army, was stationed. Mrs. Robak, who was then approximately one month pregnant, had developed a rash and a fever. She was examined by Dr. Joshua Roth, who performed a pregnancy test and a blood test for rubella (german measles). Dr. Roth informed Mrs. Robak that she was pregnant and that the test for rubella was negative. Mrs. Robak took a second test for rubella a few days later at the clinic, and this test returned positive. She returned to the clinic regularly for routine examinations during her pregnancy. Neither Dr. Roth nor anyone else at the hospital, however, ever informed Mrs. Robak that she had contracted rubella.
She was also never advised of the serious consequences that the rubella virus could have upon her unborn fetus.
Mrs. Robak gave birth to a daughter, Jennifer, on January 12, 1973. At the time of her birth, Jennifer had a rash all over her body. She was also suffering from a loss of hearing, bilateral cataracts, a slight heart defect and possible mental retardation — all common symptoms of a rubella syndrome child. Since then, Jennifer Robak has undergone two operations to remove cataracts. She has undertaken occupational and physical therapy and special training and education for the deaf-blind. She is industrially blind and has a severe to profound hearing loss; she cannot speak intelligibly. Glasses, contact lenses and hearing aids have been of only limited use. She will need deaf-blind care and supervision for the remainder of her life, as well as further operations.
On September 26, 1977, the Robaks brought this medical malpractice action, which was based on the clinic’s negligence in failing to diagnose the rubella and to inform the parents'of its possible consequences to the fetus. The Robaks sued the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2671
et seq.
In Counts I and III of the complaint, each of the parents respectively sought recovery of expenses for the care, education and maintenance of their child, Jennifer. Count II was brought on behalf of Jennifer by her father and next friend. This count was dismissed by the district court as not stating a cause of action and is not at issue in the case before us. The district court denied the government’s motion to dismiss, or alternatively for summary judgment on, the other counts.
The defendant moved for certification of certain questions of law to ■ the Alabama Supreme Court. The district court granted the motion, but certified instead the question as it was formulated by the plaintiffs.
The question and record were filed with the Alabama court on July 5,1979. On August 15, 1979, the Supreme Court of Alabama unanimously declined to answer the question certified. The district court then certified the question to this court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), on September 28, 1979. This court denied leave to appeal on October 24, 1979. The district court later denied further motions by the United States for
judgment on the pleadings or for summary judgment.
The action was tried from October 7 to October 14, 1980. At the conclusion of the trial, the court ruled orally in favor of the Robaks on the issue of liability but reserved decision on the amount of damages. On November 13, 1980, the court awarded $900,000 in damages to the Robaks — $450,-000 to each plaintiff. The court issued a further order on December 9, 1980, that awarded plaintiffs’ attorneys 25% of the money that is withdrawn from a reversionary trust established by agreement of the parties. The Robaks will withdraw funds from the trust as money is to be actually expended on Jennifer, and the attorneys shall be paid proportionately with each withdrawal up to a maximum of $225,000. The United States appeals from the order awarding damages to the Robaks. The Robaks also appeal from this order and from the one determining the amount and method of payment of attorneys’ fees.
II
The principal issue in the case is whether a cause of action exists for wrongful birth.
Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, we must apply the law as it existed at the time and place of the tort.
The United States contends that no such cause of action could have existed in Alabama in 1972 because of the strong public policy of that state at the time against abortions. This argument represents a fundamental mischaracterization of the meaning of
Roe v. Wade,
410 U.S. 113, 93 S.Ct. 705, 35 L.Ed.2d 694 (1973), and of the nature of the action for wrongful birth.
Alabama has never addressed the issue of an action for wrongful birth. The United States points to two facets of Alabama law that, it contends, indicate that Alabama would have rejected such a cause of action in 1972. We find neither of them to be persuasive. In 1978, the Supreme Court of Alabama held that an action for wrongful life brought by a child did not exist.
Elliott v. Brown,
Ala., 361 So.2d 546 (1978). That case relied in large part on a case decided prior to
Roe
v.
Wade, Gleitman v. Cosgrove,
49 N.J. 22, 227 A.2d 689 (1967), which had held that public policy considerations precluded recognition of an action either for wrongful birth or for wrongful life. Shortly after the
Elliott
decision, however, the New Jersey Supreme Court rejected the reasoning of its
Gleitman
decision.
Berman v. Allen,
80 N.J. 421, 404 A.2d 8 (1979). In recognizing a cause of action for wrongful birth when the doctor failed to warn the plaintiff mother of the high risk of her bearing a mongoloid child, the court wrote, “Public policy now supports, rather than militates against, the proposition that [the mother] not be impermissibly denied a meaningful opportunity to make [the] decision” whether to have an abortion. 404 A.2d at 14. Moreover, as we have noted,
supra,
n.2, the considerations in an action for wrongful life, such as
Elliott,
are quite different from those in an action like this one for wrongful birth.
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SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge.
This appeal presents a question that has never been decided by a federal court of appeals: whether a cause of action exists for wrongful birth. We hold that it does and affirm the judgment of the district court, which awarded damages to the parents of a child born with defects after a doctor had failed to inform the pregnant mother she had rubella. We reverse the judgment of the district court, however, on two issues raised by the parents in a cross-appeal: the calculation of damages and the method of award of attorneys’ fees.
I
In May, 1972, plaintiffs Anna and Robert Robak visited the OB-GYN clinic at Fort Rucker, Alabama, where Mr. Robak, an enlisted man in the United States Army, was stationed. Mrs. Robak, who was then approximately one month pregnant, had developed a rash and a fever. She was examined by Dr. Joshua Roth, who performed a pregnancy test and a blood test for rubella (german measles). Dr. Roth informed Mrs. Robak that she was pregnant and that the test for rubella was negative. Mrs. Robak took a second test for rubella a few days later at the clinic, and this test returned positive. She returned to the clinic regularly for routine examinations during her pregnancy. Neither Dr. Roth nor anyone else at the hospital, however, ever informed Mrs. Robak that she had contracted rubella.
She was also never advised of the serious consequences that the rubella virus could have upon her unborn fetus.
Mrs. Robak gave birth to a daughter, Jennifer, on January 12, 1973. At the time of her birth, Jennifer had a rash all over her body. She was also suffering from a loss of hearing, bilateral cataracts, a slight heart defect and possible mental retardation — all common symptoms of a rubella syndrome child. Since then, Jennifer Robak has undergone two operations to remove cataracts. She has undertaken occupational and physical therapy and special training and education for the deaf-blind. She is industrially blind and has a severe to profound hearing loss; she cannot speak intelligibly. Glasses, contact lenses and hearing aids have been of only limited use. She will need deaf-blind care and supervision for the remainder of her life, as well as further operations.
On September 26, 1977, the Robaks brought this medical malpractice action, which was based on the clinic’s negligence in failing to diagnose the rubella and to inform the parents'of its possible consequences to the fetus. The Robaks sued the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2671
et seq.
In Counts I and III of the complaint, each of the parents respectively sought recovery of expenses for the care, education and maintenance of their child, Jennifer. Count II was brought on behalf of Jennifer by her father and next friend. This count was dismissed by the district court as not stating a cause of action and is not at issue in the case before us. The district court denied the government’s motion to dismiss, or alternatively for summary judgment on, the other counts.
The defendant moved for certification of certain questions of law to ■ the Alabama Supreme Court. The district court granted the motion, but certified instead the question as it was formulated by the plaintiffs.
The question and record were filed with the Alabama court on July 5,1979. On August 15, 1979, the Supreme Court of Alabama unanimously declined to answer the question certified. The district court then certified the question to this court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), on September 28, 1979. This court denied leave to appeal on October 24, 1979. The district court later denied further motions by the United States for
judgment on the pleadings or for summary judgment.
The action was tried from October 7 to October 14, 1980. At the conclusion of the trial, the court ruled orally in favor of the Robaks on the issue of liability but reserved decision on the amount of damages. On November 13, 1980, the court awarded $900,000 in damages to the Robaks — $450,-000 to each plaintiff. The court issued a further order on December 9, 1980, that awarded plaintiffs’ attorneys 25% of the money that is withdrawn from a reversionary trust established by agreement of the parties. The Robaks will withdraw funds from the trust as money is to be actually expended on Jennifer, and the attorneys shall be paid proportionately with each withdrawal up to a maximum of $225,000. The United States appeals from the order awarding damages to the Robaks. The Robaks also appeal from this order and from the one determining the amount and method of payment of attorneys’ fees.
II
The principal issue in the case is whether a cause of action exists for wrongful birth.
Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, we must apply the law as it existed at the time and place of the tort.
The United States contends that no such cause of action could have existed in Alabama in 1972 because of the strong public policy of that state at the time against abortions. This argument represents a fundamental mischaracterization of the meaning of
Roe v. Wade,
410 U.S. 113, 93 S.Ct. 705, 35 L.Ed.2d 694 (1973), and of the nature of the action for wrongful birth.
Alabama has never addressed the issue of an action for wrongful birth. The United States points to two facets of Alabama law that, it contends, indicate that Alabama would have rejected such a cause of action in 1972. We find neither of them to be persuasive. In 1978, the Supreme Court of Alabama held that an action for wrongful life brought by a child did not exist.
Elliott v. Brown,
Ala., 361 So.2d 546 (1978). That case relied in large part on a case decided prior to
Roe
v.
Wade, Gleitman v. Cosgrove,
49 N.J. 22, 227 A.2d 689 (1967), which had held that public policy considerations precluded recognition of an action either for wrongful birth or for wrongful life. Shortly after the
Elliott
decision, however, the New Jersey Supreme Court rejected the reasoning of its
Gleitman
decision.
Berman v. Allen,
80 N.J. 421, 404 A.2d 8 (1979). In recognizing a cause of action for wrongful birth when the doctor failed to warn the plaintiff mother of the high risk of her bearing a mongoloid child, the court wrote, “Public policy now supports, rather than militates against, the proposition that [the mother] not be impermissibly denied a meaningful opportunity to make [the] decision” whether to have an abortion. 404 A.2d at 14. Moreover, as we have noted,
supra,
n.2, the considerations in an action for wrongful life, such as
Elliott,
are quite different from those in an action like this one for wrongful birth.
The United States also emphasizes that in 1972 Alabama law forbade abortions, except as was necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother.
Ala.Code, Title 14, § 9 (1972). This statute, argues the Government, demonstrates that an Alabama court would not have recognized an action for wrongful birth in 1972, since it would have been based on the denial of the right to obtain an abortion that was illegal in Alabama.
That statement may be correct, but it is irrelevant to our decision here. Unlike a court sitting in Alabama in 1972, we may benefit from the knowledge of developments in the law in the last decade.
Roe v. Wade
held that statutes such as Alabama’s were unconstitutional. In applying the law as it existed at the time of the occurrence of a tort, a court would not follow a law that has since been declared unconstitutional. An Alabama court deciding the issue now would obviously recognize, therefore, that the statute as it was then has no continuing effect.
In the absence of any direct precedent from the state involved, a federal court applying state law should consider decisions of its sister states on the same issue. Since
Roe v. Wade,
these precedents have been unanimous in recognizing a cause of action for the parents of a child born as a result of a physician’s negligence.
Many of these cases established liability for a physician’s failure to inform parents of a significant risk that the fetus would be born with defects.
Two state courts have specifically so held in cases involving rubella syndrome children. In both, the pregnancy occurred, as in this case, before
Roe v. Wade.
In
Jacobs v. Theimer,
Tex., 519 S.W.2d 846 (1975), the court noted that even though abortions were illegal in Texas at the time,
The complaint is
not
that the defendant doctor failed to perform an abortion or tell Mrs. Jacobs that she should obtain an abortion elsewhere ... but the plaintiffs contend only that the defendant should have given them information as to Mrs. Jacobs condition and then, with the information she had a right to expect from her doctor, the decision would have been made by the plaintiffs themselves to terminate the pregnancy.
519 S.W.2d at 848 (emphasis in original). In
Dumer v. St. Michael’s Hospital,
69 Wis.2d 766, 233 N.W.2d 372 (1975), the court also recognized that the choice of whether to obtain an abortion was one for the parents to make. It held they had a cause of action for expenses reasonably suffered as a result of the doctor’s failure to diagnose the mother’s rubella and to inform her of the consequences.
State courts have been quick to accept wrongful birth as a cause of action since Roe
v. Wade,
because it is not a significant departure from previous tort law. A case like this one is little different from an ordinary medical malpractice action. It involves a failure by a physician to meet a required standard of care, which resulted in specific damages to the plaintiffs.
The government tries to separate this case from those of ordinary medical malpractice by raising political and moral questions concerning abortions, but the Supreme Court has already settled that issue.
In
Roe
v.
Wade,
the Court held that it was the mother’s constitutional right to decide during the first trimester of pregnancy whether to obtain an abortion. The staff at the OB-GYN clinic at Fort Rucker deprived Mrs. Robak of the opportunity to make an informed decision when they failed to tell her of her rubella and of the potential consequences on her fetus. Because of this negligence, the Robaks are faced with large expenses for Jennifer’s care and special treatment. As in any other tort case, the defendant must bear the burden for injuries resulting from its own negligence. “Any other ruling would in effect immunize from liability those in the medical field providing inadequate guidance to persons who would choose to exercise their constitutional right to abort fetuses, which, if born, would suffer from genetic [or other] defects.”
Berman v. Allen, supra,
404 A.2d at 14. The district court was therefore correct in holding that the Robaks’ complaint stated a valid cause of action in wrongful birth.
Ill
The United States contends that even if a valid cause of action exists, there is no proximate cause in this case between the military clinic staff’s negligence and the injuries suffered by the Robaks. It bases this argument on two separate reasons, neither of which is compelling.
First, it asserts that Mrs. Robak could not have obtained a legal abortion in Alabama in May, 1972. The fallacy of this argument is obvious. Mrs. Robak could have travelled to any of the states that then permitted abortions, including New York, Maryland, Kansas or New Mexico.
It is quite common for persons to travel to other jurisdictions in order to avoid restrictive laws in their home state or to take advantage of more lenient laws in another state, and it is perfectly lawful for one to advise another
to do so.
People travel to Nevada to gamble or to gain a quick marriage or divorce; they travel across state lines in order to purchase liquor cheaper or at a younger age. Corporations incorporate in Delaware. Mrs. Robak testified that she would have sought an abortion if she had known she had rubella. Even her treating physician, Dr. Roth, who testified he was never informed of the results of the second test, declared under oath that if he had known of the results, he would have recommended that she terminate the pregnancy. Therefore, it can clearly be said that but for defendant’s negligent failure to inform Mrs. Robak of her rubella and its consequences, she would have obtained an abortion and the Robaks would not have suffered the damages for which they seek recovery.
The Government also argues no proximate cause exists because irrevocable injury to the fetus had already occurred before the negligent acts were committed. Once Mrs. Robak was infected by the rubella virus, the harm to Jennifer Robak had already been done. This contention misstates the nature of the test for proximate cause. A negligent act need not be the sole cause of the injury complained of in order to be a proximate cause of that injury. Moreover, the cause of action is not based on the injuries to the fetus but on defendant’s failure to diagnose Mrs. Robak’s rubella and inform her of the consequences.
Alabama uses the “but-for” test for proximate cause.
See, e. g., Wolfe v. Isbell,
291 Ala. 327, 280 So.2d 758, 761 (1973). If the clinic staff had not breached its duty to Mrs. Robak, she would have had a legal abortion that would have saved the Robaks from the damages they have incurred.
Defendant’s negligence was therefore a proximate cause of their injuries.
IV
The parties disagree about the proper standard of care that was to be applied in this case. The Robaks contend that the district court properly applied as the standard that which is practiced in military hospitals by military physicians. The Government argues that Alabama’s “same general neighborhood” rule applied. This dispute is a trivial one, however, for the Robaks proved the clinic staff breached its duty under either standard. They presented the expert testimony of Dr. Martin Kass, who in addition to his general qualifications in the field of obstetrics and gynecology, practiced in that field while on active military duty from 1969 to 1971. He testified that the failure to diagnose the rubella and inform Mrs. Robak of its consequences violated the standard of military care as he knew it at the time. The Government did not present any contradictory evidence concerning the standard of care.
Even if the Government is correct that the Alabama rule applies, the testimony of Dr. Kass still suffices. The Alabama Supreme Court has interpreted the statutory “same general neighborhood” rule
“to refer to the
national
medical neighborhood or
national community, of reasonably competent physicians
acting in the same or similar
circumstances.”
Zills v. Brown,
Ala., 382 So.2d 528, 532 (1980).
Dr. Kass did not therefore need to know the standard that was practiced in Alabama in 1972, as the Government contends. He functioned as an obstetrics-gynecology specialist in similar circumstances, a military hospital, during the same period as those physicians and staff who took care of Mrs. Robak. His testimony was thus equally competent to establish the standard of care under the Alabama rule.
V
The parties raise several issues regarding damages in this case. The United States contends that the damage award was too high, and the Robaks argue on cross-appeal that it was too low. The Robaks also cross-appeal the district court’s order concerning the amount and manner of payment of attorneys’ fees.
A
The Government’s argument borders on the frivolous. It contends that the award of $450,000 to each parent is duplicative, since their claims were identical. This assertion ignores the plain text of the district court’s memorandum order of November 13, 1980. The court found that the Robaks had proved $900,000 in damages to compensate them for their past and future expenses for their care of Jennifer. The court simply divided the recovery between the parents — $450,000 to each — “since both parents are equally and separately liable under the law for Jennifer’s maintenance during her minority and impaired adulthood.”
Because of the joint and severable liability of the parents,
it is perfectly proper for them to file separate claims to protect themselves against possible unforeseen development, so long as the total recovery does not exceed their combined expenses.
In this case, the Robaks have shown damages of at least $900,000. These costs included past expenses of nearly $30,000; the cost of residential education and care to age 21, discounted to present value ($229,800); the cost of a qualified companion, skilled in sign language and experienced in dealing with emotionally disturbed persons, for the remainder of Jennifer’s adult life, or comparable institutional care ($515,000); and the cost of maintaining her for her adult life, since she will never be self-supporting ($200,000). The separate award of half that sum to each parent could in no way constitute duplicate recovery.
B
The district court awarded these damages for the special costs the Robaks will incur in maintaining their rubella syndrome child. It reduced these damages by an unspecified amount for what the court considered to be the cost of raising and supporting a normal child.
In a cross-appeal, the Robaks contend that the court erred in reducing the award by that amount. We agree.
As discussed above, this case is governed by ordinary tort principles. It is a fundamental tenet of tort law that a negligent tortfeasor is liable for
all
damages that are the proximate result of his negligence. Alabama has followed this rule in other medical malpractice actions.
Some
decisions have deducted the costs of a normal child in determining damages in wrongful birth actions,
but the majority of state courts have allowed recovery of these costs.
The approach of the district court in this case — and of the states that have denied recovery of these costs — is, however, inconsistent with these principles. As noted,
supra,
part III, this action for wrongful birth is not based upon the injuries to the child. If it were, then no recovery at all would be possible, for those injuries occurred as soon as Mrs. Robak contracted rubella, before the negligent acts of the Fort Rucker clinic staff. The action is based rather on the negligent failure by the staff to diagnose the rubella and inform Mrs. Robak of it. If they had not breached their duty, Mrs. Robak would have obtained an abortion. Jennifer’s birth, and all expenses resulting therefrom, were thus the proximate result of defendant’s negligence. As the court noted in
Speck v. Finegold,
268 Pa.Super. 342, 408 A.2d 496, 508, “[B]ut for the defendants’ breach of duty to properly treat and advise the plaintiff-parents, they would not have been required to undergo the expenditures alleged.”
These expenditures must include the costs of raising a normal child, for the Robaks would not have had to bear them but for defendant’s negligence. We therefore reverse this holding of the district court and remand the case for a new determination of damages consistent with this opinion.
C
The Robaks also cross-appeal the district court’s order of December 9, 1980, which concerned the amount and manner of payment of attorneysj/fees. The court had ruled in its November 13 order that the $900,000 in damages was to be placed in a reversionary trust, established by agreement of the parties, out of which the Robaks would withdraw money as they need it to cover expenses for Jennifer. Under the December 9 order, plaintiffs’ attorneys are to be paid their fee, a percentage of the recovery, only proportionately to and concurrent with the actual disbursement of funds from the trust.
This ruling by the district court was beyond its authority. Before 1966, the Federal Tort Claims Act provided the district court with discretion to determine the attorneys’ fees to be paid in such actions.
In 1966, Congress amended the operative section, § 2678, to read as follows:.
No attorney shall charge, demand, receive or collect for services rendered, fees in excess of 25
per centum
for any judgment rendered pursuant to section 1345(b) of this title. . . .
Congress purposefully removed this matter from the discretion of the district court, so long as the fee fell within the
section’s
guidelines of 25 percent.
The contract between the Robaks and their counsel agreed upon a fee of 25 percent, within the statutory limits. The court thus had no choice but to accept this pre-existing arrangement.
The Court rendering a judgment for the plaintiff ... may, as part of such judgment, .. . determine and allow reasonable attorney fees, which if the recovery is $500 or more, shall not exceed ... 20 per centum of the amount recovered under section 1346(b) of this title, to be paid out of but not in addition to the amount recovered ...
We therefore remand the case to the district court with instructions to vacate its order of December 9.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.