Coska v. United States

USCA1 Opinion













United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
____________________

No. 96-2245

BARBARA COSKA,
Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant, Appellee.


____________________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before
Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________
____________________

John B. Manning, with whom Curtin, Murphy & O'Reilly, P.C., was _______________ _________________________________
on brief for appellant.
Mary Elizabeth Carmody, Assistant United States Attorney, with _______________________
whom Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for _________________
appellee.


____________________

May 29, 1997
____________________






















LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Barbara LYNCH, Circuit Judge _____________

Coska brought suit against the United States under the

Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. 2671 et seq., for __ ____

injuries she sustained in a slip-and-fall accident on

government property. Holding that Coska failed to make a

proper demand for a "sum certain" against the United States

within the prescribed two-year limitations period, the United

States district court dismissed the action for lack of

subject matter jurisdiction and, in the alternative, granted

the defendant's motion for summary judgment. We affirm.

I.

Our review of the allowance of the motions to

dismiss and for summary judgment is de novo. See Borschow __ ____ ___ ________

Hosp. & Med. Supplies, Inc. v. Cesar Castillo, Inc., 96 F.3d ____________________________ ____________________

10, 14 (1st Cir. 1996); Murphy v. United States, 45 F.3d 520, ______ _____________

522 (1st Cir. 1995). We recount the facts in the light most

favorable to Coska. See Borschow Hosp. & Med. Supplies, 96 ___ _______________________________

F.3d at 14; Murphy, 45 F.3d at 522. ______

On March 15, 1993, Coska slipped and fell while

walking on an ice and snow-covered sidewalk in front of the

building where she worked at 386 West Broadway, South Boston,

Massachusetts. Coska alleges that she suffered injuries,

including a fractured ankle, as a result of the fall.

At the time of the accident, the property was owned

by the United States through the United States Marshals



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Service. The Marshals Service had entered into a management

contract with Barlou Management Company which required Barlou

to maintain the property and held Barlou responsible for

removing any snow or debris from the parking area, sidewalks,

and entrances to the premises. Barlou then contracted with

another company, Kevin Sutherland Landscaping ("Sutherland"),

to handle the actual removal of any snow and debris.

On April 13, 1993, Coska's counsel sent letters to

the Marshals Service and to Barlou Management regarding

Coska's accident at 386 West Broadway. In relevant part, the

letter to the United States stated:

Please be advised that we represent
Ms. Barbara Coska, who received personal
injuries as a result of a slip and fall
accident, caused by the failure to
adequately clear the accumulation of snow
and ice from the sidewalk located in
front of 386 West Broadway . . . . Ms.
Coska sustained a fractured ankle
(fractured in three places), and is
currently in an ankle to hip length cast;
she may require surgery in the future. A
claim for her damages resulting from this
accident is hereby made.

The letter to Barlou employed the same language but

explicitly attributed the failure to clear the snow and ice

from the sidewalk to the Barlou Management Company.1 Neither

letter set forth the amount of damages being claimed.

____________________

1. That letter stated in relevant part: "Coska
. . . received personal injuries as a result of a slip and
fall accident, caused by Barlou Management Co.'s failure to __________________________________
adequately clear the accumulation of snow and ice from the
sidewalk . . . ." (emphasis added).

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The Marshals Service responded to Coska's counsel

by letter dated June 7, 1993, advising her that a claimant

must submit a claim for damages in a "sum certain" for any

injury allegedly caused by the incident before the agency

could administratively adjudicate her claim for monetary

damages. The letter enclosed a Standard Form 95 (Claim for

Injury, Damage, or Death) (hereinafter "SF-95") and stated

that the form should be completed and returned along with all

information and documentation substantiating the claim.

Coska never returned the requested form.

Thirteen months later, Barlou, but not Coska,

forwarded to the United States the "demand packet" it had

earlier received from Coska's counsel.2 The 118-page packet,

dated June 21, 1994, contained relevant information regarding

Coska's claim against Barlou, including a demand against

Barlou in the amount of $225,000. The letter included in the

packet stated that Barlou's failure to clear the entrances

and sidewalks adjacent to 386 West Broadway was "the sole and ________

proximate cause of the plaintiff's accident." (emphasis ________________

added). The letter contained no assertion of liability

against, or even mention of, the United States or the

Marshals Service. At this point, Coska's counsel had yet to


____________________

2. The record is unclear as to whether Barlou sent the
packet on its own initiative or whether the United States
requested it. Regardless, it was not sent by Coska's
counsel.

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contact the United States in response to its request for

documentation of the claim and/or the SF-95.

Five more months passed with no word from Coska. On

December 12, 1994, the Marshals Service sent a second letter

to Coska's counsel. This letter "acknowledge[d] receipt" of

the claim, stated that "[i]n this regard, the Federal Tort

Claims [sic] was received by the agency to administratively

adjudicate the claim," and then cited to the FTCA.

In its first communication with the government

since Coska's initial letter sent almost two years earlier,

the law firm representing Coska sent a letter to the Marshals

Service dated February 14, 1995, informing the government

that new attorneys from the same firm would be handling the

case. Counsel also asked in this letter whether the claim

satisfied the notice requirements of 28 U.S.C. 2401 and the

procedural requirements of the FTCA. For reasons not

disclosed by the record, counsel enclosed a second copy of

the demand packet sent to Barlou "in the event that [the

United States was] missing any information [required] to

fully evaluate the claim" and urged the government to contact

them if it needed any additional information.

About a month later, the Marshals Service did just

that. A paralegal assigned to the case called Coska's







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counsel and requested a demand for a sum certain.3 In

response, Coska's counsel claimed that they were waiting for

additional medical bills beyond those set out in the demand

packet to Barlou. The paralegal then sent another SF-95 to

Coska's counsel, which was never returned.

The United States sent a third letter to Coska's

counsel on June 20, 1995, requesting a demand for a sum

certain and including yet another SF-95 form. The Marshals

Service apparently denied the claim by letter dated September

15, 1995, having received no response to these requests.

Coska says she did not receive the letter.

On December 18, 1995, Coska brought suit against

the United States alleging negligence, breach of contract,

and breach of warranty of habitability.4 The United States

filed a motion to dismiss and, in the alternative, a motion

for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion

to dismiss, alternatively characterizing it as a grant of

summary judgment.



II.


____________________

3. The call was either placed in late March before the
statute of limitations had run or in early April just after
the period expired.

4. Similar claims were brought against Barlou. The United
States filed a cross-claim against Barlou, who in turn filed
a third party complaint against Sutherland (snow removal
contractor).

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As the recitation of facts demonstrates, before the

expiration of the limitations period, the United States had

made one or two specific requests for a sum certain from

Coska and had sent her at least one SF-95 form to complete.

More requests (with accompanying SF-95 forms) were made

later. The issue on appeal is whether Coska's two letters to

the government and the copy of the Barlou demand packet

included in the second of those letters constitute a notice

of claim against the United States for a sum certain under

the FTCA. We find that they do not.

Under the FTCA, a tort claim against the United

States is barred unless it is "properly presented" to the

agency within two years of its accrual. See 28 U.S.C. ___

2401(b); Corte-Real v. United States, 949 F.2d 484, 485 (1st __________ _____________

Cir. 1991). An administrative claim is properly presented

when it includes, among other things, a claim for money

damages in a sum certain. See 28 C.F.R. 14.2(a);5 Corte- ___ ______

Real, 949 F.2d at 485. A timely filed sum certain claim is a ____


____________________

5. 28 C.F.R. 14.2(a) provides in pertinent part:
For purposes of the provisions of 28
U.S.C. 2401(b), 2672, and 2675, a claim
shall be deemed to have been presented
when a Federal agency receives from a
claimant . . . an executed Standard Form
95 or other written notification of an
incident, accompanied by a claim for
money damages in a sum certain for injury
to or loss of property, personal injury,
or death alleged to have occurred by
reason of the incident . . . .

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jurisdictional prerequisite for a tort action against the

federal government. Kokaras v. United States, 980 F.2d 20, _______ _____________

22 (1st Cir. 1992) (citing cases).

The purpose of the sum certain requirement goes

beyond mere administrative convenience; it is to apprise the

government of its possible liability and to provide the

government with notice "sufficient to allow it to investigate

the alleged negligent episode to determine if settlement

would be in the best interests of all." Corte-Real, 949 F.2d __________

at 486 (quoting Lopez v. United States, 758 F.2d 806, 809 _____ _____________

(1st Cir. 1985)). Coska's letter, which incorporated by

reference the Barlou demand packet, failed to achieve this

objective. That packet contained no information about the

liability of the United States nor did it state the amount of

damages it would seek from the United States. Indeed, by its

own terms, the packet asserted a claim that Barlou was solely ______

liable. As the district court observed, the demand packet

against Barlou "is not an appropriate substitute." In none

of the cases Coska cites, where this court has allowed a

claim to proceed despite a dispute over the fulfillment of

the sum certain requirement, had the plaintiff completely

failed to assert explicitly a damage amount against the

United States. See, e.g., Kokaras, 980 F.2d at 23; Corte- ___ ____ _______ ______

Real, 949 F.2d at 486-87; Lopez, 758 F.2d 808-11; cf. ____ _____ ___

Santiago-Ramirez v. Secretary of the Dep't of Defense, 984 ________________ ___________________________________



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F.2d at 17-20 (1st Cir. 1993).6 Thus, Coska's arguments fall

short.7

This need for a specific sum certain was not kept

secret from Coska in hopes of defeating her claim. To the

contrary, the United States made a number of specific

requests for the sum certain. All of those requests were

ignored.




____________________

6. Coska's reliance on the Ninth Circuit's decision in House _____
v. Mine Safety Appliances Co., 573 F.2d 609, 615-16 (9th Cir. __________________________
1978) is also misplaced. That case supports the notion that
incorporation by reference can, on certain facts, satisfy the
jurisdictional requirement of presenting an administrative
claim. The Ninth Circuit found that the sum certain
requirement had not been met because neither the
incorporating nor the incorporated documents set forth a sum
certain claim of damages explicitly applicable to the
claimant(s). See House, 573 F.2d at 615-16, overruled on ___ _____ ____________
other grounds by Warren v. United States Dep't of the __________________ ______ _____________________________
Interior, 724 F.2d 776 (9th Cir. 1984) (en banc). Similarly, ________
in this case, Coska made no "explicit[] link," id. at 616, ___
between any demand against the United States and the demand
for a sum certain it asserted against Barlou.

7. The government argues that Barlou and Sutherland were
independent contractors, that liability was not joint and
several as Coska asserts, and so that notice to Barlou could
not as a matter of law, provide notice to the United States.
Therefore, the United States says, a demand against Barlou
could not be a demand against the United States. To decide
this case, we need not address whether Barlou and/or
Sutherland were "independent contractors" and thus were not
joint and severally liable. That the government is able to
make the argument, whatever its resolution, demonstrates that
it is far from a foregone conclusion that a demand against
Barlou constituted a demand against the United States. As
the district court observed, a sum certain should have been
demanded by Coska from the United States with some
specificity, irrespective of demands sent to joint or several
or other tortfeasors.

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Coska claims that affirming the dismissal of her

claim would allow "mere technicalities" to bar an otherwise

well-made claim. All of the information necessary to

investigate the claim, Coska argues, was contained in the

demand packet and letters. It is the information available

rather than the form in which it is presented that is

crucial. See, e.g., Corte-Real, 949 F.2d at 486; see also ___ ____ __________ ___ ____

Santiago-Ramirez, 984 F.2d at 19 n.2. However, there was ________________

essential information missing from the packet and the letters

-- namely, the amount of damages being sought from the United

States. Cf. Santiago-Ramirez, 984 F.2d at 19 (notice ___ ________________

requirement of 28 U.S.C. 2675 is satisfied when claim

includes sufficient information to investigate claim and the

amount of damages sought).8 Had the plaintiff included that

amount in any of the correspondence or even returned a

completed SF-95, which includes boxes for personal injury and

total damages, the situation may have produced a different

outcome. See, e.g., Corte-Real, 949 F.2d at 486-87. This is ___ ____ __________

not a case of exalting form over substance, nor is it a case

of "bureaucratic overkill." Cf. id. at 486. ___ ___

____________________

8. We reject Coska's argument that the district court
effectively merged the statutory notice requirement of 28
U.S.C. 2675 and the presentment requirement of 28 C.F.R.
14.2(a). This is a matter of subject matter jurisdiction. A
federal court has no jurisdiction to entertain a suit against
the United States unless a claimant has presented, in
writing, a claim stating a sum certain. See Corte-Real, 949 ___ __________
F.2d at 485; Gonzalez-Bernal v. United States, 907 F.2d 246, _______________ _____________
248 (1st Cir. 1990).

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Lastly, Coska argues that the district court

impermissibly relied on the government's repeated requests

for a sum certain made after the expiration of the

limitations period in coming to its decision. Without

addressing whether Coska waived this argument, we find that

even without the consideration of the one to two requests

made after the limitations period passed, Coska's claim

fails. The district court's finding hardly "rested" on the

requests made after the limitations period; it observed only

that the government gave Coska adequate notice of the

shortcomings of her submissions and that "perhaps" the

outcome would be different had such notice not been given.

Affirmed. Affirmed ________



























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