The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal Tort Claims Act, however, waives sovereign immunity for a broad class of tort claims against the United States. It contains several exceptions, including the discretionary function exception that precludes suit against the federal government if the underlying conduct involved individual judgment or choice. In 2021, in Shivers v. United States, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that the discretionary function exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act applies even where the plaintiff alleges that the conduct at issue violated the U.S. Constitution. The Eleventh Circuit agreed with the Seventh Circuit and declined to permit ...
The discretionary function exception is a powerful departure from the Federal Tort Claims Act’s gene...
Professor Hill maintains that the Constitution was grounded on an understanding that the states woul...
Several commentators have maintained that the federal courts have taken confusing and inconsistent p...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
In 1996 the Federal Tort Claims Act turns fifty. Few statutes reach the half-century mark only sligh...
The doctrine of the immunity of the sovereign in tort has long been the subject of attack by statesm...
The common law established the doctrine of sovereign immunity whereby the government is not civilly ...
Mackie Shivers, a sixty-four-year-old man, was stabbed in the eye by his mentally-ill cellmate with ...
Very early in our history we took steps to insure that the.rule of law, as expressed in the Constitu...
The Federal Tort Claims Act is a partial waiver of sovereign immunity. In Rayonier, Incorporated v. ...
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
With the enduring doctrine of federal sovereign immunity, it is too late in the day to suggest that ...
The Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) pulls back the curtain of sovereign immunity and allows private c...
As I suggest below in Part I, federal sovereign immunity was a doctrine of limited effect in the ear...
Political scientists normally discuss sovereign immunity in the context of international law and rel...
The discretionary function exception is a powerful departure from the Federal Tort Claims Act’s gene...
Professor Hill maintains that the Constitution was grounded on an understanding that the states woul...
Several commentators have maintained that the federal courts have taken confusing and inconsistent p...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
In 1996 the Federal Tort Claims Act turns fifty. Few statutes reach the half-century mark only sligh...
The doctrine of the immunity of the sovereign in tort has long been the subject of attack by statesm...
The common law established the doctrine of sovereign immunity whereby the government is not civilly ...
Mackie Shivers, a sixty-four-year-old man, was stabbed in the eye by his mentally-ill cellmate with ...
Very early in our history we took steps to insure that the.rule of law, as expressed in the Constitu...
The Federal Tort Claims Act is a partial waiver of sovereign immunity. In Rayonier, Incorporated v. ...
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
With the enduring doctrine of federal sovereign immunity, it is too late in the day to suggest that ...
The Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) pulls back the curtain of sovereign immunity and allows private c...
As I suggest below in Part I, federal sovereign immunity was a doctrine of limited effect in the ear...
Political scientists normally discuss sovereign immunity in the context of international law and rel...
The discretionary function exception is a powerful departure from the Federal Tort Claims Act’s gene...
Professor Hill maintains that the Constitution was grounded on an understanding that the states woul...
Several commentators have maintained that the federal courts have taken confusing and inconsistent p...