Master D.C. Circuit decision addressing whether the Red Cross is a "person" under the False Claims Act and applying the pre-2009 presentment requirement. with this comprehensive case brief.
Totten v. American National Red Cross occupies an important place in the pre-2009 False Claims Act (FCA) jurisprudence because it sits at the intersection of two recurring questions: the scope of the FCA's then-existing "presentment" requirement and the status of federally chartered instrumentalities like the American National Red Cross under federal liability statutes. For law students and practitioners, the case clarifies how courts approached the statutory text of 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) before Congress amended the provision in 2009, and how an entity's unique public-private character affects whether it can be sued under the FCA.
The D.C. Circuit's analysis does double duty. First, it treats the Red Cross as a "person" subject to potential FCA liability, rejecting arguments that its federal charter and instrumentalities status render it equivalent to the federal government for purposes of FCA defendant status. Second, consistent with the court's companion decision in United States ex rel. Totten v. Bombardier Corp., it applies a strict textual reading of the then-operative FCA to require that false claims under § 3729(a)(1) be presented to an officer or employee of the United States. This dual focus makes the case a valuable study in statutory interpretation, institutional status, and the evolution of FCA enforcement.
United States ex rel. Totten v. American National Red Cross, 381 F.3d 61 (D.C. Cir. 2004)
Relator David G. Totten filed a qui tam action under the False Claims Act against the American National Red Cross alleging that, in connection with federally funded programs and grants, the Red Cross made or caused to be made false claims and false statements to obtain federal funds. The complaint asserted that the Red Cross certified compliance with federal statutes, regulations, and program requirements, and that such certifications or claims for payment were materially false, thereby violating 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a). The Red Cross moved to dismiss, arguing, among other things, that it is not a proper FCA defendant because of its federal instrumentality status and that the relator's allegations failed under § 3729(a)(1) because they did not adequately allege claims were presented to an officer or employee of the United States Government. The district court dismissed in part, and Totten appealed.
1) Is the American National Red Cross a "person" subject to suit under the False Claims Act, or is it immune as an arm of the federal government? 2) Under the pre-2009 version of § 3729(a)(1), does the FCA require that a false claim be presented to an officer or employee of the United States, such that claims made only to non-federal recipients fall outside the statute?
Pre-2009 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1) imposed liability on any person who knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, to an officer or employee of the United States Government a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval. Although § 3729(c) broadly defined "claim" to include demands for money made to grantees, contractors, or other recipients if federal funds were involved, that definition did not eliminate the distinct presentment requirement embedded in § 3729(a)(1). An entity's federal charter or instrumentality status does not automatically equate it with the United States for purposes of FCA defendant status; unless Congress indicates otherwise, corporations and similar entities are typically treated as "persons" under the FCA.
The D.C. Circuit held that the American National Red Cross is a "person" subject to suit under the False Claims Act and is not the United States for purposes of FCA defendant immunity. However, consistent with the pre-2009 text of § 3729(a)(1), the court held that a relator must allege presentment of a false claim to an officer or employee of the federal government; claims predicated solely on submissions to non-federal recipients or intermediaries are not actionable under § 3729(a)(1). The court affirmed dismissal to the extent the complaint relied only on non-federal presentment, while recognizing that allegations of direct presentment to federal officials could proceed if adequately pleaded.
On the defendant-status question, the court examined the Red Cross's federal charter and Supreme Court precedents addressing its unique posture. While cases like Department of Employment v. United States recognized the Red Cross as a federal instrumentality for limited purposes, the court emphasized that this status does not collapse the Red Cross into the United States for all statutory schemes. Citing American National Red Cross v. S.G., which treats the Red Cross as an entity capable of suing and being sued in federal court, the court concluded that nothing in the FCA's text or structure exempts the Red Cross from being a "person" subject to qui tam liability. Congress knows how to insulate the federal government from FCA suits; it did not do so for the Red Cross. On the presentment question, the court relied on a close reading of § 3729(a)(1)'s language then in force: liability attached when a person knowingly "presents, or causes to be presented, to an officer or employee of the United States Government" a false claim for payment or approval. The court explained that the separate definitional breadth of "claim" in § 3729(c) did not erase the explicit presentment-to-the-government element of § 3729(a)(1). In parallel with its reasoning in United States ex rel. Totten v. Bombardier Corp., the court rejected attempts to bootstrap claims submitted only to non-federal grantees, contractors, or intermediaries into § 3729(a)(1) absent actual presentment to a federal officer or employee. Consequently, to the extent the relator's allegations hinged exclusively on submissions to non-federal recipients, dismissal was proper; any allegations of direct presentment to federal officials, if adequately pled with particularity, could survive.
Totten v. American National Red Cross is significant for two reasons. First, it confirms that the American National Red Cross is a suable "person" under the FCA, not an arm of the sovereign for FCA purposes. Second, it is a prominent example of the D.C. Circuit's pre-2009 insistence on the FCA's presentment requirement, a reading later altered by Congress in the 2009 Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act (FERA), which amended § 3729(a)(1) and restructured liability provisions to reach claims involving federal funds without strict presentment to a federal officer. For law students, Totten sharpens skills in statutory interpretation, institutional status analysis, and understanding how congressional amendments respond to judicial constructions.
They are companion D.C. Circuit decisions from the same era interpreting the pre-2009 FCA. Both read § 3729(a)(1) to require presentment of a false claim to a federal officer or employee and reject attempts to base liability solely on claims made to non-federal entities that receive federal funds. Together, they framed the pre-FERA landscape in which presentment was a critical element.
No. The court held that the Red Cross is a suable "person" under the FCA and is not equivalent to the United States for purposes of FCA defendant status. Although recognized as a federal instrumentality in some contexts, that status does not confer blanket immunity from FCA suits.
Before the 2009 amendments, § 3729(a)(1) required that a false claim be presented to an officer or employee of the United States Government. This meant that claims made only to grantees or contractors—even if funded in part by the federal government—did not satisfy § 3729(a)(1). The requirement was outcome-determinative in many cases and spurred Congress to amend the statute in FERA.
No. The court allowed that FCA claims could proceed if they were properly pleaded and met the statute's elements, including presentment (under the pre-2009 regime) or other applicable FCA provisions. The decision primarily foreclosed theories premised solely on submissions to non-federal intermediaries.
FERA restructured § 3729(a)(1) into new provisions (notably § 3729(a)(1)(A) and (B)) and eliminated the strict presentment-to-a-federal-officer requirement that Totten applied. After FERA, liability can attach to false claims involving federal funds even when routed through non-federal intermediaries, so long as statutory elements like materiality and knowledge are satisfied.
The charter explains the Red Cross's public functions and relationship with the federal government, which informs questions like jurisdiction and certain immunities. But absent clear congressional text equating the Red Cross with the United States for a specific statute, courts generally treat it as a separate corporate entity—here, a "person" under the FCA.
Totten v. American National Red Cross is best understood as a two-track holding: the Red Cross is a suable entity under the FCA, and the pre-2009 statute demanded strict presentment to the federal government for § 3729(a)(1) liability. This dual emphasis both preserved the FCA's reach against quasi-public entities and promoted textual fidelity to the then-current statutory language.
In the broader arc of FCA law, Totten marks a waystation between judicial narrowing and congressional response. While the decision's presentment analysis has been overtaken by statutory amendment, its treatment of the Red Cross's status remains a useful guide for analyzing how federally chartered or quasi-governmental bodies are positioned within federal liability schemes.
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