Alphin v. Henson

392 F. Supp. 813, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13366
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMarch 14, 1975
DocketCiv. 73-449-T
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 392 F. Supp. 813 (Alphin v. Henson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alphin v. Henson, 392 F. Supp. 813, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13366 (D. Md. 1975).

Opinion

THOMSEN, District Judge.

The several claims in this action under the antitrust laws, 15 U.S.C. 2, 15 and 26, originally brought by T. S. Alphin, d/b/a Alphin Aircraft (Alphin), against Richard Henson (Henson), and Henson Aviation, Inc. (HInc.), deal with the furnishing of aviation supplies and services on the Hagerstown Regional Airport, formerly called the Hagerstown Municipal Airport (the airport). By subsequent pleadings Alphin has added the City of Hagerstown as a defendant and Alphin, Inc. (AInc.) as a plaintiff, and has added a pendent jurisdiction claim. Henson and HInc. have filed a counterclaim against Alphin and a cross claim against the City. 1

The following facts are found from the evidence admitted at the trial and inferences drawn therefrom, giving consideration to the credibility of the several witnesses.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Hagerstown is the county seat of Washington County, in the narrow part of Western Maryland, where the Potomac River runs close to the Mason-Dixon line. The population of the City itself has been relatively static, 31,000 in *816 1930 and 36,000 in 1970. The “Hagerstown area”, however, which runs into both Pennsylvania and West Virginia, has about 100,000 persons. The airport is some five miles north of the City and one mile south of the Mason-Dixon line.

The Airport

2. In 1930 defendant Henson was employed as a test-pilot by Kreider-Reisner Aircraft Co., Inc., a manufacturer of aircraft and aircraft parts, now part of Fairchild Industries (Fairchild). In 1930 Henson “opened” a 40-acre airport on land then owned by Fairchild.

3. In 1934 the City purchased the airport from Fairchild. For some years the business of Fairchild expanded, but in more recent years it has declined. Over the years Fairchild has cooperated with the City by selling to it some parcels of land adjacent to the airport. Other land has been acquird by the City, and the airport has grown to 360 acres.

4. A plan of the airport and adjacent properties as they now exist is attached to this opinion as Exhibit A. The instrument runway runs east and west; the non-instrument runway runs roughly north and south. Exhibit A is based upon a preliminary layout plan which has been prepared by consulting engineers employed by the City in March 1973, whose final report is expected early in the present year. Exhibit A also shows some of the land which the engineers propose should be added to the airport, and which the City has the power to condemn under Art. 1A, § 7-701, Anno.Code of Md., Vol. 1, 1974 Cum.Supp. 2

Henson’s Activities Through 1971

5. In 1931, while he was still employed by Fairchild, Henson began to operate a flying service at the airport. At that time, and in 1934, when the City bought the airport property from Fair-child, the only hangar at the airport was an old wooden hangar built in the 1920’s, which Henson had leased from Fairchild, but which has since been tom down.

6. In 1936 the City built a hangar (no. 1 on the plan) and leased it to Henson. It is now being used as the airport terminal.

7. Henson’s activities on the airport, most of which have been carried on through HInc., 3 expanded over the years, although Henson also continued to work for Fairchild until 1964, when he began to devote his full time to his airport interests. For some time before as well as after 1964 Henson and HInc. had a fixed base operation (fbo) 4 on the airport. They provide line service (sale of fuel, oil and lubricants), 5 flight training, ground school training, aircraft rental, tie down service, aircraft parking, aircraft repair and maintenance, avionics, a small amount of aircraft sales, air taxi and charter services, and a commuter service operated in connection with Allegheny Airlines. 6

*817 8. By a lease executed in 1948, modified in 1949, the City leased the airport to Henson. In 1952 a new lease for a period of three years was executed, this time to HInc., wherein, for a rental of $2,000 a year, HInc. was given the right to control all selling privileges and concession rights on the airport and in the City hangar, subject to various provisions. 7 The lease specifically provided: that it should not be construed as granting HInc. any exclusive right to conduct any activity at the airport involving the use of the landing area contrary to Section 303 of the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938; and that the lease “shall be subordinate to the provisions of any existing or future agreement between the City and the United States, relative to the operation or maintenance of the airport, the execution of which has been or may be required as, a condition precedent to the expenditure of Federal funds for the development of the airport”. After the expiration of the lease, HInc. held over as a tenant, at rentals increased from time to time, until a new lease was executed in 1972. Until 1972 no one else asked the City officials for a lease of the airport or any part thereof, or complained to the City of the terms of the arangement with Henson or HInc.

9. In 1954, HInc., the Landis Tool Company and the City worked out an unusual arrangement whereby Landis built a hangar (no. 2 on the plan) on the airport, conveyed its interest in the hangar to HInc, and leased it back, with a provision that the City might purchase the hangar at any time at its depreciated value, in which event HInc. would make a specified adjustment with Landis. The arrangement was satisfactory to all three parties and was repeated in 1961-2, when Landis built a larger hangar (no. 3 on the plan) and terminated its lease of the smaller hangar, which became the avionics building.

10. In 1959 Henson built a T-hangar (no. 4 on the plan) on airport land leased by the City to Henson, who borrowed the money to build the hangar. Henson agreed to pay the City rent based on his receipts from its use. In 1961 Henson purchased from Fairchild a plot of land just west of the first T-hangar, and over a period of several years built four more T-hangars thereon (Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 8 on the plan). In 1971, those hangars and the land on which they were built were deeded to the City, along with Henson’s interest in other hangars on City land.

11. Henson acted as airport manager, with the knowledge and approval of the City officials, in dealings with the Federal Aviation Administration and with other persons and corporations, although no written agreement formally designating an “airport manager” was signed until May 1972, when HInc. (the corporate defendant) was so designated.

12.

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392 F. Supp. 813, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alphin-v-henson-mdd-1975.