Aviat Aircraft, Inc. v. Saurenman

2009 WY 98, 213 P.3d 956, 2009 Wyo. LEXIS 116, 2009 WL 2478079
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2009
DocketS-08-0143
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2009 WY 98 (Aviat Aircraft, Inc. v. Saurenman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aviat Aircraft, Inc. v. Saurenman, 2009 WY 98, 213 P.3d 956, 2009 Wyo. LEXIS 116, 2009 WL 2478079 (Wyo. 2009).

Opinion

HILL, Justice.

[¶1] Appellant, Aviat Aireraft, Inc. (Avi-at), seeks review of the district court's "Judgment in Accordance with Verdict." We will explain the details below, but we briefly note here that Aviat actually appealed from a decision of the district court that was made independent of, but which was subsumed into, the above identified "Judgment." We also note that Aviat filed a motion for new trial that stayed the time for filing the notice of appeal, and that Aviat did not file its notice of appeal until an appropriate time after the motion for new trial was denied. We will affirm the district court.

ISSUE

[¶2] Aviat raises this issue:

Did the district court err when it determined as a matter of law that after wrongfully converting an aircraft owned by Aviat Aircraft, Inc., Mr. Saurenman became an involuntary bailee and that such involuntary bailment was a defense to Aviat's claim for conversion?

Saurenman restates the issue thus:

Based upon uncontroverted material facts, did the district court err in finding that Saurenman was an involuntary or gratuitous bailee, thereby precluding Aviat's claimed property damages to its airplane from exposure to elements and deterioration over time?

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

[¶3] This case has a long procedural history. Boiled down to its essence, there are two individuals and a corporation who figure in this story. The corporation is Aviat, of course. Saurenman worked for Aviat, which was a corporation wholly owned by Stuart Horn (Horn), who was its president and the person in control of its day-to-day operations. Aviat builds aerobatic airplanes, other small aireraft such as those used by bush pilots in Alaska, as well as "kit" airplanes for the truly adventurous. Saurenman worked for Aviat as an "engineer" who designed, built, and flew many types of aircraft. His work experience included working for other aircraft manufacturers, including some that produced personal and military aircraft (e.g., Learjet and Raytheon). Saurenman met Horn in 1995-96, and Horn hired him to work for Aviat in 1997. That employment relationship lasted until early 2004, when Saurenman chose to treat Horn's abusive conduct toward him as a constructive discharge and left that employment.

[¶4] Horn tried to impeach Saurenman's credibility by questioning him as to why one of the aircraft manufacturers Saurenman claimed to have worked for had no record of him ever being an employee. Without missing much of a beat, Saurenman explained that he worked for a subcontractor which worked directly for that manufacturer on site. Saurenman produced an internal phone book used by that aireraft manufacturer which showed his name and phone number for the time he claimed to have worked there. Horn also tried to make much of the fact that Saurenman bad very little formal education, apparently to attempt to show that he had deceived Horn about his qualifications to work for Aviat. However, once again the record is devoid of any direct evidence that Saurenman purposely or maliciously ever tried to deceive Horn, or any one else, about the level of his academic achievements. He was not a degreed engineer, *958 indeed, he did not have a high school diploma, although he did have a GED.

[¶5] Both of Saurenman's parents were aerobatic pilots and he grew up in that world. He built his first aerobatic plane as a teenager and had worked in one way or another in the design, building, and flying of aireraft of various sorts for his entire work life. Interestingly enough, the two principal designers of the bulk of the aircraft Aviat produced were both individuals who were not "college graduate" engineers, but rather experienced pilots intimately familiar with the design and building of the types of aireraft Aviat produced.

[¶6] The litigation that leads us to this juncture was initiated by Saurenman with the filing of a multi-count complaint in the district court on May 13, 2004. Saurenman asserted that he was approached by Horn (on behalf of Aviat) in 1997, and was hired to work for Aviat as an "advanced design engineer." Saurenman contended that he was either fired, or "constructively discharged," from Aviat in early 2004, when Horn became very angry after a meeting Aviat was hosting at its Afton headquarters with officials from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). Those meetings related to a new aircraft that Saurenman was designing known as the A-4000. That aircraft was essentially a modified version of a two-seat plane Aviat had manufactured for years, which was being enlarged to carry four passengers. Horn was frustrated at that time because he thought the progress of the project had been too slow, as well as because he "perceived" that Saurenman had been late for that meeting with the FAA that day. Saurenman explained in his testimony that he had forewarned Horn that he would necessarily be delayed in arriving at the meeting and had told Horn he would have to take care of the first half-hour or so of the meeting-much of which was more social that substantive-ie., coffee, introductions, ete. According to Sau-renman, after that meeting was over, Horn flew into a rage that included him seriously damaging one of the prototype A-4000 aircraft by repeatedly throwing heavy objects at it, screaming and hollering, and dangerously (to those persons present) accelerating his pickup truck out of the hangar in which the aircraft was being assembled. Horn did not dispute that an event much like that described by Saurenman occurred, although he did describe it in terms more favorable to his point of view, just as, perhaps, Saurenman described it in terms more favorable to his point of view.

[¶7] Immediately following this event, Saurenman left Afton, as he had planned to do before Horn's "tantrum" occurred, and returned to the State of New York, where he was doing his work for Aviat. However, shortly after returning to New York, Sauren-man informed Horn that he would no longer work for Aviat. At that point in time, Sau-renman had possession of two planes that were titled in Aviat's name, a Sukhoi plane and the Monocoupe. At that time those planes were being housed in a hangar in New York that was leased by Aviat. Horn emailed Saurenman and directed that he return both planes, as well as an extensive list of other Aviat property Horn claimed Sau-renman had in his possession. By the time this litigation came to trial, the only property still in dispute was the Sukhoi and the Mono-coupe. With respect to the Monocoupe, Sau-renman had "revised" his position from one that he "owned" the Monocoupe, to one that he was entitled to an "interest" in the Mono-coupe to the extent that he had owned the skeletal airframes and jigs (a sort of frame) that he had built before he went to work for Aviat, and which had been transported to Afton for completion of the plane. Eventually, Saurenman was determined not to have any interest of any sort in the Monocoupe.

[¶8] The employment "contract" between Horn and Saurenman was in many ways quite informal and the closest it ever came to being formalized was a draft letter from Horn to Saurenman that contained marginal notations made by Saurenman, but which was never signed by Horn. Saurenman claimed that they reached an agreement to that effect and Horn denied it. The record fully supports a conclusion that that letter best summarized their contractual relations, which was also the jury's conclusion at the end of the trial.

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2009 WY 98, 213 P.3d 956, 2009 Wyo. LEXIS 116, 2009 WL 2478079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aviat-aircraft-inc-v-saurenman-wyo-2009.