Casteel v. American Airways, Inc.

88 S.W.2d 976, 261 Ky. 818, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 748
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 20, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 976 (Casteel v. American Airways, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casteel v. American Airways, Inc., 88 S.W.2d 976, 261 Ky. 818, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 748 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

These cases are of first impression. They are consolidated suits for damages for ejection of passengers from an airplane.

Ford Casteel and wife, Mrs. Frieda Casteel, were citizens of Laurel county, Ky. He was afflicted with tuberculosis, and they had been residing for some time in New Mexico. On October 5, 1933, they took passage on appellee’s air line from El Paso, Tex., to Louisville,. Ky. He was permitted to travel in pajamas and a robe. It is alleged in the petitions that they, were carried to Fort Worth, Tex., and without just or legal cause wrongfully removed from the plane and put off in a strange city without means and compelled to wait there for five hours until they were transported at the defendant’s expense by railroad to Louisville, The petitions charged that because of the wrongful act of the defendant each was weakened and permanently impaired in health due- to the change and prolonged transportation. Humiliation, exposure, and mental and physical distress and discomfort were averred.

In the petition of Ford Casteel’s Administrator it was further charged that the defendant allowed and suffered another passenger on the ship to impose and mistreat the decedent by leaning against him, and that the defendant so operated the plane for at least 200 miles “in an improper maimer by suddenly and unnecessarily shunting it upward and instantly shifting its course downward in such a way and manner as to jerk and shake” him unnecessarily, and “endeavored in divers ways to make it so uncomfortable and unpleasant as to try to cause him to ask to leave said airship of his own accord,” but he refused to do so, and protested against removal. The answers presented a *820 traverse, justification, and consent by the passengers to discontinuance of tire journey by plane. The defendant also pleaded a regulation promulgated by the Treasury Department of the United States governing transportation in interstate commerce by air and placing a quarantine upon passengers afflicted with pulmonary tuberculosis; but this went out on demurrer, it appearing that the regulation, filed as an exhibit, did not prohibit the transport of such afflicted persons if certain provisions for their care and the protection of othbr passengers should be made, and the pleadings did not negative the existence of such provisions.

After the joint trial had commenced, amended petitions were tendered which alleged certain profane language intended to apply to the plaintiffs’’ mistreatment during passage by another passenger, and negligence in failing to provide suitable protection for the sick man from exposure to inclement weather. The court properly refused to allow the amendments to be filed at that stage of the case. We shall therefore consider only the evidence coming within the pleadings and pass over that pertaining to circumstances apparently embraced by the amendments, which, it was said, indicated a hostile attitude or atmosphere of displeasure over the presence of the sick man.

The carrier sold the tickets with full knowledge of Casteel’s condition. We state the testimony of Mrs. Casteel: Before reaching Fort Worth, the pilot navigated the ship up and down and sideways in a rough manner, which made her husband sick. But neither of them made complaint. Change in planes was to be made at Fort Worth. When the machine arrived there, Casteel was carried into the port. A doctor felt his pulse and advised that he should not continue by plane, but ought to finish.the journey by rail. Both she and her husband protested. She told the doctor that her husband’s physician had administered medicine to prepare and enable him to make the journey by plane, that he could not stand the long trip by train, which was the reason they were traveling that way. She asked to be allowed to go on, but was told she could not. An agent asked to see the tickets, and when she gave them to him he stated they could not be taken farther and her money would be refunded. Neither consented to the surrender of the tickets nor to continuing by train. A *821 check was given her representing the proportionate fare to Louisville, and she signed a refund receipt. The company had them taken to a first-class hotel and bore all expenses. The company made arrangements for the railroad tickets and paid for them out of the refund check. The amount was something less. It also provided transportation to the station. They traveled in a pullman drawing room and changed trains only at Memphis. They arrived in Louisville the next afternoon, experiencing a delay of about 29 hours. The company had sent a message to those awaiting their arrival by plane. Mr. and Mrs. Casteel remained in Louisville five days because he was unable to go to his home in Laurel county. He was taken there by automobile, a distance of 150 miles, and died a week later of tuberculosis.

Mrs. Casteel testified to humiliation because of her experiences and of having been worried and made nervous, weak, and exhausted. The expense in Louisville was about $40. A local doctor testified that when Casteel arrived home he.was in a serious condition, and in response to a hypothetical question expressed the opinion that the experience had hastened his death. However, the doctor had no personal knowledge of travel by air.

According to the defendant’s evidence, the dispatcher at El Paso advised against- the sick man embarking and informed him and his wife that it would depend on how he stood the trip as to whether or not he would be taken off at Big Springs or Fort Worth or carried to his destination. They were told of the conditions which might be expected and the ill effects likely to ensue; but they insisted on going on. The plane was delayed a few minutes on this account. This evidence was contradicted by Mrs. Casteel. En route the pilots observed the effect on the sick man and did the best they could to avoid disturbance by changing altitude gradually and otherwise operating the plane in an unusually careful manner. El Paso is 3,900 feet above sea level, and it was necessary to ascend 6,500' or 7,000 feet through the mountains and descend to 650 feet, the elevation of Fort Worth. During the last six minutes the ship encountered head winds. The station at Fort Worth was radioed to have a doctor meet the plane.

*822 | ‘./..'The man was very ill and in a helpless condition. He was .carried.into the station and Dr. W. H. McKnight, a ■.wéll-cjüalifiéd physician, made a careful examination of his/heáít and lungs. He found him in the last stages of tuberculosis and experiencing considerable distress in breathing. He had a very poor heart action and looked as if he‘would die soon. The”doctor advised that he was not, jaiM’é to continue, that it would be dangerous for hipa, tb go on by air and much safer to finish the journey by rail. The evidence, of the defendant is that the passengers acquiesced and appeared satisfied that the best thing to do was to go by train. The doctor gave professional reasons why it would not have been safe for a man in his condition to travel by plane. Courtesy and due attention were shown the passengers.

Mrs. Casteel denied the testimony of the several witnesses as to agreement or consent of herself and husband.

At the beginning of the trial the defendant’s offer to confess judgment in each case for $50 was declined.

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 976, 261 Ky. 818, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casteel-v-american-airways-inc-kyctapphigh-1935.