Chapman Et Ux. v. United States
This text of 194 F.2d 974 (Chapman Et Ux. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act 1 by his father and mother, beneficiaries of the action conferred by Art. 2315 Louisiana Civil Code, this suit was for damages for the death of their son as a result of the crash in Louisiana of a United States Air Force plane killing all on board.
The claims of negligence set out in great detail in the complaint, reduced to their essence, were three in number: (1) that the plane was defective; (2) that the pilot was inadequately briefed on the weather; and (3) that he was negligent in the handling of the plane.
The United States denied the charges of negligence and pleaded a release signed by the deceased and by his father as parent or guardian.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the district judge querying plaintiffs’ counsel, “What negligence have you shown?”, a full argument followed.
The district judge, filing findings of fact and conclusions of law in the form of an unreported memorandum, found no negli *975 gence, and in addition that plaintiffs were barred by the release, and entered judgment for the defendants, and plaintiffs have appealed.
Putting forward ten specifications of error,. appellants argue them here under three propositions.
These are: (1) that they have shown by practically undisputed, evidence specific acts of negligence on the part of agents and employees of the United States, and that the district judge’s findings to the contrary are clearly erroneous; (2) that the court erred in excluding from evidence the Army Air Force Board’s report of the accident investigation which sets forth the opinion of the board that the pilot just before the crash exercised poor judgment and technique; and (3) that the court erred in holding that plaintiffs were barred by the pleaded release.
Upon the first proposition, we find ourselves in agreement with the district judge that plaintiffs did not show negligence, and, therefore, in disagreement with the appellants that they did.
Because we are of the opinion that the district judge in the memorandum which, since it is not reported, we have set out sufficiently below, 2 adequately dealt with *976 and correctly disposed of this proposition adversely to appellants, we shall not writfe at length upon it.
We shall, however, for the purpose of bringing into precise focus the real question below and here, whether plaintiffs satisfied *977 their burden of proof, add to the statement of the district judge the following brief statement of our own.
We think it clear, indeed it is hardly contended otherwise, that there is ample evidence from which a reasonably adequate picture of the flight from its very beginning until shortly before its sudden and fatal ending may be drawn, and that in that picture no proof of negligence appears. The last critical moments of the flight, as time and tide go in a plane which, though still airborne, is in desperate plight, must, however, remain forever shrouded behind the impenetrable curtain which death has drawn. This curtain neither investigators, nor boards, nor even judges can pierce, except by speculation and conjecture, and these may not take the place of proof. Since knowledge must precede understanding, and understanding must precede judging, and we cannot know, we cannot judge what was done by the pilot that he ought not to have done, what was left undone by him that he ought to have done, it is, we think, fatal to plaintiffs’ claim that they were unable to discharge their burden of proof by presenting evidence as to what in those critical moments was happening to and within the plane. Without such evidence, the district judge could not have found the pilot negligent, in the face of the undisputed facts showing that in the pressing, the enormous emergency, the agony indeed, of those final fateful moments, his radio out, one engine gone and the other failing, he was fighting desperately to save his plane and the lives of all within it, including his own.
Since we cannot know the facts, and conjecture may not serve as proof of them the post hoc armchair speculations of the report, if admitted in evidence, may not serve as such. Nor may we, on the basis of these forbidden substitutes for evidence, conclude that the district judge made a clear error in finding no negligence and that his judgment refusing to convict the dead pilot of wrong doing without evidence and to require the United States to stand in damages was wrong and must be reversed. Indeed, we think the evidence standing as it does, that a finding that the pilot was negligent, and the United States was liable, would do great violence to the evidence and to the law governing those who, finding themselves in the emergency of swift and dire peril, brought about by no *978 fault of their own, adjust themselves to it as best they can and fight a brave and unremitting fight to the bitter end.
It would be difficult, we think, to find a case more demanding of the application of these controlling legal principles than this one presents. As stated and supported by full authority in 38 Am.Jur., “Negligence”, Sec. 41, “Acts in Emergency or Sudden Peril”, at page 686: “The prudence and propriety of an action are not to be judged by the event but by the circumstances under which it was done. The rule, as stated generally, is that one who, in a sudden emergency, acts according to his best judgment, or who, because of want of time in which to form a judgment omits to act in the most judicious manner, is not chargeable with negligence. * * * The fact that injurious consequences might have been avoided had he chosen another course of conduct does not charge him with negligence.”
Or, as the rule is stated on page 687: “ * * * the sound view appears to be that one who through no fault of his own, is confronted with a sudden peril and does things which afterward may seem to have been improper or foolish is not negligent if he does what a prudent man would or might do under the circumstances.”
Putting to one side, therefore, that the Board was without authority to adjudge fault, nothing in its conclusion, that the pilot did not exercise good judgment, in any way militates against this view. It was based on the same complete lack of evidence which prompted the district judge’s query, in effect; who at this time and in the state of the record knows, who can say, what was good judgment then or what a prudent man, confronted as the pilot was, would do? Who can, upon this record, say what untoward and unforeseen circumstances, not revealed in the record, intervening at the last moment, wrecked the plans and the plane ?
Upon the second proposition, the exclusion of the Army Air Force Board’s report, we are of the clear opinion; that nothing in the report, which the judge had before him and read, and which is before us in the record, requires or supports a different finding as to negligence from that made by him; and that its exclusion, if error, was harmless.
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194 F.2d 974, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-et-ux-v-united-states-ca5-1952.