Dagi v. Delta Airlines, Inc.

961 F.3d 22
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2020
Docket19-1056P
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 961 F.3d 22 (Dagi v. Delta Airlines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dagi v. Delta Airlines, Inc., 961 F.3d 22 (1st Cir. 2020).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 19-1056

T. FORCHT DAGI, M.D.,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

DELTA AIRLINES, INC.,

Defendant, Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]

Before

Howard, Chief Judge, Thompson and Barron, Circuit Judges.

Henry Herrmann for appellant. Christopher A. Duggan, with whom H. Reed Witherby, Pauline A. Jauquet, and Smith Duggan Buell & Rufo LLP, were on brief, for appellee.

June 2, 2020 THOMPSON, Circuit Judge. When an airline passenger

suffers "bodily injury . . . on board [an] aircraft or in the

course of any of the operations of embarking or disembarking," his

or her only legal recourse is to sue the airline for recovery under

the Montreal Convention (a multilateral treaty -- more on that in

a minute) that preempts any other local law claims the passenger

could bring. See Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules

for International Carriage by Air, May 28, 1999, S. Treaty Doc.

No. 106-45 (2000) (the "Montreal Convention" or the "Convention"),

ch. I, art. 1, §1; art. 17. The Convention also requires that the

passenger bring any such suit within two years of "the date of

arrival at the destination, or from the date on which the aircraft

ought to have arrived, or from the date on which the carriage

stopped." Id. at ch. III, art. 35, §1.

Appellant, Dr. T. Forcht Dagi, M.D. ("Dagi"), is one

such passenger who, having missed the Montreal Convention's two-

year deadline to sue for injury that occurred in connection with

his 2015 Delta Airlines flight to London, wishes now to convince

us that his injury actually occurred after his disembarkation and

therefore outside the preemptive scope of the Montreal Convention,

and is actionable under local law. Our (legal and factual)

crosscheck complete, we find that Dagi has failed to show that his

injury did not begin inflight and therefore falls within the scope

- 2 - of the Convention and is, as a result, time-barred. Seatbelts

fastened with chairs in the upright position, we explain.

BACKGROUND

Dagi, an American citizen and resident of Massachusetts,

was a passenger on Delta Flight No. 63 that departed Boston's Logan

Airport on March 30, 2015 and arrived at London's Heathrow Airport

the next morning. As the plane was descending, Dagi was accused

of stealing a crew member's bag. With Dagi's consent, the airlines

searched Dagi's carry-on luggage, but came up dry. Later inflight

the bag was found elsewhere on the plane, but Dagi was accused of

having thrown the bag to the spot of discovery (presumably to avoid

being caught). Upon landing, the airline prevented Dagi from

deplaning until all other passengers had done so.

Quoting the relevant portions of Dagi's complaint:

 Once the Aircraft landed, the Attendant prevented the Plaintiff from leaving the Aircraft before the other passengers had done so.  The Attendant on the Jetway directed the Delta Ground Employee to detain the Plaintiff and to turn him over to the "authorities."  Thereafter, accordingly, prior to the Plaintiff having disembarked from the Jetway, the Attendant ordered the Plaintiff to "follow that woman" and to "not go anywhere else."  The Attendant had transferred custody of the Plaintiff to Delta Ground Employee, who ordered the Plaintiff to follow her away off the Jetway to another location in the terminal to wait "until the police arrived."  Thereupon, the Plaintiff was marched, under duress, to another location in the terminal (the "Second Location"). This involved a walk

- 3 - of ten to fifteen minutes duration to a distance of approximately four hundred yards from the Aircraft and Jetway.  The Plaintiff, who is older, had at that time not fully recovered from leg surgery. He was forced to carry and move his two pieces of carry on luggage with no help. Accordingly, he was callously and unnecessarily subjected by Delta to significant pain and discomfort, exhaustion, and dangerous stress.  The Plaintiff, at the Second Location, was kept standing and was not afforded an opportunity to sit down.  After being detained at the Second Location for approximately fifteen minutes, the Plaintiff, without receiving any explanation, was marched, under duress, for ten to fifteen minutes, limping all the way back to the terminal in the vicinity of the Aircraft.  Again, it was readily apparent that the Plaintiff, in being marched back to the Aircraft, was limping in pain, and was labored in carrying and moving luggage.  Upon arriving back at the vicinity of the Aircraft, Delta Ground Employee turned over custody of the Plaintiff to a Delta employee identified as a "Delta supervisor."  At this time, the Plaintiff again denied the accusations against him, and demanded to either be released or to speak to the police. In response, he was told that he was not allowed to leave.  During the entirety of Plaintiff's detention by Delta, its personnel adamantly refused to respond to any of Plaintiff's reasonable questions, such as, without limitation: "Where are you taking me?"; "Have the police really been called?"; ["]What happens next?"; ["]How long will I be held here?"; and "Why am I being marched back to the plane?"  The Plaintiff, once again, was kept standing and was not afforded an opportunity to sit down while waiting at the second location.  Thereafter, in the terminal near the Aircraft, the Delta Supervisor detained the Plaintiff

- 4 - for a considerable amount of time, and held several telephone conversations.  The caller was a British police officer, who, after interviewing the Plaintiff, told the Plaintiff he was free to go and ordered his immediate release.  The Plaintiff thereafter departed by passing through British immigration and customs, which are not a function of Delta Airlines.

The British police officer who ordered Dagi's release

suggested to him that he file a complaint against Delta. The

entire incident, from landing to Dagi's procession towards

immigration and customs, lasted at least one hour.

Dagi had no further interaction with Delta until March

28, 2018 -- almost three years after his ill-fated flight -- when

he packaged his ordeal into a suit filed against Delta in

Massachusetts Superior Court in Middlesex County, alleging Delta

had falsely arrested and wrongfully imprisoned him. On July 10,

2018, Delta removed the action to the United States District Court

for the District of Massachusetts; Dagi filed his Amended Complaint

there on July 13, 2018.1

Delta moved to dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule

of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), arguing that 1) the Montreal

Convention exclusively governed Dagi's alleged injury because it

"[b]egan on the [p]lane and [c]ontinued [w]hile [d]isembarking,"

1 We will refer to this as Dagi's complaint. See Amended Compl., Dagi v. Delta (No. 18-CV-11432-DPW) (D. Mass. July 13, 2018).

- 5 - as defined by the First Circuit in McCarthy v. Northwest Airlines,

Inc., 56 F.3d 313 (1st Cir. 1995),2 through an "unbroken string of

events," thereby preempting Dagi's local3 law claims; and 2)

because the statute of limitations under the Convention had already

expired, Dagi was out of luck, warranting the suit's dismissal.

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961 F.3d 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dagi-v-delta-airlines-inc-ca1-2020.