Dreyer v. United States

349 F. Supp. 296, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11699
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 5, 1972
DocketC 68-718 to C 68-728, C 68-822, C 69-90 to C 69-94, C 69-514
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 349 F. Supp. 296 (Dreyer v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dreyer v. United States, 349 F. Supp. 296, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11699 (N.D. Ohio 1972).

Opinion

*298 MEMORANDUM

BEN C. GREEN, District Judge:

This litigation arises from a tragic event which occurred on the afternoon of August 27, 1967, in which sixteen skydivers who were participating in a high altitude parachute jump from a B-25 aircraft were killed when they landed in the waters of Lake Erie in an area approximately three to four miles from the shoreline in the vicinity of Huron, Ohio. The jump had been planned so as to bring the parachutists down on land in the vicinity of Ortner Airfield, located about eight miles south of the south shore of Lake Erie and some eleven miles in a southeasterly direction from the actual jump site over the Lake. These consolidated actions under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b), seeking recovery for the deaths of the sixteen skydivers and damages on behalf of two survivors of the jump, have initially been heard on the issue of liability.

It is the plaintiffs’ contention that the proximate cause of the accident was misidentification of the B-25 by an air traffic controller at the Oberlin Air Traffic Control Center. Plaintiffs’ theory is that the controller was tracking a radar target on an approach to Ortner believing it to be the B-25 and communicating with the B-25 on that premise, when in fact the B-25 was heading toward the Lake.

It is the defense’s position that there was no misidentification of the aircraft. The government contends that the proximate cause of the accident was pilot error, postulating the theory that the pilot was suffering from a condition of oxygen insufficiency known as hypoxia, which causes a euphoric disorientation, and that he did not drop the jumpers when he was in the vicinity of Ortner but continued flying northwest for some minutes until he was over . the Lake, at which time the jump took place. It is also contended that the jumpers were contributorily negligent, in that at the time they exited the aircraft there was a solid layer of clouds below.

The facts pertaining to the fatal flight have come into evidence through the testimony of Mr. Robert L. Coy and Mr. Bernard R. Johnson, the two survivors of the jump, Mr. Robert Karns and Mr. Richard S. Wolfe, the pilot and copilot of the B-25, Major Allan Homstead and Mr. Larry Hartman, who were on board the B-25 and made a successful jump over Ortner Airfield sometime after the other eighteen skydivers, Mr. Ted Murphy and Mr. Louis E. Pemberton, who were flying in the area of Ortner Airfield in a Cessna aircraft, Mr. Engel Smit, an air traffic controller on duty at the radar station controlling aircraft in the area involved and Lt. Paul Potter, a witness to the descent of some of the parachutists into the Lake. There was introduced into evidence a deposition of Mr. Michael Jengo, the air traffic controller who was on duty at the relevant station preceding Mr. Smit. The tapes and a transcript of the radio transmissions to and from the relevant radar station during a period including the time of the jump were introduced. The plaintiff offered expert testimony of Mr. Francis McDermott, in which Mr. Mc-Dermott projected his version of the events surrounding the accident. Expert testimony was also introduced by the government going to the subject of hypoxia and to voice identification of a disputed transmission on the tapes.

It appears that for some period of time prior to August 27, 1967, information had been circulating among sport parachutists in the Northern Ohio area, both by word of mouth and by virtue of a notice signed by Larry Hartman, sent under a letterhead of a non-existent corporation, that a high altitude parachute jump was to take place from a B-25 aircraft at Ortner Airfield. The evidence indicates that Mr. Hartman was a prime mover in organizing the jump, and would so appear to persons receiving information with regard thereto. Mr. Hartman was a highly experienced skydiver, at that time being the Area *299 Safety Officer for the Parachute Club of America responsible for qualifying and licensing other sport parachutists in the area. He had been instrumental in organizing previous jumps from this same B-25, with Mr. Robert Karns as its pilot.

On the morning and early afternoon of August 27, 1967, a number of interested persons and jumpers gathered at Ortner Airfield. It was determined that twenty parachutists would go up on the B-25, eighteen of whom would jump at approximately 20,000 feet to engage in relative work. The other two parachutists intended to remain in the plane after the first group and ascend to approximately 30,000 feet before making their jump.

Relative work is a form of skydiving wherein the participants endeavor to perform free-fall maneuvers in close proximity to each other. It requires that all participating jumpers leave the plane at virtually the same time so that the free-fall maneuvers can take place with a minimum of separation between jumpers. The plans for the jump were for the skydivers to remain in free-fall until approximately 2,500 feet, at which time they would descend on their open chutes, or canopies, to the vicinity of Ortner Airfield.

Mr. Ted Murphy was on the scene to observe the jump, originally planning to do so from the ground. However, when Mr. Louis Pemberton, who came to Ortner Airfield to make the jump, decided not to participate, the two men agreed to go up in Mr. Murphy’s Cessna aircraft and photograph the proceedings from about the 12,000 foot level.

The B-25 was of World War II vintage, originally designed as a medium range bomber with no provisions for intentionally dropping parachutists. Therefore, the plane had to be carefully loaded in order to utilize the limited space available and to prevent overbalancing.

Mr. Hartman and another jumper sat in an area behind the pilot and co-pilot and directly over the forward hatch, which had a defective latch. In order to keep the hatch from opening during the course of the flight, both jumpers were required to sit on a plank bench with their feet on the unsecured hatch. The bench on which they were seated was against a low bulkhead which separated the forward area from the bomb bay area. From that location they could, when standing, see into and be observed by persons in the bomb bay area.

Mr. Robert Coy and Major Allan Horn-stead were located in the bomb bay area with five or six other jumpers. That group was seated on two narrow planks on either side of the bomb bay area squeezed together shoulder to shoulder and knee to knee, their feet resting lightly on the bomb bay doors. The area was enclosed front and rear by low bulkheads, and had no windows or other source of illumination. Consequently, during the flight the jumpers in the bomb bay area would be in rather complete darkness.

Mr. Bernard Johnson, one of the survivors of the jump, and the remaining jumpers were in the aft seption. Mr. Johnson and another chutist were seated on a plank bench at the bulkhead separating the bomb bay and aft sections, and the remainder of that group were seated in a crowded fashion on the floor of the plane, with no room for movement. In the rear section of the B-25 there were two areas which originally had been waist gunner’s windows, one of which had been removed to permit quicker exit for jumping purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
349 F. Supp. 296, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyer-v-united-states-ohnd-1972.