Duff v. Spearman

322 S.W.3d 869, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 7420, 2010 WL 3517453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 9, 2010
Docket09-09-00282-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 322 S.W.3d 869 (Duff v. Spearman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duff v. Spearman, 322 S.W.3d 869, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 7420, 2010 WL 3517453 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

HOLLIS HORTON, Justice.

This appeal arises from an experimental-airplane crash that caused the deaths *873 of the airplane’s pilot and passenger. We find no reversible error regarding the venue of the case. Although the trial court erred by refusing Charles Duffs request to withdraw a deemed admission, that error does not require a new trial. The trial court also erred in awarding taxable costs to Michael Spearman and Innova Aircraft, Inc. By entering a new judgment on the jury’s verdict, these errors can be remedied on remand. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment as to Innova Ventures, Inc., we reverse the trial court’s judgment decreeing that appellants take nothing against Michael Spearman and In-nova Aircraft, Inc., and we remand the case to the trial court with instructions to recalculate the amounts the jury awarded to appellants, to enter findings on litigation costs, to recalculate the net awards to the appellants, and to award appellants their taxable costs against Michael Spearman and Innova Aircraft, Inc.

Background Facts

Michael Spearman, a resident of Montgomery County, Texas, hired Turbine Design, Inc. to build an airplane referred to by the parties as the “TD2” or the “Spear-man Raptor.” 1 When the plane reached the test stage in the construction process, Spearman paid Mike Lumbert, a test pilot, to perform test flights of the TD2. Lum-bert tested the TD2 for approximately thirty-four hours during the summer of 2004. In late July 2004, Lumbert advised Spearman that he felt the TD2 required additional testing, and he also advised Spearman that issues existed that made the TD2 “hazardous and/or unsafe which need further development^]” Lumbert’s July 2004 correspondence to Spearman concluded that “a sign off and release of the aircraft into Phase II 2 [was] inappropriate.”

Approximately eight months later, Spearman asked Terry Willis, 3 a resident of Travis County, Texas, if he would fly the TD2 to Texas from Florida. During Spearman’s telephone call with Willis, Spearman suggested that Willis talk with several people that had been involved in the TD2’s development, examine the TD2, and “look over all the details[.]” After doing so, Willis was to decide whether to perform additional test flights, and after flying the plane, decide whether to obtain a ferry permit 4 or to sign the plane off into Phase II testing. Willis could then fly the plane to Texas.

On April 8, 2005, Willis, accompanied by David Duff, 5 and Charles Lawrence, an employee of Innova Aircraft, 6 travelled together by private plane to New Smyrna, Florida to talk to various individuals familiar with the TD2. Although both Willis and Duff were licensed pilots, Spearman expected Willis to pilot the TD2 in the event Willis decided to fly the plane to Texas.

*874 On the day following their arrival in New Smyrna, Florida, Lawrence gave all of the TD2’s test-flight documentation to Willis, including Lumbert’s July 2004 correspondence that reflects Lumbert’s concern over the TD2’s operating characteristics. Following his initial test flight of the TD2, which occurred on April 9, Willis told Lawrence that he would complete the TD2’s testing.” On April 10, 2005, Willis, accompanied by Lawrence, flew the TD2 from New Smyrna to Deland, Florida, from Deland to Daytona, Florida, and then from Daytona back to New Smyrna. On April 11, Willis, accompanied by Lawrence, flew the TD2 from New Smyrna to Lake-land, Florida. According to Lawrence, none of the problems identified in Lum-bert’s July 2004 correspondence occurred during these flights. On April 12, 2005, Willis, accompanied by Duff, flew the plane from Lakeland to Daytona Beach, Florida. Before leaving the Daytona Beach airport on April 12, Willis showed Lawrence documents indicating that he had completed the TD2’s Phase I testing.

Willis and Duff departed from the Day-tona Beach airport on April 12. While approaching an airport near Bogalusa, Louisiana, Willis and Duff were killed when the TD2 crashed. Approximately one year later, Duffs parents, Charles Duff and Judith Hunts, along with Duffs estate (collectively referred to as “the appellants”), sued Michael Spearman in Travis County. Their suit alleged that venue was proper in Travis County because “all or a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to Plaintiffs’ claims occurred in Travis County[.]”

Spearman filed a motion to transfer venue of the case from Travis County to the county of his residence, Montgomery County. See Tex. Civ. Prao. & Rem.Code Ann. § 15.002(a)(2) (Vernon 2002). In his motion, Spearman asserted that all or a substantial part of the events giving rise to the appellants’ claims had not occurred in Travis County. Specifically, Spearman asserted that no facts related to the crash occurred in Travis County, and he denied that he had misrepresented facts about the TD2 to either Willis or Duff. After a hearing, the trial court in Travis County transferred 7 the appellants’ case to Montgomery County.

In November 2008, the trial judge conducted a jury trial. In its verdict, the jury awarded the Estate of David Duff damages of $15,000, awarded Judith Hunts damages of $975,000, and awarded Charles Duff damages of $303,000. The jury apportioned negligence between those it determined to have been negligent as follows: (1) Michael Spearman, 4%; (2) Charles Lawrence, 8 4%; (3) John Cunningham, 9 2%; (4) “Pilot in Command,” 10 70%; (5) Terry Willis, 11 for acts and omissions other than as “Pilot in Command,” 10%; (6) David Duff, for acts and omissions other than as “Pilot in Command,” 10%. Additionally, the jury answered “no” to a question asking whether Willis acted in the furtherance of a mission for Spearman’s benefit. The trial court’s judgment offset *875 the appellants’ recovery against Spearman and Innova Aircraft with a settlement credit 12 and litigation costs. 13 The judgment then decrees that the appellants “recover nothing from Defendants Michael Spearman, Innova Aircraft, Inc.[,] and In-nova Ventures, Inc.,” and orders that “Defendants recover their taxable costs from Plaintiffs.”

Issues on Appeal

In five issues, the appellants challenge the trial court’s judgment. In their first issue, the appellants argue that the Travis County trial court erred in transferring the lawsuit to Montgomery County. In issue two, the appellants assert that the trial court erred in admitting character evidence to show Willis’s character as a bad pilot. In issue three, the appellants contend that based on the evidence, Willis acted as Spearman’s agent as a matter of law.

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322 S.W.3d 869, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 7420, 2010 WL 3517453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duff-v-spearman-texapp-2010.