Duhon v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc.

554 So. 2d 1270, 1989 WL 151400
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 1989
Docket88-875
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 554 So. 2d 1270 (Duhon v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duhon v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., 554 So. 2d 1270, 1989 WL 151400 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

554 So.2d 1270 (1989)

Michael Allen DUHON and Mary Kathryn Duhon, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
PETROLEUM HELICOPTERS, INC., etc., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 88-875.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

December 13, 1989.
Rehearing Denied January 23, 1990.

*1272 Keaty & Keaty, Robert B. Keaty, Lafayette, for plaintiffs-appellants.

McGlinchey, Stafford, Mintz, Cellini & Lang, Ken Laborde and Sharon Gross, New Orleans, for PHI and AVCO.

Roy & Forrest, L. Albert Forrest, New Iberia, for AVCO.

Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, Donald O. Collins, New Orleans, for Aerospatiale Helicopter.

McBride, Foret, Rozas & Leonard, Robert R. McBride, Lafayette, for USF & G.

Phelps, Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, Howard Daigle, Jr., New Orleans, for Garrett Corp.

Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips, W. Luther Wilson, Baton Rouge, for Parker.

Before DOMENGEAUX, YELVERTON and KING, JJ.

YELVERTON, Judge.

Michael Allen Duhon was a passenger aboard a helicopter which was involved in two accidents in 1983 in the Gulf of Mexico. Claiming personal injuries suffered from both incidents, he and his wife, Mary Kathryn Duhon, sued multiple parties, the number of which by the time of trial were reduced to four: Petroleum Helicopters, Inc. (PHI), the owner of the aircraft; AVCO-Lycoming, the manufacturer of the engine that powered the aircraft; Aerospatiale Helicopter Corporation and its parent company, Societe Nationale Industrielle Aerospatiale (collectively, Aerospatiale), the manufacturer of the aircraft; and John Airington, the pilot on both occasions.

Basing their claims on the strict liability provisions of Louisiana tort law and also on the general maritime law, Duhon asked for compensatory damages and punitive damages, and his wife sought an award for loss of consortium. After a three week trial, the trial judge directed a verdict finding that Duhon was not contributorily negligent. The case was given to the jury in the form of a special verdict consisting of nine interrogatories, and the jury was instructed to answer at least the first eight. The jury responded to Interrogatory No. 1 of the special verdict by finding that Duhon suffered "injuries or an aggravation of a pre-existing condition", caused by one or the other, or both, of the landings at sea. The jury found that no defendant was liable. The jury then determined that Michael Duhon had $112,000 in damages and his wife had $10,000 in damages.

In post-verdict proceedings, the trial judge set aside the jury verdict as to the liability of PHI and AVCO-Lycoming, and found that those defendants were liable. The trial court denied the plaintiffs' motion for a new trial.

The plaintiffs have appealed claiming error in the failure to find Aerospatiale liable and in the failure to award punitive damages, and seeking an increase in the award. They alternatively asked for a new trial based upon the discovery of new evidence, and four allegedly erroneous evidentiary rulings by the trial judge.

The two defendants who were cast in judgment also appealed. PHI assigns as error the directed verdict against it, arguing that the strict liability provision of La. C.C. art. 2317 is inapplicable in a suit under the general maritime law. AVCO-Lycoming assigns as error the directed verdict against it, arguing that there was no proof its engine was defective in either design or manufacture. The defendants do not complain on appeal of the amount of damages awarded.

THE AUTOROTATIONS AT SEA

Michael Duhon, age 28 at the time of trial, was employed by Southern Petroleum *1273 Laboratories of Lafayette, Louisiana, as a meter technician. His work required him to be transported from the shore base in Lafayette to offshore oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico well beyond a marine league from the Louisiana coast. His employer had contracted with PHI to ferry him by helicopter to these locations.

On March 31, 1983, Duhon was the sole passenger on one of PHI's helicopters, an A-Star AS350D, powered by an AVCO-Lycoming LTS 101 engine, flown by John Airington, headed to a platform some 35 miles offshore, when the engine quit at an altitude of 1,000 to 1,500 feet. The pilot autorotated the aircraft safely to the water. An autorotation descent of a helicopter was described by the experts as a procedure by which a pilot brings the aircraft more or less straight down, so that the updraft of air turns the main rotor providing lift to the helicopter and slowing its descent, much like a parachute. In accordance with applicable Federal Aviation Administration (F.A.A.) directives this landing was categorized as an "incident", rather than a crash, because the helicopter sustained no damage and there were no apparent injuries to its occupants. The pilot testified that the aircraft landed with a jolt on touchdown. Flotation devices, called ditchbags, attached to the main landing gear, kept the helicopter afloat until a rescue vessel arrived about two hours later. In the meantime, the plaintiff and the pilot climbed on top of the helicopter and sat there and talked and waited. When the rescue boat arrived plaintiff jumped from the helicopter to the boat ladder, and while he was on the ladder wave action caused the nose of the aircraft to pin him momentarily against the vessel. This did not cause any apparent injuries and the plaintiff boarded the boat`and went ashore.

An investigation following the incident of March 31, 1983, revealed that the engine quit running because a blade on the gas producer rotor of the engine failed as a result of vibrator stress.

About four months later, on July 26, Duhon was a passenger on the same aircraft piloted again by John Airington, when it once more autorotated into the Gulf of Mexico. The evidence rather conclusively established, bolstered by the plaintiff's own pretrial admission, that this was a soft landing, and that plaintiff suffered no injuries as a result of this incident. The cause of this incident was again the failure of an LTS 101 engine, although not the same engine involved in the earlier incident. An investigation resulted in a finding that the cause of this incident might have been the clogging of the fuel manifolds, but the engine was so badly corroded due to exposure to salt water when one of the flotation devices failed, that the experts were unable to say exactly what caused this engine failure.

The trial of the case took place four years after these incidents occurred, and massive discovery took place during that time. At trial plaintiff attempted to show that structural damage to the aircraft following the July 26 landing proved that it was a hard landing, or a crash, rather than a soft landing. The great weight of the evidence, however, indicates otherwise. After the helicopter landed, one of the flotation devices burst causing the aircraft to turn over in the water, but all of this occurred after plaintiff had left the plane and boarded an inflatable raft. The aircraft was thereafter towed in the water to a nearby platform, and the expert testimony indicated that it was this towing of the partially submerged aircraft in heavy seas that caused the structural damage, and not the landing itself.

Inasmuch as the evidence conclusively establishes that whatever injuries plaintiff suffered were incurred as a result of the March 31 incident, and not the July 26 soft landing, we consider it unnecessary to spend any more time discussing the July 26 landing.

A PARIAH IN THE HELICOPTER INDUSTRY?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
554 So. 2d 1270, 1989 WL 151400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duhon-v-petroleum-helicopters-inc-lactapp-1989.