Dyer v. United States

633 F. Supp. 750, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24020
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedNovember 20, 1985
DocketCiv. 82-1340-FR
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 633 F. Supp. 750 (Dyer v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. United States, 633 F. Supp. 750, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24020 (D. Or. 1985).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

FRYE, District Judge:

INTRODUCTION

On March 14, 1981, Jon Keith Dyer was killed when the Piper Turbo Arrow aircraft *752 in which he was a passenger crashed at the Clatsop County Airport in Astoria, Oregon. His mother, Gladys Dyer, is the plaintiff in this action, together with the Central National Insurance Company of Omaha, Nebraska, the insurer of the aircraft. 1

Plaintiffs bring this action against the United States of America for wrongful death pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(d), 2671, et seq. Plaintiffs contend that the crash occurred when the aircraft encountered wake turbulence from a United States Coast Guard helicopter. Plaintiffs contend that the Coast Guard’s negligence was a substantial factor in the cause of the crash and the death of Jon Dyer. The government contends that Coast Guard personnel acted reasonably and lawfully at all times and that there was no causal connection between any actions of the Coast Guard and the crash. The government asserts that the crash was caused solely by the negligence of the aircraft’s pilot, John Robert Franklin, Jr.

This court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties in this action. Prior to filing this action, plaintiffs exhausted their administrative remedies by filing a timely administrative complaint and instituting this action in a timely manner after the administrative claim was denied. 28 U.S.C. § 2675(a).

On April 30, 1985, the matter was tried to the court. The trial lasted eight days, with each side presenting numerous factual and expert witnesses. The court then took the matter under advisement.

On March 14, 1981, Jon Dyer, John R. Franklin, Cathy Chivavetta, and Patty Cvetich left Aurora State Air Park, east of Portland, Oregon, on a pleasure flight to Astoria, Oregon, intending to visit Jon Dyer’s brothers and parents. Dyer occupied the right front seat. Franklin, the pilot, was seated in the left front seat. Although Franklin was a relatively inexperienced pilot with approximately 300 hours of flight time (29.7 of those hours being in a Piper Turbo Arrow), Franklin was properly certified and qualified as a private pilot for single engine, land aircraft.

The flight went smoothly. Franklin testified as to what happened as the Piper Turbo Arrow approached the Clatsop County airport:

A. Well, I saw the helicopter just as I was coming in at the 45-degree angle. I saw the helicopter at the end of runway 21, getting ready to approach the threshold, the very end of the runway itself. That’s when I first noticed it.
Q. Okay. And after you saw the helicopter, could you explain what you did and why? Well, first explain what you did upon seeing the helicopter.
A. Well, I knew it was a fairly large helicopter, much larger than my own aircraft, so I just figured it had something, it had something, but I wasn’t sure what. So I extended my patterns to allow whatever it was to dissipate.
Q. Now, when you say extend your pattern, could you explain what you mean?
A. I made the downward leg much longer than normal so I was quite a ways out from the airport. Then I turned base leg and then final.
Q. All right. Now, as you were—do you remember the precise speeds that you were actually going—let me ask it this way: Are there particular speeds that you try to go on different legs of the traffic pattern?
A. On this particular instance I tried to go slower than normal because still I wasn’t sure about the helicopter.

The helicopter was an HH-3 Coast Guard helicopter which was returning to the Clatsop County airport from a search and rescue mission. Four crew members were aboard, including the pilot, Lt. Commander Thomas Preston; the co-pilot, Lt. Commander Paul Gruver; the avionicsman, Pet *753 ty Officer Jonathan Major, and the flight mechanic, Petty Officer John Nicholl.

The Clatsop County airport is unique in that it is an uncontrolled airport that is jointly used by general aviation aircraft and large military aircraft. The airport has no control tower. Aircraft operate under visual flight rules and provide their own sequencing and separation. Ordinarily pilots make their positions and intentions known to other aircraft on a common radio frequency called UNICOM.

On the day of the accident, the HH-3 Coast Guard helicopter approached the airport from the southwest, but east of runway 21. Officer Gruver testified that he saw a T-tail plane like the Piper Turbo Arrow to the west of the airport as the helicopter approached for landing. He testified that it did not appear to him that the plane was intending to land because it was approximately two miles northwest of the airport heading away from the airport, and he heard no transmissions on UNICOM to indicate that an airplane was in the pattern for landing.

The HH-3 helicopter continued in its flight pattern, using a left hand approach pattern, approaching the airport from the southeast on its downwind leg, turning left for the base leg and left again for the final approach crossing the threshold of runway 21 at approximately 55 knots and 350 feet above ground level. The helicopter then made a steady and continuous reduction in airspeed and altitude, touching down at the midpoint where all runways intersect, with virtually no forward speed, known as a “no hover” landing.

Approximately two minutes later, the Piper Turbo Arrow crossed the threshold of Runway 21 on its way to land. Franklin described the ensuing moments as follows:

A. Well, I did another—another scan of the airport. I still didn’t notice anything. So I assumed that everything was normal; it was okay. And I was just about to go into the flare when the turbulence hit.
Q. Okay. When you say the turbulence, tell me what the airplane did.
A. At first it went over to the left like it was almost on its side, and then I remember it going—I tried to add more power so I could perhaps go around, but it just didn’t seem like anything happened, and it went to the right again and the next thing I knew the ground was coming up.

Jon Dyer was fatally injured in the crash that followed, and the Piper Turbo Arrow was destroyed.

Plaintiffs contend that the Coast Guard helicopter pilots were negligent in the following particulars:

1. In failing to avoid the flow of fixed-wing aircraft as required by 14 C.F.R. § 91.89(a)(2).
2. In failing to plan or adjust their flight path to minimize vortex exposure to other aircraft, as required by paragraph 544(d) of the Airmen’s Information Manual.

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Bluebook (online)
633 F. Supp. 750, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-united-states-ord-1985.