OPINION
Before RABINOWITZ, C. J., and CON-NOR, BOOCHEVER and BURKE, JJ.
RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.
This action arose out of an airplane accident. George Farnsworth and Michael Steiner had been on a hunting trip and had spent the day searching for game from the air, landing and taking off several times. They approached the McGrath airport around 8:30 p. m., the airplane made a banking turn in preparation for landing and then suddenly plunged, nose down, to the
ground. The altitude at which this abrupt change in attitude occurred is the subject of some dispute, and witnesses’ estimates ranged from 150 to 500 feet. There was no dispute, however, as to the fact that once the airplane began plummeting downward it did not deviate from that bearing — according to observers on the ground, the aircraft’s final flight pattern evidenced no attempt to recover from the nose-down attitude. The airplane impacted at a 90 degree angle, killing Steiner, who was piloting the plane, and seriously injuring Farnsworth.
Farnsworth filed a complaint in superior court alleging negligence on the part of Steiner. Subsequently, a counterclaim was filed on behalf of Steiner’s estate claiming damages for wrongful death caused by Farnsworth’s alleged negligence. It was Farnsworth’s contention at trial that the plane was carrying excess baggage and fuel at the time of the crash and thus was over the recommended operating weight and balance limits prescribed by the manufacturer for that type of aircraft. That fact, according to Farnsworth, combined with possible pilot error, caused the airplane to enter an aerodynamic stall while in the course of an approach to landing. H. J. Steiner, as representative of the decedent’s estate, denied that the plane was overweight or that it was negligently operated. The estate’s theory was that the accident resulted from Farnsworth’s own negligent behavior.
The airplane, a 1969 Citabria Champion, had two seats arranged in tandem position. It had been originally equipped with dual controls, but was subsequently altered, leaving only the rudder control pedals operational from the rear seat. Steiner’s estate argued that the accident was caused by Farnsworth’s sudden and careless depression of the left rudder pedal, which brought about the uncontrolled change in attitude and overrode the decedent’s attempts to regain control of the aircraft. Both parties introduced expert testimony in support of their respective theories as to the cause of the accident.
Steiner’s estate prior to trial made an offer of judgment, pursuant to Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 68.
This offer was rejected by Farnsworth. Ultimately, the superior court determined that the offer exceeded the jury’s award upon trial and that, consequently, under Rule 68 Farnsworth was liable to Steiner for costs and attorney’s fees accrued after the date of offer of judgment.
All of Farnsworth’s contentions in this appeal relate to the offer of judgment. He asserts that the offer was invalid and, alternatively, that even if it was valid it did not exceed the sum awarded by the jury. Steiner’s estate, as cross-appellant, alleges error in the superior court’s treatment of various evidentiary matters, in the content of the jury instructions, and in the superior court’s refusal to direct a verdict in his favor on the issue of liability.
We turn first to Farnsworth’s contentions regarding the offer of judgment. The offer read as follows:
OFFER OF JUDGMENT
TO: JOSEPH W. SHEEHAN, Esq.
Defendant H.J. STEINER as personal representative of the Estate of MICHAEL R. STEINER, pursuant to Civil Rule 68, hereby offers to allow entry of judgment for plaintiffs in this action for $45,000.00, plus $5,000.00 in costs to date hereof. This is an offer of compromise only, and is not to be construed as an admission.
DATED this 23rd day of December, 1975, at Anchorage, Alaska.
MERDES, SCHAIBLE, STALEY,
& DeLISIO, INC.
Attorneys for Defendant
Citing
Albritton v. Estate of Larson,
428 P.2d 379 (Alaska 1967), Farnsworth argues that because it is “not an unconditional offer allowing ‘costs then accrued’ the offer is void
per se.”
Farnsworth is correct in noting that Rule 68 requires that an offer of judgment allow costs accrued up to the date of the offer. His reliance on
Albrit-ton,
however, is misplaced. In that case we found an offer to be invalid on two grounds: it was not served on the opposing party but was instead filed in the superior court, and, more significantly, it was “devoid of any offer to allow judgment to be taken against appellee for a specified sum of money together with ‘costs then accrued.’ ”
Id.
at 381 (footnote omitted). We particularly noted the fact that the offer made to Albritton failed to conform to Form 128, Forms for Rules of Civil Procedure.
Id.
at 381 n. 6. In the present case, the offer of judgment paralleled illustrative Form 128, differing only in that it supplied defendant’s identity and filled in the blank spaces.
See generally Jakoski v. Holland,
520 P.2d 569, 577 (Alaska 1974). Farnsworth’s contention is without merit.
Farnsworth argues, additionally, that the amount of the offer did not exceed the jury award and that therefore it was error for the superior court to award appel-lee costs incurred after the making of the offer pursuant to Civil Rule 68. The jury award amounted to $36,631.00. After adding interest and costs accrued up to the date of the offer of judgment, the superior court arrived at a figure of $49,043.28
for
use in comparison with the total offer of judgment of $50,000.00. As appellant’s calculation, which produced a figure in excess of $50,000.00, depends upon what we must assume to be a clerical error,
it can be rejected out of hand. We have previously held that:
All that is required to bring into play ‘the offeree must pay the costs incurred after the making of the offer’ portion of Civil Rule 68 is a recovery which falls short of the offer of judgment. In our opinion, any other interpretation would be contrary to the clear meaning of the text of the rule, as well as in derogation of the rule's rationale.
Miklautsch
v.
Dominick,
452 P.2d 438, 440 (Alaska 1969). The fact that the offer and the jury award in this case are somewhat close
does not alter our conviction concerning the clarity of Rule 68.
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OPINION
Before RABINOWITZ, C. J., and CON-NOR, BOOCHEVER and BURKE, JJ.
RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.
This action arose out of an airplane accident. George Farnsworth and Michael Steiner had been on a hunting trip and had spent the day searching for game from the air, landing and taking off several times. They approached the McGrath airport around 8:30 p. m., the airplane made a banking turn in preparation for landing and then suddenly plunged, nose down, to the
ground. The altitude at which this abrupt change in attitude occurred is the subject of some dispute, and witnesses’ estimates ranged from 150 to 500 feet. There was no dispute, however, as to the fact that once the airplane began plummeting downward it did not deviate from that bearing — according to observers on the ground, the aircraft’s final flight pattern evidenced no attempt to recover from the nose-down attitude. The airplane impacted at a 90 degree angle, killing Steiner, who was piloting the plane, and seriously injuring Farnsworth.
Farnsworth filed a complaint in superior court alleging negligence on the part of Steiner. Subsequently, a counterclaim was filed on behalf of Steiner’s estate claiming damages for wrongful death caused by Farnsworth’s alleged negligence. It was Farnsworth’s contention at trial that the plane was carrying excess baggage and fuel at the time of the crash and thus was over the recommended operating weight and balance limits prescribed by the manufacturer for that type of aircraft. That fact, according to Farnsworth, combined with possible pilot error, caused the airplane to enter an aerodynamic stall while in the course of an approach to landing. H. J. Steiner, as representative of the decedent’s estate, denied that the plane was overweight or that it was negligently operated. The estate’s theory was that the accident resulted from Farnsworth’s own negligent behavior.
The airplane, a 1969 Citabria Champion, had two seats arranged in tandem position. It had been originally equipped with dual controls, but was subsequently altered, leaving only the rudder control pedals operational from the rear seat. Steiner’s estate argued that the accident was caused by Farnsworth’s sudden and careless depression of the left rudder pedal, which brought about the uncontrolled change in attitude and overrode the decedent’s attempts to regain control of the aircraft. Both parties introduced expert testimony in support of their respective theories as to the cause of the accident.
Steiner’s estate prior to trial made an offer of judgment, pursuant to Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 68.
This offer was rejected by Farnsworth. Ultimately, the superior court determined that the offer exceeded the jury’s award upon trial and that, consequently, under Rule 68 Farnsworth was liable to Steiner for costs and attorney’s fees accrued after the date of offer of judgment.
All of Farnsworth’s contentions in this appeal relate to the offer of judgment. He asserts that the offer was invalid and, alternatively, that even if it was valid it did not exceed the sum awarded by the jury. Steiner’s estate, as cross-appellant, alleges error in the superior court’s treatment of various evidentiary matters, in the content of the jury instructions, and in the superior court’s refusal to direct a verdict in his favor on the issue of liability.
We turn first to Farnsworth’s contentions regarding the offer of judgment. The offer read as follows:
OFFER OF JUDGMENT
TO: JOSEPH W. SHEEHAN, Esq.
Defendant H.J. STEINER as personal representative of the Estate of MICHAEL R. STEINER, pursuant to Civil Rule 68, hereby offers to allow entry of judgment for plaintiffs in this action for $45,000.00, plus $5,000.00 in costs to date hereof. This is an offer of compromise only, and is not to be construed as an admission.
DATED this 23rd day of December, 1975, at Anchorage, Alaska.
MERDES, SCHAIBLE, STALEY,
& DeLISIO, INC.
Attorneys for Defendant
Citing
Albritton v. Estate of Larson,
428 P.2d 379 (Alaska 1967), Farnsworth argues that because it is “not an unconditional offer allowing ‘costs then accrued’ the offer is void
per se.”
Farnsworth is correct in noting that Rule 68 requires that an offer of judgment allow costs accrued up to the date of the offer. His reliance on
Albrit-ton,
however, is misplaced. In that case we found an offer to be invalid on two grounds: it was not served on the opposing party but was instead filed in the superior court, and, more significantly, it was “devoid of any offer to allow judgment to be taken against appellee for a specified sum of money together with ‘costs then accrued.’ ”
Id.
at 381 (footnote omitted). We particularly noted the fact that the offer made to Albritton failed to conform to Form 128, Forms for Rules of Civil Procedure.
Id.
at 381 n. 6. In the present case, the offer of judgment paralleled illustrative Form 128, differing only in that it supplied defendant’s identity and filled in the blank spaces.
See generally Jakoski v. Holland,
520 P.2d 569, 577 (Alaska 1974). Farnsworth’s contention is without merit.
Farnsworth argues, additionally, that the amount of the offer did not exceed the jury award and that therefore it was error for the superior court to award appel-lee costs incurred after the making of the offer pursuant to Civil Rule 68. The jury award amounted to $36,631.00. After adding interest and costs accrued up to the date of the offer of judgment, the superior court arrived at a figure of $49,043.28
for
use in comparison with the total offer of judgment of $50,000.00. As appellant’s calculation, which produced a figure in excess of $50,000.00, depends upon what we must assume to be a clerical error,
it can be rejected out of hand. We have previously held that:
All that is required to bring into play ‘the offeree must pay the costs incurred after the making of the offer’ portion of Civil Rule 68 is a recovery which falls short of the offer of judgment. In our opinion, any other interpretation would be contrary to the clear meaning of the text of the rule, as well as in derogation of the rule's rationale.
Miklautsch
v.
Dominick,
452 P.2d 438, 440 (Alaska 1969). The fact that the offer and the jury award in this case are somewhat close
does not alter our conviction concerning the clarity of Rule 68. Farnsworth’s argument is devoid of merit.
We have considered Farnsworth’s other assertions of error and find them to be lacking in merit, such that discussion of them is unnecessary.
Steiner’s estate as cross-appellant, proposes numerous assignments of error concerning the conduct of the trial by the superior court. Of these, we think only two merit discussion here.
Steiner argues that the superior court’s refusal to admit the deposition testimony of Calvin Stoner and John Lincoln, concerning the decedent’s experience with aerobatic flying techniques, was reversible error. Steiner’s theory is that this evidence was relevant in that it demonstrated that the decedent possessed a degree of skill as a pilot that rendered Farnsworth’s version of the accident highly improbable. The claim is that the decedent’s experience in similar emergency situations was such that he would have attempted to perform emergency maneuvers to avoid the crash and that these attempts would have been reflected in the observed flight pattern of the airplane. Since the airplane went straight down and no perceptible attempt at recovery was made, according to this argument, the evidence in question would have tended to prove that Farnsworth, and not Michael Steiner, was responsible for the accident. Farnsworth’s counsel objected on the ground that the evidence sought to be introduced purported to be evidence of habit and, as such, was insufficient to demonstrate the decedent’s “regular practice of meeting a particular kind of situation with a specific type of conduct.”
The trial
judge agreed with Farnsworth’s characterization and excluded the evidence.
We believe that “the judge should possess the discretion usual in this field of circumstantial evidence to exclude if the habit is not sufficiently regular and uniform, or the circumstances sufficiently similar, to outweigh the danger, if any, of prejudice or confusion.”
In view of the fact that the evidence which the estate proffered at trial would have shown only that the decedent had received aerobatic training from Stoner and had performed aerobatic maneuvers “on more than one occasion” when Lincoln was a passenger, we are not persuaded that the superior court judge abused his discretion in excluding it. We are similarly unable to discern any error or abuse of discretion in the superior court’s treatment of the other evidentiary matters raised in the estate’s cross-appeal.
Reversible error is also asserted by the estate in regard to several jury instructions. The most important of these allegations pertains to the negligence
per se
instruction which the trial court gave regarding certain Federal Aviation Regulations.
Steiner’s estate cites
Ferrell v. Baxter,
484 P.2d 250, 261 (Alaska 1971), for the proposition stated therein, that:
[B]efore a plaintiff is entitled to an instruction defining the violation as negligence
per se,
he must first demonstrate that he is among the protected class and, second, that the injury was caused by a harm against which the law was designed to protect.
The estate argues that the negligence
per se
instruction read to the jury at trial was inappropriate because the F.A.A.’s regulations “do not identify a particular class of citizens to be protected, nor are they addressed to protection against any particular type of harm.” This argument overlooks the fact that very few laws or regulations specifically identify a class of people to be protected or the particular harmful nuances sought to be avoided; it also fails to take notice of this court’s recognition, in
Ferrell,
that such protective policies are “sometimes expressly, but more often by implication” contained in laws and regulations. The implication that these Federal Aviation Regulations are designed, at least in part, to protect passengers from being injured in airplane crashes is inescapable. We therefore hold that the superior court’s negligence
per se
instruction was a correct statement of the law and that it was an appropriate one to give in light of the particular facts of the case at bar.
Finally, each party to this action alleges that the attorney’s fees and costs awarded to him were inadequate and that the sums awarded to his opponent were excessive. Our review of the record indicates that the
superior court did err in its computation of attorney’s fees and interest.
As we have often stated, an award of attorney’s fees after trial should be based upon the appropriate criteria set forth in Civil Rule 82.
Fairbanks Builders, Inc. v. Sandstrom Plumbing & Heating,
555 P.2d 964, 966 (Alaska 1976). Further, we have consistently held that “the trial court should state its reasons when it makes an award of attorney’s fees which varies from the schedule in Rule 82(a)(i) . . .”
Miller v. McManus,
558 P.2d 891, 893 (Alaska 1977);
Haskins v. Shelden,
558 P.2d 487, 496 (Alaska 1976). No reasons appear in the record in explanation of the superior court’s award to Farnsworth of an attorney’s fee of $5,000. In view of the superior court’s unexplained departure from Civil Rule 82 in calculating the attorney’s fee award to Farnsworth, this facet of the superior court’s judgment must be vacated.
In addition, we conclude that upon remand the superior court should make a factual determination of the offeror’s actual expenses incurred after the date of the offer of judgment. Once this determination is made, the superior court, cognizant of the partial recovery principles of Civil Rule 82,
should award the offeror reasonable partial attorney’s fees and costs based upon its calculation of the offeror’s actual expenses incurred after the date the offer was made.
The superior court erroneously computed the amount of prejudgment interest to which Farnsworth is entitled upon his jury award. Ordinarily, a plaintiff who is successful at trial is awarded interest on the judgment amount from the date the cause of action accrues until the. date of judgment.
Haskins v. Shelden,
558 P.2d 487, 494 (Alaska 1976). However, under Rule 68,
a party who is successful at trial but who rejected an offer of judgment which exceeded his trial recovery, is permitted to recover expenses and fees — including prejudgment interest — only from the date that the cause of action accrues, to the date of the rejected offer of judgment.
In the case at bar the superior court calculated interest on Farnsworth’s award through to the date of final judgment.
Given this erroneous calculation this portion of the judgment must be remanded for recomputation.
The superior court’s judgment is AFFIRMED as to all matters except the award of attorney’s fees and interest; which issues are remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
MATTHEWS, J., not participating.