Gregory v. Garrett Corp.

578 F. Supp. 871, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10725
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 16, 1983
Docket82 Civ. 2316 (GLG)
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 578 F. Supp. 871 (Gregory v. Garrett Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. Garrett Corp., 578 F. Supp. 871, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10725 (S.D.N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

GOETTEL, District Judge:

Presented is a motion for summary judgment that requires the Court to decide very close issues concerning the scope of an employer’s immunity from suit under the workers’ compensation statutes of New York, Connecticut, and North Carolina. Before those issues can be precisely formu *875 lated, however, the complexity of this case requires a fairly detailed accounting of its underlying facts.

FACTS

As has been true of a number of earlier cases involving airplane crashes, this one has grown into a formidable jungle of litigation. There are twenty-one related actions involving numerous direct claims, third-party claims, expert witnesses, requests for discovery, and motions, all springing from a simple but tragic event— an airplane accident that resulted in the death of all persons aboard the aircraft. Those caught up in the litigation include the decedents’ families, estates, and employers, as well as the owner and operator of the aircraft, the United States government, and all those corporations that were in any way involved in the design, manufacture, sale, installation, maintenance, or inspection of the critical aircraft components whose failure may have caused, at least in part, the aircraft to crash.

The crash itself occurred at 6:40 p.m. on February 11, 1981, as corporate aircraft N520S, a Lockheed 731 JetStar owned and operated by TexasGulf Aviation, Inc. (“TGA”), approached for a landing at the Westchester County Airport, which lies just north of White Plains, 'New York. Of the eight persons who died when the JetS-tar crashed, two were members of its flight crew and six were employées of TexasGulf, Inc. (“TG”), the parent corporation and 100% shareholder of TGA.

More specifically, those on board and their corporate affiliations were as follows:

Passengers
Dr. Charles F. Fogarty Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of TG
Chairman of the Board of TGA
Gordon N. McKee, Jr. Vice President and Treasurer of TG
Vice President and Treasurer of TGA
Robert J. Boyle Vice President of TG
Clarence E. Drew Manager of Corporate Communications at TG
Frank J. Claydon, Jr. Vice President of TG
Albert D. Woodling Accounting Superintendent of TG
Flight Crew
J. Morgan Gregory President and Director of TGA
Shanley S. Sorenson Pilot for TGA

Of the six passengers, four (Fogarty, McKee, Boyle, and Drew) were residents of Connecticut and worked for TG in Stamford, Connecticut. The other two passengers (Claydon and Woodling) were residents of North Carolina and worked at a TG office located there. TG is a major mining and mineral exploration company incorporated in Texas and maintaining its principal place of business in Stamford, Connecticut.

The two flight crew members were also residents of Connecticut but worked at TGA’s headquarters at the Westchester County Airport in New York. Originally a department of TG, TGA in 1973 was spun off as a subsidiary and incorporated in New York to enable TG to continue to maintain a fleet of readily available corporate aircraft yet still meet the ownership requirements of the Federal Aviation Agency (the “FAA”). 1

*876 All eight of the decedents had been receiving their paychecks directly from TG, and all eight were covered by a workers’ compensation insurance policy issued to TG and certain of TG’s subsidiaries. Thus, as soon as the insurer verified that the crash had occurred during the course of the eight individuals’ employment as they were returning from a business trip to Toronto, Ontario, approval was given for their surviving spouses (the “survivors”) 2 to receive workers’ compensation benefits in accordance with the terms of TG’s insurance policy. The survivors of the six Connecticut residents accepted benefits under the terms of Connecticut’s Workers’ Compensation Act, while the two survivors of the North Carolina residents accepted benefits under the terms of North Carolina’s Workers’ Compensation Act.

Not surprisingly, though, the fairly minimal benefits provided under the relevant workers’ compensation statutes were hardly enough to match the income that the survivors had been accustomed to receiving while the employees were alive and earning considerable salaries. 3 However, under the applieablé statutory provisions, TG as the passengers’ employer was, and is, immune from any additional direct liability to the survivors. See Conn.Gen.Stat. Ann. § 31-284(a) (1972); N.C.Gen.Stat. § 97-10.1 (1979). Hence, the survivors had to look to other entities if they were to recover any further compensation for the losses they had suffered.

Initially, the survivors followed the lead of TG and TGA, which had brought suit against a number of parties whose services and products were alleged to have caused the accident and thereby TGA’s loss of the JetStar. See TexasGulf, Inc. v. Colt Electronics Co., No. 81 Civ. 7147 (S.D.N.Y. filed Nov. 17, 1981). 4 The theory of that pending action is that all those who were connected with the design, manufacture,’ sale, installation, and inspection of the JetStar’s solid-state generator control units (“GCU’s”) are liable to TGA and TG for the loss of the aircraft because the GCU’s failed to perform as specified on the night of the crash. Adopting a similar theory, the survivors filed a number of actions against the same five defendants involved in TGA’s suit, namely: (1) Lockheed Corporation (“Lockheed”), which designed and manufactured the JetStar; (2) Phoenix Aerospace, Inc. (“Phoenix”), which designed and manufactured the GCU’s that were installed in the JetStar and were in use on the night of the crash; (3) Colt Electronics Co. (“Colt”), which adapted the GCU’s for the JetStar and sold them to TGA; (4) The Garrett Corporation (“Garrett”), whose division, AiResearch Aviation Company, located in Islip, New York, installed the GCU’s on the aircraft; and (5) the United States (through the FAA), which approved Colt’s application for a Supplemental Type Certificate covering the modification of the JetStar’s electrical system and the installation of the GCU’s into the aircraft, and which is responsible for the conduct of the air traffic controllers who were in communication with the JetStar on the night of the crash. 5

*877 These defendants have, in turn, impleaded TG and TGA as third-party defendants on the theory that the crash was actually caused by the negligence of the flight and maintenance personnel working out of TGA’s office and hangar at the Westchester Airport.

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Bluebook (online)
578 F. Supp. 871, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-garrett-corp-nysd-1983.