Hartz v. United States

249 F. Supp. 119, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7625
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 29, 1965
DocketCiv. A. 8139-8141
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 249 F. Supp. 119 (Hartz v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartz v. United States, 249 F. Supp. 119, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7625 (N.D. Ga. 1965).

Opinion

MORGAN, Chief Judge.

These were actions brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C., Section 1346(b), to recover damages for the deaths of William B. Hartz and Harold S. Roth, and for property damage to the Bonanza airplane, in which both were occupants, which occurred when it crashed on take-off. These three actions were consolidated for trial and heard before this Court without a jury.

At approximately 7:00 P.M. on Friday, November 10, 1961, a Beech Bonanza N— 7996D requested clearance to make an intersection take-off on Runway 27 at the Atlanta Municipal Airport. The Bonanza was first cleared to the intersection by *121 a Ground Control controller, taxied there and took its position in the intersection, facing the runway. Other commercial aircraft were waiting for take-off at the end of the runway. While waiting there, an Eastern Air Lines DC-7, known as Flight 131, took off along Runway 27, from the end of the runway, passing the intersection in front of the Bonanza, waiting for its take-off clearance. The Bonanza was then cleared info position and requested to hold at the intersection. After Flight 131 had passed down the runway, the local controller, one John H. Dillworth, an employee of the Federal Aviation Agency, issued the Bonanza a clearance for take-off, by clearing the Bonanza in the language “November 96 Delta cleared for take-off, watch the prop-wash”. The Bonanza acknowledged the clearance and commenced its take-off roll from the intersection. Shortly after take-off, witnesses saw the lights of the Bonanza apparently wobble in the air; the Bonanza then crashed on the runway after having achieved a height of 50 to 75 feet, and skidded and came to rest off the runway. Both the pilot and the passenger on the Bonanza died in or as a result of the wreck, and, since no eye witnesses actually saw the plane crash, it is difficult to ascertain what caused the crash.

Plaintiffs claim that the Bonanza crashed because it was caught up in the right wing-tip vortex of the preceding Eastern Air Lines Flight 131, which would not have happened if Controller Dillworth had allowed sufficient separation between said Flight 131 preceding it, and the Bonanza, at the time the Bonanza was cleared for take-off. Plaintiffs claim further that the controller violated a provision of his procedure manual, which provided for the separation to be maintained or, in the alternative, a common law duty.

Defendant denies there was any violation of the procedure manual, or that the separation effected was improper; or, further, that any act or omission on the part of the controller, or any other employee of the United States, was responsible for the crash of the Bonanza.

Defendant denies further that the crash was caused because of wing-tip or vortex turbulence. In any event, defendant contends that it was the negligence of the pilot which was wholly and solely responsible for the crash and the resulting deaths of William B. Hartz and Harold S. Roth, and the loss of the Bonanza.

The first question to be determined by this Court is the cause of the crash of the Bonanza N-7996D.

The crash of the Bonanza occurred on Runway 27 of the Atlanta Municipal Airport. Runway 27 is 7,860 feet in length. Eastern Air Lines Flight 131, a DC-7, began its roll for take-off at the eastern threshold of the runway in question. Captain Ashley, pilot of the DC-7, estimated his lift-off at 2600 to 2850 feet from the roll-off point. Mr. Hartz, piloting the Bonanza, requested clearance from the control tower at an intersection on Runway 27 2,160 feet west of the runway eastern threshold. By a timing of a re-recording of the original tower tapes, the time which elapsed between the take-off clearance to Eastern 131 and the Bonanza was 43 to 46 seconds. The DC-7 passed the intersection where the Bonanza was awaiting clearance, and at a point approximately 500 feet west from said intersection, the DC-7 became airborne.

After receiving its take-off clearance, the Bonanza initiated its take-off roll and became airborne after approximately 1300 feet. This was in the vicinity of the intersection of Runway 27 with Runway 21, the northeast-southwest runway. Following its lift-off, Controller Stod-dard, at the Atlanta Air Tower, who had accumulated 800 hours as pilot of a Bonanza, observed the Bonanza to follow a normal take-off pattern, and the Bonanza flew in a straight and level flight before any irregularity was noted. Immediately following the take-off, the lights of the Bonanza were observed to “wobble” and this was observed by both Controller Dillworth and Stoddard. Imme *122 diately thereafter Controller MacDonald saw sparks going down the runway made by the impact. Hartz and Roth died in or as a result of the crash on November 10, 1961. Just prior to the crash, the witnesses in the control tower noted the green right wing-tip light assumed a higher position than the white tail light, and the red left wing-tip light was thereafter seen by Dillworth. The evidence from the tower observers was that the plane Bonanza rolled completely over.

Following the crash, the Civil Aeronautics Board, through its air safety investigator, John H. King, conducted an investigation, and from the physical facts found there was no evidence of any engine or structural failure of the aircraft nor of any occurrence of a stall. The control instruments settings in the Bonanza after the crash indicated that the settings were correct and proper settings for a Bonanza while initiating takeoff roll and take-off. The evidence indicated that the Bonanza crashed in an inverted position. Experts testified that a Bonanza aircraft, at an altitude of 50 to 70 feet and an air speed which it would normally assume would have insufficient roll capabilities, through the use of the controls in the cockpit, to become inverted prior to striking the ground, and that an altitude of 200 feet or more would be required to invert the aircraft prior to its striking the ground. Hence, even if Hartz had tried, he could not have caused the Bonanza to become inverted prior to its impact with the ground through the use of controls available to him. Experts testified that under the circumstances the Bonanza could not have stalled. The various experts testified that the engine of the Bonanza was under high R.P.M.’s, developing high power on impact, as evidenced by the bends in the propeller blades. The engine failure was further ruled out by evidence that the parallel grooves or gouge marks found on the runway were made by the propeller, and that the engine of the Bonanza had to be developing power at the time of impact for the propeller to have gouged as deeply into the concrete as it did. Experts dismissed the possibility of a stall having occurred, saying the Bonanza would have “rolled up in a ball” on the runway had a stall occurred, rather than moving 183 feet in a lateral direction.

According to Dr. Barnes Warner McCormick, Jr., 1 a vortex is created when the wing of an aircraft in flight sheds a horizontal sheet of air in its wake which quickly rolls up into what has been described as a “horizontal tornado”. The right wing-tip vortex rotates counterclockwise looking forward along the line of flight of the aircraft shedding the vortex. The vortex contains a core, at the edge of which is found the maximum force of the vortex. The forces on the right side of the core, again looking forward, are upward while those to the left are downward.

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Bluebook (online)
249 F. Supp. 119, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartz-v-united-states-gand-1965.