Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., and Federal Insurance Company, Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., and Federal Insurance Company

349 F.2d 307
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1965
Docket9889
StatusPublished

This text of 349 F.2d 307 (Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., and Federal Insurance Company, Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., and Federal Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., and Federal Insurance Company, Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., and Federal Insurance Company, 349 F.2d 307 (4th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

349 F.2d 307

IMPERIAL FURNITURE COMPANY, Inc., Appellee,
v.
PIEDMONT AVIATION, INC., and Federal Insurance Company, Appellants.
IMPERIAL FURNITURE COMPANY, Inc., Appellant,
v.
PIEDMONT AVIATION, INC., and Federal Insurance Company, Appellees.

No. 9888.

No. 9889.

United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 2, 1965.

Decided July 12, 1965.

Thomas M. Starnes, Morganton, N. C. (Patton, Ervin & Starnes, Morganton, N. C., on brief), for appellants in No. 9888 and appellees in No. 9889.

Harry DuMont, Asheville, N. C. (Uzzell & DuMont, Asheville, N. C., on brief), for appellee in No. 9888 and appellant in No. 9889.

Before HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge, SOBELOFF, Circuit Judge, and HUTCHESON, District Judge.

HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge:

This controversy presents cross-claims for property damage arising out of a midair collision between two airplanes approaching the Hickory, North Carolina, airport for a landing. The District Judge found fault on the part of the commercial airliner in making a right turn in the vicinity of the airport, but concluded that that fault was not shown to have been a proximate cause of the collision. He concluded that, as the finder of fact, he was unpersuaded that the evidence showed fault on the part of the executive aircraft owned by the Imperial Furniture Company, Inc. As a result, the cross-claim of each party was dismissed and each party has appealed.

We conclude that absolution of the commercial airliner is supportable, but that a finding of fault on the part of the other aircraft was compelled.

On April 29, 1960 at approximately 12:39 P. M., a twin-engined turboprop airliner, designated as an F-27, departed Tri-Cities Airport, Tennessee, as Piedmont Aviation's Flight 50. Its next scheduled landing was at Hickory, North Carolina. Leaving Tri-Cities, the F-27 was placed on a heading of 120° to 130° until it intercepted the Hickory radio beacon. It then homed on the Hickory VOR radio beacon, which is approximately 10.2 miles northeast of the Hickory airport. When in the vicinity of the beacon, it made a right turn to 225 degrees, which heading brought it to the vicinity of the airport. Approximately two miles from the airport, it turned right to approximately due west, which course it followed for approximately two miles until it made a roughly 90° turn to the left, which brought it in alignment with the North-South runway upon which it intended to land. The plane was in a gradual descent from the time it passed the crest of the mountains until near the end of its final approach.

Meanwhile, a twin-engined Cessna 310, an executive aircraft, small relative to the F-27, was also approaching the Hickory airport for the purpose of landing on runway 19.1 There was a dispute in the evidence as to whether or not the Cessna's approach was straight in or whether it had come out of a sharp and steeply descending turn to the left immediately prior to the impact. There is no dispute that when the two planes were about 800 feet from the runway, the Cessna landed with force on the left wing of the F-27 leaving the imprint of its tires astride the port engine, as the propeller of the F-27 tore into the Cessna's nose section, dislodging the nose wheel. The nose of the Cessna bounced up after the impact, placing the Cessna in a stalling position. The vertical fin of the F-27 then struck the right rudder of the Cessna and a moment later sheared off the right wing tip of the Cessna. The Cessna then went into a spin and plummeted to the ground. It was demolished, of course, and its pilot and passengers were killed.

Notwithstanding the collision and the damage it sustained, F-27 was safely landed without injury to any of its passengers or its crew.

This action was brought initially for recovery of some $72,000, representing the value of the Cessna less the scrap. Piedmont cross-claimed for the cost of repairing its F-27 amounting to some $37,000, plus other damages which it claimed on account of loss of its use while undergoing repairs.

The Hickory airport is a small, uncontrolled airport. That is, there is no control tower advising and regulating the movements of arriving and departing airplanes. The Federal Aviation Agency does maintain there an information service. It has radio equipment through which it can communicate with aircraft in the area and it is utilized as a clearing house for information as to traffic in the vicinity. A private company, Cannon Aviation, also had radio equipment, known as Unicom, on the field through which it could communicate with aircraft in the area, and it was used by aircraft to relay personal messages. Finally, Piedmont Air Lines had its own radio equipment through which its ground personnel could communicate with its airplanes in the area.

Piedmont's F-27 had called in to Piedmont radio at Hickory at 12:54 P. M. reporting its presence in the area. In return it received information about the wind direction and the weather which, incidentally, was excellent and with unlimited visibility. At 1:00 P. M. there was another communication between Piedmont's ground personnel at Hickory and the F-27 during which the F-27 was advised of a slight change in the wind and the fact that a single-engine Cessna, not, of course, the one subsequently involved in the collision, was taking off from runway 24. At 1:03 or 1:04 P. M., Piedmont's ground personnel learned from Federal Aviation Agency Flight Service that the Cessna 130 had reported its presence in the area at 1:02 P. M. Earlier, at 12:45, the Cessna had called Cannon Aviation on the Unicom, requesting that Cannon order a taxicab for the use of the Cessna's passengers. Cannon, of course, did not report this call to flight service, and Cannon had no duty to do so.

At approximately 1:06 P. M. the F-27 was informed by Piedmont's ground personnel that the Cessna was close above and behind it and to "go around." Obedient to this suggestion, the F-27's captain ordered landing gear and flaps up and began to apply power intending to scrub the landing and circle the field for another landing approach. Before the added power took effect, however, or the descent of the F-27 had been affected, the collision occurred. The captain immediately took off the added power, ordered the gear and flaps down again and successfully landed the plane on runway 19.

After 1:03 or 1:04 P. M., a Flight Service specialist tried to contact the Cessna to inform it of the presence of the F-27. It could get no response from the Cessna.

The District Court found, in agreement with the testimony of all the eyewitnesses, that immediately prior to the impact the Cessna was above, behind and to the left of the F-27. Each circumstance — the fact that the Cessna was overtaking the F-27, was at a higher altitude, and was to the left of the F-27 — gave the right of way to the F-27 under Civil Air Regulations, Part 60, and obliged the Cessna to give way. The District Judge was of the opinion, however, that the evidence did not disclose how long the Cessna had been above behind and to the left of the F-27.

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Related

Imperial Furniture Co. v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc.
349 F.2d 307 (Fourth Circuit, 1965)

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