In Re Air Crash Disaster at New Orleans (Moisant Field), Louisiana on March 20, 1969. Mary I. Cates v. United States

544 F.2d 270, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 6685
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 1976
Docket75-2066
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 544 F.2d 270 (In Re Air Crash Disaster at New Orleans (Moisant Field), Louisiana on March 20, 1969. Mary I. Cates v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Air Crash Disaster at New Orleans (Moisant Field), Louisiana on March 20, 1969. Mary I. Cates v. United States, 544 F.2d 270, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 6685 (6th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

EDWARDS, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) (1970), brought by representatives of the estates of nine men who were killed in the crash of an unscheduled airplane at the New Orleans International Airport (Moisant Field) in New Orleans, Louisiana, on March 20, 1969. Appellants alleged proximate negligence on the part of the Federal Aviation Administration (hereinafter FAA) air controllers at Moisant Field who had been in contact with the *272 DC-3 before the crash. The aircraft had been leased by Avion, Inc., to one William Jackson, doing business as Travel Associates, for a charter flight of hunters from Memphis, Tennessee, to Belize, British Honduras. The aircraft was scheduled to clear customs at Moisant Field at New Orleans on March 20,1969. It departed from Memphis around 4:30 a. m. and, seeking to make a bad visibility landing, it crashed after bouncing off a runway at Moisant at approximately 6:55 a. m. All three crew members and 13 of the 24 passengers were killed.

The pilot of the DC-3 had been warned several times by FAA controllers during the flight from Memphis to New Orleans that Moisant Field was affected by smoke and ground fog, that visibility was less than 600 feet (well below its minimum requirement for landing of 2,400 feet)* He was told that no planes had landed at Moisant but that the weather was expected to clear around 9 a. m. The pilot decided to fly to Moisant and asked and received permission to come in for a low level approach and “look at it.”

Apparently relying upon the clearance to make the low level approach and upon an incomplete (or erroneous) answer to a question about which the primary issue in this case revolves, but without ever asking for or receiving “clearance to land,” the pilot made the approach and descended to where on his last transmission he told the tower he had “the strobe lights in sight.” The physical facts of the accident showed that he then descended below the 202 MSL (feet above mean sea level) “missed approach” level, struck runway 10 at Moisant at a 25° angle, bounced off, and failing to gain altitude, struck the ground heavily at a distance of 3000 ft., the plane finally coming to rest in flames 5000 ft. from the first point of impact.

Evidence presented by the government included the testimony of two survivors of the crash who were themselves amateur pilots. Both testified that they had watched out the window of the DC-3 and had seen that the ship was flying through heavy fog in the minutes before the crash. One testified to a brief glimpse of the runway before the fog closed in again just before the crash.

FAA Regulations clearly forbid a pilot to land without the minimum required visibility “unless otherwise authorized by the Administrator.”

(b) Landing mínimums. Unless otherwise authorized by the Administrator, no person operating an aircraft (except a military aircraft of the United States) may land that aircraft using a standard instrument approach procedure prescribed in Part 97 of this chapter unless the visibility is at or above the landing minimum prescribed in that part for the procedure used. If the landing minimum in a standard instrument approach procedure prescribed in Part 97 of this chapter is stated in terms of ceiling and visibility, the visibility minimum applies. However, the ceiling minimum shall be added to the field elevation and that value observed as the MDA or DH, as appropriate to the procedure being executed. 14 C.F.R. § 91.116(b).

During the radio transmission between Moisant approach controller Goertz and the pilot, Goertz was asked about mínimums and confirmed that 2400 ft. visibility was required to land at Moisant. Goertz inquired as to whether or not the pilot had a current approach plate for Moisant Field and received an affirmative answer. The approach plate established the point of decision as 202 feet above mean sea level and specified the method for handling a missed approach. Thus from the beginning Goertz knew that the pilot knew that he needed 2400 feet visibility and, if he did not have it, he was required to abort the landing attempt without going below 202 feet and execute a missed approach.

In the case of an ILS Approach, the pilot is specifically forbidden to descend below decision height unless his aircraft is lined up with the runway for “a normal approach.”

(b) Descent below MDA or DH. No person may operate an aircraft below the prescribed minimum descent altitude or *273 continue an approach below the decision height unless—
(1) The aircraft is in a position from which a normal approach to the runway of intended landing can be made; and
(2) The approach threshold of that runway, or approach lights or other markings identifiable with the approach end of that runway, are clearly visible to the pilot.
If, upon arrival at the missed approach point or decision height, or at any time thereafter, any of the above requirements are not met, the pilot shall immediately execute the appropriate missed approach procedure.
14 C.F.R. § 91.117(b).

Without regard to whether anybody was negligent in getting the DC-3 to a point 202 feet in the air above Moisant Airport, it may well be that the critical fact of this accident was the pilot’s error in determining to try to land when his heavily loaded plane was not lined up with the runway. Since the marks from the DC-3’s first bounce on the runway and those made by the subsequent crash contact indicated the plane was at a 25 degree angle with the runway, it is obvious the pilot should never have descended below 202 feet (MSL).

On this issue the District Judge found:

From the angle of the skid marks on the runway and the testimony of the passengers, this Court finds that the requirements of 14 C.F.R. § 91.117(b) were not maintained. To descend below DH when the requirements were not met or maintained constituted a violation of that section and constituted another one of the forms of negligence on the part of the crew which was the proximate cause of the crash.

We cannot hold this finding to be clearly erroneous.

Clear as may be the causal relationship between pilot negligence and the deaths of appellants’ decedents, this still does not answer the principal question in this appeal. The negligence of the pilot is in no way attributable to his passengers and cannot exculpate the controller or relieve the government of liability if their negligence also contributed to causing the accident.

In a recent case where, due in part to an air controller’s error, 16 Air National Guardsmen, parachuted through clouds to their deaths in Lake Erie, this court made clear that concurrent or subsequent negligence did not exonerate the government.

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Bluebook (online)
544 F.2d 270, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 6685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-air-crash-disaster-at-new-orleans-moisant-field-louisiana-on-march-ca6-1976.