Kenty v. Spartan Aircraft Company

1954 OK 274, 276 P.2d 928, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 690
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 12, 1954
Docket36108
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1954 OK 274 (Kenty v. Spartan Aircraft Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenty v. Spartan Aircraft Company, 1954 OK 274, 276 P.2d 928, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 690 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

This action was instituted by Robert B. Kenty, plaintiff, during his lifetime, against Spartan Aircraft Company and Geraldine Powell, defendants, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in an airplane crash which occurred on December 22, 1949. A jury trial was had upon the issues joined, resulting in a unanimous verdict *929 in favor of defendants. Motion for new trial was overruled and plaintiff appeals.

Subsequent to the trial plaintiff was killed in another plane crash, and the cause has been revived in the name of Cloyse Kenty, executrix of the estate of Robert B. Kenty.

The only proposition urged by plaintiff in this appeal is error on the part of the trial court in refusing to give certain instructions requested by plaintiff. No objection was made to the instructions given by the court and no complaint concerning their correctness is made here. Plaintiff contends that the refusal to give the instructions requested by him deprived him of having his theory of the case presented to the jury.

The factual situation involved is substantially as follows:

Robert B. Kenty lived at Dallas, Texas, and was branch manager of Air Associates, Inc. He was a licensed airplane pilot and on December 22, 1949, arranged to fly to Tulsa, Oklahoma in a Swift single-engine airplane owned by his employer. Kenty was accompanied on the trip by another employee, a Mr. Frick, who was also a licensed pilot but generally flew other types of planes. The plane seated two persons who sat side by side and was piloted from Dallas to Tulsa by Kenty. The gas tank of the plane held twenty-seven and a half gallons of gasoline and the plane used about nine gallons per hour in flight. It took a little over two hours to fly to Tulsa, where Kenty landed and taxied the plane to Spartan Hangar No. 2. After parking near Hangar No. 2, Kenty and Frick alighted from the plane, entered Hangar No. 2 and crossed to the office. Kenty testified that he and Frick had agreed that Frick would fly the plane back to Dallas and that he instructed Frick to take care of servicing the plane at Tulsa. Frick requested such service from the defendant Powell who was employed by the defendant Spartan Aircraft Company at the time. There is some controversy about the exact nature of the conversation wherein the service was requested. Plaintiff testified that Frick requested the defendant Powell to service the “Swift parked outside” and that he, Kenty, added, “Air Associates Swift parked outside here.” The defendant Powell testified that Kenty requested the service for the plane and stated that it was parked at Hangar No. 1 and that it was a Swift. It was undisputed, however, that the NC number of the plane was neither asked for nor given in connection with the request for service. The NC number is a number assigned to each airplane for the purpose of registration and identification which is prominently displayed on the airplane and carried by it so long as it continues to exist as an airplane. After requesting servicing of the plane Kenty and Frick went to the purchasing department of the defendant company to transact business for which they had come.

The defendant Powell then instructed one Oscar Mack, an employee of the defendant company, to service a Swift plane parked at Hangar No. 1 and to get the NC number of the plane and bring it to her along with the amount of gasoline and oil used in servicing the plane. Mack then went to Hangar No. 1 where he found a Swift plane at the east end and inside of said hangar, which he proceeded to service with gas and oil. This, of course, was not the plane in which Kenty and Frick had arrived. After servicing the plane, Mack gave the NC number of the plane he had serviced to the defendant, Powell, together with information as to the amount of gasoline and oil used. The defendant Powell then made out a service ticket showing the NC number of the plane serviced, the amount of gasoline and oil furnished, and that the service was charged to Air Associates, Inc.

About 2:30 p. m. on the same day, Kenty and Frick returned to the hangar, where Kenty went to the men’s room Frick went direct to the office. Kenty then went to the office where he heard Frick protesting or commenting about the amount of oil consumed as shown on the service ticket. Kenty hold Frick to go ahead and sign the ticket, that the amount of oil was about right considering the plane’s condition. Frick then signed the ticket, the original of which was delivered to him, and the two men then proceeded back out to the plane, which had not been moved from *930 the place they had left it. Kenty took the left side'seat and piloted the plane on take off. After climbing- to about 3,000 feet he turned 'the controls over to Frick for the flight back to Dallas.

After traveling around 140 miles toward Dallas, the motor of the plane suddenly stopped. Kenty then took over the controls and when he found that there was a fuel failure he started looking for a landing place, lowered the landing gear, thought he saw a landing strip, which later proved to be a new highway under construction, and that' is the last thing he remembers. The plane crashed, as a result of which Frick was killed and Kenty severely injured.

The plane was equipped with a gasoline gauge which was located between the two .seats and which was in working condition. Kenty did not check such gauge prior to taking the-plane off at Tulsa, although he checked all the other instruments, nor did he check it at any time after taking off and prior to the crash. Neither did he check the NC number shown on the service ticket to see if it corresponded to the NC number of his plane. He was able to give the NC number of his plane from memory, however,- at the time of the trial some four years after the accident.

■ Defendants’ answers to plaintiff’s petition consisted of a general denial, pleas of unavoidable casualty and contributory negligence by reason of failure to check the gasoline gauge before leaving Tulsa, failure to check the gasoline gauge after leaving Tulsa, failure to ¡land the plane at any of the airports between Tulsa and the scene of the crash in order to refuel, failure to give th,e defendant the serial number of the plane to be serviced and failure to use the care and caution which a person of his experience should have exercised under the same circumstances prior to departure from Tulsa, and an allegation that defendant carried out the instructions given by the plaintiff or his companion.

In support of their contentions, defendants introduced the testimony of a commercial pilot who, as - an expert witness, testified that it is customary for a pilot, before he takes off, to satisfy himself that he has a full gasoline tank; that the NC number is an integral part' of the operation of a plane, as it is constantly used as a means of identification; that . he always checks his fuel even though he was received a service ticket from a reputable, first class service company; that he had never failed a single time to check his gas gauge before taking off and that it is drilled into every pilot to check the fuel supply before taking off.

It was also brought out by cross-examination of plaintiff that the plane was one normally used by him and that he was what might be called the senior pilot of that particular plane and was responsible for the overall operation of seeing that the plane was in proper flying condition.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 274, 276 P.2d 928, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenty-v-spartan-aircraft-company-okla-1954.