Margaret Murray, Personal Representative of the Estate of William A. Murray, Deceased, Massey Ferguson, Inc., a Foreign Corporation v. Gates Learjet Corporation, Third-Party United States of America, Third-Party

782 F.2d 1042
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1985
Docket84-1660
StatusUnpublished

This text of 782 F.2d 1042 (Margaret Murray, Personal Representative of the Estate of William A. Murray, Deceased, Massey Ferguson, Inc., a Foreign Corporation v. Gates Learjet Corporation, Third-Party United States of America, Third-Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret Murray, Personal Representative of the Estate of William A. Murray, Deceased, Massey Ferguson, Inc., a Foreign Corporation v. Gates Learjet Corporation, Third-Party United States of America, Third-Party, 782 F.2d 1042 (3d Cir. 1985).

Opinion

782 F.2d 1042

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
MARGARET MURRAY, Personal Representative of the Estate of
William A. Murray, Deceased, Plaintiff, MASSEY
FERGUSON, INC., a foreign corporation,
Defendant-Appellee, Defendant-Appellant,
v.
GATES LEARJET CORPORATION, Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant,
Plaintiff-Appellee, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Third-Party Defendant-Appellee.

84-1660, 84-1661, 84-1662

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

12/3/85

Before: LIVELY, Chief Judge; JONES and WELLFORD, Circuit Judges.

WELLFORD, Circuit Judge.

These cases, treated as one by the district court, arise from the crash of an airplane on January 19, 1979, during its landing approach at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. The estate of William A. Murray, a passenger killed in the accident, brought these actions against various defendants, including Gates Learjet Corporation (Gates Learjet), the manufacturer of the aircraft; Massey-Ferguson, Inc. (Massey), the lessee of the aircraft, whose employee and independent contractor comprised the crew of the plane at the time; Management Jets, International (MJI), the owner of the aircraft; and the United States, whose employee was operating the airport control tower and was controlling the aircraft and other air traffic at the time. Massey and MJI have been jointly represented throughout the trial and on appeal.

Gates Learjet was alleged to be liable for negligence and breach of warranty in the design of the aircraft, specifically involving the alleged failure of the stall warning and prevention systems to operate when small amounts of ice formed on the wings. Massey, as employer of the pilot and supervisor of the copilot, was alleged to be liable for the actions of the crew in negligently permitting the aircraft to reach stall speed, causing an aerodynamic stall from which they were unable to recover in the remaining altitude. MJI, the owner of the aircraft, was alleged to be liable for the negligence of the crew under the Michigan aircraft owner liability statute. The United States was alleged to be liable for the acts of its employee, an FAA control tower operator, who allegedly gave incorrect information to the aircraft's crew and did not assure adequate spacing between the Learjet and an aircraft then taking off from the same runway.

Pursuant to a funding agreement, four of the parties, Gates Learjet, the United States, Massey, and MJI, paid $1,750,000 to the plaintiff in final settlement of their liability to the Murray estate. This payment was made pursuant to a settlement agreement which allowed each of the four defendants to litigate their respective fault and seek contribution and/or indemnity from each other.

The matter then proceeded to trial on the claims for contribution and indemnity. The district court ruled that the liability of the United States would be determined by the court as the trier of fact pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act. Thus the jury determined the respective fault of Gates Learjet, Massey, and MJI, while the court determined the fault of the United States. The jury found that Massey and MJI were eighty percent (80%) at fault, while Gates Learjet was twenty percent (20%) at fault. The district court ruled that the United States had no liability for the accident thus was responsible for no part of the award.

Two appeals are now before this court. First, Gates Learjet, Massey, and MJI appeal from the district court's finding that the United States was not liable, and Massey and MJI appeal the district court's award of costs in favor of the United States. Gates Learjet, Massey, and MJI assert on appeal that the district court erred in using an improper standard for proximate cause under Michigan law where an intervening cause existed.

Second, Massey and MJI appeal from the jury verdict apportioning liability among Gates Learjet, Massey, and MJI, while Gates Learjet appeals the district court's denial of costs against Massey and MJI. Massey and MJI assert on appeal that the district court abused its discretion in excluding FAA Airworthiness Directive 79-12-05 from evidence; that the district court erred in giving an erroneous instruction to the jury on the manufacturer's duty to warn; and that the district court erred in failing to grant a motion for mistrial by Massey and MJI.

On January 19, 1979, a Gates Learjet Model 25D, identified as N137GL, crashed on the Detroit Metropolitan Airport runway while making its landing approach. The aircraft crossed over the approach end (or 'threshold') of the runway in level flight and then aerodynamically stalled1, causing its right wing tip tank to strike the runway. The plane then cartwheeled on the runway, killing the pilot, copilot, and all four passengers aboard. Prior to the accident, the crew of the Learjet had been in constant communication with the Detroit Metropolitan Airport control tower, which was operated by employees of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), an entity of the United States.

Approximately five minutes before the crash, air traffic control of the Learjet was handed off from en route services to local control. Jack Dewolf, an FAA employee, was the air traffic controller at Detroit Metropolitan Airport responsible for local control of the Learjet and other aircraft arriving and departing at that time.

Although there was ice on the runways, the night was clear, visibility was good, and DeWolf was in constant communication with arriving and departing aircraft on the ground and in the air, including Delta Flight 713, a DC-9 commercial airliner waiting to depart. As the Learjet approached the airport, Delta 713 was on the ground and taxing to takeoff position at the end of the same runway on which the Learjet was eventually cleared to land. DeWolf cleared Delta 713 to take off and, shortly thereafter, also cleared the Learjet to land. During this time, DeWolf advised the Learjet's crew that Delta 713 was 'rolling good' and that the spacing between the two planes was 'going to be adequate.'

When both departing and arriving aircraft use the same runway, as on the night of the accident, the air traffic controller has the duty to assure adequate spacing between aircraft. In this case, the FAA Air Traffic Control Manual Sec. 12 (1979) requires a departing DC-9 to be 6,000 feet down the runway and airborne before an arriving aircraft crosses the runway threshold. Although DeWolf testified that this minimum separation had been achieved, evidence of an expert reconstruction of the flight paths offered against the United States suggested that the final spacing between the Learjet and Delta 713 was no more than 3500 feet. There was uncontradicted expert testimony that the Learjet crew would have been able to see the position of Delta 713 as they approached.

The Learjet crashed due to aerodynamic stall. There was evidence that this Learjet Model 25D with a Century III wing modification in a landing confliguration (landing gear down and flaps down 40 degrees) would stall at approximately 87 knots.

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