Meredith v. United Air Lines

41 F.R.D. 34, 10 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 306, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10612
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedAugust 26, 1966
DocketCiv. A. No. 64-26-IH
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 41 F.R.D. 34 (Meredith v. United Air Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meredith v. United Air Lines, 41 F.R.D. 34, 10 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 306, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10612 (S.D. Cal. 1966).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

IRVING HILL, District Judge.

This case enables the Court to use the 1966 amendment of Federal Civil Rule 15(c) for the beneficial purposes for which the amendment was intended.

The instant case is a personal injury action based on negligence. On January 22, 1963, Plaintiff, Mrs. Meredith, was a paying passenger on a United Air Lines flight from Seattle to Los Angeles. She is a resident of Washington. Near the end of the flight, while the plane was over the vicinity of Bakersfield, California, she was standing in the restroom when she alleges that she was thrown to the floor by an abrupt and sharp movement of the aircraft, with resultant serious injury and permanent disability.1

[36]*36Plaintiff’s husband employed California counsel shortly after the accident. Counsel apparently engaged in quite a lengthy series of settlement negotiations with the insurers for United Air Lines. At some time in those negotiations, Plaintiff’s counsel learned that there had been a near-collision between the United plane and a military-type jet fighter plane. Mrs. Meredith and her husband were also told of the near-collision by one of Mrs. Meredith’s fellow passengers who was an eye witness. He stated that the abrupt veering off of the passenger plane had been caused by a military-type plane bearing U. S. Government insignia, coming right at it. Mr. and Mrs. Meredith informed counsel of this information in September, 1963. It is not clear which of these two disclosures of the near-collision came to counsel’s attention first; they probably occurred at about the same time.2 3 In any event that was all the information counsel had when the complaint was prepared and they made the natural assumption that the unidentified military-type plane was government-owned and government-operated.

The instant complaint was filed on January 9, 1964. It is in two counts. Count 1 names United Air Lines alone and is based on diversity. Count 2 names both United Air Lines and the United States, charging the concurrent negligence of both. It alleges that a government plane of “description unknown” was a contributing cause of the injury. The United States is sued under the Federal Tort Claims Act.

Thus far I have discussed the facts which were known to Plaintiff and her counsel up to the filing of the complaint. Important events, unknown to them, had occurred in the meantime. Very shortly after the accident, the Civil Aeronautics Board conducted an investigation of the near-collision. Therein the Government took the position that it had no jet aircraft of a military-type operating anywhere near the scene of the near-collision. The Government also contended therein that if a military-type airplane was involved, it must have been one of two military aircraft being operated in the general area by Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, a supplier of military aircraft to the Government. It appeared that Lockheed, on the date in question, was conducting a pre-delivery test of a new military-type jet aircraft manufactured for the Government. The test also involved the use of another military-type jet plane as a target. Both were being flown by Lockheed’s pilots. The Civil Aeronautics Board apprised Lockheed of these facts and made Lockheed a party to the investigation. Statements were taken therein from Lockheed’s pilots and other of its employees. Generally Lockheed denied that the tests were conducted in the vicinity of Bakersfield, but one of its pilots stated to the Civil Aeronautics Board that he was “in the vicinity of Bakersfield” after having been released from the tests. The tests were being directed from Palmdale which is about 75 air miles from Bakersfield.

Unfortunately, neither Plaintiff nor her attorney was made aware of the facts which the Civil Aeronautics Board investigation developed.3

After extensions of time to plead, the Government filed an answer on June 26, [37]*371964, which, for the first time, advised Plaintiff and her attorney of the Government’s position that it was not operating the military-type aircraft. At the same time, the Government noticed a motion to bring Lockheed into the case as a Third-Party Defendant. The Motion was granted on July 13, 1964. On July 21, 1964, the Government filed a Third-Party Complaint against Lockheed. In the Third-Party Complaint, after describing both of the planes which were being operated by Lockheed in the general area as aforesaid, the Government asserted that the unknown military-type plane referred to in Plaintiff’s Complaint was one of those two. The Third-Party Complaint sought indemnification from Lockheed in the event the Government was held liable.

After thus learning of Lockheed’s possible involvement, Plaintiff’s attorney acted promptly. On September 2, 1964, he moved to sue Lockheed under Civil Rule 14(a) and filed a proposed Amended Complaint. After some lapse of time, that Motion was heard and granted, and on November 20, 1964, an Amended Complaint was filed naming Lockheed as an additional Defendant in Count 2.

Since the first effort to bring Lockheed into the case as a party defendant occurred more than one year after the accident, and since the California statute of limitations for negligence is one year (Code of Civil Procedure § 340(3)), Lockheed has moved to dismiss the Amended Complaint as to it. All parties agreed in oral argument that the California one-year statute of limitations applies.

Plaintiff resists the Motion to Dismiss on two alternative grounds. First, she asks the Court to hold that the statute of limitations has been tolled because of Lockheed’s “fraudulent concealment” of its possible implication. Second, she urges that the Amended Complaint should be deemed to relate back to the date on which the original Complaint was filed.

At the hearing on the Motion to Dismiss I gave the parties a substantial additional period of time in which to conduct further discovery. I asked them to file such affidavits as they might wish to file on several factual matters:

(1) What notice Lockheed had had of the pendency of the claim.
(2) Whether Lockheed would be prejudiced by being brought into the action at this time, particularly as to whether Lockheed had made a factual investigation while the facts were fresh in memory.
(3) When Plaintiff first knew or should have known of Lockheed’s possible involvement.

Only Plaintiff filed an affidavit as requested.4

As will be seen infra, I hold that under Civil Rule 15(c) as amended in 1966, the Amended Complaint should be deemed to relate back to the date of filing the original Complaint. Thus, it is unnecessary to consider whether there has been any “fraudulent” or other concealment which would toll the statute of limitations under California law.

In reaching my conclusion I have considered the following questions:

I. Does this case meet the requirements of present Civil Rule 15(c) ?

II. Can Rule 15(c) as amended in 1966 be validly applied to the instant case?

[38]*38By way of dictum, it is also my view, as will be discussed infra, that the same result would have been reached under Rule 15(c) before its recent amendment.

I

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.R.D. 34, 10 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 306, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-united-air-lines-casd-1966.