Mitchell v. Eyre

206 N.W.2d 839, 190 Neb. 182, 1973 Neb. LEXIS 660
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1973
Docket38561
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 206 N.W.2d 839 (Mitchell v. Eyre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Eyre, 206 N.W.2d 839, 190 Neb. 182, 1973 Neb. LEXIS 660 (Neb. 1973).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

This is a wrongful death action arising out of a crash October 4, 1964, during an effectiveness test of the search and rescue capabilities of the Nebraska Wing of the Civil Air Patrol. Both occupants of the aircraft were killed. The parties to the action are the widows and personal representatives of the decedents. The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff appeals. We affirm.

Both decedents Mitchell and Eyre were members of the Nebraska Wing of the Civil Air Patrol. Mitchell had held a phot’s license since September 10, 1958. Because hi's log book was unavailable, the extent of his actual experience could not be ascertained. However, he had been an active member of the Civil Air Patrol from 1959. At the time of his death he occupied the position of a training officer. Eyre began flying in 1963. He qualified for a private pilot’s license in October of that year. His log book indicates that he had 87 hours and 55 minutes of flying experience. He became a member of the Civil Air Patrol in September 1963.

For the purpose of the test, a simulated wreck had been placed upon the Leonard Sisel farm % mile east and 2 miles north from Bee, Nebraska. Participation was entirely voluntary. The aircraft, an Aeronca L-16, was a tandem-seated plane with dual controls, that is to say the plane could be operated from either of the two seat positions. In the investigation which followed the crash, it was determined that both controls were installed and operating.

The Civil Air Patrol form shows Eyre as the pilot in command and Mitchell as the observer. While Eyre was the pilot at take-off, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, a lieutenant colonel in the Civil Air Patrol, testified that *184 insofar as the Civil Air Patrol is concerned, it is possible for the observer, if he is a licensed pilot, to be flying the aircraft at any given time. He has done so as an observer.

The crash occurred at the edge of a milo field in terrain which was described as level, rolling, and farm ground. The site was an open or noncongested area. The weather was clear, with unlimited ceiling and visibility of more than 15 miles. The wind at the time of the crash was from 340 degrees, with a velocity of 14 knots and gusts to 22 knots. The temperature was 57 degrees Fahrenheit. The estimated time of departure on the mission was approximately 9:45 a.m. The time of the crash is estimated at approximately 11 o’clock a.m. The site of the crash was approximately 30 miles from Wahoo, the point of take-off.

There were four eyewitnesses to the crash. The first, Mrs. Leonard Sisel, testified she first saw the plane sometime around 10:30 a.m. It made two turns over her farm and then flew to Dwight, Nebraska. It then returned and started circling the milo field which is just north of a tree windbreak on the Sisel farm. The windbreak is just north of the house which faces east. She stood on the north edge of the windbreak with her children and watched the plane circle two or three times. She then testified: “A. On the last circle it seemed to have speeded up, and started going down quite rapidly; and it turned out over the road, and — Q. The road in front of your house? A. That’s right. Right in front of our house. It turned out over the road, and cleared the electric wires, and was heading west, and then it was quite low over the field. Then it kind of straightened up like it was going to land, and right then its wings tipped straight up and down like this (indicating), and it went down. * * * Q. Then it went out over that road, and then came back in? A. Yes. It swung out over the road, cleared the wires, and headed back west. Q. Then it went up? A. Then *185 suddenly his wings flipped up like this (indicating), and he went down. Q. If you would, when you say the wings flipped up, would you show us what you had in mind when you say the wings flipped up? A. The wings flipped up like this (indicating). Q. How? A. He was coming around this way (indicating), and came out over the road this way (indicating), and then his wings went like this (indicating), and he went clear down. Q. Almost perpendicular? A. That’s all I saw. There is a very slight — the land isn’t completely level. There is a very slight incline right there. I didn’t exactly see it hit the ground, but it looked like it was absolutely straight up and down like this (indicating), and the kids figures he was going to land, and they couldn’t figure out how it could land in that position. Q. You didn’t see it hit the ground? A. No.”

Vic Semin, a farmer living % mile north of the Sisel farm was watching the plane from his yard. He saw the plane flying toward the north, saw it turn west, and it leaned over and went out of sight. Mrs. Semin, who was with her husband, saw only one circle of the flight and had no opinion as to the height of the plane.

Robert Washington, a major in the Civil Air Patrol at the time of the trial, was in command of a ground mobile unit equipped with a radio participating in the test. He watched the plane circle twice, watched it come back out over the road starting a third circle, and then it disappeared as it flew west of a building which he described as a barn which blocked his view.

No purpose will be served by reviewing the expert testimony or the technical data received in evidence. None of the eyewitnesses could testify as to who was piloting the aircraft at the time of the crash.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved for a directed verdict. Included among the reasons assigned was the fact that the evidence failed to show Michael Eyre was piloting the aircraft at the time of *186 the accident. It was a dual control aircraft which could be operated, from either seat, and there is no proof in the record as to which one of the decedents was actually flying it at the time of the crash. This motion should have been sustained unless there is some legal presumption that Eyre, • who was. the pilot at take-off, was the pilot at the time of the crash.

Plaintiff’s casé is bottomed on the premise that the pilot in command of an aircraft is legally presumed to have been in control of it at the time of the accident if there is no direct evidence as to who was actually in control. There is an Annotation discussing this question in 36 A. L. R. 2d 1290.

At the outset, we suggest that in any action for injuries sustained in an airplane accident the issues of negligence, proximate . cause, and . contributory negligence invariably turn upon the question of who 'was piloting the plane at the time of the crash. It is necessary, therefore, for one seeking to recover in such action to establish the identity of the operator of the plane at the timé of the accident: Where the aircraft is equipped with dual controls, and both occupants are pilots, proof as to who may have been piloting the craft at the time of take-off, in our judgment, should not be conclusive where, as here, the crash occurs more than an hour later.

There are a number of decisions dealing with the question of presumption in these situations'. Those cited by plaintiff which hold, that a presumption exists can be readily distinguished from the facts in the instant case.

In Bird v. Louer (1933), 272 Ill. App.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 N.W.2d 839, 190 Neb. 182, 1973 Neb. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-eyre-neb-1973.