Nicole Van Dorn Preston as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. J. Wesley Van Dorn, USN, Amy Snyder, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. Sean Christopher Snyder, USN, Cheyenne Collins, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Petty Officer 3rd Class Brian Andrew Collins, USN, And Petty Officer 2nd Class Dylan Morgan Boone, USN v. M1 Support Services, L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 2020
Docket02-18-00348-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nicole Van Dorn Preston as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. J. Wesley Van Dorn, USN, Amy Snyder, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. Sean Christopher Snyder, USN, Cheyenne Collins, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Petty Officer 3rd Class Brian Andrew Collins, USN, And Petty Officer 2nd Class Dylan Morgan Boone, USN v. M1 Support Services, L.P. (Nicole Van Dorn Preston as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. J. Wesley Van Dorn, USN, Amy Snyder, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. Sean Christopher Snyder, USN, Cheyenne Collins, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Petty Officer 3rd Class Brian Andrew Collins, USN, And Petty Officer 2nd Class Dylan Morgan Boone, USN v. M1 Support Services, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Nicole Van Dorn Preston as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. J. Wesley Van Dorn, USN, Amy Snyder, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. Sean Christopher Snyder, USN, Cheyenne Collins, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Petty Officer 3rd Class Brian Andrew Collins, USN, And Petty Officer 2nd Class Dylan Morgan Boone, USN v. M1 Support Services, L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-18-00348-CV ___________________________

NICOLE VAN DORN PRESTON AS SURVIVING SPOUSE AND PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE ESTATE OF LT. J WESLEY VAN DORN, USN, DECEASED; AMY SNYDER, AS SURVIVING SPOUSE AND PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE ESTATE OF LT. SEAN CHRISTOPHER SNYDER, USN, DECEASED; CHEYENNE COLLINS, AS SURVIVING SPOUSE AND PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE ESTATE OF PETTY OFFICER 3RD CLASS BRIAN ANDREW COLLINS, USN, DECEASED; AND PETTY OFFICER 2ND CLASS DYLAN MORGAN BOONE, USN, Appellants

V.

M1 SUPPORT SERVICES, L.P., Appellee

On Appeal from the 393rd District Court Denton County, Texas Trial Court No. 16-00046-393

Before Gabriel, Womack, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Womack MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

This case arises from the crash of a United States Navy helicopter off the coast

of Virginia during a minesweeping exercise. The crash, which the Navy determined

was related to Kapton1 wiring issues, resulted in the deaths of three servicemembers

and serious injuries to two others. Appellants are the spouses (Nicole Van Dorn

Preston, Amy Snyder, and Cheyenne Collins)2 of the deceased servicemembers

(Lieutenant J Wesley Van Dorn, Lieutenant Sean Christopher Snyder, and Petty

Officer 3rd Class Brian Andrew Collins) and one of the injured servicemembers

(Petty Officer 2nd Class Dylan Morgan Boone). In this appeal from the granting of a

plea to the jurisdiction to appellee M1 Support Services, L.P. (M1), a company who

performed maintenance on the helicopter, we are asked to consider whether the

political question doctrine applies to the facts of this case. We conclude that it does

and, therefore, affirm the order granting the plea to the jurisdiction and dismissing the

case.

According to a technical manual dated September 15, 2009, “published by 1

direction of the commander, Naval Air Systems Command,” Kapton is “[a] trademark of the DuPont Company for their polyimide resin film used as wire insulation.” It also provides, “Kapton wire has poor life characteristics and is no longer recommended for Navy aircraft.”

In the style of the plea to the jurisdiction, the spouses are identified as Nicole 2

Preston, Amy Provido, and Cheyenne Strauser.

2 II. BACKGROUND

In 2013, M1, a small business with its headquarters in Denton, Texas,

contracted with the Navy to perform phase maintenance on MH-53E Sea Dragon

helicopters in Navy squadrons HM-14 and HM-15. “Phase maintenance” refers to

recommended service (based on the original equipment manufacturer’s service

manuals and the Navy’s log books) after approximately 200 flight hours. Work was

performed in accordance with a document called the “Performance Work Statement.”

Pursuant to the contract, M1 was to “provide organizational level (O-Level)

maintenance support as outlined in Section 4.0.” Section 4.0 stated in part, “The

Contractor shall perform requirements in a manner that meets or exceeds the intent

of CNAFINST 4790.2 series, applicable Naval Aviation Maintenance Program

Standard Operating Procedures (NAMPSOPs)[,] and local NAMPSOP instructions.”

The Performance Work Statement required that all work done by M1 be “in

accordance with applicable publications, technical directives, instructions, standards,

and procedures contained in pertinent manuals utilizing blueprints, drawings[,] or

schematics as provided by the [Contracting Officer’s Representative].” In addition, it

provided a “[m]inimum [t]eam [c]omplement of skill sets required” of M1, which

included the specific skills, knowledge, and quantity of M1’s staff. It also included

“Directives and Instructions,” which referenced various military procedures, manuals,

guidelines, and publications.

3 In her affidavit, M1’s majority owner, Kathy Hildreth, stated that the Navy

prescribed the number of employees for each task order and their specific

qualifications. Further, she averred that the Navy not only approved the M1

personnel who provided maintenance services on HM-14’s and HM-15’s helicopters

but also recommended, through its contracting officer’s representative Lieutenant

Mike Caffey, that M1 hire Gene Mettler as its site lead.

According to Hildreth, phase maintenance was done from May 2013 to

September 2015 on HM-14’s and HM-15’s helicopters. Hildreth stated that the Navy

supplied M1 a technical manual, which was only accessible on a Navy website and

only during the term of a task order, which contained phase/maintenance cards for all

of M1’s phase maintenance activities. She testified that the Navy set the timeframes,

performed its own quality assurance inspections, and supplied all helicopter parts used

in the maintenance activities.

Mettler joined the Navy when he was eighteen years old, received maintenance

training, and then served as a remedial instructor for mechanics. After being in

Helicopter Combat Support Squadron, he was a quality analyst before serving in

maintenance control. He retired in 2012 as a chief petty officer. Mettler testified that

he supervised twenty-four employees as site lead for M1, and all of M1’s work went

through the Navy’s Contract Officer Representative Caffey, who set timeframes for

completion. According to Mettler, in September and October 2013, M1 performed

Phase C maintenance on the subject helicopter. A phase inspection—consisting of A, 4 B, C, and D phases—“identified specific areas and tasks, areas that need to be

inspected in that timeframe.”

According to Mettler, in approximately 2010, he “was informed by United

States Navy publications of Kapton wiring issues in Sea Dragon and Super Stallion

helicopters and that the technical manual would eventually be modified to account for

those issues.” However, to the best of his knowledge, the Navy did not implement

those modifications until October 2015.

Mettler averred that the Navy did not require that M1’s Phase C maintenance

include inspection of the subject helicopter for the Kapton wiring and fuel transfer

issues complained of by Appellants in this lawsuit. In addition, “[a]s to the task order

regarding HM-14’s and HM-15’s helicopters and the Kapton wiring and fuel transfer

issues complained of by [Appellants] in this lawsuit, M1 did not attempt to modify the

existing technical publications or directives or to evaluate the history of the

helicopters for discrepancies.”

Phase Maintenance Card M-12, dated January 15, 2010, which dealt with the

fuel system, required M1 to inspect for “1. Fuel and vent lines in cabin for leakage,

chafing, obvious damage, and security[;] 2. Fuel dump tube outlets on outside of

fuselage for obvious damage[;] 3. No. 2 engine firewall shutoff valve for leakage and

security[; and] 4. Inspect all brackets and lines for cracks and security.” The card

identified the “work zone” and the time to be spent on the inspection. Other phase

cards addressed different parts of the helicopter to be inspected, including “visible 5 structures, skin, and attachment fittings for cracks, distortion, and loose or missing

fasteners.” The inspection manual “contain[ed] the minimum phased maintenance

requirements to inspect the helicopter for material degradation and to perform

essential preventive maintenance.”

Christopher Varney, the Quality Assurance representative on the contract from

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Nicole Van Dorn Preston as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. J. Wesley Van Dorn, USN, Amy Snyder, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Lt. Sean Christopher Snyder, USN, Cheyenne Collins, as Surviving Spouse and Personal Representative for the Estate of Petty Officer 3rd Class Brian Andrew Collins, USN, And Petty Officer 2nd Class Dylan Morgan Boone, USN v. M1 Support Services, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicole-van-dorn-preston-as-surviving-spouse-and-personal-representative-for-texapp-2020.