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.

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 2022
Docket20-0270
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 Texas Supreme Court 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. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0270 ══════════

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, Petitioners,

v.

M1 Support Services, L.P., Respondent

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Second District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued September 14, 2021

JUSTICE BLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.

Justice Young did not participate in the decision. In American K-9 Detection Services v. Freeman, 1 we recognized the political question doctrine in Texas state courts for cases involving the military. In adopting this separation of powers principle, we were careful to observe that state courts retain jurisdiction over “ordinary tort suits” capable of judicial management. 2 Abstention based on a political question thus requires a case-specific examination to determine whether judicial review of military action in a suit inappropriately encroaches on the Executive Branch’s constitutional authority over the armed forces. In such circumstances, we do not allow judicial second-guessing. In this case, a private contractor maintained a fleet of aging Navy helicopters. When one crashed during a training exercise, the families of the deceased servicemembers and a survivor sued the contractor, alleging claims under the Death on the High Seas Act and maritime law. 3 The trial court dismissed the suit for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, ruling that questions of military judgment render this case nonjusticiable. The court of appeals affirmed. Applying American K-9’s principles, we conclude that the issues presented here are capable of judicial management without interfering with the military’s judgment. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

1556 S.W.3d 246 (Tex. 2018). “The political question doctrine excludes from judicial review those controversies which revolve around policy choices and value determinations constitutionally committed for resolution to the halls of Congress or the confines of the Executive Branch.” Japan Whaling Ass’n v. Am. Cetacean Soc., 478 U.S. 221, 230 (1986). 2 Am. K-9, 556 S.W.3d at 254. 3 46 U.S.C. § 30301, et seq.

2 I A In January 2014, a Navy MH-53E helicopter caught fire 100 feet above sea level and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off the Virginia coast. Three aboard the aircraft—Lieutenant J. Wesley Van Dorn, Lieutenant Sean Snyder, and Petty Officer Third Class Brian Collins— died. Two others, including petitioner Petty Officer Second Class Dylan Boone, were injured. The Navy recovered the wreckage. Upon inspection, its investigators discovered two holes in the helicopter’s aluminum fuel- transfer tube and visible evidence of chafing damage surrounding the breached areas. The holes in the transfer tube would have allowed fuel to leak into the cabin of the aircraft. Investigators suspected that the same chafing exposed poorly insulated wiring, igniting the leaked fuel. Although it was not recovered, investigators further suspected that a wire bundle held together by a plastic zip-tie had rubbed against the fuel tube, causing the chafing damage. Respondent M1 Support Services, L.P., a Texas-based private contractor, performed “phase maintenance” for the aircraft about three months before it crashed. Phase maintenance requires a top-to-bottom helicopter inspection and repair of any mechanical discrepancies. M1 completed the maintenance and marked the helicopter “safe for flight.” M1 performed its work according to a Navy-provided Performance Work Statement. The work statement required M1 to use “applicable publications, technical directives, instructions, standards, and

3 procedures contained in pertinent manuals,” as well as Navy-provided “blueprints, drawings or schematics.” Through these directives—presented in a series of maintenance cards—the Navy prescribed the qualifications and number of M1 employees who were to perform the work and the time allotted to perform it. The Navy regularly inspected M1’s activities, although the parties dispute whether these inspections involved more than a review of M1’s paperwork. In one maintenance card directing M1’s activities, the Navy expressly required that M1 check the “[f]uel and vent lines in [the helicopter’s] cabin for leakage, chafing, obvious damage, and security.” B Petty Officer Boone and the families of the deceased servicemen— the petitioners here—sued M1 for damages under the Death on the High Seas Act and general maritime law. The petitioners allege that M1 negligently failed to detect and repair damage to the fuel-transfer tube and the wire bundle during M1’s phase maintenance, which in turn caused their injuries. M1 denies the petitioners’ allegations. It asserts several defenses, including the “proportionate responsibility of Plaintiffs and non- parties.” M1 further asks that the trial court apply settlement proceeds obtained from other defendants as credits should the court render any judgment against it. 4

4 Four product-liability defendants resolved the petitioners’ claims against them in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut in December 2016 and January 2017.

4 When discovery was nearly complete, M1 moved for summary judgment, raising the government-contractor defense to liability that the Supreme Court recognized in Boyle v. United Technologies Corp. 5 The trial court never ruled on that motion. In the interim, M1 sought to dismiss this suit for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, relying on our recent decision in American K-9. In its jurisdictional plea, M1 argued that the adjudication of this case is inextricable from judicial review of military decisions, raising the prospect of political interference of the sort that had made the claims in American K-9 nonjusticiable. In support of its plea, M1 adduced statements from naval officers who averred that the Navy commonly used spare parts obtained from inoperable aircraft for repairs on the helicopter fleet. One officer related an instance in which the Navy requested she maintain an aircraft without the proper technical manuals. And M1 observed that the command investigation recognized that the Navy had inspected the crashed helicopter before the accident and authorized it safe for flight. These complaints involve the Navy’s maintenance procedures, M1 argued, and thus adjudicating the petitioners’ claims would require the trial court to evaluate the Navy’s decisions. The petitioners responded that, unlike the questions presented in American K-9, this case simply involves the proper maintenance of a particular aircraft. The Navy required M1 to inspect and replace defective fuel lines, and M1 allegedly failed to do so in compliance with those requirements. These claims do not require second-guessing of the

5 487 U.S. 500, 512 (1998).

5 Navy’s military judgment, the petitioners urged, but an analysis of whether M1 complied with the Navy’s maintenance procedures. Any review of the Navy’s actions in this case thus does not infringe on its strategic decision-making.

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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-tex-2022.