North American Aviation, Inc., a Corporation v. Wanda Lee Hughes and Randall L. Hughes, a Minor, by His Guardian Ad Litem, Harry Sutton

247 F.2d 517
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1957
Docket15292_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 247 F.2d 517 (North American Aviation, Inc., a Corporation v. Wanda Lee Hughes and Randall L. Hughes, a Minor, by His Guardian Ad Litem, Harry Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Aviation, Inc., a Corporation v. Wanda Lee Hughes and Randall L. Hughes, a Minor, by His Guardian Ad Litem, Harry Sutton, 247 F.2d 517 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

LEMMON, Circuit Judge.

Man or machine — ■

Which was responsible for the jet airplane crash that caused the death of the pilot, whose widow and whose infant son recovered $125,000 from the manufacturer of the machine ?

If the man was responsible for the accident, his widow and his son, plaintiffs below and appellees here, cannot recover, and reversal results.

*518 '■ If the machine was defective, the mantfacturer — the defendant below and the appellant here — was responsible, and the judgment of damages must be affirmed.

" The action was one for wrongful death. The appellant filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for á new trial. The lower court denied both motions, and gave judgment on the verdict. From that judgment the present appeal has been taken.

1. The Stipulated Facts

An F-86F aircraft, manufactured by the appellant, and piloted by the decedent, First Lieutenant Fred L. Hughes, crashed at the west end of the Los Angeles International Airport immediately after take-off, at about 3:27 p.m., on December 18,1953.

This aircraft had been delivered to th'e United States Air Force, after acceptance by the latter, and Lieutenant Hughes was flying it from the appellant’s factory, located at the Airport, to Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas, Nevada, when the accident occurred.

' The machine was completely demolished and the pilot instantly killed. The plane was airborne before it crashed.

. In addition to these stipulated facts, each party argued that there were certain additional facts favorable to their respective contentions. Those additional facts will be stated below, under appropriate headings.

2. The Appellant’s Version Regarding Certain Additional Facts

The printed transcript of record in this case consists of 885 pages. Obviously, an independent summary of the evidence cannot be attempted here. Accordingly, we give below the parties’ respective versions of additional facts not covered by the stipulation, supra. The appellant’s version is given first.

The appellant’s aircraft was known as the “Jet F-86F.” Although _ there are numerous landing strips at the Airport, where the crash Occurred, the particular strip involved here was about 8500 feet long, was paved, and ran in an easterly and westerly direction.

- The evidence 'is uncontradicted that the weather at the time of the accident was poor. Visibility was obscured by reason of a heavy fog bank which was rolling in from west' to east. Flight visibility was described as “zero”, and “instrument weather” prevailed. The weather was so bad that no “Army Air Force acceptance flights” were performed on the day in question, and some 18 scheduled flights were canceled.

At the time of his death, the pilot was 25 years of age. He had acquired a total flying time of 627 hours and 5 minutes, of which about 279 hours were spent as á student. His total flying time in the jet aircraft was “comparatively slight,” and most of his jet plane experience was in visual rather than instrument flying.As of June, 1953, he had only 137 hours of instrument flying.

The Army Air Force issued to its pilots two types of cards: a green card, “which is something like a rank,” and requires at least 500 actual instrument flying hours; and a white card, “which permits no element of discretion on the part of the pilot; it merely shows a basic instrument qualification.” The decedent never had a green card, although he did possess a white card, which was not current.

The aircraft contained about 1,000,000 parts, and was capable of exceeding the speed of sound, 735 miles per hour. A jet aircraft requires no warm-up as do other planes when the flight is conducted under visual rules. When, however, the flight is to be on instruments, the motor must be warmed up for at least five minutes, to stabilize certain instruments.

Thousands of these planes had been delivered, and there was no evidence that any of them had ever had any trouble.

Throughout the course of the manufacture of the plane it is minutely checked and inspected in all of its various systems. On the first flight it was discovered that there were three minor “squawks,” none of which had anything to do with the take-off or operation at low speeds. Take-off speed was only 110 *519 knots an hour. All the “squawks” were inspected and checked off or corrected.

Although the pilot who flew the Army Air Force acceptance flight was an employee of the appellant, this method of operation had long been in existence between the appellant and the Government.

In addition to the appellant’s inspectors, the Army Air Force also has inspectors of its own, who make certain independent inspections. Altogether, there were three inspections by the appellant’s flight inspector.

The fatal flight was scheduled for instrument take-off, and the decedent had filed a flight plan with the tower. He was seen to inspect the plane, climb into the cockpit, start the motor, and taxi the machine to the east end of the runway. There is considerable smoke connected with a jet plane. The pilot stopped the machine there for a very short time, probably less than a minute. He then took off, as the fog bank was moving in and covering the west end of the runway.

The take-off appeared to be normal. One witness described the plane’s height as 5 to 25 feet at the moment that it disappeared into the fog bank. At a point about 125 feet west of the west end of the runway, the jet crashed to the ground. A fire developed at that point immediately, and spread westerly across Lincoln Boulevard, burning the grass and dirt, and then searing the asphalt surface of the highway. After crashing, the plane proceeded in a westerly direction, tore through the fence on the east side of the Boulevard, went across the highway, broke through the fence on the westerly side of the Boulevard, and proceeded about 200 feet into a vacant field, where the major portions of the plane-fuselage, door assembly, engine, and other larger parts — were found. At the moment that the plane struck the ground there was an explosion, followed immediately by a fire.

William L. Pitts, procurement quality control inspector of the Air Force, immediately took over to “protect the interests of the Government.” A team of experts from the appellant, the Army Air Force, and General Electric co-ordinated their activities in an effort to determine the cause, if possible, of the crash.

The appellant produced all of the available experts who participated in the investigation of the accident. They agreed that it was not due to any failure of the aircraft “or its component parts.”

The evidence that “pilot error,” negligent or non-negligent, could cause the jet plane to crash. The appellant lists nine [causative?] “factors” that it says appear in the evidence, including the fact that the pilot was a relatively inexperienced man in the flying of jet aircraft.

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247 F.2d 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-american-aviation-inc-a-corporation-v-wanda-lee-hughes-and-ca9-1957.