E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
This appeal arises from a products liability action concerning a helicopter seat belt. It involves interpretations of both the Louisiana Products Liability Act (“LPLA”), La.Rev. StatAnn. § 9:2800.51 et seq. (West 1991), and Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317, Lá. Civ.Code Ann. art. 2317 (West 1979). Margie A. Pickett, Terry Á. Pound, Angenette Mullet, and Michael Brent Pickett, widow and children of the helicopter pilot killed by the failure of the seat belt (the “Picketts”), and Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., his employer (“PHI”), assert that Pacific Scientific Company, the manufacturer of the seat belt (“PSC”), is liable under the LPLA for making an unreasonably ■ dangerous product. They argue that the seat belt was defective because it could be taken apart and reassembled in a way that made it likely to fail in a crash, and that there was no adequate warning of this characteristic. The Picketts further assert that RTS Helicopter Leasing Corporation, the owner of the helicopter, and RTS Capital Services, Inc., its parent company (collectively, “RTS”), are strictly hable under Article 2317 as the owners of an unreasonably dangerous thing. The district court granted both PSC’s and RTS’s motions for summary judgment. We affirm.
I.
Drawing all reasonable inferences in the Picketts’ favor,
the facts are the following. On November 19, 1990, a helicopter owned by RTS and leased to PHI crashed shortly after takeoff in Cameron, Louisiana. The pilot, .Joseph Pickett, was fatally injured when his seat belt failed to restrain him and he was-flung into the rotor. Had it operated correctly; the seat belt might well have saved his life, as - the accident was not necessarily fatal.
The crash itself was caused by a PHI mechanic who removed the wrong control tube from the helicopter during routine maintenance, resulting- in its total loss of cyclic' control immediately after take-off. During the resulting crash, the seat belt failed because one. of its components, the “take-up bar,” had been at some point removed and reinserted upside down. On- this particular belt, the take-up bar. is the part of the cinching mechanism that keeps the belt tight after adjustment. Because the take-up bar was upside down at the time of the crash, the load placed on the seat belt was born by the thin, flat part of the bar, instead of the thick, 'round portion. The bar slipped, allowing the seat belt to come undone, just when it was most needed. This incorrect configuration of the take-up bar was possible because the bar was asymmetric (i.e., it had a thin, flat half and a thick, round half) and the seat belt was capable of disassembly. At the time of manufacture of the seat belt, there existed both symmetric designs that could not be incorrectly reassembled in this way, and other designs that could not be disassembled at all.
The seat belt in question had been originally manufactured in 1971 by PSC. It was not a part of the helicopter’s original- equipment, but had been installed as a replacement sometime prior to 1983. There is no evidence that the take-up bar was upside down at any time prior to 1983. In May of 1983, the seat belt was refurbished by Aircraft Belts, Inc. They rewebbed -the belt straps, disassembled and cleaned the metal parts, including the take-up bar, and then reassembled and relaced the belt. Obviously, the most likely explanation for the take-up bar’s being upside down at the time of the crash is that the seat belt was reassembled
incorrectly by Aircraft Belts.
There is not, however, any direct evidence of this. Whether a jury could reasonably infer that this is what happened is a close question that we need not reach. For purposes of argument, we will assume that this was the cause of the take-up bar’s incorrect configuration.
PSC was aware that the take-up bar could be positioned upside down. It issued two written warnings (“Safety Bulletins”), one dated January 11, 1972, and one dated May 30, 1983, that, clearly described the problem, the potential danger, and the solution with easy to understand diagrams. There is no dispute that the warnings would have been effective to avoid the incorrect configuration of the take-up bar in the hands of someone performing a reassembly of the seat belt. There is also no dispute that the warnings were in the possession of Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (“Tenneco”), the owner of the helicopter from 1976 to November of 1989; as well as PHI, the lessee after November of 1989, at all relevant times.
After the accident, the Picketts brought suit against a wide variety of parties in Louisiana state court, including the manufacturer of the helicopter, PSC, Aircraft Belts, RTS, and PHI. The case was removed to federal district court on diversity grounds pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. After being dismissed as a defendant, PHI intervened as a plaintiff to recover what it had already paid to the Picketts in compensation, should the Picketts’ claims succeed. RTS erossclaimed against PSC. Prior to the instant motions for summary judgment, all original defendants other than PSC and RTS had been dismissed for one reason or another. The Picketts and PHI now appeal the summary judgments entered in favor of PSC and RTS. RTS makes a protective appeal of its cross-claim against PSC.
II
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo.
Once a properly supported motion for summary judgment has been presented, the burden shifts to the non-moving party to set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. In examining the facts, we draw “all inferences most favorable to the party opposing the motion.”
Exxon Corp. v. Baton Rouge Oil and Chemical Workers Union,
77 F.3d 850, 853 (5th Cir. 1996). We are also mindful, however, of the underlying standards and burdens of proof.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
477 U.S. 242, 252, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 2512, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). The pivotal question will always be whether the non-moving party has produced sufficient evidence that a reasonable jury could find for him at a trial on the merits.
Ill
A
With regard to the Picketts’ LPLA claims against PSC, the sole question before us is whether the seat belt’s capability of disassembly and incorrect reassembly was aproxímate cause of Mr. Pickett’s death. Based on our precedent of
Graham v. Amoco Oil Co.,
21 F.3d 643 (5th Cir.1994), we conclude that it was not.
In order to establish manufacturer’s liability under the LPLA, a claimant must show (1) damage, that (2) was proximately caused by (3) a characteristic of an unreasonably dangerous product during (4) a reasonably anticipated use of that product. La. Rev.Stat.Ann. § 9:2800.54 (West 1991).
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
This appeal arises from a products liability action concerning a helicopter seat belt. It involves interpretations of both the Louisiana Products Liability Act (“LPLA”), La.Rev. StatAnn. § 9:2800.51 et seq. (West 1991), and Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317, Lá. Civ.Code Ann. art. 2317 (West 1979). Margie A. Pickett, Terry Á. Pound, Angenette Mullet, and Michael Brent Pickett, widow and children of the helicopter pilot killed by the failure of the seat belt (the “Picketts”), and Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., his employer (“PHI”), assert that Pacific Scientific Company, the manufacturer of the seat belt (“PSC”), is liable under the LPLA for making an unreasonably ■ dangerous product. They argue that the seat belt was defective because it could be taken apart and reassembled in a way that made it likely to fail in a crash, and that there was no adequate warning of this characteristic. The Picketts further assert that RTS Helicopter Leasing Corporation, the owner of the helicopter, and RTS Capital Services, Inc., its parent company (collectively, “RTS”), are strictly hable under Article 2317 as the owners of an unreasonably dangerous thing. The district court granted both PSC’s and RTS’s motions for summary judgment. We affirm.
I.
Drawing all reasonable inferences in the Picketts’ favor,
the facts are the following. On November 19, 1990, a helicopter owned by RTS and leased to PHI crashed shortly after takeoff in Cameron, Louisiana. The pilot, .Joseph Pickett, was fatally injured when his seat belt failed to restrain him and he was-flung into the rotor. Had it operated correctly; the seat belt might well have saved his life, as - the accident was not necessarily fatal.
The crash itself was caused by a PHI mechanic who removed the wrong control tube from the helicopter during routine maintenance, resulting- in its total loss of cyclic' control immediately after take-off. During the resulting crash, the seat belt failed because one. of its components, the “take-up bar,” had been at some point removed and reinserted upside down. On- this particular belt, the take-up bar. is the part of the cinching mechanism that keeps the belt tight after adjustment. Because the take-up bar was upside down at the time of the crash, the load placed on the seat belt was born by the thin, flat part of the bar, instead of the thick, 'round portion. The bar slipped, allowing the seat belt to come undone, just when it was most needed. This incorrect configuration of the take-up bar was possible because the bar was asymmetric (i.e., it had a thin, flat half and a thick, round half) and the seat belt was capable of disassembly. At the time of manufacture of the seat belt, there existed both symmetric designs that could not be incorrectly reassembled in this way, and other designs that could not be disassembled at all.
The seat belt in question had been originally manufactured in 1971 by PSC. It was not a part of the helicopter’s original- equipment, but had been installed as a replacement sometime prior to 1983. There is no evidence that the take-up bar was upside down at any time prior to 1983. In May of 1983, the seat belt was refurbished by Aircraft Belts, Inc. They rewebbed -the belt straps, disassembled and cleaned the metal parts, including the take-up bar, and then reassembled and relaced the belt. Obviously, the most likely explanation for the take-up bar’s being upside down at the time of the crash is that the seat belt was reassembled
incorrectly by Aircraft Belts.
There is not, however, any direct evidence of this. Whether a jury could reasonably infer that this is what happened is a close question that we need not reach. For purposes of argument, we will assume that this was the cause of the take-up bar’s incorrect configuration.
PSC was aware that the take-up bar could be positioned upside down. It issued two written warnings (“Safety Bulletins”), one dated January 11, 1972, and one dated May 30, 1983, that, clearly described the problem, the potential danger, and the solution with easy to understand diagrams. There is no dispute that the warnings would have been effective to avoid the incorrect configuration of the take-up bar in the hands of someone performing a reassembly of the seat belt. There is also no dispute that the warnings were in the possession of Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company (“Tenneco”), the owner of the helicopter from 1976 to November of 1989; as well as PHI, the lessee after November of 1989, at all relevant times.
After the accident, the Picketts brought suit against a wide variety of parties in Louisiana state court, including the manufacturer of the helicopter, PSC, Aircraft Belts, RTS, and PHI. The case was removed to federal district court on diversity grounds pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. After being dismissed as a defendant, PHI intervened as a plaintiff to recover what it had already paid to the Picketts in compensation, should the Picketts’ claims succeed. RTS erossclaimed against PSC. Prior to the instant motions for summary judgment, all original defendants other than PSC and RTS had been dismissed for one reason or another. The Picketts and PHI now appeal the summary judgments entered in favor of PSC and RTS. RTS makes a protective appeal of its cross-claim against PSC.
II
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo.
Once a properly supported motion for summary judgment has been presented, the burden shifts to the non-moving party to set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. In examining the facts, we draw “all inferences most favorable to the party opposing the motion.”
Exxon Corp. v. Baton Rouge Oil and Chemical Workers Union,
77 F.3d 850, 853 (5th Cir. 1996). We are also mindful, however, of the underlying standards and burdens of proof.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
477 U.S. 242, 252, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 2512, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). The pivotal question will always be whether the non-moving party has produced sufficient evidence that a reasonable jury could find for him at a trial on the merits.
Ill
A
With regard to the Picketts’ LPLA claims against PSC, the sole question before us is whether the seat belt’s capability of disassembly and incorrect reassembly was aproxímate cause of Mr. Pickett’s death. Based on our precedent of
Graham v. Amoco Oil Co.,
21 F.3d 643 (5th Cir.1994), we conclude that it was not.
In order to establish manufacturer’s liability under the LPLA, a claimant must show (1) damage, that (2) was proximately caused by (3) a characteristic of an unreasonably dangerous product during (4) a reasonably anticipated use of that product. La. Rev.Stat.Ann. § 9:2800.54 (West 1991). In order for a product to be unreasonably dangerous, it must either: (a) be defective in construction, (b) be defective in design, (c) have an inadequate warning, or (d) fail to conform to an express warranty.
Id,
The Picketts assert claims under both the defective design and inadequate warning prongs of the LPLA. First, the Picketts argue that the seat belt was defective in design because it could be disassembled and incorrectly reassembled in a way that made it likely to fail in a crash. Under their reasoning, this capability of misassembly was the characteristic of the seat belt that caused the death of their husband and father. Because there existed alternate designs at the time of manufacture that did not have this characteristic, they conclude that the design
in question was defective. Alternately, the Picketts argue that the seat belt was unreasonably dangerous because there was no adequate warning of the capability of misassembly.
Regardless of which theory of liability we consider, under the LPLA the Picketts must also establish that the actual failure of the seat belt (and thus Mr. Pickett’s death) was proximately caused by the capability of. misassembly. Although not in the LPLA context, we had occasion to consider the definition of proximate cause under -Louisiana law in our decision of
Graham v. Amoco Oil Co., 21
F.3d 643 (5th Cir.1994). There, we held that proximate cause is “ ‘any cause which, in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient, intervening cause, produces the result complained of and without which the result would not have occurred.’”
Id.
at 648-49 (quoting
Sutton v. Duplessis,
584 So.2d 362, 365 (La.Ct.App. 1991)). More specifically, where “an accident results from two negligent acts, ‘one more remote and one an intervening cause, the presence of the intervening cause prevents a finding of liability on the one responsible for the more remote cause.’ ”
Id.
Applying
Graham,
it is clear that the failure of the seat belt in this case was not proximately caused by the mere capability of misassembly inherent in its design. Actual failure simply could not have occurred without actual negligent misassembly, here, presumably by Aircraft Belts, and this actual misassembly is an intervening cause that breaks the “natural and continuous sequence” of events flowing from the design.
In the
Sutton
case relied on in
Graham,
the court reversed a finding of partial negligence on the part of a mother whose child was injured after she failed to pick him up from school as she usually did. Applying the definition stated above, the
Sutton
Court found that the child’s eventual injury was proximately caused not by the mother’s failure to pick him up, but by the intervening negligence of the school in failing to supervise him. The instant case involves a strikingly similar situation. Although PSC may have established a prerequisite. to the eventual injury by designing a seat belt that
could
be misassembled, PSC did not proximately cause that injury because, as a matter of law, the
actual
misassembly sufficiently intervened to break the causal chain. For this reason, the Picketts’ LPLA claims cannot succeed. . . ,
B
With regard to the Picketts’ strict Lability claim against RTS, the sole question before us is whether there is a material question of fact as to RTS’s custody of the hehcopter on the date of the accident. Based on our precedent of
Ellison v. Conoco, Inc.,
950 F.2d 1196 (5th Cir.1992) (Garwood, J.), we conclude that RTS did not have custody as a matter of law.
(1)
Because this claim turns on a precise understanding of RTS’s relationship to the helicopter, a few additional facts are relevant. On Novembér 7, 1989, RTS purchased the hehcopter from Tenneco with the intention of leasing it immediately to PHI. Although the record is not entirely clear about the events surrounding the transfer of the hehcopter, viewed in the light 'most favorable to the Picketts they are as follows. On November 15; at PHI’s direction, Tenneco delivered the hehcopter directly from its facility in Houston, Texas, to PHI’s facility in Lafayette, Louisiana. On hand for the dehvery was one Terry Doehling, an independent contractor working for RTS. Doehling signed a dehvery receipt for Tenneco which provided that RTS had “caused [the hehcopter] to' be inspected and reinspected,” that RTS “accepted] [the hehcopter] as suitable for purchase,” and that it was “delivered to the
undersigned on behalf of RTS.” Doehling signed this receipt as RTS’s “regional mam ager.” There is no evidence, however, that Doehling ever himself inspected or even laid a hand on the helicopter. It is undisputed that he signed the receipt after simply visually verifying that the helicopter had arrived.
The lease between RTS and PHI was not signed and did not take effect until November 27. Under the terms of the lease, PHI had the sole right and responsibility to determine how the helicopter was to be used, where it was to be flown, and what maintenance, inspections, and repairs were to be performed on it. There is no evidence that this, was not, in fact, the arrangement between RTS and PHI, and no evidence that it was not actually in place as of November 15, as RTS asserts. In particular, there is no evidence that RTS had any power to affect any aspect of the helicopter’s usage, direction, or control, including matters of maintenance and inspection, at any time.
(2)
The Picketts’ -strict, liability claim against RTS is based on Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317. It provides, in relevant part: “We are responsible, not only for the damage occasioned by our own act, but for that which is caused by the act of persons for whom we. are answerable, or of the things which we have in our custody.”
In a normal case of statutory construction, where the meaning of a code provision was plain, our statement of the law might well end at this point, and we could proceed to an application of the clear language to the facts at hand.
BFP v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
511 U.S. 531, 566, 114 S.Ct. 1757, 1775-76, 128 L.Ed.2d 556 (1994) (Scalia, J.). Unfortunately, we cannot apply so simple an analysis to this case. As a matter of Louisiana law, the construction of Article 2317 has been placed in a peculiar context that has little to do with a common sense interpretation of the words quoted above. In
Ross v. La Coste de Monterville,
502 So.2d 1026 (La.1987) (Dennis, J.), the Louisiana Supreme Court held that an owner who transfers possession, but not ownership, of a thing to another party nonetheless retains custody of the thing for purposes of Article 2317. In
Ellison v. Conoco, Inc.,
950 F.2d 1196 (5th Cir.1992), however, we held that the
Ross
rule did not apply to a finance entity owner that never had actual possession of the thing.
The Picketts argue that as an owner who transferred possession, but not ownership, to PHI, RTS continued to have custody of the helicopter under
Ross.
RTS counters that, under
Ellison,
it never had custody of the helicopter, since it never- had the' helicopter in its physical possession. Thus, unlike the defendant in
Ross,
it could not have “continu[ed] to have” custody. The Picketts reply in the alternative that there is- a dispute in the record as to whether RTS physically possessed the helicopter for some brief period of time on November 15, 1989. They contend that, if the jury found that there was both ownership and possession on this date, RTS would, as a matter of law, have acquired custody under
Ellison.
The district court agreed with RTS that
Ellison
controlled and that there was no genuine issue as to possession. Although we agree with the district court and RTS that
Ellison
controls this case, we find the term “possession” singularly uninformative in the case of corporate entities like RTS. To clarify what constitutes “possession” for purposes of
Ellison,
we must briefly review the tangled history of Article 2317.
(3)-
The current Article 2317 is an exact copy of the English text of Article 2296 of the Code of 1825, which was published in both a French and an English version. The French text of Article 2296, in turn, was an almost exact copy of. the French text of the first paragraph of Article 20 of the Code of 1808.
Like much of . the Code of 1808, the first paragraph of Article 20 was drawn directly from the Code Napoleon, where its almost identical counterpart was and is Article
1384(1).
Under Louisiana law, it is well established that the French version of the Code of 1825 is controlling as to articles with a civilian heritage that have not been changed since that time.
Ross,
502 So.2d at 1030 (citing
Sample v. Whitaker,
172 La. 722, 135 So. 38 (1931), and other cases);
Shelp v. National Sur. Corp.,
333 F.2d 431, 439 (5th Cir.1964) (Wisdom, J.).
This rule applies here in the application of Article 2317. Furthermore, in this case the French version of Article 2296 of the Code of 1825 differs in one important respect from the English. Where the English text has “in our custody,” the French text uses the words
“sous sa
garde.”
As both this court and the Louisiana Supreme Court have held in the past, the French word
garde
as used in Article 2296 is a civilian term of art that incorporates shades of meaning beyond the literal English translation of “custody.”
Ross,
502 So.2d at 1030;
Ellison,
950 F.2d at 1208. Just what it does mean is a matter of some complexity, however. In particular, the interrelation between ownership and possession for purposes of allocating
garde
is less than clear.
The development of the theory of
garde
in Louisiana law has remained closely tied to its civilian heritage.
In
Loeseher v. Parr,
324 So.2d 441 (La.1975), the Louisiana Supreme Court held that the owner and possessor of a lot had
garde
of a tree on the lot, and was strictly liable for the damage caused when the otherwise healthy looking tree fell on his neighbor’s Cadillac. Citing a secondhand translation of a French legal dictionary, the court defined
garde
as the “[ojbligation imposed by the law on the proprietor of a thing or of an animal or on the one who avails himself of it to prevent this thing or this animal from causing damage to others.” 324 So.2d at 447 n. 6. Although the question in
Loeseher
allowed the court to skirt the possession-versus-ownership issue, they .noted in dictum that, based on French legal theory, one could “lose the custody .of a thing without losing its ‘garde.’ ” 324 So.2d at 447 n. 6 (citing Henri, Leon . & Jean. Mazeaud, 2
Traite Théoretique et Pratique de la Respon
sabilité Civile Délictuelle et Contractuelle
No. 1160 at 218-24 (André Tunc ed., 6th ed.1970)). In
Ross,
the court picked up this thread and held that the owner of a step ladder continued to have
garde
of the ladder after he had gratuitously lent it to his tenant.. 502 So.2d at 1032.
Ross
speaks only of an owner “continu[ing] to have”
garde,
however, and does not address the prerequisites for an owner to acquire
garde
in the first instance. This gap did not go unnoticed, and we held in
Ellison
that where an owner never had possession of a thing, he did not acquire
garde
in the first place. In
Ellison,
Judge Garwood reasoned that “[bjeeause [the owner] never possessed, controlled, or operated [the thing] ..., it follows that [he] was never in a position to correct defects that might have arisen.” 950 F.2d at 1209.
The requirement of past possession announced in
Ellison
can be traced to the French sources underlying
Ross. Ross
relies heavily on French legal theory, including the Mazeaud treatise cited in
Loescher,
and a case from the Cour de cassation, France’s highest appellate- tribunal. In
Société Commerciale Européenne des Brasseries “Brasseries de la Meuse" v. Etablissements Boussois-Souchon-Neuvesel et al.,
Cass. 2e civ., June 5, 1971, 1971 Bull.Civ. II, No. 204,
reprinted in English translation with commentary in
Arthur Taylor von Mehren and James Russel Gordley,
The Civil Law System
676-78 (2d ed.1977), the plaintiff was injured by a defect in a bottle of carbonated lemonade that caused it to explode. Affirming the trial court, the Cour de cassation held the bottler liable under Article 1384(1) because it retained the
garde
of the bottle after transfer to the plaintiff. Ignoring both ownership and physical possession, which apparently resided in the plaintiff at the time of the accident, the court looked instead to the fact that the bottler retained
control
over the bottle, which periodically came back to the bottler for washing, testing, and refilling (presumably after being turned in for a deposit). Since the plaintiff had no such control over the bottle, and no practical opportunity to test the bottle for defects, the court concluded that the bottler retained the
garde.
The result in the
Brasseries de la Meuse
ease is no outlier, inasmuch as the power of “usage, direction, and control,” not physical possession or bare ownership,
has always been the touchstone of
garde
in French law. 2 Mazeaud No. 1160 at 218-24. In a closely related situation, the law is clear that if the bare owner does not have the substantial power of “usage, direction, and control,” he cannot have
garde,
and it falls on the party that- does have this power: “If the attributes of ownership are divided due to the existence of a property right in a thing other than ownership, for example a usufruct, the
‘garde ’
attaches in principle to the one whose right gives him the power of. command with regard to the thing, ‘the usage, direction'and control’ of the thing. Thus, the usufructuary would have the
garde,
not the bare owner.”
Based on the
Brasseries de la Meuse
case and the French commentators relied on in
Ross,
it is clear that
garde
attaches to the owner of a thing when he acquires the substantial power of usage, direction, and control of the thing, including the practical ability to discover defects, and remains with him so long as he has that power, regardless of who has the physical possession at any given time.
In
Ross
itself, the owner of the step
ladder had lent it out for only; a short period of time, and expected it to return to his possession shortly. On an ongoing basis, he had the substantial power of “usage, direction, and control” of the ladder, and ample opportunity to examine it for defects, even though he did not have it in his physical possession at the time of the accident. The situation was almost identical to that in the
Brasseries de la Meuse
case, and the
Ross
Court was quite correct to conclude that the owner retained the
garde.
In
Ellison,
on the other hand, the owner was a finance entity that purchased the title to certain oil drilling equipment and immediately leased it back to the former owner without disturbing possession. Applying the same theory of
garde,
the
Ellison
Court was also quite correct to conclude that the finance entity never acquired
garde
in the first place. “Because [the finance entity] never possessed, controlled, or operated [the equipment] ..., it follows that [it] was never in a position to correct defects that might have arisen.”
Ellison,
950 F.2d at 1209.
Based on this reading of
Ross
and
Ellison,
we hold that, for purposes of applying Article 2317, Ellison’s “possession” means, at a minimum, the substantial power of usage, direction, and control, including the practical ability to discover defects, or what the French would call
“detention au sens intellectuel.’’
Physical possession, while relevant, is not a touchstone, and neither
Ellison
nor
Ross
is to the contrary.
(4)
Turning, at long last, to the facts of the instant case, we find that there is no material issue of fact as to whether RTS had
garde
of the helicopter at any relevant time. The Picketts do not even allege that RTS ever had any kind of substantial power of usage, direction, or control of the helicopter, or that RTS was ever in a position to discover defects through maintenance, and the evidence is undisputed that this was not the case. Rather, the evidence is clear that from the moment that Tenneco delivered the helicopter to PHI’s facility in Lafayette (at PHI’s direction), the helicopter was subject to the exclusive power of PHI under the terms of a long-term lease. Although the presence of Mr. Doehling at PHI’s facility might be read to constitute a brief moment of physical possession by RTS in some -sense, we do not find this probative of the real question posed by
Ellison,
namely: Did RTS ever have the substantial power of usage, direction, and control? In the end, this case is very similar to
Ellison,
as RTS was essentially the same kind of finance entity owner, albeit a slightly less trusting one in that it sent a representative to ensure that the financed asset was actually delivered. For these reasons, we agree with the district court that, as a matter of law, RTS did not have custody of the helicopter at the time of the crash, and the Picketts’ claim under Article 2317 cannot succeed.
IV
In conclusion, we hold that PSC cannot be held liable under the LPLA for the failure of its seat belt because this failure was not proximately caused by any characteristic of the seat belt itself. We also hold that RTS cannot be.held strictly liable under Article 2317 because it never had the substantial power of usage, direction, and control of the helicopter, and thus did not acquire
garde
of the helicopter under Louisiana law. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED. Because we affirm the district court, RTS’s protective appeal is DISMISSED AS MOOT.
AFFIRMED.