Pitcock v. B & W INCORPORATED

476 S.W.2d 83, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2382
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 30, 1971
Docket15769
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 476 S.W.2d 83 (Pitcock v. B & W INCORPORATED) 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.

Bluebook
Pitcock v. B & W INCORPORATED, 476 S.W.2d 83, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2382 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

Wrongful death action arising from a mid-air collision between two aircraft, a converted Douglas B-26 and a Cessna 150, near Van Nuys Airport in California. The plaintiffs, appellants here, are the surviving beneficiaries of Carl B. Pitcock and Bruce James Schuyler. Pitcock was teaching Schuyler, the pilot, to fly the Cessna. The B-26, owned by the defendant company, was being flown by Dan Arney, and its co-pilot was Russell Rew. Trial to a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of the survivors of Schuyler for $10,000 and no recovery for Pitcock’s survivors in view of a jury finding as to contributory negligence on his part.

Pitcock and Schuyler were killed in the accident. No radio transmission was received from them after take-off and prior to their deaths concerning the course or bearing of the Cessna. Arney and Rew were the only ones who testified that they saw the Cessna in flight before the collision. Both of them related that it was only a few feet ahead of them when they saw it and it was then in a right turn, apparently in an evasive maneuver. There was, however, circumstantial evidence concerning the course and bearing of the Cessna when the collision occurred.

The only jury findings of contributory negligence and proximate cause on the part of either plaintiff were those concerning the lookout kept by Pitcock.

The appellants’ first point of error is that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence the appellee’s posed photographic exhibits (DX 11-17), and the supporting proof relating to those photographs, purporting to reflect an extrajudicial experiment conducted by representatives of ap-pellee to show whether the sun, on the flight path assumed by the appellee, would have been visible in the windshield of the Cessna or would have affected visibility from the Cessna, and to show whether, during the simulated experimental flight path of the two aircraft, the B-26 would have been visible to the approaching Cessna, for the reasons that the assumed conditions were totally dissimilar to what actually occurred, involved unproven assumptions of fact, were intended to only project appellee’s theory, did not purport to depict what actually happened, were calculated to and did in fact mislead the jury, and were not subject to simple or any other readily understood explanation of the differences between the theory and the accident itself.

It was uncontroverted that visibility from each of the aircraft in question is limited in certain directions by structural braces, wings, cowling, etc.

We review the evidence as to the course ' flown by the aircraft on the occasion in question, summarizing first that which was offered by the plaintiffs (appellants).

V. B. Cole testified by deposition. He was on duty as an air traffic controller in charge of runway 16 right when the accident occurred. He has a transcription of the voice transmission of the pilots and the controllers on that occasion, prepared by the Federal Aviation Agency. The Cessna was identified as 88 Sierra and the B-26 as 94 Hotel. On July 3, 1968 at 4:32 P.M. plus 58 seconds, Pacific Daylight Saving time, ground control at Van Nuys Airport, said: “88 Sierra Skyways” (the Cessna) “taxi one six right time three two and a half.” One six right was the right-hand runway of two which have a magnetic compass bearing of 160 degrees, or 20 degrees east of due south. At 4:36 plus 20 seconds, a voice from the Cessna said: “Van Nuys tower 88 Sierra blast fence ready for takeoff.”

*86 At 4:36 plus 25 sec., “88 Sierra hold short.” From the Cessna came the acknowledgment “88 Sierra.”

At 4:37 plus 45 sec. the control said: “Cessna 88 Sierra cleared for takeoff.”

The acknowledgment: “88 Sierra.”

Then at 4:40 plus 35 sec. a transmission was received from the B-26: “Van Nuys tower 94 Hotel five miles south downwind for one six right.”

The control tower replied “94 Hotel right traffic one six right report downwind.” The B-26 answered “94 Hotel, Roger.”

At 4:41 plus 15 sec., Rew in the B-26 said “Van Nuys tower, 94 Hotel,” then there was a pause. “We just, ah, struck a Cessna 150 just on the other side of the freeway.”

The control tower said “94 Hotel, say again.”

At 4:41 plus 40 sec., Rew responded: “94 Hotel, we are behind the tower crossing Sherman Way, we just struck a Cessna 150, a blue and white one, and, ah, it looks like he spun in.”

The tower said “94 Hotel, Roger, cleared to land one six right.”

The tower tried to contact the Cessna by radio, but to no avail. There were other voice transmissions.

The elevation at Van Nuys airport is 800 feet, mean sea level. Under Visual Flight Rules, the approach pattern for heavy aircraft such as the B-26, there is indicated an altitude of 2300 ft. m. s. 1. and for light aircraft, such as the Cessna 150, 1800 ft. m. s. 1.

Cole found nothing unusual in the position of the B-26 when its pilot called in and wanted to land at Van Nuys Airport. He does not remember watching either of the planes and did not realize the Cessna and B-26 were going to the same area, because he had no idea which way the Cessna 150 was going. He knows now, because of the accident, the Cessna did not turn west. Chances are, it was a southwesterly departure.

John Dickinson testified that Van Nuys Airport was one of the busiest in the world.

The appellants offered the deposition testimony of Adam Berg. Carl Pitcock had worked for him as a flight instructor for about two and a half years, and Bruce Schuyler had been a student in Berg’s flight school. Schuyler had received his private pilot’s license. Berg was flying at the time of the accident and learned about it when he landed. The Cessna 150 had a 100 horsepower engine, it normally cruised at about 95 m. p. h., its rate of climb was 500 feet per minute and it normally climbed at 72 m. p. h. for maximum efficiency.

Berg teaches his instructors who are using runway 16 right to have their students fly out straight when they leave the traffic pattern until they get over Van Owen St., and if they have reached as much as 500 feet above the ground, then to turn 90 degrees to the right. Upon reaching Balboa Blvd. they would then turn 45 degrees left, which would be generally a southwest direction (205 degrees), then go on out to a practice area in the valley, due west of the airport. His company records indicate Pitcock was on his way to give Schuyler a lesson that day.

The student sits in the left seat, or the pilot’s seat, and the instructor sits in the right seat.

Visibility on the day in question was three miles. The Cessna 150 was new. Berg wasn’t present when the Cessna left and has no idea what pattern they followed out of the airport except that he knows what the school taught the pattern to be.

Except for looking up above the wing, the Cessna 150 has the best visibility of any airplane.

*87 Under normal conditions the pilot would have climbed to 4500 feet m. s. 1. at about 500 feet per minute, but it was a hot day, so he may not have been able to climb at that rate. He would have flown on the 205 degree heading until he reached the Ventura Freeway, then he would have flown west.

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Bluebook (online)
476 S.W.2d 83, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitcock-v-b-w-incorporated-texapp-1971.