prod.liab.rep.(cch)p 10,758 Nichols Construction Corp. v. Cessna Aircraft Co.

808 F.2d 340
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 24, 1986
Docket83-3187
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 808 F.2d 340 (prod.liab.rep.(cch)p 10,758 Nichols Construction Corp. v. Cessna Aircraft Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
prod.liab.rep.(cch)p 10,758 Nichols Construction Corp. v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 808 F.2d 340 (5th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge.

Nichols Construction Corporation, plaintiff-appellant in this Louisiana diversity action to recover the value of an allegedly defective airplane, appeals from the district court’s grant of judgment notwithstanding the verdict in favor of defendants-appellees Cessna Aircraft Company and Garrett Corporation and of directed verdict in favor of defendant-appellee Cruse Aviation, Inc. *342 Finding that the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict for the plaintiff, we affirm.

Facts and Proceedings Below

Appellant Nichols Construction Corporation (“Nichols”) sought to recover the value of its Conquest Model 441 aircraft which crashed under mysterious circumstances in the Atlantic Ocean, killing both the pilot and Louisiana State University football coach Robert “Bo” Rein.

Cessna Aircraft Company (“Cessna”) manufactured the Conquest 441, a twin-engined, turboprop aircraft which could carry between seven and nine passengers and was certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (“FAA”) to fly at heights up to 33,000 feet. The Conquest aircraft contained outflow and safety valves which were designed to regulate cabin pressure during flight. The aircraft was constructed so that the engines supplied a continuous flow of pressurized air into the cabin and cockpit; the outflow valve, in turn, either opened or closed to release or retain the compressed air as necessary to maintain cabin pressure at a safe level. In the event the outflow valve were to malfunction and remain in a closed position, creating overpressurization, the safety valve would begin to operate as a backup system to release pressure. 1 The aircraft did not contain a similar backup mechanism for outflow valves that locked in an open position. Both the outflow and safety valves contained a diaphragm retention ring made of lexan, a material similar to plastic. 2 The valves and the rings were manufactured by Garrett Corporation (“Garrett”).

In April 1979, Nichols purchased the new Conquest 441 through an authorized Cessna dealer, Cruse Aviation, Inc. (“Cruse”), for $961,700. Garrett subsequently sent a series of teletype Service Bulletins to Cessna, advising it of a “potential problem” in diaphragm retention rings of the type used in the Conquest 441. The last Service Bulletin, dated December 15, 1979, stated:

“The problem area is centered around the balance diaphragm retention ring cracking and breaking away from the diaphragm assembly. If this occurs, the valve will close and may not perform its normal pressure relief and depressurization functions.” (Emphasis added.)

Garrett advised Cessna to warn aircraft owners to visually inspect the rings, following a procedure outlined by Garrett in the Service Bulletin. After receiving this notice, Cessna sent out a “Customer Care Owner Advisory” on December 21, 1979, advising owners of Cessna-manufactured aircraft that contained this type of retention ring to contact their Cessna dealers in order to arrange to have the safety and outflow valves inspected. Nichols received a copy of this notice.

Nichols thereafter had its pilot, Lewis Benscotter, fly its Conquest 441 to Houston on January 10, 1980, where Cruse conducted an inspection. At the time of inspection, the aircraft had registered be *343 tween fifty and sixty-five hours of flight time. It is conceded that the Cruse mechanic, Richard Bockelman, conducted a more thorough inspection of the valves than that outlined in Garrett’s Service Bulletin. 3 He then ran pressurization tests, in which the valves functioned properly. After Bockelman completed the inspection of the valves and pressurization tests, Benscotter flew to Shreveport and picked up Rein. They then departed for Baton Rouge. Rather than fly directly from Shreveport to Baton Rouge, Benscotter was advised by air traffic controllers to fly east to Monroe, Louisiana, southeast to Vicksburg, Mississippi, and then south to Baton Rouge, in order to avoid inclement weather. Benscotter acknowledged the controllers’ message.

Initially, air traffic controllers were able to communicate with Benscotter as the Conquest 441 headed east from Shreveport toward Monroe. Later in the flight, however, controllers from the Fort Worth Center tried unsuccessfully to get through to him after he exceeded a 25,000-foot altitude clearance level which had been imposed on this flight because of the weather. 4 The controllers contacted an airborne Pan American airplane which was flying in the vicinity of the Conquest 441, headed for Houston, and asked the pilot to contact the aircraft. The Pan Am pilot, William Kianka, initially tried, without success, to contact Benscotter on the assigned frequency. He subsequently managed to contact the Conquest over the emergency frequency and relayed the message that Benscotter was to contact the Center. Kianka testified that Benscotter had acknowledged his message and could be heard trying to contact air traffic control. Kianka also testified, however, that he could barely hear Benscotter’s attempts to contact Fort Worth on the assigned frequency, and Fort Worth was unable to pick up his radio contact at all. When asked whether he “detected] anything unusual about the tone of voice or the quality of voice,” Kianka responded, “No, not anything whatsoever different.” Kianka explained that Benscotter’s “voice wasn’t weak,” but that his radio transmissions were difficult to hear. Kianka subsequently was asked, “Did you in either of those times, the first transmission or the subsequent transmissions, detect anything unusual about the voice itself,” to which he replied, “No, not at all.” Benscotter’s transmissions to Kianka’s jet were the last audible contacts picked up from the Conquest.

At about 1:40 a.m. on January 11, the Conquest 441 plunged into the Atlantic Ocean, some eighty miles off the coast of Portsmith, Virginia, killing both occupants. Shortly before the plane crashed, an Air Force jet, acting at the request of the ground control at Fort Lee, Virginia, and at Washington Center, came within about 500 feet of the Conquest. At this point, the Conquest was flying at an altitude of approximately 40,000 feet. The pilot of the Air Force jet, Captain Daniel Zoerb, testified that he did not observe any signs of life in the cabin, but added that “it was impossible to see inside the cockpit.” He also testified that the windows and doors appeared to be intact and that the cockpit panel lights appeared to be operating. He noted that the cabin section was dark. The Air Force jet followed the aircraft out to sea. Zoerb observed that the Conquest began to lose altitude, made a right-hand turn, and then appeared to quit functioning *344 altogether, plummeting into the ocean. No wreckage was ever recovered nor were the victims’ bodies ever found.

Nichols brought this diversity action against Cessna and Cruse to recover the value of the Conquest. Garrett subsequently was added as a defendant by amended complaint. Nichols argued alternative theories of negligence against all the defendants, 5

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