Sandra Lynne Downing v. Blair Losvar

507 P.3d 894
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 14, 2022
Docket36298-1
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 507 P.3d 894 (Sandra Lynne Downing v. Blair Losvar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandra Lynne Downing v. Blair Losvar, 507 P.3d 894 (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED April, 14, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

SANDRA LYNNE DOWNING, ) individually and as Personal ) No. 36298-1-III Representative of The Estate of Brian ) Downing, Deceased, and on behalf of ) KRISTYL DOWNING and JAMES ) DOWNING, Death Beneficiaries of The ) Estate of Brian Downing, ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) BLAIR LOSVAR, Personal ) Representative of THE ESTATE OF ) ALBERT E. LOSVAR. Deceased, ) ) Respondent, ) ) LYCOMING, A DIVISION OF AVCO ) CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation ) and subsidiary of TEXTRON AVIATION, ) INC., a foreign corporation; and JOHN ) DOES 1-20, ) ) Defendants, ) ) TEXTRON AVIATION, INC., a ) Kansas corporation formerly CESSNA, ) AIRCRAFT COMPANY, ) ) Petitioner. )

FEARING, J. —

“[T]his exact fact pattern (a resident-plaintiff sues a global [aviation] company, extensively serving the state market . . . for an in-state accident)’ No. 36298-1-III Downing. v. Losvar

also effectively functions ‘as an illustration—even a paradigm example—of how specific jurisdiction works.” Cohen v. Continental Motors, Inc., 2021- NCCOA-449, 864 S.E.2d 816, 827 (N.C. 2021), review denied, 868 S.E.2d 859 (N.C. 2022) (alterations in original) (quoting Ford Motor Company v. Montana Eighth Judicial District Court, ___U.S. ___, 141 S. Ct. 1017, 1028, 209 L. Ed. 2d 225 (2021)).

We’re not [only] in Kansas anymore. Paraphrase of Dorothy, in The Wizard of Oz.

This appeal presents the first opportunity for a Washington appellate court to

review and apply the United States Supreme Court’s recent ruling, in Ford Motor Co. v.

Montana Eighth Judicial District Court, 141 S. Ct. 1017 (2021), explicating the basis for

personal jurisdiction over a nonresident manufacturer. Textron Aviation Inc., the

successor corporation to Cessna Aircraft Company, challenges the superior court’s ruling

that Washington courts possess personal jurisdiction over the aviation company in this

lawsuit brought as the result of a crash of a Cessna airplane in Okanogan County. In so

arguing, Textron Aviation takes flight in order to dissociate and distance itself from the

company’s promotional material that boasts of its manufacturing planes for a worldwide

market and brags about its far ranging and quick service throughout the nation. Because

the owner of the Cessna plane resided in Washington State, because the crash occurred in

Washington State, because Cessna Aircraft Company possessed extensive contacts with

Washington State, and because this lawsuit relates in part to those contacts, we affirm the

superior court’s finding of personal jurisdiction under Washington’s long-arm statute and

2 No. 36298-1-III Downing. v. Losvar

the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

Ford Motor Co. v. Montana Eighth Judicial District Court compels our ruling.

FACTS

This lawsuit arises from the crash of a Cessna T182T Skylane, four-seat light

piston-engine aircraft. The impact killed pilot Albert Losvar and passenger Brian

Downing. The estate of Brian Downing initiated this suit against the estate of Albert

Losvar on the theory of pilot error and failure to maintain the aircraft. After some

discovery, Downing’s estate concluded that the plane likely malfunctioned, and the estate

added Textron Aviation Inc., the successor corporation to the manufacturer of the plane,

Cessna Aircraft Company, as a defendant. The estate of Albert Losvar cross claimed

against Textron Aviation.

We purloin our facts from the complaint of the estate of Brian Downing, the cross

claim of the estate of Albert Losvar, and affidavits filed by the parties in support of and in

opposition to Textron Aviation’s motion to dismiss. These facts extend to the nature and

extent of Cessna Aircraft Company’s and Textron Aviation’s business, Cessna’s

activities in Washington State, the provenance of the Cessna T182T involved in the

Okanogan County crash, and the few facts known about the crash. We refer to Textron

Aviation Inc. as “Textron Aviation” and its parent company Textron Inc. as “Textron.”

We refer to Cessna Aircraft Company as “Cessna.” We refer to the respective estates

3 No. 36298-1-III Downing. v. Losvar

simply as Downing and Losvar. For purposes of this appeal, Downing and Losvar hold

the same interests and forward the same arguments.

Cessna designed and manufactured the T182T model aircraft in Kansas. In 2008,

Cessna, not Textron Aviation, sold the Cessna T182T craft at issue to an authorized

Cessna dealer in Napa, California. The Napa dealer retrieved the plane from

Independence, Kansas, and the dealer later sold the plane to a customer in San Francisco.

In 2012, Albert Losvar purchased the plane from the San Francisco owner.

Cessna received notice of Albert Losvar’s purchase of the used plane and Losvar’s

Washington address. Between August 2012 and October 2014, Cessna sent Losvar, in

Washington State, six notices or service bulletins concerning the Cessna T182T. For

example, in March 2014, Cessna sent a service letter to Losvar explaining that a suspect

fuel pump might have been installed on his plane. This service letter advised Losvar to

inspect his plane’s paperwork or the plane’s fuel pump to determine if the suspect pump

had been installed. As required by law, Textron Aviation mails service bulletins to all

registered owners of aircraft covered by the given service bulletin.

On August 13, 2015, the Cessna T182T plane owned by Albert Losvar departed

the airport in Oroville, Washington. Fifteen minutes after taking off, the plane crashed,

killing pilot Losvar and passenger Brian Downing.

Following the crash, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) examined

the fuel selector valve from Losvar’s plane. The NTSB found “[a] black, rigid solid”

4 No. 36298-1-III Downing. v. Losvar

material inside the valve. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 722. Nevertheless, the Board could not

determine the nature of the material because it had “decomposed to elemental carbon and

water” when exposed to high temperatures. CP at 722.

After the NTSB’s examination, an independent aviation accident investigator and

reconstructionist, Mark Pottinger, concluded that the black, rigid solid substance, found

in the fuel selector valve, contained glass fibers. Pottinger, a man prouder of his aviation

engineering background than his law degree, teaches engineering at University of

Southern California. Pottinger opined that the glass fibers likely entered the fuel system

during manufacturing, and the fibers migrated through the fuel system until they

completely obstructed the fuel selector valve. Textron Aviation denies any

manufacturing defect and contends the material found inside the valve was deposited in

the selector valve only because of the heat immediately following the crash.

Although Downing and Losvar sue Textron Aviation, we first review the

background of Cessna, a predecessor company of Textron Aviation. Tinkerer Clyde

Cessna built his first plane in 1911 on the Oklahoma salt plains. By 1927, Cessna, then a

car dealer in Enid, Oklahoma, moved his upstart plane construction operation from Enid

to Wichita, Kansas, because Enid bankers refused to lend him money. That same year,

Cessna formed the Cessna Aircraft Company, which in the mid-to-late twentieth century,

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Bluebook (online)
507 P.3d 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-lynne-downing-v-blair-losvar-washctapp-2022.