Sheila Arthur and David Magiera v. Janet Lyn Grimmett

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2009
Docket08-07-00040-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sheila Arthur and David Magiera v. Janet Lyn Grimmett (Sheila Arthur and David Magiera v. Janet Lyn Grimmett) 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
Sheila Arthur and David Magiera v. Janet Lyn Grimmett, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ SHEILA ARTHUR and No. 08-07-00040-CV DAVID MAGIERA, § Appeal from Appellants, § 112th District Court v. § of Crockett County, Texas JANET LYN GRIMMETT, § (TC # 02-09-06507) Appellee. §

OPINION

This is the tragic story of a private airplane crash in Ozona, Texas, on October 19, 2001. The

cause of the accident is undisputed. Stated bluntly, the Piper PA-30 Twin Comanche simply ran out

of gas or, as phrased by the expert witnesses, the crash occurred as the result of “fuel starvation.”

Two passengers, Janet Lyn Grimmett, and her boyfriend, Dennis Otts, filed suit against the pilot,

John Willison; the owner, Sheila Arthur; Arthur’s husband, David Magiera; and Magiera’s business

entity, Dove Homes, L.L.C. Following a two-week trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the

plaintiffs for $14,266,238.75. Arthur and Magiera have appealed. Because we conclude that the

evidence is legally insufficient to support either theory of Grimmett’s recovery, we reverse and

render.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

We begin by examining the individual actors and the relationships that existed between them.

Sheila Arthur is a former executive secretary who is married to David Magiera. At the time of the

events involved here, Arthur was involved in an Internet-based ministry. Magiera is an artist,

sculptor, and website designer. Through their church, the couple had become friends with John Willison, a pilot. The three of them also became friends with Jose Hernandez, a young man from

El Salvador. Hernandez found work in Texas as a framer and ultimately started a subcontracting

framing business operated as JOH Construction. This company employed up to eighty workers

engaged in construction contracts throughout the United States.

Magiera and Hernandez came up with the idea of entering business together as home

builders. They incorporated Dove Homes, L.L.C. in June 2001 as a limited liability corporation,

with each man owning fifty percent of the company. They agreed that Magiera would act as the sales

and promotion arm of the company while Hernandez handled the construction end of the business.

Their intent was to build houses in Irving, Texas, where Magiera and Arthur lived. Hernandez and

his family lived in nearby Fort Worth.

Throughout the late summer and early fall of 2001, Hernandez worked on a construction

contract at a golf resort in Lajitas, Texas, which is an eleven hour drive from Fort Worth. On five

or six occasions, Hernandez leased a private airplane to fly home for the weekend to visit his family.

On at least one of these occasions, Willison piloted the plane. Hernandez and Willison then began

discussing the purchase of an airplane to facilitate the business travel. Although Hernandez had

sufficient income to afford payments and expenses related to owning a plane, neither he nor Willison

had the credit necessary to obtain financing. Willison then talked to Magiera about buying an

airplane. And so the plan unfolded. Because Arthur had the necessary credit, she would be the

owner in name only. Hernandez would be the owner-in-fact. Arthur would arrange the loan and

Hernandez would make the payments, including maintenance expenses. To protect Arthur’s credit,

Hernandez would make the payments to her and she in turn would pay the lender. After the note was

repaid, Arthur would transfer title to Hernandez.

The aircraft would enable Hernandez to fly between Lajitas and the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex both to visit his family and to begin construction projects through Dove Homes. For

Arthur and Magiera, the plan would allow them to travel for leisure; it would also further the

business of Dove Homes. Willison would pilot the plane, for free, in return for the ability to use it

in his wallpaper business as well as for his own personal reasons. Because he hoped to obtain an

ownership interest, Willison wanted to “work off” his part of the down payment by flying the plane.

All parties agree there was never an intent to operate the aircraft for profit or for charter. The

attorneys apparently all agreed that this arrangement was “loosey-goosey.”

There is some evidence in the record of a hierarchy or pecking order of use. Hernandez was

to have access to the plane when he needed it. Arthur and Magiera would use the plane if Hernandez

weren’t using it, and Willison could use the plane when no one else was using it.

Within a couple of weeks, the four friends decided to move forward with their plan. Willison

began looking at planes and reporting to the others. Willison found the Piper PA-30 Twin

Comanche on the Internet and Arthur authorized him to purchase the plane for $90,000. Willison

booked a commercial flight to South Carolina to inspect the plane and he negotiated the purchase

on everyone’s behalf. Hernandez put up the down payment of $10,000 and Arthur signed a

promissory note for the balance. The purchase was completed on October 18, 2001, and the airplane

was registered in Arthur’s name. Willison then flew the plane to Meacham Field at Fort Worth

where it was to be hangared. At the time of the purchase, Hernandez was in Lajitas.

The very next day, Hernandez called Magiera and asked him to call Willison. Hernandez

wanted Willison to fly to Lajitas, pick him up, and fly him back to Fort Worth. Magiera relayed the

message to Willison and arranged to meet him at Meacham Field. Magiera wanted to fly with

Willison to Hicks Field in Dallas to try out their new plane. Willison took on fuel at Hicks and

Magiera paid for it with Arthur’s credit card. Hernandez later reimbursed Arthur for the fuel. At this point, Willison flew to Addison Airport to pick up an electrician and his family who Hernandez

wanted flown to Lajitas. Willison did not purchase fuel at Addison. He then flew to Lajitas where

he dropped off these passengers and picked up Hernandez, Otts and Grimmett. Otts was a

contractor/friend of Hernandez and Grimmett was Otts’ girlfriend. Neither Magiera nor Arthur knew

there would be additional passengers on the flight.

Willison planned to fly from Lajitas to San Angelo to refuel because the Lajitas airport had

no fuel service. At some point after takeoff, Willison realized that there was probably less fuel than

he had calculated prior to take-off. He decided to divert to Ozona, where there was a lighted airstrip

and available fuel. By this time it was dark and Willison had difficulty locating the air field. Before

he could find the runway, the plane crash-landed. All of the passengers survived, but Grimmett

suffered catastrophic injuries.

PROCEDURAL SUMMARY

In their original petition, Janet Grimmett and David Otts sued Crockett County, Charles

McCleary d/b/a McCleary Aircraft, Dove Homes, L.L.C., and the pilot, John Willison. They later

amended their petition to add as defendants the owners of Dove Homes, Sheila Arthur and David

Magiera. Otts entered into a settlement and his cause of action was severed. Upon deciding that

neither Crockett County nor Charles McCleary bore any fault in the accident,1 Grimmett dismissed

her claims against them. During trial, Judge Brock Jones granted a directed verdict as to Dove

Homes.

THE CAUSES OF ACTION AND THE VERDICT

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