Snell v. Intercoastal Airways, Inc.
This text of 165 So. 2d 878 (Snell v. Intercoastal Airways, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
William E. SNELL, Jr.
v.
INTERCOASTAL AIRWAYS, INC., et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*879 Julian B. Humphrey and F. F. Willoz, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
Bienvenu & Culver, P. A. Bienvenu, New Orleans, for Bankers Ind. Ins. Co., defendant-appellant.
Sehrt, Boyle & Wheeler, New Orleans, for Intercoastal Airways, Inc., and James E. Stephens, defendants-appellants.
Before YARRUT and HALL, JJ., and BARNETTE, J. pro tem.
YARRUT, Judge.
All Defendants have appealed from a judgment of the district court awarding Plaintiff $8,000.00 (of a total of $42,160.00 claimed) as damages for personal injuries, loss of wages and medical expenses suffered in a crash landing of a single-engined, dualcontrol airplane in which Plaintiff was flying as a student with an instructor over Callender Field, Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. Plaintiff answered the appeal for an increase in the award.
Defendants are, respectively, the flying school (Intercoastal Airways), its president and acting instructor who was piloting the plane at the time of the accident (Stephens), and its insurer, Bankers Indemnity Insurance Co. (Bankers Indemnity).
This matter was first here on appeal from a summary judgment of the district court under LSA-C.C.P. art. 966, dismissing Plaintiff's suit. The judgment was set aside and the case remanded for a trial on the merits, because we did not consider the record disclosed with sufficient certainty lack of primary negligence by Defendants or contributory negligence and assumption of risk by Plaintiff, as was reciprocally alleged. Snell v. Intercoastal Airways, Inc., La.App., 139 So.2d 70.
In connection with the trial on the merits, Plaintiff testified that on July 20, 1947, in the late afternoon, he reported to Intercoastal Airways for a course of instruction in piloting an airplane. Upon his arrival, Defendant Stephens, as president, informed Plaintiff that he would personally take him on a flight and instruct him in making forced landings. After six takeoffs and landings, and on the last flight, Stephens advised Plaintiff he was going to show him how to make a forced landing in case of an emergency; Stephens told him to pull the throttle at anytime and Stephens would maneuver for a forced landing; this resulted in the crash and destruction of the plane and injury to both of them.
Plaintiff charges the crash was due entirely to the negligence of Stephens in instructing him to pull the throttle at a time when it was dangerous to do so; in negligently maneuvering the plane; in attempting *880 to make a 90 turn to the left for a forced landing; and in failing to "gun" the engine for power to gain altitude, which would have avoided the crash.
Of the $42,160.00 damages claimed, all except $1,610.00 accrued medical and doctor bills and $550.00 to accrue; $3,500.00 accrued loss of wages and $1,500.00 to accrue, was for personal injuries, pain and suffering.
In their joint answer Defendants denied all allegations of Plaintiff except the allegation that Plaintiff did pull the throttle of the plane and cut off the supply of gasoline to the engine, when the plane was at an altitude of no more than 300 feet. In the alternative, Defendants alleged the crash was due to Plaintiff's contributory negligence and assumption of risk, because he held a private pilot's certificate from the Civil Aeronautics Administration since August 22, 1946, and had flown over 100 hours, 72 of which were solo flying; that he was familiar with the dangers of flying, notwithstanding which and while the plane had reached an altitude of 300 feet, Plaintiff pulled the throttle and cut off the supply of gasoline to the motor, leaving the plane without flight power, the loss of which, at such low altitude, is most hazardous in an emergency; which emergency Stephens could not avoid.
Defendant Bankers Indemnity specially denied liability, as Stephens was not a licensed instructor at the time of the accident and its policy, under Declaration No. 7, provides that the aircraft will be flown only by a pilot holding a proper license or certificate issued by the Civil Aeronautics Administration of the United States Department of Commerce; and Section A, Paragraph 3, that the policy will not apply if a loss occurs while the aircraft is operated by a person other than pilots named in the Declaration, who must be properly licensed or certified; and no liability if the aircraft is operated with the consent of the assured, or an executive officer, in violation of the U. S. Federal Regulations on Civil Aviation concerning certification of pilots; and that, in any event, its liability is limited to $10,000.00 for one person.
Mr. Maynard, a well-qualified expert aviator and instructor holding many ratings and licenses as such, was asked if he were teaching a student to fly in a "Steerman" plane at Callender Field in Louisiana, which was bordered by growing trees, and had just taken off and reached an altitude of 300 feet, when the student turned the throttle down to idle, would he have acted as Stephens did. He answered that Stephens' action was not sound flying instruction because the possibility of the plane stalling in the turn around the trees was a hazardous maneuver even in a small plane like a "Steerman".
The record discloses that a "Steerman" aircraft is a dual-control, two-seated, biplane, weighing a maximum of 3000 pounds, and was used extensively by the U. S. Army and Navy for training military and naval pilots during World War II, after which they were sold as surplus war material. The front seat is for the pilot instructor and the rear seat for the student pilot, each able to control the plane.
After the trial on the merits, the district judge in rendering judgment for Plaintiff for $8,000.00 in globo, without fixing the amount of each item of damage sustained, gave his reasons as follows:
"At the trial on the merits, it was established that plaintiff reported to the school for further lessons, in order that he might secure a commercial pilot's license, and when he found his instructor absent, Stephens, the President of the School, a licensed pilot of considerable experience, agreed to fly with him and offered to show him how to make forced landings. The relationship of student and instructor therefore was established and it is of no significance that Stephens did not possess an instructor's license.
*881 "While the plane was aloft, Stephens instructed plaintiff, who was at the dual controls, to cut off the throttle, and after this was done, Stephens was about to make a perfect landing;, when he decided at the last minute to turn the plane slightly to the left to land nearer the center of the field, a totally unnecessary maneuver. In making the turn, Stephens caused the plane to tilt, resulting in its landing on a wing, as a consequence of which plaintiff sustained injuries.
"Defendant contends that plaintiff contributed to the accident by having his hands and feet on the dual controls, which interfered with the operation of the plane. This is something Stephens should have anticipated. In my opinion, the proximate cause of the accident was the unnecessary lastminute maneuver which Stephens made, and Stephens and Intercoastal Airways, Inc. are liable for their negligence.
"The insurer is liable in this case.
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165 So. 2d 878, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snell-v-intercoastal-airways-inc-lactapp-1964.