Thomas D. Ray, V. Vincent Davis Ditmore

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 7, 2022
Docket81494-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Thomas D. Ray, V. Vincent Davis Ditmore (Thomas D. Ray, V. Vincent Davis Ditmore) 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
Thomas D. Ray, V. Vincent Davis Ditmore, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

THOMAS D. RAY, No. 81494-0-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION VINCENT DAVIS DITMORE,

Appellant.

CHUN, J. — Thomas Ray brought a negligence suit against Vincent

Ditmore, claiming damages arising from a ground collision between their

airplanes. After a bench trial, the trial court determined that Ditmore was solely

responsible for the collision. Ditmore appeals, claiming Ray’s negligence was

the sole cause of, or at least contributed to, the collision. For the reasons below,

we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

The Arlington Municipal Airport is an “uncontrolled” airport because it does

not have an air traffic control tower. Federal Aviation Administration Advisory

Circular (AC) 90-66A § 4(a). Pilots communicate with each other using a

Common Traffic Advisory Frequency (CTAF), which is a radio “frequency

designated for the purpose of carrying out airport advisory practices while

operating to or from an airport without an operational control tower.”

Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM) § 4-1-9(b)(1).

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 81494-0-I/2

Ellie’s at the Airport is a restaurant just east of Taxiway A. It has large

windows from which diners can watch airplane traffic. Many pilots fly to the

airport, park their planes on the East Ramp—which is just east of Taxiway A and

directly south of Ellie’s—and dine at the restaurant.

September 15, 2017 was a clear day with excellent visibility. Ray flew his

Piper PA-18 Super Cub (Cub) to the airport. The Cub is a fixed-wing plane from

which the pilot has full visibility from the front and the sides. Once Ray landed,

he turned off his radio and anti-collision lights. He taxied towards Arlington Flight

Services’ (AFS) self-service fuel station at the north end of the airport, and

planned to have lunch at Ellie’s.

Ditmore was also at the airport where his Boeing Stearman biplane was

undergoing repairs. The body of the Stearman rests at an angle with the nose of

the plane higher than the tail. The cockpit angles upward facing the nose of the

plane. As a result, when taxiing in a straight line, the pilot cannot see over the

nose, in front of the plane. Like driving “a car with the hood up,” the nose

obscures the pilot’s vision. To avoid taxiing “blindly,” Stearman pilots taxi in an S

pattern, known as “s-turns” or “s-turning.” As the pilot steers the plane to the left,

they look to the right side of the plane to see oncoming traffic. As the pilot steers

to the right, they look to the left side.

Ray refueled his Cub, maneuvered it onto Taxiway A, and began traveling

south towards Ellie’s. Simultaneously, Ditmore travelled north on Taxiway A.

Ditmore turned off Taxiway A and onto the East Ramp as Ray continued taxiing

south on Taxiway A. Then, Ditmore reentered Taxiway A directly in front of Ray.

2 No. 81494-0-I/3

Ray slowed down and tried to swerve to avoid Ditmore, but the planes collided.

The “left wing tip of the Super Cub caught on the end strut” of the Stearman.

Because the “Stearman weighs twice as much” as the Cub, the force of the

collision lifted the Cub and spun it 180 degrees. It sustained extensive damage

and was no longer airworthy.

B. Procedural History

Ray sued Ditmore for negligence. Ditmore countersued for negligence.

The matter proceeded to a bench trial.

Mark Hilsen witnessed the collision and testified to the following: He was

having lunch at Ellie’s and watching the airport traffic through the windows. He

saw the Cub taxiing south and the Stearman taxiing north on Taxiway A. The

Stearman was taxiing straight, not s-turning. The trial court found Hilsen credible

and afforded his testimony “great weight.”

Ray testified to the following: While taxiing south on Taxiway A from AFS,

he did not have his anti-collision lights or radio on. He saw the Stearman taxiing

north and Ditmore was not s-turning. He saw Ditmore “straddling the line”

between Taxiway A and the East Ramp. When Ditmore got to the north end of

the East Ramp, he navigated back onto Taxiway A going north in Ray’s direction.

Ray did not know what Ditmore was doing, so he “slowed down way before he

got close” and “started moving to the right . . . as far as I could.” “[A]s [Ditmore]

got closer to the end of the ramp, there was enough of an angle that it became

obvious that if I didn’t take drastic action to avoid him, that he was going to

3 No. 81494-0-I/4

collide with my airplane.” Ray tried to avoid the collision by swerving. After the

collision, Ditmore walked over to Ray and said that he did not see the Cub.

Ditmore’s testimony contradicted Hilsen’s and Ray’s versions of the

incident. He testified to the following: “When I came up initially, I did not [see the

Cub]. I was not looking that far ahead.” Before he entered Taxiway A, he saw

the Cub at AFS. He planned to refuel where Ray had refueled. Ditmore used his

radio to announce his intentions to taxi north on Taxiway A to other pilots and

AFS. He assumed the Cub was parked because its “rotating beacon” or

“anti[-]collision” lights were off and he did not get a radio response. Ditmore

entered Taxiway A and s-turned as he taxied north on Taxiway A. He was

halfway through his fifth s-turn, and he could not see the Cub, when the planes

collided.

The trial court found that Ditmore failed to explain why he did not see the

Cub on the taxiway while he s-turned “a distance of over [two] football fields.”

The court wrote that it “looked carefully at Mr. Ditmore’s explanation for how the

accident happened, assessed it against other evidence, and concludes that

much of Mr. Ditmore’s explanation is unsupported by the evidence and is

therefore unreliable.” The trial court concluded that Ditmore was solely

responsible for the collision because he failed to s-turn and thereby failed to “use

ordinary care to see what was in front of him and his speed and [sic] are the sole

proximate causes of the collision.” It entered judgment against Ditmore and

awarded Ray $84,047.65 in damages plus statutory costs and attorney fees.

Ditmore appeals.

4 No. 81494-0-I/5

II. ANALYSIS

A. Negligence Per Se

Ditmore suggests that Ray’s non-compliance with Federal Aviation

Regulations (FARs), and certain provisions of the AIM and certain ACs,

constitutes negligence per se.1 He says the court should have found “negligence

as a matter of law” because Ray failed to: (1) illuminate his anti-collision lights;

(2) monitor his radio while taxiing; (3) see and avoid the collision; (4) keep proper

distance; (5) follow taxi procedures; and (6) maintain a current medical

certification.

Under traditional negligence per se doctrine, “the violation of a statute or

administrative regulation establishes the elements of duty and breach.” Williams

v. Leone & Keeble, Inc., 170 Wn. App. 696, 718, 285 P.3d 906 (2012). But with

few exceptions not at issue here, in 1986, our legislature abolished the doctrine.

RCW 5.40.050 (“a breach of a duty imposed by statute, ordinance or

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