Williams v. SUPERIOR COURT, IN & FOR CTY. OF PIMA, ETC.

494 P.2d 26, 108 Ariz. 154, 1972 Ariz. LEXIS 268
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1972
Docket10684-PR
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 494 P.2d 26 (Williams v. SUPERIOR COURT, IN & FOR CTY. OF PIMA, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. SUPERIOR COURT, IN & FOR CTY. OF PIMA, ETC., 494 P.2d 26, 108 Ariz. 154, 1972 Ariz. LEXIS 268 (Ark. 1972).

Opinions

CAMERON, Vice Chief Justice.

We granted a petition to review a decision and opinion of the Court of Appeals which ordered the trial court to grant summary judgment to the defendant, Governor Jack A. Williams, Commander-in-Chief of the Air National Guard of Arizona, hereinafter also referred to as the “Guard.” The trial court had refused the Guard’s motion to dismiss the complaint of the Sunnyside School District No. 12 in which the school has asked that the Guard be permanently enjoined from using, except in an emergency, the airspace immediately above or in proximity to the school. See Williams v. Superior Court, 15 Ariz.App. 480, 489 P.2d 854 (1971).

We are called upon to determine:

1. Does the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 preempt the state courts of jurisdiction to grant equitable relief to a school seeking to prevent flights by the Air National Guard over the school when the flights are controlled by employees of the Federal Aviation Administration ?
2. If the court has jurisdiction, may it grant injunctive relief to prevent a public official (the Governor as Commander-in-Chief of the National Guard of Arizona) from exercising the duties of his office?
3. Was the Superior Court without jurisdiction because the National Guard is an instrumentality of the United States?

The relevant facts are that all flights at Tucson International Airport are controlled by employees of the Federal Aviation Administration, housed in a tower at the airport. Mr. Carl Swanson, chief traffic air controller for the Federal Aviation Administration, testified that he and his assistants allocate flights (using wind, safety, airport traffic, and neighborhood noise abatement as guides) for all civil and military aircraft, including the Air National Guard, one of the airport’s tenants.

The Arizona Air National Guard conducts a training school at the airport, the purpose of which is to teach pilots of Arizona and other states to fly certain types of jet aircraft. The training school has greatly increased the number of flights landing and taking off from the airport. The reason for the size of the flight program, which is authorized by the Secretary of the Air Force, is the weather in Tucson, which, Mr. Swanson testified, is among the best in the world for this purpose. Normally the Guard flies its aircraft only on weekends. However, when the training school is being held, flights occur during the week and during school hours.

The school is less than a mile northwest of at least one of the runways generally used by the Guard. Testimony was to the effect that at times the planes made a great deal of noise, enough to disturb the children at the school. Some testimony was also received to the effect that the flights in the Guard training program conceivably constituted a greater- safety hazard to the school than other flights. '■'There were no allegations, and indeed it was explicitly denied in an affidavit by an employee of the defendant, that any federal rule or regulation was broken.

The history of the litigation is as follows. On 30 March 1971, Sunnyside School District No. 12 filed a complaint against Governor Jack A. Williams, Commander-in-Chief of the National Guard of Arizona, seeking injunctive relief concerning the jet aircraft flights in the vicinity of the school. Plaintiff asked “that defendant be permanently enjoined from permitting the National Guard from taking off or landing within the airspace immediately above or in close proximity to the plaintiff’s school buildings with the exception of an emergency situation * * [156]*156On 25 May 1971, the Guard filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, contending that the court was without jurisdiction to grant the relief sought. The court denied the motion to dismiss on 22 June 1971, and the Guard brought a special action in the Court of Appeals, Division Two. The Court of Appeals treated the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment and ordered the trial court to grant the motion, on the grounds that the federal government had preempted the field of allocating and controlling the use of airspace. In a companion case not before the court at this time, the school seeks relief in inverse eminent domain against the Tucson Airport Authority. See Sunnyside School District No. 12 v. Tucson Airport Authority, Cause No. 123288 (filed 3 December 1970).

PREEMPTION

A New Jersey judge, dealing with an airport-noise case somewhat analogous to ours, traced the history of federal regulation of the airspace and found a pattern of disallowing the preemption argument when the local attempts at regulation did not interfere at all with principal areas of federal concern, such as safety. Judge Joseph Stamler, while acknowledging that the federal government is supreme in the field of air traffic regulation for safety purposes, stated:

“The controls and remedies provided by the various federal aviation enactments nowhere state that they are sovereign and exclusive. * * * In United States v. Causby, 328 U.S. 256, 66 S.Ct. 1062, 90 L.Ed. 1206 (1946), a chicken farmer alleged that he had been bothered repeatedly by aircraft from a nearby military base. The noise and vibration of overflying aircraft essentially destroyed the residential value of his land and its value as a commercial chicken farm. The court, recognizing an 'exclusive national sovereignty’ and the right of freedom in air transit, nevertheless held that the owner of land might recover for a taking by governmental use of air space resulting in destruction in whole or in part of the usefulness of the property itself.
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“ * * * With safety to the aircraft, passengers and the land-bound public below as a prime goal, this court agrees that a court’s conventional experience and decision-making power cannot and must not supplant the exercise of administrative discretion of the expert agency created by Congress. Where there is a clash between state and federal authority in this regard, the supremacy of the federal is recognized. Where there is no conflict, and certainly where there is state action consistent with the avowed second purpose of F.A.A., suppression of noise, a state court may act.” Township of Hanover v. Town of Morristown, 108 N.J. Super. 461, 261 A.2d 692, 700 (1969).

’ The Supreme Court of California has-also considered the subjects of airplane noise abatement and preemption in a detailed manner. The California court, although upholding a denial of an injunction on the facts of the case, stated:

“The * * * protection of health and welfare are matters primarily of state law, and only a strong federal interest, as determined by Congress, will necessitate infringement upon state-created rights in these areas. Only a compelling federal interest, e. g., where the state-created liability would clearly frustrate federal purposes, justifies our implying an intent on the part of Congress to nullify common-law rights normally in the state-law sphere. In People v. Western Air Lines, Inc., 42 Cal.2d 621, 645, 268 P.2d 723

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Williams v. SUPERIOR COURT, IN & FOR CTY. OF PIMA, ETC.
494 P.2d 26 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
494 P.2d 26, 108 Ariz. 154, 1972 Ariz. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-superior-court-in-for-cty-of-pima-etc-ariz-1972.