Godwin Aircraft v. Wayne Walker ( 1998 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    FILED
    GODWIN AIRCRAFT, INC.,                  )                              September 15, 1998
    a Tennessee Corporation,                )
    )                               Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    Plaintiff/Appellee,        ) Shelby Circuit No. 76548 T.D. Appellate C ourt Clerk
    )
    VS.                                     ) Appeal No. 02A01-9708-CV-00187
    )
    WAYNE WALKER,                           )
    )
    Defendant/Appellant.       )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SHELBY COUNTY
    AT MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE KAREN R. WILLIAMS, JUDGE
    ALAN E. GLENN
    Memphis, Tennessee
    Attorney for Appellant
    MICHAEL RICHARDS
    BAKER, DONELSON, BEARMAN & CALDWELL
    Memphis, Tennessee
    Attorney for Appellee
    REVERSED AND RENDERED
    ALAN E. HIGHERS, J.
    CONCUR:
    DAVID R. FARMER, J.
    HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J.
    Defendant/appellant appeals the judgment of the trial court finding him 90% at fault
    for damages to plaintiff/appellee’s airplane. Plaintiff/appellee raises an issue regarding the
    trial court’s finding that it was 10% at fault. For reasons stated hereinafter, we reverse the
    judgment of the trial court finding plaintiff/appellee to be 10% at fault.
    Plaintiff/appellee, Godwin Aircraft, Inc. (“appellee”), is engaged in the business of
    selling and/or leasing private aircraft. On September 25, 1995, defendant/appellant,
    Wayne Walker (“appellant”), leased a 1974 58 Series Beechcraft Baron from appellee for
    $225 per hour. This aircraft is a twin engine plane with retractable landing gear. Upon
    returning from a trip to Vicksburg, Mississippi, appellant landed the aircraft at General
    Dewitt Spain Airport in Memphis, Tennessee. After taxiing down the runway approximately
    1800 feet, intending to raise the flaps, appellant reached over and pulled the landing gear
    retraction lever instead. This resulted in the retraction of the landing gear thereby causing
    damage to the aircraft as a consequence of the contact with the ground by both the body
    of the airplane and its rotating propellers.
    On this airplane there is a mechanical device called a squat switch that when
    working properly, prevents an airplane landing gear from retracting when on the ground.
    In this instance, the squat switch did not work as evidenced by the airplane’s descent upon
    the activation of the landing gear retraction lever by appellant.
    Appellant is a full-time, professional pilot, with approximately 9,000 hours of total
    flight time. He has been a flight instructor for more than 20 years and has flown between
    800 and 1,000 hours in Beechcraft Baron aircrafts. In particular, appellant has flown the
    specific airplane in question approximately 25-30 hours.
    The flap lever is located to the left of the middle control panel in the 1974 Beechcraft
    Baron 58 series. It is flat and of a different color from the landing gear retraction lever.
    The landing gear retraction lever is approximately 14 inches to the right of the flap lever on
    the opposite side of the middle control panel. In contrast to the flap lever, the landing gear
    retraction lever is round in shape and white in color.
    2
    At trial, appellant admitted that touching the landing gear retraction lever while the
    aircraft is on the ground violates a cardinal rule of safety, pilot checklist procedures, and
    FAA Guidelines. Indeed, he acknowledged that as a flight instructor he would always
    caution his students to never move the landing gear retraction lever while the airplane was
    on the ground because airplanes were subject to mechanical problems. Appellant
    explained that these mechanical problems can sometimes result in retraction of the landing
    gear in spite of the implementation of safety devices to prevent such occurrences.
    After the accident, the airplane was inspected by Glen Mitchell, an A&P mechanic
    with 53 years experience. Mitchell was assisted by another A&P mechanic, William
    Bryner, to place jacks under the airplane and determine whether or not the squat switch
    on the airplane was in working order. Mitchell testified that he jacked the airplane up off
    the ground, placed a jack under the left landing gear strut, raised it approximately 1 inch,
    and marked the position to determine where the strut should be for on-the-ground
    operation. Mitchell and Bryner then jacked the airplane down to place weight on the strut
    thereby activating the squat switch. The squat switch warning horn sounded, and the
    switch operated thereby disabling the landing gear from retracting.
    Appellee filed this suit alleging negligence, breach of express contract, and breach
    of bailment contract as seen in Tenn. Code Ann. § 24-5-111. Appellant filed his answer
    admitting his negligence, but persisted to lay blame on appellee for the failing squat switch.
    Appellant, in his answer, contended that no express contract existed with appellee. He
    further denied the existence of a bailment situation between the parties. The trial in this
    matter was had on July 7, 1997, in the Circuit Court of Tennessee for the Thirtieth Judicial
    District at Memphis.Judge Karen Williams presided.Judge Williams heard the testimony
    of appellee and appellant, two mechanics who inspected the airplane’s safety device after
    the incident occurred, and several other witnesses.
    At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court found that appellee’s airplane had
    sustained damages in the amount of $31,212.00, but found that appellee was 10% at fault
    3
    in this matter and thereby reduced the judgment by 10% for a total judgment of
    $28,091.00. More specifically, the trial court stated:
    On the other hand, I believe this is a comparative fault case.
    If the fail-safe system had worked, the plane could not have
    crashed. So at that moment that system wasn’t working. But
    nothing would have gone wrong had not the defendant pulled
    the wrong lever.
    Similarly, the trial court, in its final judgment, provided in pertinent part:
    From all of which the Court finds that Plaintiff is guilty of
    comparative negligence in the amount of 10% and Defendant
    is guilty of comparative negligence in the amount of 90%.
    This appeal followed.
    This case was tried by a court sitting without a jury. Thus, we review the case de
    novo upon the record with a presumption of correctness of the findings of fact by the trial
    court. Unless the evidence preponderates against the findings, we must affirm, absent
    error of law. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d).
    Several procedural issues arise out of the facts of this case, particularly, whether
    principles of comparative fault apply to bailment situations and whether comparative fault
    was, indeed, plead by appellant, and if not whether the issue of comparative fault was tried
    with the implied consent of the parties under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 15.02. However, these
    issues are of no consequence in this matter. Although, clearly, appellee owed a duty of
    due care when leasing appellant the airplane in question, there is insufficient evidence in
    the record of appellee’s negligence in breaching this duty. This is true regardless of
    whether one analyzes the facts in this matter under bailment doctrine or under a
    negligence/comparative negligence line of reasoning.
    More specifically, appellee’s breach of bailment contract claim under Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 24-5-111 involves negligence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 24-5-111 provides:
    In all actions by a bailor against a bailee for loss or damage to
    personal property, proof by the bailor that the property was
    delivered to the bailee in good condition and that it was not
    returned or redelivered according to the contract, or that it was
    returned or redelivered in a damaged condition, shall constitute
    prima facie evidence that the bailee was negligent, provided
    4
    the loss or damage was not due to the inherent nature of the
    property bailed.
    There is ample evidence that appellee delivered the airplane “in good condition.” On one
    hand, appellant contends that the facts in this case do not fall within the parameters of the
    above statute because of the failure of the squat switch on appellee’s airplane, but on the
    other hand, appellant admits in his answer that the airplane was delivered “in good
    condition.” It is the opinion of this Court that the evidence in the record evinces that the
    airplane was delivered in good condition. The airplane passed its annual inspections as
    required by the FAA, and the squat switch was operable upon inspection after the incident
    at issue occurred. As such, under Tenn. Code Ann. § 24-5-111, this constitutes prima
    facie evidence that the appellant was negligent in returning the airplane in the damaged
    condition. Appellant fails to rebut this evidence. In fact, he admits the fact that he was
    negligent, but insist that appellee should be held responsible for the damage to the
    airplane because of the failure of the squat switch on said plane. In doing so, however,
    appellant fails to set forth any evidence in the record to persuade this Court to hold
    appellee responsible for any amount of the damages to the airplane.
    Along these lines, appellant contends that appellee has failed in its duty to inspect
    the airplane under 8 Am Jur 2d § 165, “Bailments.” Section 165 provides in pertinent part:
    Section 165. Bailor’s duty to inspect. If the subject of a
    bailment for hire is of such a nature that its use threatens
    serious danger to others unless it is in good condition, there is
    a positive duty on the part of the bailor to take reasonable care
    to ascertain its condition by inspection. Failure to do so may
    be negligence without actual knowledge on the part of the
    bailor of any defect or of facts sufficient to stimulate
    investigation.
    Appellant once again has failed to document any evidence in the record of appellee’s
    failure to positively inspect the airplane. In fact, quite the opposite is true. The evidence
    displayed in the record illustrates that appellee’s airplane passed its yearly FAA inspections
    and, indeed, passed the post-accident inspection performed by A&P mechanics Mitchell
    and Bryner. In light of this, we see no basis to support a 10% reduction of judgment from
    appellee.
    5
    In summary, whether the trial court proceeded under a negligence/comparative
    negligence line of reasoning or under the doctrine of bailment is inconsequential. The
    result in this case is the same. What is noticeably absent from the record and ultimately
    fatal to appellant’s case is the fact that there is absolutely no evidence that appellee was
    negligent. The mere failure of the squat switch in appellee’s airplane is not negligence in
    and of itself. Indeed, appellant admitted that there are a “large amount of mechanical
    problems with airplanes,” in fact, causing the landing gear to retract while on the ground
    despite the implementation of safety systems to prevent such from occurring.
    Undoubtedly, appellee had a duty of due care in leasing the airplane in question to
    appellant. However, the record is devoid of any evidence that appellee breached this duty.
    There is no evidence of appellee’s failure to inspect the airplane or that appellee knew or
    should have known that the squat switch in the airplane was defective. There is no
    evidence by appellant of appellee’s inspection process or lack thereof. There is no
    evidence by appellant of directives from the FAA or Beechcraft as to required inspections
    or the frequency of such, if required. Without evidence of appellee’s breach of his duty of
    due care toward appellant, appellee cannot be held responsible for 10% of the damage to
    his airplane.
    Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment for
    appellee in the amount of $31,212.00. Costs are taxed to appellant, for which execution
    may issue if necessary.
    HIGHERS, J.
    6
    CONCUR:
    FARMER, J.
    LILLARD, J.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 02A01-9708-CV-00187

Filed Date: 9/15/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014