Lead Opinion
Plaintiff, Aircraft Logistics, Inc., appeals a final summary judgment in its negligence action against H.E. Sutton Forwarding Company, LLC. Finding no error in the trial court’s conclusion that H.E. Sutton owed Aircraft no duty as a matter of law, we affirm the summary judgment.
Aircraft owned a single engine Piper Saratoga plane based at Miami Executive Airport in Opa-Locka, Florida.
In 2006, Aircraft’s plane was tied down at the airport. In May, 2006, on the day of the incident giving rise to the lawsuit, the weather forecast was for showers. However, at one point a sudden thunderstorm erupted causing micro-bursts of wind of over sixty miles per hour. There were no storm warnings in effect at the time. The winds were of such intensity that a hangar roof was torn off, and a Boeing 737 jumbo jet and a fully loaded G4 jet were spun around (over 180 degrees). The gusts lifted the ramp into Aircraft’s plane. The plane was a total loss.
Aircraft initially sued H.E. Sutton for negligence to recover the value of the plane. Aircraft asserted that H.E. Sutton had failed to properly secure the ramp, resulting in the damages to Aircraft’s plane. H.E. Sutton asserted that the ramp was in the airport’s sole care, custody or control at the time of the incident. Aircraft then amended its complaint to
In its answers to interrogatories, H.E. Sutton stated that there were means of securing the ramp under normal conditions, but that there was no way to secure the ramp under the conditions that day. H.E. Sutton filed a summary judgment motion arguing that Aircraft had not established Sutton owed it any duty, and that the damages were the result of an Act of God. Aircraft responded asserting that no damages would have resulted had the ramp been properly secured, regardless of the weather conditions. The trial court granted H.E. Sutton’s motion, concluding that H.E. Sutton owed Aircraft no duty. Aircraft appeals.
The trial court properly found, as a matter of law, that H.E. Sutton owed Aircraft no duty under the facts of this case. “[DJuty exists as a matter of law and is not a factual question for the jury to decide.” McCain v. Florida Power Corp.,
McCain explained that “[t]he duty element of negligence focuses on whether the defendant’s conduct foreseeably created a broader ‘zone of risk’ that poses a general threat of harm to others.” McCain,
There was an agreement between the airport and H.E. Sutton that the airport would use the ramp and house it, alleviating H.E. Sutton of the burden of constantly transporting the ramp. On the day of the storm, H.E. Sutton had not been to the airport in over a month. The airport was using the ramp. The ramp was in the airport’s sole care, custody and control.
Additionally, nothing was advanced to refute H.E. Sutton’s assertion that under the conditions that day the ramp could not have been secured so as to avoid damage. The fact that harm may occur does not automatically create a legal duty. Aguila,
Even ship owners are not subject to automatic liability if their vessels collide with other ships or structures. The issue in Burklow & Associates, Inc. v. Belcher,
Finding no basis to reverse the court conclusion that no duty was owed as a matter of law, the summary judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The airport is operated by Miami Executive Airport, Inc., a co-defendant below.
Concurrence Opinion
(specially concurring).
I agree to affirmance but only because the appellee had surrendered complete control of the ramp to the airport and thus no longer had a duty to maintain it properly or to safeguard surrounding aircraft from its possible dangers. As the court correctly states, no such obligation arises from the mere ownership of a non-dangerous instrumentality.
. I do not agree, however, with the trial judge that the fact that the wind arose suddenly and was unusually powerful for the season, rendered it an intervening “Act of God” which was the sole legal cause of the accident. Because one of the very purposes of properly securing the ramp was to prevent its being moved by any wind — and the fact is that the plane, which was properly moored, did not move, but the ramp, which wasn't, did — I believe that foreseeability and legal causation were jury questions. The controlling rule to this effect is stated in K-Mart Enterprises of Florida, Inc. v. Keller,
