306 F. Supp. 390 | S.D. Fla. | 1969
OPINION
On February 7, 1964, the United States Air Force issued a technical order,
The jury found that the United States was negligent: (1) in delivering the aircraft and ejection seat in question to American Airmotive when the United States knew, or should have known, that the seat was improperly designed and manufactured; and (2) in preparing and issuing Technical Order No. 876. Further, the jury found that the negligence of the United States was the, or one of the, proximate causes of Moyer’s death, and that the United States had not established that Moyer was guilty of negligence which was a contributing, proximate cause of his death. The jury then assessed plaintiff’s damages in the sum of $700,000.00.
Subsequently, the case was submitted to this Court on post trial memoranda pursuant to Rule 52(a). Rule 52(a) provides, in pertinent part:
“In all actions tried upon the facts without a jury or with an advisory jury, the court shall find the facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon * *
The United States filed a motion to dismiss the suit for lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter based on 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b) and § 2680. In an opinion filed August 12, 1969,
Now, it remains to be decided,
FACTS
The particular plane involved in this accident, AF 52-1469, was sent to American Airmotive (Airmotive) for repairs for damage to its fuselage caused by an emergency landing in Alaska. To accomplish this work, the pilot’s seat was removed from the aircraft and placed on a bench. While the plane was undergoing these structural repairs at Airmotive, T.O. 876 was issued by the Air Force which directed several modifications on the ejection seat used in this type of airplane. After learning about T.O. 876, Airmotive requested that it be permitted to do the seat modifications while the plane was still at its plant. It received approval from WRAMA some time in March, 1964. The work was assigned by Airmotive to a sheet metal worker named Al Bass.
Bass went to the bench where the seat was lying and commenced the modifications. He testified that he followed the technical order in chronological order, which meant that he first made the modifications called for in paragraphs j to I,
q. For pilot’s position only — lower right-hand arm rest and assure that a Ys inch clearance is obtained between pin (installed) and top side of seat bucket as shown in Figure 2, Instruction No. I. Locate and drill a %6 inch (0.1875) hole at right angle to arm rest support, Part No. 505-31010R, aligned fore and aft, through arm rest support, to facilitate installation of a down stop, as shown in Figure 2, Instruction No. 2.
r. Install bolt, Part No. AN173-7, and nut, Part No. AN363-1032, on arm rest support, Part No. 505-31010R. (Reference Figure 2, Instruction No. 3 — pilot’s position only.)
The purpose of the bolt described in paragraph r, which acted as a down stop, was to prevent a new safety pin, installed in the arm rest, from hitting the seat bucket when the arm rest was in the down position.
The plaintiff’s case was largely based on the testimony of Bass concerning why and when he removed the roll pin. According to Bass, he made a mistake in locating and drilling the hole for this bolt and ended up with a clearance of over Ys inch.
On April 22, 1964, Moyer was scheduled to test-fly AF-52-1469 to check the repairs made on the fuselage. He made his normal exterior check of the plane with the ground mechanic, Seftchick, and then climbed inside. There he pulled the seat initiator pins and then climbed into the pilot’s seat.
The accident was caused by three events acting in conjunction with one another. First, Moyer pulled the safety, or initiator pin,
The United States argues that it was not negligent towards Moyer, or if negligent, that it is not legally liable for his death. First, the Government argues that the T.O. was not negligently drawn for several reasons: (a) it made no difference whether the bolt rested on the flat or the apex; (b) there were step-by-step instructions for the work and all the parts and supplies were numbered; (c) the T.O. was prepared in accordance with the Military Specification on how to draw technical orders and was prepared in line with the prevailing practice in the sheet metal field; (d) there were no reported difficulties in following T.O. 876 from the date of issue, February 14, 1964, to the date of the accident, April 22, 1964, or even up to the time of trial, and there were no other mistakes reported in doing the modifications. Second, the Government argues that Bass deviated from the technical order when he removed the roll pin and that the only credible evidence is that he removed it to drill the holes and insert the rivets for the trigger guard and not to correct any mistake as the result of following paragraph q. Moreover, even if Bass removed the roll pin to correct a mistake, his failure to replace it was certainly not foreseeable and this failure was a major deviation from the technical order. The Government points out that it tried to foresee any minor mistakes in following the technical order and, therefore, included a note concerning minor deviations,
Crucial to the plaintiff’s theory is that the roll pin was removed to correct a mistake which inevitably resulted from following the “negligently” drawn T.O., rather than that it was removed at the outset to drill the holes in order to install the rivets on the trigger guard. Bass’s testimony on this point is subject to grave suspicion. The physical evidence demonstrates that the rivet holes could not have been drilled without first removing the ring truarc or, in the alternative, removing the roll pin. Bass testified he never removed the ring truarc; that it was never removed; that he did not have the tools to remove it; that he didn’t even know what it was. If this is true, as he testified, then he had to remove the roll pin to drill the rivet holes. If he removed the roll pin for that purpose, then it was not because of misleading instructions contained in what plaintiff refers to as a negligently drawn technical order. Thus, the force of plaintiff’s contention is seriously weakened. I conclude, based largely on his own testimony, that Bass removed the roll pin to drill the rivet holes and was not misled by inept language in the technical order.
CONCLUSIONS
In order to recover, the plaintiff must show that the Government was negligent in the preparation of T.O. 876 and that this negligence was a proximate cause of Moyer’s death. Because the accident was the result of three concurring causes— the absence of the roll pin, the pulled initiator pins, and the by-passed spring-loaded pin — the plaintiff must link one of these three causes to some negligence on the part of the Government. The plaintiff does not attempt to attribute either of the latter two causes to the United States. Thus, the plaintiff must show that the Government’s negligence was the proximate cause of the absence of the roll pin and through it, the death of Moyer.
After carefully reviewing the testimony and the documents introduced into evidence, I conclude that the Government was not negligent in preparing and distributing T.O. 876. Prepared for an experienced sheet metal worker, T.O. 876 defined the work to be done in a detailed step-by-step recital which included an identification and itemization of each of the parts involved. The plaintiff focuses her contention that the Government negligently prepared T.O. 876 on paragraph q thereof. Concededly, the expert witnesses called by the plaintiff testified that the technical order could have been more expertly drawn and paragraph q could have been clearer. More specifically, plaintiff’s witnesses noted that, while paragraph q called for an assured Ys inch clearance, it did not explain that the difference between the diameter of the bolt and the diameter of the nut must be taken into account. These experts explained that this omission caused the Vic inch additional clearance realized by Bass. Further, one of plaintiff’s experts indicated that the Ys inch clearance spelled out in paragraph q required accuracy to one ten-thousandth of an inch because no specific tolerance was indicated. But, this testimony overlooks the note on minor deviations contained in the technical order,
The plaintiff’s argument that the roll pin should have been made not removable is not persuasive. A pin, such as the one here, which required 350-400 pounds of force to remove and which Bass destroyed in the process, is to all intents and purposes unremovable. Moreover, I am unable to say that the plaintiff has proved that the Government was negligent in failing to place a warning in the technical order regarding the roll pin. At no point did T.O. 876 require in its instructions or illustrations that a mechanic should be concerned with, work on, or remove the roll pin located at the base of the telescoping tube. In these circumstances, I cannot find either that the Government should have anticipated conduct such as Bass’s, or that it was negligence to omit a warning regarding the roll pin.
But even assuming, arguendo, that the technical order in question was negligently drawn, there remains yet another reason why, in my judgment, plaintiff cannot recover. This is because the injury was not a probable, as opposed to a merely possible result of the negligence, or stated differently, was not the proximate cause of the accident. Even though the language of the technical order were carelessly drawn and misleading, which led to the removal of the roll pin, this did not cause Bass to place the roll pin in his tool box and forget it; or result in the Airmotive inspectors’ failing to discover that it was missing; or influence Moyer, contrary to instructions in the Air Force manual, to pull the initiator pins and hold out the spring-loaded pin prior to raising the arm rest.
In order to determine that this accident resulted in a natural and ordinary sequence and was a probable result of the alleged carelessly worded technical order, it would be necessary to conclude, first, that the result was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the negligent wording. Otherwise stated, it would be necessary to decide that the United States, in preparing the order, should have reasonably foreseen:
(1) The Bass would have forgotten to have replaced the roll pin and left it in his tool box;
(2) That inspectors would have failed to have discovered that it had not been replaced;
(3) That Moyer, contrary to pre-flight instructions in his Air Force manual, would have pulled out the initiator pins prior to raising the arm rest; and,
(4) That Moyer, again contrary to instructions in his manual, would have held out the spring-loaded pin while raising the arm rest.
And, yet, it is a fact that had any single one of the four acts just enumerated not occurred, this accident could not have happened. In my view, no reasonable person in drawing this technical order could have foreseen this bizarre combination of misadventures. Their simultaneous occurrence was a barely possible, as opposed to a probable, result of the alleged negligence. Cone v. Inter County Tel. & Tel. Co., 40 So.2d 148 (Sup.Ct.Fla.1949).
The result here reached may be regrettable because it not only goes contrary to the findings of a jury (which, however, I feel was largely the result of sympathy) but, also, deprives plaintiff and her children of a substantial recovery. But the United States in matters of this sort has no more responsibility than any other ordinary citizen; it is not an insurer. This accident, in my judgment, resulted solely from the negligence of American Airmotive and its servants, and it is most unfortunate that as the result of a quirk of state law, this corporation, rather than being financially liable to plaintiff for the full damages, can be compelled to pay little more than nominal monthly compensation by way of Workmen’s Compensation.
What has been said above shall constitute both Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.
Let an order be entered in accordance with the above.
Sitting in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida by assignment.
. The order was prepared under the supervision of the San Antonio Air Material Area (SAAMA), which had overall responsibility for ejection seat systems for the Air Force, at the direction of Warner Robbins Air Material Area (WRAMA), which had overall responsibility for the B-57 type aircraft.
. Martin Marietta Corporation and Aircraft Mechanics, Inc.
. At the request of Judge Eaton who presided over the pretrial proceedings.
. Moyer et al. v. United States, 302 F.Supp. 1235 (S.D.Fla.1969).
. Under Rule 52(a) F.R.Civ.P., the verdict of the advisory jury is advisory only. The Court must find the facts independently and is in no way bound by the verdict of the advisory jury. Chicago and North Western Ry. Co. v. Minnesota Transfer Ry. Co., 371 F.2d 129, 130 (8th Cir. 1967); Reed v. Riddle Airlines, 266 F.2d 314, 319 (5th Cir. 1959).
. Bass testified that he did not remember his exact classification at the time of the accident, but that he had six years experience as a sheet metal worker.
. More particularly, trimming the hand grip and attaching the new handle and improved trigger guard. There were two ways that the arm rest assembly could be disassembled to do this work; dis-assembly from the top as directed by the technical order, or disassembly from the bottom not contemplated by the technical order. The former and correct way involved the removal of a part called a ring truarc which held the arm rest support to the arm rest. The latter, incorrect, way required the removal and possible destruction of the roll pin which, as a safety device, prevented the arm rest support from passing upwards through the collar which held it to the seat.
. In the RB-57A bomber, the right arm rest goes up and down to allow the pilot to climb into the seat. This arm rest, which contains the trigger mechanism for the ejection system, is hinged at the rear and supported at the front by a telescoping tube or sleeve (arm rest support in paragraph' q). This tube passes through a collar or sleeve which contains a spring-loaded pin. Once the pilot is in the seat, he pulls the arm rest up to the horizontal. The spring-loaded pin goes into a hole in the tube and holds the arm rest in this position. When the pilot wants to leave the seat, he reaches over and pulls out the spring-loaded pin. The tube then slips down through the collar lowering the arm rest and allows the pilot to climb out of the seat.
. Bass failed to take into account that the bolt, once installed, would rest with its head and nut on the collar or sleeve instead of resting on its shank. Thus, when the bolt was installed in the hole which he drilled, there was a clearance of Ylq inch, greater than the Vs inch called for in paragraph q.
. As stated in note 7, supra, there were two ways in which the arm rest assembly could be disassembled: from the top by removing the ring truarc; and from the bottom by removing the roll pin. According to Bass, when he made his mistake, the work on the trigger guard had already been completed. Therefore, he stated thát both he and Cohen felt that the only way to make the correction was to disassemble the arm rest assembly from the bottom by removing the roll pin. I agree that as a question of mechanics, this would be the only way to disassemble the arm rest assembly if the work on the trigger was completed when the mistake occurred. The question is whether the arm rest assembly needed to be disassembled to make the correction. The Government argued that there was an easier way to make the correction. I
. A roll pin is a metal pin with a cut in one side. This pin can be slightly compressed and driven into a hole which is smaller than the original diameter of the pin. When the pin is driven in, it expands against the sides of the hole and is very difficult to remove.
. In the RB-57A bomber when the pilot is getting into his seat, a ground mechanic stands with his head up into the aircraft through the access hole in the underside of the plane in order to assist the pilot in getting ready for takeoff. In this case, the ground mechanic, Seftchick, testified as to Moyer’s actions from the moment he entered the plane to the time that he was ejected.
. The spring loaded pin was designed to catch in holes in the arm rest support tube and would stop the arm rest from passing the horizontal position. See note 8, supra.
. Moyer is charged with contributory negligence in two respects: (a) pulling the safety pins before the seat arm rest was raised; and, (b) holding out the spring-loaded pin while the arm rest was raised. I do not decide this issue because it is unnecessary in the light of the result reached, but it is a fact that had Moyer followed the instructions in the Air Force Manual and not pulled this initiator pin until after raising the arm rest and had not held out the spring-loaded pin while raising the arm rest, the seat would not have ejected despite Bass’s negligence. I shall consider these facts hereafter in connection with the Government’s defense of intervening efficient cause.
. Id.
. T. O. 876 contained a note on minor deviations which read:
Note
“Minor deviations from the following procedures are permissible provided the intent of this technical order is accomplished and the integrity of the ejection system is not compromised.”
. See note 16, supra.
. See note 16, supra.
. “Not every negligent act of omission or commission gives rise to a cause of action for injuries sustained by another. It is only when injury to a person who himself is without contributing fault has resulted directly and in ordinary natural sequence from a negligent act without the intervention of any independent efficient cause, or is such as ordinarily and naturally should have been regarded as a probable, not a mere possible, result of the negligent act, that such injured person is entitled to recover damages as compensation for his loss. Conversely, when the loss is not a direct result of the negligent act complained of, or does not follow in natural ordinary sequence from such act but is merely a possible,
. Whether these intervening acts might better be regarded as constituting an intervening, efficient cause rather than not a proximate cause, becomes academic.
. Whether Moyer’s actions above described constituted contributory negligence, which of itself was sufficient to bar recovery, it is not necessary to decide. Despite some equivocal statements in a mechanics’ manual which I did not consider applicable, and certain exculpatory testimony from an expert witness, the fact remains that Moyer, in the two respects above discussed, failed to follow the instructions in his manual.