On December 2, 1980 two aircraft collided in the airspace between Indio and Palm Springs, California. One plane was able to land safely at Palm Springs airport. The other plane crashed in the desert, killing pilot Clyde Alford and copilot Ronald Letnes. Both planes were owned by Waig
The government contends that there was no waiver of sovereign immunity under the facts of this case, that Letnes’ motion for summary judgment was improperly granted, and that the government’s motion was improperly denied.
1
We review grants and denials of summary judgment motions de novo.
Lojek v. Thomas,
The Federal Tort Claims Act is a limited waiver of sovereign immunity. The Act permits the United States to be sued for the negligence of its employees. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). The government may also be sued for the actions of a government contractor and its employees if the government has the authority “to control the detailed physical performance of the contractor” and supervise its “day-to-day operations.”
United States v. Orleans,
This is not a case of first impression. Once before this court was required to determine whether a pilot who had entered into a contract with the Forest Service was a government employee or an independent contractor.
United States v. Becker,
Letnes contends that
Becker
should control because of the factual similarities between it and the present case. Letnes, however, fails to appreciate the extent to which
Becker
has been weakened by subsequent Supreme Court pronouncements.
The district court erred in finding that Waig’s pilots were Forest Service employees. Most of the contractual provisions referred to by the district court as indicia of employee status are “the sort of regulation-mandated contractual restrictions described in
Orleans
that are designed to secure federal objectives and that, despite their restrictive effect on the activities of the contracting party, do not convert an independent entrepreneur into an ‘agent’ of the federal government.”
Ducey,
Additional evidence that supported a finding of an employee relationship in
Becker
is absent in the relationship between Waig and the Forest Service. Waig was selected by means of competitive bidding rather than an elaborate testing procedure. A specific home base was not required to successfully compete for the contract. In
Becker
we noted that the pilot was “subject to close supervision and control in flight.”
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The government also challenges the date from which interest on the judgment shall accrue. The relevant statute provides that interest runs from the date of filing the transcript of judgment with the Comptroller General through the day before the date of the mandate of affirmanee.
See
31 U.S.C. § 1304(b)(1) and
DeLucca v. United States,
