A. INVESTIGATE
The basic concern in an aviation accident case
is to determine what actually happened to cause or contribute to the
cause of the accident. A legal accident investigation, when done
completely results in establishing facts as to what happened and how it
happened. From a properly conducted investigation an attorney will
establish what parts malfunctioned, what human errors occurred, and what
chain of events transpired. Relationships will become clear between
actions and results. The potential defendants and innocent actors will
be determined. Probable cause will transform into proximate cause and
cause in fact.
B. WHO INVESTIGATES AIR ACCIDENTS
The N.T.S.B. (National
Transportation Safety Board) has the duty of investigating all civilian
accidents in the United States. It combines with the military and
conducts a joint investigation when there is military involvement with a
civilian aircraft. (midairs) It provides investigators to an I.C.A.O
investigation, and at times sends an investigator, to foreign
investigations at the request of the foreign country made through State.
The main NTSB work is conducted in the United States, Alaska and
territories. Functionally they are set up to handle two varieties of
investigations. The Mass Air Disasters (airlines and commuters) and
General Aviation Crashes.
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C. INVESTIGATION?
"PARTIES to the field investigation shall be
limited to those persons, government agencies, companies, and
associations whose employees, functions, activities or products were
involved in the accident or incident and who can provide suitable
qualified technical personnel to actively assist in the field
investigation."
49 U.S.C. section 831 Translated to the real
world this means: Owners, operators, airframe manufacturer, engine
manufacturer, propeller manufacturer, suspect component manufacturer,
airline union representatives and some F.A.A. people. Generally it
precludes others and almost always precludes attorney's and the
representatives of possible litigants.
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D. MILITARY ACCIDENT INVESTIGATIONS and REPORTS
All
services are similar in the Handling of an aircraft accident
investigation. I will limit myself to a discussion of the U.S.A.F.
Reports and then talk generally of the others. There are two separate
accident investigations, and there are two separate accident reports.
The way the accidents are investigated is delineated in military
instructions. One investigation is conducted for the purpose of
gathering and disseminating fact. It is supposed to be devoid of
opinion,conclusion or recommendation for safety. When a witness
statement appears it has been obtained with a warning "you have been
advised, that you do not need to testify, whatever you say can and will
be used against you, you have a right to counsel. Your statement will be
sworn and recorded." or words to that effect. The other Report is called
the Board's Safety Report or the Board's Accident Report. This Board is
convened to determine the cause of the accident and contributing Factors
to the accident. It includes opinions, conclusions and recommendations
for safety. It naturally contains a lot of the same facts that were
gathered by the other board as well as independently gathered fact. The
Boards sole purpose for existing is to enhance safety by determining
what happened and recommending fixes to prevent reoccurrence Two
Varieties of Lawsuits: NEGLIGENCE and STRICT PRODUCT LIABILITY IN TORT
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E.
LEGAL ACTION NEGLIGENCE CAUSE OF ACTION
People may bring lawsuits
in Negligence against a defendant person or company when it can be show
that:
1. The Person or Company owed a duty of Care to the defendant.
2. The Person or Company breached that the duty of Care owed to the
defendant has harmed.
3. The breach was a proximate Cause of the
harm.
4. Damages may be awarded.
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F.
GROSS NEGLIGENCE
And if the Breach of care was so grievous that
it constituted a wanton willful act of disregard to the rights of
others. This is considered Gross negligence.
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G.
PRODUCT LIABILITY LAW
The designer, manufacturer and seller of a
defective product may be held liable for the harm that product does. A
product may be defective in one of three ways. It can be defective in
design, meaning that each identical product is also defective. It may be
manufactured defectively so it does not live up to its specification.
Finely a product may be found defective because of its marketing in that
it failed to warn of or train of the hazards inherent to user of the
product.
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H. TO WIN A PRODUCTS CASE YOU MUST PROVE ALL ELEMENTS
The
Elements of a STRICT PRODUCT LIABILITY CASE ARE:
The product was
defective.
The product reached the consumer in an unchanged state.
The defect was a producing cause of the accident.
The defect caused
the damage.
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I. ESTABLISH LEGAL CAUSATION
Rules concerning
causation vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. The general idea is
that one must show a legally allowed connection between a cause and a
later effect. Again the causation must link a legal defect or legal
negligence to the effect ( the accident ). Without causation you lose.
You may lose because you cannot find fact causation, or you may lose
because you can't find legal causation.
J.
PRODUCTS…THE TESTS FOR DEFECTIVENESS
The test for defectiveness
has changed over the years and from state to state: The original test
for defect was a showing that the product caused an unreasonable risk of
harm to exist. ( unreasonable risk of harm test). Later the test was
modified to be the risk of harm from usage of the product was greater
than that a reasonable Consumer would expect. (Consumer Expectation
Test) and finally a test for defectiveness that balances the utility of
the product as produced with the risk of usage of that design and
production. ( risk vs. utility test).
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K.
PRODUCT RISK V. UTILITY… TEST OF DEFECTIVENESS
Most jurisdictions
apply the RISK vs. UTILITY TEST in the following manner:
1. If at the
time of design of the allegedly defective part there could have been
created an alternate design (technically feasible) and if this alternate
design was cost effective (economically possible). And,
2. If the
alternative design would make the product safer. And,
3. IF the
alternative design did not detract from product utility then,
4. The
original design or process was defective.
L.
EFFECT OF RISK V. UTILITY
Basically the Risk vs. Utility test for
defectiveness is: If the designer could have economically made his
product safer, using technology available at the time of manufacture, he
should have. This test for defect has an automatic state of the art
defense built within, and it does not require a manufacturer to advance
the state of the art. It does require the manufacturer to remain abreast
of the state of the industry and utilize alternative designs if they are
cost effective as well as safer.
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M.
LEGAL CAUSATION.
Rules concerning causation vary from
jurisdiction to jurisdiction. The general idea is that one must show a
legally allowed connection between a cause and a later effect. Again the
causation must link a legal defect or legal negligence to the effect (
the accident ). Without causation you lose. You may lose because you
cannot find fact causation, or you may lose because you can't find legal
causation.
N. PUNITVE DAMAGE - THE TEST
The test of punitive damages is
often stated as Gross Conduct that is wanton or willful disregard of the
rights of others. Another test of gross conduct is whether or not it
shocks the conscience. A single act in disregard of safety is usually
not enough. It is when a pattern has been established. More than one
occasion where the manufacturer had notice of a problem and did nothing.
Better yet, the manufacturer knew and considered the fatal consequences
and still failed to act. Better yet the manufacturer cheated, lied and
covered up defect willfully. In any negligence case, any product case,
and any punitive action case the important things to discover are:
1.
What the defendant knew.
2. What the defendant should have known.
3. When the defendant knew it.
4. When the defendant should have
known it.
5. What the defendant did or didn't do when armed with the
knowledge.
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O. PRODUCT LIABILITY STATE OF THE ART
State of the
Art is an engineering concept and principal that has been scientifically
duplicated and reduced to capture. It may only be proven by drawings and
scale prototypes. It must be witnessed to be captured. The state of the
art advancement has occurred at the first date of patentable invention,
not the date of patent issue, not the date of design of the production
widget, and not at the date of production of the widget. The invention
may be a terrible idea, it may never be used - and it is still a state
of the art advance.
P. LEGAL STATE OF THE ART
Only in the legal
risk utility - test analysis for defect do we find a reasoned approach
to what legal authors were looking for when they used the words State of
the Art. It is explained that an alternative design is only required
when it is technically available and reasonable economical. This is
probably what the authors should mean when they say it was state of the
art from a legal standpoint. In fact, it would be an advance in legal
writing in the area of products liability to use the exact wording"
LEGAL STATE OF THE ART" to be defined as a design that was technically
feasible and economically reasonable for inclusion in the product under
scrutiny at the date of manufacture.
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Q.
PRODUCT LIABILITY STATE OF INDUSTRY
State of the Industry is a
misnomer with no exact and decided and agreed upon meaning. Probably the
accepted idea would be that state of the industry probably has to do
with accepted practice within the industry or engineering discipline. It
has been used in the context to hold that a manufacturer do the same as
the average manufacturer does. In the second meaning it is legally
useless.
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R. PRODUCT LIABILITY - CHANGES IN PRODUCTS
Obviously a
manufacturer will not change a product that is working well, selling
well and is profitable, unless something can be done to improve the
product. This may be in the form of a "product improvement" fix. These
generally enhance the product in one or more of the following ways.
1. By adopting a newer technology.
2. By making a safer product.
3. By making the widget cheaper while maintaining the same utility.
4. Increasing the utility while maintaining the same cost.
5.
Deleting some undesirable feature without decreasing utility.
6. To
suit marketing
S. PRODUCT LIABILITY ENGINEERING CHANGES ECP
The Engineering Change Proposal - E.C.P. is forwarded to the
government for approval by the company. An E.C.P. may be submitted by
the manufacturer simply because the manufacturer has thought up a better
product or simply because the manufacturer has discovered a shortcoming
in his product as it exists. The government can also suggest the need
for a change or an improvement by asking or demanding that the
manufacturer create a E.C.P. for a specific improvement desired by the
military.Once such an improvement is designed by the manufacturer in the
form of an E.C.P. it can not be installed unless it is approved by the
government. In the Air Force this approval is in the form of an Air
force Technical Order. In the navy it is called a Engineering Order.
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T.
G.A.R.A. The General Aviation Revitalization Act ( Tort Reform ) Pub. L.
103 - 298, August 17, 1994, 108 Stat. 1552.
On August 17th
President Clinton signed the ACT into law. At that time he stated. "This
limited measure is intended to give manufacturers of general aviation
aircraft and related component parts some protection from lawsuits
alleging defective design or manufacture after an aircraft has
established a lengthy record of operational safety." The act establishes
an 18 year statute of repose for the aircraft of older design and
manufacture. No liability actions may be held against any general
aviation aircraft that is older than 18 years from the date of its first
sale.
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U. DEALING WITH THE FAA
The Federal Aviation Act of 1958
empowers and requires the administrator of the FAA to enforce rules and
regulate security provisions. These powers are far reaching and include
the ability to impose civil, criminal and equitable sanctions against
violations. The administrator is empowered, in the public interest, to
order, amend, suspend, and revoke type certificates, airworthiness
certificates, air carrier certificates or agency certificates. However,
before issuing such an order the administrator must specify the charges,
give notice and allow the alleged offender an opportunity to reply.
V. C.A.M.I. - Civil Aero Medical Institute
Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma. The Civil Aero Medical Institute, at Oklahoma city is a F.A.A.
facility that has many important facets. It houses Airmen's Medical
Records for the F.A.A., it houses the F.A.A. laboratory that conducts
Toxicological examinations post accident. It may house the best aero
medical library in the country. C.A.M.I trains all F.A.A. designated
physicians as Aviation Medical Examiners. These doctors are those
allowed to administer F.A.A. physical examinations to airmen. The A.M.E.
is not a F.A.A. employee, but an independent licensee with designated
powers and responsibilities. There are approximately 7,000 such
physicians in the United States. All of these examiners are physicians,
and some carry with them other specialty skills such as military flight
surgeon designations and myriads of medical certifications and board
specialties. C.A.M.I. is routinely asked to participate in accident
investigations. The original request comes through the N.T.S.B., and is
forwarded to the F.A.A. and thence to C.A.M.I.
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W.
INCIDENT REPORTING SYSTEM
The military and the manufacturers keep
track of incidents and the outcomes, thereof. They do this through a
computerized system. Typically there will be the narrative of the
incident. Manufacturers investigation, status and recommendation as well
as How mal codes. This computerized system is in place in the military
and is shared with the manufacturer. What it is called changes with
manufacturer. Data from such a computerized system is discoverable from
the manufacturer or from the government.
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X.
SPOLIATION OF EVIDENCE
Within this context of an already filed
lawsuit where already identified evidence is tampered with or "lost" the
sanctions have ranged from stern lectures, to pecuniary discovery
sanctions, to striking portions of pleading or defenses, to dismissal.
The sanctions may continue outside the context of the original case by
giving rise to disbarment actions and legal malpractice lawsuits. Much
of what sanctions are imposed by the court seems to hinge on:
1. How
important the evidence was to the issue of the case
2. What level of
certainty can be placed as to who was responsible for the act, and
3.
Whether the act was intentional or accidental.
Spoliation means more
than the simple spoiling of evidence, in fact the word is not derived
from spoil. Spoliation signifies an intentional or negligent plundering
of the evidence. Recently Negligent Spoliation of evidence has become a
cause of action unto itself. It probably has the same elements as any
negligence claim, namely:
1. A duty to preserve evidence must be
established.
2. That duty must be negligently breached by the party
owing the duty.
3. The destruction of the evidence must be the
proximate cause of the damage complained of. ( loss of the ability to
win with another cause of action )
4. There must be provable damage.
Like a malpractice law suit a spoliation suit requires the proof of two
issues.
1. There was the spoliation and
2. Without the spoliation
the plaintiff would have prevailed.
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Y.
FOREIGN SOVEREIGN IMMUNITIES ACT (1976)
Up until the year 1976
the Government of the United States had not codified under what
conditions a Foreign Sovereignty could be sued in United States Courts.
The act sets forth the requirements for jurisdiction of a Foreign as
well as delineates the restrictions as to liability of the foreign.
Under the act any entity that is an agency or instrumentality of a
Foreign state, be it a company, a majority share of an agency or company
or a political subdivision of the state is defined as the variety of
potential defendant envisioned by the act. This is true so long as the
entity in no way is it already a citizen of the United states or created
under the laws of a third country. Provisions of the act that makes the
entity available to the jurisdiction of our courts are found in the
exceptions provisions. They include:
1. Waiver of jurisdiction, by
appearance
2. Commercial activities waiver
3. Tortuous Activity
waiver - among others. The most commonly utilized is the commercial
Activities waiver.
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Z. FEDERAL TORT CLAIMS ACT
The United
States of America may be sued for it's negligence. FEDERAL TORT CLAIMS
ACT 28, U.S.C Section 1346. The action is one of negligence. For the
purposes of the act the elements are:
1. That a federal employee
breeched a non discretionary duty, while acting in the course and scope
of his employment.
2. That the negligent act or failure to act was a
cause of the damage.
3. That damage was to property, personal injury
or wrongful death. ( The claim is for money damages.)
4. The law of
the place of the occurrence is such that it would place liability on the
government had the government been a person.
Procedurally the United
States government can not be sued until an administrative claim
requirement is complied with and finished. The Statute of Limits for an
action is two years
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AA. FAA and Federal Tort Claim Liability
The federal government is involved with all facets of aviation through
the Federal Aviation Agency. They are responsible for the certification
of aircraft, for the testing of airmen, for the control of air traffic,
and for providing weather and aeronautical warnings. The key test of
government negligence is to determine if the government breached a non
discretionary duty. When a government employee breaches a requirement
you may feel optimistic that such a failure was non discretionary.
Aviation Federal Tort Claims act cases are common in areas of:
a. Mid
air collisions.
b. Runway traffic collisions.
c. Failure to warn
of weather.
d. Failure to provide weather briefing.
e. Radar
vectoring into weather.
f. Radar vectoring into terrain.
g.
Failure to monitor and warn of approach deviations.
h. Unworkable
navigation facilities.
i. Failure to handle emergencies correctly.
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BB. FOIA INFORMATION
The F.O.I.A. act is a very helpful tool in
obtaining information from the U.S. Government. The government is
required by law to release government records to the public. There are
several commonly used exceptions to the release of such data. The most
common are:
1. Classified National Security
2. Privileged,
Official Business, Safety Board privilege ( portions of military
accidents)
3. Privacy Act restrictions
4. Discretionary government
discussions before decisions.
5. Proprietary agreements where
disclosure jeopardizes trade secrets.
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CC.
CONFLICT OF LAW
Conflicts on the other hand is the facet of law
relied upon to determine what law should apply to the case at hand.Even
though a certain court may have jurisdiction to hear a case it may be
forced to apply the substantive law of a foreign forum in determining
the outcome. Looking at conflicts first, there are to rules that are
used to determine what law will apply. The minority and old position was
that the place of the accident determines the law to be applied. The "
SITUS " rule is deemed unfair since it subjects victims to some times
harsh results simply because an airplane chose to crash on an
unfavorable forum. Perhaps it was the intention of the aircraft to
overfly the forum entirely.
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DD.
SIGNIFICANT CONTACTS RULE
The significant contacts rule applies
the law of the forum with the most significant contacts to the accident.
This test requires the court to analyse the entire accident and rule
where the most significant contacts reside. This analysis will include:
1. crash site location.
2. Residence of all defendants.
3.
Residence of the plaintiff.
4. Nature of and purpose of the flight.
5. Where the negligence occurred.
6. Where the product was designed
and manufactured.
7. other significant factors.
In such situations
the law of all possible forums must be studied for their ramifications.
It is not unusual to see state statutes written
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EE.
MONTREAL CONVENTION 2003
The United Nations formed a organization
to unify and make standard the rules, regulations and law all countries
are expected to abide by when they participate in International Airline
operations, both Civilian passenger and air cargo. About 110 nations
have signed and others work within the system voluntarily while having
not completed ratification. The ICAO organization resides in Montreal
Canada and it oversees many aspects of International flying. The latest
treaty is called the MONTREAL CONVENTION 2003 and its entire 24 pages
may be obtained in PDF format by Googling MONTREAL CONVENTION 2003 The
convention allows and controls lawsuits aimed at the airline defendant.
It does not include third parties or aircraft manufacturers. This
Convention suggests to be covered you must be a ticketed passenger on an
international ticket (NRSA Frequent flyer pass, vacation pass etc are
same as fare paying passengers.) You must be hurt or killed by an
accident on an aircraft or in the process of boarding or deplaning. Then
you have 2 years to file a lawsuit in one of several places to include –
City of Take off or destination, Airline home and a few other places. If
the victim fits the criteria the victim will be compensated according to
a simple negligence action. Generally will be computed using method
allowable in victims country of residence. Punitive damages are not
allowed under Montreal.
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FF. INTERNTIONAL ACCIDENTS
The Montreal
Convention attempts to bring some uniformity to a vastly complex system
of laws as practiced and suitable for the differing 109 countries. On
International flights from one Hub city to another foreign hub it is
likely to have a vast array nations represented in the passenger
Manifesrt. As example thing of a Lufthansa flight from New York Kennedy
to Frankfort Germany. Here the list might easily include persons from
USA, Central America, Germany and several European, middle Eastern and
Former Eastern Bloc countries. If there were not soe uniformity provided
by the Convention it would be hectic. The truth is it still is as
Montreal does not trump all foreign laws and so litigation outcome are
vastly different. International accidents of countries under Montreal do
a systematic investigation under agreed investigative protocol called
ANNEX 13. These reports are handled and released by the Host Nation.
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GG.
THE TEAM CONCEPT WORKS
Unless you are a huge law firm, it is very
unlikely that you have individual Attorneys who specialize in every of
the myriad of legal specialties recognized by the ABA or the various
State Bar Associations. Aviation Law is one such discipline that
requires intensified knowledge in areas peculiar to that specific
endeavor. Lawyers are used to hiring testifying expert witnesses to help
bridge the understanding gap. It may be more cost effective and outcome
determinative to form a team of consulting attorneys who can help you
master the complex field for the benefit of your client. Consider this.
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HH. AIRLAWS MEMBERS CONDUCT A NO COST PRIVELEGED CASE EVALUATION
The work involves analyzing and evaluating preliminary accident data.
This evaluation is completed at no charge to any potential client. A
determination will be made and an opinion issued as to what legal
avenues may be taken. A further determination will be issued suggesting
preliminary work and investigation that need be accomplished. At this
time an evaluation will be completed to determine if there is reason to
employ this firm or another to handle your specific case requirements.
We prefer to work on contingent fee, which means there is no legal fee
charged to a client unless there is successful recovery by verdict or
settlement.
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Top
II. AIRLAWS MEMBERS WILL CONSULT ON
MOST FACETS OF AVIATION LITIGATION.
THEY CAN EVALUATE or PERFORM:
1. AIRCRAFT ACCIDENT INVESTIGATIONS.
2. SIMULATIONS, RECONSTRUCTIONS
3. PILOTING and TEST PILOTING AS REQUIRED.
4. RESEARCH INTO AIRCRAFT HISTORY
5. DAMAGE EXPERTISE IN VALUE OF AIRLINE CAREERS.
6. TRIAL PREPARATION AS REQUESTED.
7. CROSS EXAMINATION OF HOSTILE TECHNICAL EXPERTS.
8. TAKE or SECOND CHAIR DEPOSITIONS.
THEY CAN
EVALUATE:
1. PILOT TRAINING RECORDS.
2. PILOT PROFICIENCY.
3. PILOT RECENCY.
4. TECHNICAL AND AVIATION DISCOVERY.
5. AIRCRAFT AIRWORTHINESS ISSUES.
6. AIRCRAFT CERTIFICATION ISSUES.
THEY CAN:
1. SUGGEST, HIRE AND WORKING WITH TESTIFYING AVIATION EXPERTS
2. ENGAGE IN TRIAL PARTICIPATION .
3. TESTIFY AS EXPERT WITNESS IN SPECIFIC AREAS.
4. PREPARE DEMONSTRATIVE AVIATION EXHIBITS FOR TRIAL.
5. PARTICIPATE IN ALTERNATE RESOLUTIONS.
6. SECOND CHAIR TRIAL.
NON LITIGATION AVIATION
MATTERS AIRLAWS MEMBERS CONSULT ON:
1. EMPLOYMENT GRIEVANCES UNDER RLA.
2. EMPLOYMENT ISSUES UNDER RLA.
3. WHISTLEBLOWERS UNDER RLA and FELA.
4. UNION GRIEVANCE, AND SYSTEM BOARD REPRESENTATIONS.
5. DEFEND PILOTS FROM FAA VIOLATIONS AND CERTIFICATION
ACTIONS.
6. REPRESENT PILOT IN MEDICAL LICENSING ISSUES.
7. UNION CONTRACT NEGOTIATING CONSULTING.
8. DEFENDING FBO against FAA VIOLATIONS.
9. DEFENDING MAINTENANCE FACILITIES AGAINST FAA VIOLATIONS.
10. WORLDWIDE AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT TRANSACTIONS
11. ESTATE PLANNING BASED ON AIRLINE CREW RETIREMENT AND
BENEFITS PACKAGES.
12. AIRLINE WRONGFUL DISCHARGE CASES.
13. EEOC AND ERISA ISSUES WITH PILOTS UNION CONTRACTS.
14. DAMAGE ISSUES OF PILOT JOB VALUES AND EXPECTATIONS.
15. MILITARY BENEFIT PACKAGES.
16. PBGCA ISSUES.
17. CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECODS.
The AIRLAWS
members focus includes but is not limited to:
Aviation,
Aviation Accidents, Aviation Accident Investigations, Aviation
Litigation, Air Crash Litigation, Aviation Law, Airplane Accidents,
Helicopter Accidents. Military accidents, General Aviation, General
Aviation Accidents, Commuter Accidents, Airline Accidents, Air
Worthiness, Air Worthiness Directives, Aviation Safety, Air Safety, Air
Safety Investigations, Air Safety Investigators. Aviation Schools,
Flight training, Air Crew Training, Air Crews, Piloting, Pilot Errors,
Human Factors, Design Induced Errors, Probable Cause, Aviation Safety
Reporting, Airmen Certification, Aircraft Certification, Military
Contract Defense, Aircraft Design, Aircraft Engineers, Air Crash
Litigation, Aviation records, Cockpit Resource Management, System
Safety, Aircraft Warning Systems, Aircraft Automation. Approach
Accidents, Cruise Accidents, Take Off Accidents, Aircraft Icing, CFIT
Accidents, Landing Accidents, and more.
If your legal problems
involve any of the following subject matters THE AIRLAWS GROUP can
either help you or direct you to places where your problem can be
professionally resolved.
In addition to our in house expertise
and experience, we have access to other attorneys with an aviation focus
in aviation specialty areas.If that is insufficient we have listings of
several hundred lay specialist we would suggest you employ for your
client’s benefit as case specifics require.
Please contact us if
you have questions on : Aviation Law, Aviation Safety, Air Safety, Air
Safety Investigations, Air Safety Investigators, Air Craft Accidents,
Airplane Accidents, Airline Accidents, Helicopter Accidents, Military
Accidents, Flight Schools, Flight Training, IFR Training, Aeronautical
Charts, Aerodynamic Flutter, Aero-elastic Deformation, Aeronautical
Systems, Aerodynamic Forces, Approach, Approach Stall, Approach Speed ,
Approach Accidents, Aviation Accidents, Aviation Litigation, Aviation
Schools, Aviation Safety Reporting, Aviation Records, Aviation Law Firm,
Aircraft Accident Investigations, Aircraft Fires, Autopilot, Auto
flight, Auto Throttles, Air Worthiness, Air Worthiness Directives, Air
Crew Training, Air Crews, Air Crash Litigation, Air Accidents, Air
Crash, Aircraft Noise, Air Port Accidents, Airport Control Zones,
Approach Control, Air Traffic Control, Air Traffic, Aircraft Warning
Systems, Aircraft Automation, Airline Accidents, Aircraft Certification,
Airmen Certification, Aircraft design, Aircraft engineers, Aircraft
Maintenance, Aircraft Overhaul and Repair, Overhaul and Repair, Inspect
and Repair, Airframe Icing, Airframe Failures, Airframe Flutter,
Helicopter Accidents. Military Accidents, General Aviation, General
Aviation Accidents, Commuter Accidents, Flight training, Piloting, Pilot
Errors, Human factors, Design Induced Error, Military Contract Defense,
Cockpit Resource Management, System Safety in Aviation, Cruise
Accidents, Take Off Accidents, Icing Encounters, CFIT Accidents, Landing
Accidents. Experts, Expert Witnesses, Next Generation Automation, Auto
Flight and more. .
CONTINGENT FEES - YOUR CASE
IS OUR CASE
Your client is the reason we exist. In the
aircraft accident, personal injury and strict product liability aspects
of the plaintiff litigation we can conduct business on a contingent fee
basis or on a task based hourly basis. We are exceptionally comfortable
with a contingent arrangement because it means quite simply that we give
more than lip service loyalty to your cause. Your cause becomes our
cause, and quite simply if we do not prevail for you, we do not get
paid.
Your Privilege is our Privilege. Because all Airlaw’s
members are attorneys, another advantage of hiring us as
associated/Consulting counsel is that in every case our work product is
covered by both attorney client and work product privileges unless you
decide to designate an Airlaw’s member to be a testifying expert.
Obviously the pay agreement in such a case would be hourly.
Throughout the litigation process we recognize that the case is the
client's. We provide professional advice so the lead attorney and a
client can make appropriate decisions on the many issues of the case.
Statistics show that most viable cases settle before trial, but
our firm has learned that the best settlements can only be achieved when
the defense recognizes the economic risk of going to trial.