In Re Air Crash Disaster at Tenerife, Etc. , 435 F. Supp. 927 ( 1977 )


Menu:
  • 435 F. Supp. 927 (1977)

    In re AIR CRASH DISASTER AT TENERIFE, CANARY ISLANDS ON MARCH 27, 1977.

    No. 306.

    Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation.

    August 16, 1977.

    Before JOHN MINOR WISDOM, Chairman, and EDWARD WEINFELD, EDWIN A. ROBSON, JOSEPH S. LORD, III, STANLEY A. WEIGEL, ANDREW A. CAFFREY, and ROY W. HARPER, Judges of the Panel.

    OPINION AND ORDER

    PER CURIAM.

    On March 27, 1977 a Boeing 747 jet aircraft being operated by KLM-Royal Dutch Airlines (KLM) collided with a Boeing 747 jet aircraft being operated by Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) on the runway at the Los Rodeos Airport in Tenerife, Canary Islands. The KLM aircraft was carrying 248 passengers and crew members and the Pan Am aircraft was carrying 396 passengers and crew members at the time of the collision. Over 550 of those persons were killed.

    Presently, 40 actions arising from the collision are before the Panel as a result of *928 motions by various parties to transfer the actions in this litigation to a single district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407 for coordinated or consolidated pretrial proceedings.[1] Fifteen of these actions are pending in the Northern District of California;[2] thirteen in the Central District of California; three in the Southern District of New York; two each in the Northern District of Illinois and the District of Alaska; and one each in the Eastern District of California, the Southern District of California,[3] the District of Arizona, the Western District of Washington, and the District of Puerto Rico. KLM is a defendant in all actions, Pan Am is a defendant in all but one of the actions, and Boeing is a defendant in several of the actions. Additional defendants in some of the actions include Royal Cruise Lines, booking agent for the Pan Am flight; the Government of Spain, operator of the airport at which the collision occurred; the insurance underwriter for the airport authority; and the surviving pilot and first officer of the Pan Am aircraft. Plaintiffs in the actions generally allege that negligent conduct of the defendants in operation, maintenance or design of either of the two aircraft or the airport caused persons aboard the aircraft to sustain injuries or resulted in the wrongful death of plaintiffs' decedents. Two of the actions, McClintock and Marshall, which are pending in the Northern District of California, have been brought as class actions on behalf of various victims of this collision or their estates.

    All parties that have submitted briefs favor transfer of the actions in this litigation to a single district pursuant to Section 1407 for coordinated or consolidated pretrial proceedings. The only dispute among the parties is over the selection of an appropriate transferee forum. Four different districts have been suggested—the Northern, Central and Southern Districts of California and the Southern District of New York. Clearly, these actions involve common questions of fact and we find that their transfer under Section 1407 to the Southern District of New York will best serve the convenience of the parties and witnesses and promote the just and efficient conduct of the litigation.

    The parties that favor a California forum as the transferee district generally contend that the center of gravity of this litigation is located in California. They assert that most of the passengers on the Pan Am aircraft were residents of California or other west coast states; that a majority of the survivors of the collision are residents of California; that several actions arising from this collision have been filed in California state courts and many additional actions arising from this collision are expected to be filed in state or federal courts located in California; and that all the major defendants in this litigation are located in or near, or do substantial business in, California. Thus, the parties that favor a California forum maintain that a California forum will be convenient to the greatest number of parties and witnesses and will best facilitate coordination of discovery efforts between the actions pending in California state courts and those pending in federal court.

    Though any of the three California forums that have been suggested, as well as *929 the New York forum, could be described as an appropriate transferee forum for this litigation, on balance, we are persuaded that the Southern District of New York is the preferable forum.

    The New York forum appears to have a greater nexus to the liability phase of the litigation than a California forum. The surviving pilot and first officer of the Pan Am aircraft reside in the New York area and are key witnesses. Also important are investigators of the collision from the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board, who apparently reside in either the New York area or the Washington, D.C. area. In addition, Pan Am's headquarters are located in New York and, as certain defendants and plaintiffs represent, many of the relevant documents and witnesses will be found in the New York vicinity. We observe that other centers of discovery in the liability phase will be the Netherlands, where KLM's headquarters are located; Spain, which is conducting its own investigation of the collision; and of course the Canary Islands, the situs of the crash.

    Related actions are pending in New York state courts as well as California state courts. Hence, our selection of either a New York or California federal forum would facilitate the coordination of pretrial efforts between state and federal courts regarding the actions arising from this disaster. See In re Bomb Disaster at Roseville, California, 399 F. Supp. 1400, 1403 (Jud.Pan.Mult.Lit.1975).

    One party requests that the Panel enter an order which requires that: 1) Pan Am and KLM file a list of passengers and next of kin; 2) the passengers and next of kin be notified of these proceedings and 3) Pan Am and KLM file a list of settled claims. The Panel is not empowered to enter such an order under Section 1407, however. A request of this type should be presented to the federal district court in which one of the constituent actions was originally filed or to the transferee court following transfer under Section 1407.

    IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407, the actions listed on the following Schedule A and pending in districts other than the Southern District of New York be, and the same hereby are, transferred to the Southern District of New York and, with the consent of that court, assigned to the Honorable Robert J. Ward for coordinated or consolidated pretrial proceedings with the actions already pending there and listed on Schedule A.

    SCHEDULE A
    District of Alaska                     Civil Action No.
    Wilma Lee Bowen, etc. v. Pan           A77-107-Civ
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    William Blackmon, etc. v. Pan          A77-108-Civ
    American World Airways, et al.
    District of Arizona
    Norma Jean Boen, et al. v. Pan         Civ-77-394-PHX-WPC
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Central District of California
    Mary Finley, etc. v. Pan American        CV-77-1201-F
    World Airways, Inc., et al.
    Mary Finley, etc. v. Boeing Co.,         CV-77-1245-AAH
    et al.
    Frank L. Foley, Jr., et al. v.           CV-77-1263-WMB
    Pan American World Airways,
    et al.
    Dan Harlow, et al. v. Pan American       CV-77-1475-RJK
    World Airways, Inc., et al.
    Julie A. Levengood v. Pan American       CV-77-1476-WMB
    World Airways, Inc., et al.
    June Perry, et al. v. Pan American       CV-77-1478-R
    World Airways, Inc., et al.
    Robert Hale v. Pan American              CV-77-1479-LTL
    World Airways, Inc., et al.
    H. Clifton Kroon, etc. v. His            CV-77-1511-AAH
    Catholic Majesty, the King of
    Spain, a sovereign nation, et al.
    Burke Kaplan, etc. v. KLM-Royal          CV-77-1719-LEW
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Edward Hirshfield, etc. v. KLM-Royal     CV-77-1720-AAH
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Ann D. Kaessner, et al. v. Pan           CV-77-1391-MML
    American World Airways, et al.
    Steven Alan Lewis, et al. v. Pan         CV-77-1588-RF
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Dorothy D. Kelly, et al. v. KLM-Royal    CV-77-2310-RJK
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    

    *930
    Northern District of California
    Harold E. & Roman McClintock,            C-77-0665-WHO
    et al. v. Pan American World Airways,
    et al.
    Eugene J. Marshall, etc. v. Pan          C-77-0711-WHO
    American World Airways, Inc., et
    al.
    Albert K. Emerzian, et al. v. Pan        C-77-0758-WHO
    American World Airways, et al.
    Allen Calandra, et al. v. KLM-Royal      C-77-0780-WHO
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Betty Guerriero, et al. v. KLM-Royal     C-77-0781-WHO
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Walter Michael H. Watt, etc. v.          C-77-0838-WHO
    His Catholic Majesty, et al.
    Betty I. Rodriguez, etc. v. Pan          C-77-0863-WHO
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Bethene M. Moore v. Pan American         C-77-0874-WHO
    World Airways, et al.
    Elfriede Naik, et al. v. KLM-Royal       C-77-0901-WHO
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    C. Carl Nelson, Jr., et al. v.           C-77-0963-WHO
    KLM-Royal Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Norman L. Shapro, etc. v. KLM-Royal      C-77-0938-WHO
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Laura Callahan, etc. v. The Government   C-77-0981-WHO
    of the Kingdom of
    Spain, et al.
    Donald Vogel, et al. v. The Government   C-77-0982-WHO
    of the Kingdom of
    Spain, et al.
    Arthur R. Reed, et al. v. The            C-77-0983-WHO
    Government of the Kingdom of
    Spain, et al.
    William Bodinson, et al. v. KLM-Royal    C-77-0956-WHO
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Southern District of California
    Sarah B. Petersen, et al. v. Pan         77-0205-GT
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Eastern District of California
    Maurice Magante, et al. v. Pan           S-77-252-PCW
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Northern District of Illinois
    Marianne Jakoubek, et al. v. Pan         77-C-1311
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Charles H. Ziebel, et al. v. Pan         77-C-1711
    American World Airways, Inc.,
    et al.
    Southern District of New York
    John C. Amador v. KLM-Royal              77-Civ-1795
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    J. Edwin Harper, etc. v. KLM-Royal       77-Civ-1820
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    James W. Flood, et al. v. KLM-Royal      77-Civ-2462
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    District of Puerto Rico
    Adolfo Torrech Nieves, et al. v.         77-520
    KLM-Royal Dutch Airlines, et al.
    Western District of Washington
    Donald F. Dally, etc. v. KLM-Royal       C-77-275S
    Dutch Airlines, et al.
    

    NOTES

    [1] All parties in this litigation anticipate a considerable number of tag-along actions, some of which have already been filed but came to the attention of the Panel too late to be included in the Panel hearing on this matter. See Rules 1, 9 and 10, R.P.J.P.M.L., 65 F.R.D. 253, 255, 259-60 (1975).

    [2] Two additional actions that were pending in the Northern District of California have been dismissed since the Panel hearing: Richard Bernasconi, et al. v. KLM-Royal Dutch Airlines, et al., Civil Action No. C-77-0778-WHO; and Dennis Querantes, et al. v. KLM-Royal Dutch Airlines, et al., Civil Action No. C-77-0779-WHO.

    [3] An additional action that is pending in the Southern District of California, James F. Barth, et al. v. Pan American World Airways, Inc., et al., Civil Action No. 77-0345-GT, was also included in the motions. On principles of comity, after receiving a request from the judge to whom Barth is assigned, we are deferring our ruling concerning this action pending that judge's decision on a matter he has under consideration. See In re Plumbing Fixture Cases, 298 F. Supp. 484, 496 (Jud.Pan.Mult.Lit.1968).