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Parker Hannifin to pay $43.6million for 737 crash

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Weasil

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 19, 2003
Posts
752
Business Times - 09 Jul 2004

SilkAir crash: US firm told to pay US$44m


Los Angeles Superior Court jury says defects in rudder control system caused the crash


(LOS ANGELES) Parker Hannifin Corp, the world's largest maker of hydraulic equipment, was told by a Los Angeles jury to pay US$43.6 million to the families of three people killed in a 1997 crash of a SilkAir Pte plane in Indonesia.

The Los Angeles Superior Court jury on Tuesday determined that defects in a rudder control system caused the Boeing Co 737 to plunge from 35,000 feet, killing all 104 people aboard.

The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) concluded that there were no mechanical defects and the pilot intentionally caused the crash.

'We are incredulous,' said Lorrie Paul Crum, a spokeswoman for Cleveland-based Parker Hannifin, who said the company will appeal. 'This is the best case for tort reform I've seen yet.'

The jury assigned the entire responsibility for the crash to Parker Hannifin, rejecting the option of apportioning any fault to SilkAir or Boeing, which manufactured the 10-month-old 737. Parker Hannifin was the only defendant.

Boeing had settled earlier and SilkAir had paid about US$100,000 to each family under the Warsaw Convention, which limits airlines' liability in international accidents, said Walter Lack, a lawyer for the families.

The case was the first US trial over the crash of SilkAir Flight 135, Mr Lack said. The trial established Parker Hannifin's liability and relatives of about 30 other people will now go to trial in the same Los Angeles court to determine how much Parker Hannifin owes them in damages, he said.

'This is just the tip of the iceberg,' Mr Lack said. Another 40 cases are pending in federal court in Seattle, he said.

SilkAir is Singapore Airline Ltd's regional unit, serving mainly tourists travelling to Asian destinations. SilkAir Flight 135 was travelling to Singapore from Jakarta when it crashed in December 1997.

The NTSB said in a December 2000 letter to the Indonesian National Transportation Safety Committee that 'no airplane- related mechanical malfunctions or failures caused or contributed to the accident' and the evidence indicates the crash was caused by 'intentional pilot action'. The Indonesian safety agency gave no official reason for the crash.

The US agency investigates major international accidents involving US air carriers or US manufactured jets. NTSB reports can't be used as evidence at trial under federal law, Ms Crum said. Mr Lack said factual statements from NTSB reports can be used, while conclusions and recommendations are barred by the law.

Parker Hannifin intends to challenge that statute in its appeal as well as seek a legislative remedy, Ms Crum said. The verdict won't affect Parker Hannifin's earnings because the company is covered by insurance, she added.

The case was brought by the families of Soen Lay Heng, 46, a Singapore resident who specialised in security printing; Merleen Tan Peck Jiang, 26, a Singapore resident who worked as a computer consultant; and Kenneth George Wilson, 44, a Scottish citizen living in Indonesia.

The trial before Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Emilie Elias lasted six weeks. The jury deliberated for four days before delivering its unanimous verdict on all questions, Mr Lack said. - Bloomberg
 
Someone correct me if I am wrong, but I could SWEAR that crash was the cause of the pilot comitting suicide. And I am not thinking of the Egypt Air crash....
 
You are thinking of what is suspected in the Egypt Air crash. Parker Hannifin's only defense in this one was to claim pilot suicide. It was so unlikely they got laughed out of court with it. For the NTSB to even give their opinion on probable causes is a joke. Example - C172 crashes in Podunk KS. CESSNA is invited by NTSB 100% of the time to go along for the initial inspection (see a problem yet). Anyone at inspection to represent the pilot? No. Lets say there's a possible problem with a Honeywell autopilot on the crashed airplane. Where does the autopilot get tested - HONEYWELL. Uh, think they'll find any precrash anomilies? Probable cause after 3 days of work and the file sitting on different desks for 18 months - pilot error.
 
skykid said:
You are thinking of what is suspected in the Egypt Air crash. Parker Hannifin's only defense in this one was to claim pilot suicide. It was so unlikely they got laughed out of court with it. For the NTSB to even give their opinion on probable causes is a joke. Example - C172 crashes in Podunk KS. CESSNA is invited by NTSB 100% of the time to go along for the initial inspection (see a problem yet). Anyone at inspection to represent the pilot? No. Lets say there's a possible problem with a Honeywell autopilot on the crashed airplane. Where does the autopilot get tested - HONEYWELL. Uh, think they'll find any precrash anomilies? Probable cause after 3 days of work and the file sitting on different desks for 18 months - pilot error.
There was pretty compelling evidence that the CA committed suicide in the Silkair crash. I think the parents of the Silkair FO even believe it. Someone messed with the black box a minute or two before the aircraft unaccountably dived into a river bed.
 
vc10, not one on the jury or any alternate was buying the suicide conspiracy theory. Messed with the black box? I think you are referring to manipulating circuit breakers.
 
skykid, you must be a lawyer

Juries and judges are idiots and end up being manipulated by greedy lawyers who are looking to take 40% of any judgements.
 
What's so fvqued about this.......

Think about it: Non-Americans using American courts and American lawyers to sue American companies.

The word is out.....America is a lottery for the world to play! Free tickets!

Let's say a Chinese airliner (purchased at Wal-Mart) crashed in Chicago, killing Americans. Do we have access to their courts to sue Ying Yang Heavy Industries??

American trial lawyers at it again.

This behavior has a name: treason.
 
No I'm not a lawyer, and feel the same way as the last couple of posters about what is going on in our judicial system. My point is simply that the defense in this case was more than weak.
 
I read this the day it was published in the Straights Times while on an overnight. Same thought occured to me about the suicide theory. Anyone remember the United 737 that rolled inverted at Colorado Springs or the USAirways 737 that plowed into the ground outside of Pittsburgh ? They both had far fetched theory's as well. USAirways pilots and management were deeply involved in the Aliquippa crash and proved beyond a doubt that it was a rudder hardover. As I'm sure the Colorado Springs crash and the SilkAir crash were. I'm equally sure that neither Boeing nor Parker Hannifin do anything to prevent these wild theories from surfacing, they may even be the root of them. This all in an effort to deflect blame. It is a real pity because the USAirways crash was avoidable. If one of these companies had taken the time to properly investigate the Colorado Springs accident and the numerous related rudder events on the 737 a proper fix or warning could have been in place before the Aliquippa and SilkAir crashes.Typhoonpilot
 
Let me explain my motivation. I like to stick up for pilots. Come to court and prove your secondary slide in the rudder PCU dual concentric servo valve is a great product and works correctly 1000s of times per day, don't tell me a pilot decided to kill himself and everybody else on board because his credit cards are maxed.
 

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