Quinn v. Pena

USCA1 Opinion












[NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 96-1551

CANDACE A. QUINN,

Petitioner,

v.

DAVID R. HINSON, Administrator,
FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION,

Respondent.

____________________


ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER

OF THE NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD

____________________

Before

Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________

____________________


Thomas C. Halloran on brief for petitioner. __________________
Robert P. Vente and Kathleen Yodice, Acting Manager, Appellate ________________ _______________
Branch, Office of the Chief Counsel, Federal Aviation Administration,
on brief for respondent.

____________________

December 19, 1996
____________________
















ALDRICH, Senior Circuit Judge. Candace A. Quinn _____________________

(hereinafter petitioner), seeks review of the National

Transportation Safety Board's affirmance of an order of the

Federal Aviation Administration ("FAA"), suspending her

commercial pilot's license for forty-five days. We affirm.

I. Background __________

A. Facts _____

Petitioner is a certified flight instructor

employed by a fixed base operator at the Beverly,

Massachusetts airport. In addition to flight instruction

duties, she flies a daily morning Metro Traffic Reporting

flight. On the day in question, she performed her regular

traffic flight. Later that morning, her employer asked her

to make a ferry flight to Lawrence, Massachusetts,

approximately twelve miles northwest, in a plane she had

never operated. Petitioner did not hesitate because she was

"just used to going up [t]here and not having any problems

. . . ."

Shortly after her departure from Beverly,

petitioner contacted Lawrence Automatic Terminal Information

Service ("ATIS") and was informed that the weather was

suitable for flying under Visual Flight Rules ("VFR").1 A


____________________

1. Visual Flight Rules, see 14 C.F.R. 91.151-159, govern ___
procedures for flight in "VFR" conditions. In general, VFR
conditions are those where the pilot can see minimum required
distances and utilize visual navigation techniques.

-2-













few minutes later, she tried to contact Lawrence Air Traffic

Control ("ATC") and found both radios inoperative. At about

the same time, she noticed snow showers to the north in the

direction of Lawrence airport. Unable to make contact with

Lawrence ATC she ultimately turned away from the weather.

It appears that at this point petitioner had lost

track of where she was. Instead of heading back toward

Beverly, she testified that she "didn't know the exact

heading [she] took but it must have been a heading of south

. . . ." While on this southerly heading, she steadily

descended, watched for traffic, worked on her radios and

tried to "calm" herself.

Petitioner eventually managed to establish radio

contact with Lawrence ATC and was "shocked" to learn she was

twenty miles south of her intended flight path -- at an

elevation of only 700 feet, three miles north of Logan

Airport -- thus flying in Class B controlled airspace2

without authorization. At the urgent request of a Logan air

traffic controller, Lawrence ATC radioed petitioner to

contact Logan ATC which then provided her with vectors back

to Lawrence. As a result of this unauthorized foray into

Class B air space, Logan controllers were forced to shut down


____________________

2. Class B controlled airspace surrounds the nation's
busiest airports. It generally ranges from the surface to
altitudes as high as 10,000 feet and requires Air Traffic
Control clearance before entry.

-3-













runways, delay departing flights and divert arriving flights

on final approach. The written record does not reflect that

petitioner ever informed Lawrence ATC or Logan controllers of

her radio problems.3

After landing at Lawrence, petitioner contacted the

Boston Terminal Radar Approach Control ("TRACON") Area

Manager. When asked what happened, she replied:

I got kind of discombobulated
because I entered a snow shower and none
of my radios seemed to be working. I was
getting wrong information . . . I ran
into a little bit of difficulty . . . I
got disoriented. I have an instrument
rating . . . [b]ut I'm not current . . .
I'm actually a certified flight
instructor and this is the scary part
. . . I just . . . got disoriented and I
guess I thought I knew where I was going
and then when I found out that I didn't
have the runway or airport in sight then
I knew I had a problem . . . if anyone
had told me it would happen to me I would
never [have] believed it . . . I'm
probably going to be in very big trouble.

Three weeks later, petitioner submitted a written report to

the Logan FAA Flight Standards Field Office in which she

acknowledged that "perhaps [she] could have done more to

prevent incurring Boston's airspace." With the burden being

on her, this was an understatement.


____________________

3. Petitioner did testify that after making contact with
Lawrence Air Traffic Control, she reported her radio
problems. She also testified that she told Logan controllers
of her avionics difficulties. However, neither transcript of
tapes routinely kept by both authorities contained any
confirmation of this.

-4-













B. Procedural History __________________

On March 29, 1994, the FAA issued the final amended

order suspending petitioner's commercial pilot certificate.

The order found petitioner guilty of three violations of

Federal Aviation Regulations ("FAR"), 14 C.F.R. 1.1 et __

seq. Specifically, she was charged with operating her ____

aircraft within Class B airspace without authorization, see ___

14 C.F.R. 91.131(a)(1), and over a congested area of a city

below an altitude of 1,000 feet. See 14 C.F.R. 91.119(b). ___

She was also charged with operating her aircraft carelessly

or recklessly so as to endanger the life or property of

another. See 14 C.F.R. 91.13(a). ___

Petitioner filed a notice of appeal with the

National Transportation Safety Board ("NTSB"), pursuant to 49

C.F.R. Part 821, Subpart I. A hearing was held on August 29,

1995, before an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ"), who

affirmed the FAA order in its entirety. Petitioner then

filed a notice of appeal with the full NTSB which denied the

appeal and upheld the ALJ's decision. We have jurisdiction

under 49 U.S.C. 1153.

II. Discussion __________

Under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), 5

U.S.C. 706(2)(A), we are required to give NTSB decisions

"generous deference on review," Echo, Inc. v. Hinson, 48 F.3d __________ ______

8, 11 (1st Cir. 1995), affirming unless the decision was



-5-













"arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise

not in accordance with the law." Id. (citation omitted). We ___

accept factual conclusions by the NTSB if they are supported

by substantial evidence, Twomey v. Nat'l Transp. Safety Bd., ______ ________________________

821 F.2d 63, 67 n.5 (1st Cir. 1987); 49 U.S.C. 1153(b)(3),

while reviewing questions of law de novo.

Petitioner does not dispute that she committed

multiple FAR violations, maintaining, instead, that she was

excused from compliance under 14 C.F.R. 91.3(b), which

provides that "[i]n an in flight emergency requiring

immediate action, the pilot in command may deviate from any

rule of this part to the extent required to meet that

emergency." The NTSB and the ALJ considered this affirmative

defense and rejected its application because the emergency

was of petitioner's own making. We agree. See, e.g., ___ ____

Chritton v. Nat'l Transp. Safety Bd., 888 F.2d 854, 861 (D.C. ________ ________________________

Cir. 1989) (emergency defense rejected where pilot

encountered deteriorating weather conditions and failed to

execute a 180 degree turn). It is beyond dispute that upon

encountering snow showers in her path, petitioner could

simply have turned around and returned to Beverly airport.

Instead, she panicked and blundered into classified airspace,

endangering many lives, including her own.

Petitioner contends that contrary to the

requirements of the APA, the ALJ's decision did not contain a



-6-













"recitation of factual evidence" nor "an analysis thereof to

support the ultimate findings of fact which support the

conclusions of law." See 5 U.S.C. 557(c). The ALJ, ___

however, specifically found that petitioner was "confused and

disoriented" and stated:

[I]f there was an emergency --
Respondent's counsel says there was an
emergency -- it was an emergency of her
own making and she certainly didn't tell
anyone during, before or afterwards that
such an emergency existed . . . I do not
find there was an emergency, really, as
such on the part of the pilot.

While this passage is not included in the ALJ's formal

recitation of findings of fact and conclusions of law, we

find it to be adequately articulated and providing sufficient

support for the rejection of the emergency defense.

Petitioner also maintains that the findings of

material fact by the ALJ and upheld by the NTSB are not

supported by substantial evidence as required under 5 U.S.C.

706(2)(E). Substantial evidence is "such relevant evidence

as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a

conclusion." Chritton, 888 F.2d at 856 (citations omitted). ________

Under the substantial evidence test, we "determine whether

the agency . . . could fairly and reasonably find the facts

as it did." Id. (citations omitted). "An agency conclusion ___

may be supported by substantial evidence even though a

plausible alternative interpretation of the evidence would




-7-













support a contrary view." Throckmorton v. Nat'l Transp. ____________ ______________

SafetyBd., 963F.2d 441,444 (D.C.Cir. 1992)(citation omitted). _________

After a close review of the record, we hold that

the findings of the ALJ are supported by substantial

evidence. First, as regards the rejection of the emergency

defense, there was testimony by an FAA expert which

established that petitioner should not have attempted to fix

her radios if doing so would result in a loss of ground

reference points. Radios are not required for aircraft

flying in VFR conditions during the day. See 14 C.F.R. ___

91.205(b). Moreover, the expert witness testified that

even if petitioner had lost sight of her ground reference

points and therefore could not engage in "dead reckoning,"4

she still had use of her magnetic compass or her directional

gyroscope which would have alerted her that she was turning

south toward Logan.

Substantial evidence supports the threshold of

findings of FAR violations. Petitioner in her testimony

admitted her ultimate conclusion that she "was probably

headed south while . . . trying to fix the radio," that she

was "probably" within three miles of Logan when contact was

made and that she "kept descending thinking it was going to

get better." She should have known immediately. Although


____________________

4. "Dead reckoning" is a basic navigational method using
compass, time, distance and headings.

-8-













she couldn't remember going as low as 700 feet, the FAA

introduced a radar plot confirming the low altitude. We need

go no further. The decision of the NTSB is affirmed.















































-9-