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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, March 17, 2019
Jurisprudence Of The Ethiopian Airlines Crash
Air transport is a human endeavour where human lives are placed in the custody of the airline which is required to carry the passenger safely and securely to the destination.
by Dr Ruwantissa Abeyratne-March 14 at 11:56 PM
Writing from Paradise Island, The Bahamas
On Sunday 10th March an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft
operating flight 302 crashed just after takeoff from Addis Ababa on its
way to Kenya. All 157 persons on board were killed as the plane crashed
at high speed onto the ground. The captain of the flight had reported
“flight control problems” to air traffic control shortly before the
aircraft crashed. It is reported that the manufacturer Boeing issued a
statement following the crash saying they would recommend the temporary
global suspension of the entire 737 Max fleet. As this article was being
written, fifty countries had grounded or banned the planes inside their
airspace.
On 2 Sunday 8 October 2018 Lion Air Flight JT 610 took off from Jakarta
at 23:30 GMT heading towards Depati Amir airport in Pangkal Pinang. 13
minutes into the flight, authorities lost contact. The aircraft crashed
shortly off Jakarta. The flight was operated by a Boeing Max aircraft –
the same type which was involved in the Ethiopian Airlines crash. The
aircraft was carrying 178 adult passengers, one child and two babies. In
addition to the two pilots, there were also six cabin crew. It is
reported that the pilots were desperately engaged in a “futile
tug-of-war with the plane's automatic systems” in the minutes before it
plunged into the ocean, killing all 189 people on board. According to
Lion Air, the pilot and co-pilot had more than 11,000 flight hours
between them.
Unlike the Lion Air flight which was operated between two points in
Indonesia, the Ethiopian Airlines flight was an international one
between two countries. Both Ethiopia and Kenya have ratified the
Montreal Convention of 1999 which is the Convention for the unification
of certain rules pertaining to international carriage by air. Ethiopia
ratified the Convention on 24 April 2014 while Kenya ratified it on 7
January 2002. Therefore, the applicable treaty for the adjudication of
claims for death of the passengers would come within the purview of the
Montreal Convention.
Article 17 of the Montreal Convention stipulates that the airline is
liable for damage sustained in case of death or bodily injury of a
passenger upon condition only that the accident which caused the death
or injury took place on board the aircraft or in the course of any of
the operations of embarking or disembarking. For damages arising under
Article 17 not exceeding 100 000 Special Drawing Rights for each
passenger, the airline is not be able to exclude or limit its liability.
This means that the airline (i.e. Ethiopian airlines) is liable
in limine (at the outset) to pay 100,000 Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)
in the case of each passenger. However, the airline is not liable for
damages arising under Article 17 to the extent that they exceed for each
passenger 100 000 Special Drawing Rights if the airline proves that:
such damage was not due to the negligence or other wrongful act or
omission of the airline or its servants or agents; or such damage was
solely due to the negligence or other wrongful act or omission of a
third party. Although the cause of the crash has not been conclusively
determined, Ethiopian Airlines may have a valid defence under this
provision if the final findings were that there was an inherent defect
in the aircraft itself. If, however, it is found that the flight crew
were responsible (through negligence) for the crash, (note: it is the
airline that has to prove absence of negligence) the plaintiff would be
able to claim compensation over and above the 100,000 SDRs limit.
Article 28 of the Convention admits of advance payments in the case of
aircraft accidents resulting in death or injury of passengers, where the
airline is required to, if required by its national law, make advance
payments without delay to a natural person or persons who are entitled
to claim compensation in order to meet the immediate economic needs of
such persons. Such advance payments do not constitute a recognition of
liability and may be offset against any amounts subsequently paid as
damages by the airline.
As to the issue of where an action for compensation can be brought
against the airline Article 33 of the Convention provides that an action
for damages must be brought, at the option of the plaintiff, in the
territory of one of the States Parties, either before the court of the
domicile of the airline or of its principal place of business, or where
it has a place of business through which the contract has been made or
before the court at the place of destination. In respect of damage
resulting from the death or injury of a passenger, an action may be
brought before one of the courts mentioned above, or in the territory of
a State Party in which at the time of the accident the passenger had
his or her principal and permanent residence and to or from which the
airline operates services for the carriage of passengers by air, either
on its own aircraft, or on another airline’s aircraft pursuant to a
commercial agreement, and in which that airline conducts its business of
carriage of passengers by air from premises leased or owned by the
airline itself or by another airline with which it has a commercial
agreement.
Article 35 is explicit in that the right to damages are extinguished if
an action is not brought within a period of two years, reckoned from the
date of arrival at the destination, or from the date on which the
aircraft ought to have arrived, or from the date on which the carriage
stopped.
All this is clinical legal jargon to those who lost their loved ones in
the crash. Air transport is a human endeavour where human lives are
placed in the custody of the airline which is required to carry the
passenger safely and securely to the destination. Air transport is not
primarily about States. Nor is it about airlines. It is about the young
woman – newly married – who texts her husband that she will contact him
on landing (which never happened). It is when the ultimate in technology
meshes gently with humanity.
The author, who is a former Senior Legal Officer of ICAO, is
currently Senior Associate, Air Law and Policy at Aviation Strategies
International, a consultancy headquartered in Montreal, having branches
around the world. He has written this article while on mission in
Nassau, The Bahamas.