No. 89-8982.United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
January 15, 1991.
Page 655
Samuel W. Wethern, Atlanta, Ga., for petitioner.
Eddie L. Thomas, Office of Asst. Chief Counsel, Federal Aviation Administration, Atlanta, Ga., Joseph A. Conte, Atty., Washington, D.C., for respondents.
Petition for Review of an Order of the National Transportation Safety Board.
Before CLARK and COX, Circuit Judges, and TUTTLE, Senior Circuit Judge.
PETITION FOR REHEARING
PER CURIAM:
[3] I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
[4] On May 31, 1988, the Administrator of the FAA ordered the emergency revocation of Mack Kirkendall’s first-class medical certificate, which certificate is required for a pilot to act as a pilot in command of a commercial air carrier. The revocation was ordered because of petitioner’s alleged “disturbance of consciousness” of undetermined etiology of December 30, 1986. Kirkendall filed a notice of appeal with the NTSB and, accordingly, the administrator filed its complaint with the NTSB. An amended complaint asserted as an additional basis for revocation a December 9, 1987 incident of Kirkendall’s loss of consciousness.
Page 656
explanation of the cause.” The NTSB, in affirming the ALJ’s ruling, expressly relied upon a determination that each of the above-mentioned events, which occurred nearly 12 months apart, demonstrated “an established medical history or clinical diagnosis of a disturbance of consciousness without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause.”
[6] II. FACTS
[7] Petitioner has been an aircraft pilot for more than 30 years and employed by Delta Air Lines for more than 20 years; he has been a Delta captain for 12 years. After an incident on December 30, 1986, he ceased flying pending medical evaluation and was furloughed. On that date, petitioner returned home to Atlanta after flying a three-day trip. He testified that he was very tired and hot and was suffering from a severe sinus infection and that he had a fever and he went to bed. His roommate, Ms. Burgess, also testified that she observed Kirkendall on his bed, his face drooping a little, making jerking movements, and talking “gibberish.” She also testified that she observed some foaming at the mouth and that he looked “putty colored” for a period of almost 10 minutes.
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and he fell sideways, hitting his jaw on the desk and his hip and his head on the floor. Kirkendall’s instructor found him lying on the floor and he summoned the school nurse, Ms. Cox. She testified that he could not answer questions regarding his identity or his whereabouts. The nurse testified that Mr. Kirkendall was disoriented, that he did not know his instructor’s name and he did not know his own date of birth. Ms. Cox testified that he did not know where he was at the time. She also testified that he had some sputum on the side of his mouth and that it took five to ten minutes for him to become alert after she arrived in the room. There was no testimony that Kirkendall had lost consciousness.
[13] Ms. Cox testified that she had called an emergency ambulance, but that Kirkendall refused to go to a hospital and that he insisted on driving himself home rather than letting someone else perform this service for him.[14] III. ISSUE
[15] Was there substantial evidence to support the Board’s finding of a disturbance of consciousness without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause?
[16] IV. DISCUSSION
[17] Under the Federal Aviation Act, the FAA administrator has the power not only to issue medical certificates, but also to amend, modify, suspend, or revoke those certificates. 49 U.S.C.App. § 1429. When exercising this power, the administrator may reexamine an airman after issuance of a certificate to verify continued qualification. If, after such examination, the administrator determines that safety in air transportation and the public interest require, he may issue an order amending, modifying, or suspending, or revoking an airman’s certificate. 49 U.S.C.App. § 1429.[2]
[20] V. BACKGROUND
[21] It is clear that the administrative law judge, whose findings of fact and conclusions were adopted by the Board, clearly based his finding of Kirkendall’s lack of medical qualification on the finding of two separate and distinct losses of consciousness within a year of each other. The ALJ stated: “. . . There is clearly evidence to show that there was a loss of consciousness on two occasions and that there is no satisfactory medical explanation for the cause.”
The law judge also stated:
[22] The Board, in affirming the law judge’s decision stated:. . . And although the administrator has the burden of proof, under this one particular section, unless the respondent comes back with a convincing satisfactory medical explanation as to a cause for both of these instances of unconsciousness, we have a failure to meet the qualifications in the regulations. (emphasis added.)
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[23] The Board then stated: “We find that the diagnosis does not permit us to evaluate the risk of recurrence, especially in light of the fact that there were two events within one year of each other.” (emphasis added.) [24] Thus, it is apparent that we must determine whether there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the Board’s finding (1) that there were two episodes of a “disturbance of consciousness,” and (2) if so, was there a “satisfactory medical explanation for the cause?” [25] (A) The December 30, 1986 IncidentThe Board’s evaluation of the record causes us to agree with the law judge that respondent had two episodes involving a spontaneous disturbance of consciousness, during each of which he displayed at least a modest amount of convulsive symptoms, and that there has been no satisfactory medical explanation of the cause or causes.[3] (emphasis added.)
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he was at the time and that he had some sputum on the side of his mouth. She testified that it took five to ten minutes for him to become alert after she arrived at the scene. Kirkendall did not see a physician after this occurrence. Thus, there is no medical evidence either as to the actual existence of a disturbance of consciousness or as to the cause.
[32] The appropriate FAA regulations require that a disturbance of consciousness and a lack of a “satisfactory medical explanation of the cause” must be based on the “medical history or clinical diagnosis of the patient.”[4] [33] Since there was no testimony either by an attending physician or a medical expert who reviewed Kirkendall’s medical history, we are unable to conclude that as to the December 9, 1987 incident, there was even a disturbance of consciousness. It would be entirely different had a medical expert at the hearing reviewed the case history of the incident of December 9, 1987 and had given his expert opinion as to whether there was a disturbance of consciousness and whether, if so, there was a satisfactory medical explanation for the cause.[34] VI. CONCLUSION
[35] We must therefore remand the case to the NTSB for further consideration. The Board may, if it deems it appropriate, consider any further evidence that may be available as to the 1987 event and it may also determine whether, assuming there was no adequate proof as to that event, the proof of the 1986 event alone was sufficient to support the administrator’s action in revoking petitioner’s medical certificate.
Q Looking at the entire report and all the information that you have gathered, is there a known medical explanation for the causes of the loss of consciousness or the disturbance of consciousness that the Respondent has had in this case?
A I don’t believe there is.
Q And why did you come to that conclusion?
A Because despite having a serious medical work-up here by his own treating physicians here in Georgia and going up to Mayo Clinic, the consensus I see of this is that there’s still — despite all the EEG’s and the blood tests and the CT scans and the MR scan, endocrine test, and metabolic test, blood sugar test, and everything, that still no established etiology has been defined.
First-class medical certificate.
(d) Mental and neurologic —
(2) Neurologic.
(i) No established medical history or clinical diagnosis of either of the following:
(b) A disturbance of consciousness without satisfactory medical explanation of the cause.
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