Go Back  Airline Pilot Central Forums > Career Builder > Flight Schools and Training
Legal Question--Dropping off student >

Legal Question--Dropping off student

Search
Notices
Flight Schools and Training Ratings, building hours, airmanship, CFI topics

Legal Question--Dropping off student

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 03-23-2009, 08:43 AM
  #1  
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
 
vtbvtdk's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jun 2008
Position: 9K CA
Posts: 124
Default Legal Question--Dropping off student

So I know this is probably a stupid question that I SHOULD know the answer to, but I thought I would pose it and see what people thought:

I have a student who wishes to do a little refresh flight training. He has a SEL/MEL/IRA and wants to get a little flight training in before we do his BFR so he can get back up to speed. He was wondering if it would be possible, on some of the cross country training flights, to fly to a location, drop him off, and have me fly the aircraft back solo. Is this legal? Or does it fall under and illegal commercial operation? I have been banging my head against the wall on this one, and thought I'd ask some advice. Thanks in advance.
vtbvtdk is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 09:23 AM
  #2  
Prime Minister/Moderator
 
rickair7777's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jan 2006
Position: Engines Turn Or People Swim
Posts: 39,253
Default

Good question. Some of this depends on who owns, or rents, the airplane.

Overnight stops incidental to instruction are allowed, as long as legit instruction is occurring.


Two issues with your proposal...

- If you do not stay with the student on the overnight, then it would start to look more like flying for hire and less like flight instruction.

- You repositioning the airplane is flying for hire. Only exception would be if YOU owned or rented the airplane, in which case you would have to be concerned with commercial maintenance requirements for the airplane. It is actually legal for you to get paid to repo someone else's plane.

This one might actually be a grey area, I think it could go either way. I suspect it would come down to the legitimacy of the flight instruction...if there was a real need for it that the FAA would buy off on, you would probably be OK. But if it was one of those "wink, wink" kind of deals it could bite you in the rear.
rickair7777 is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 09:26 AM
  #3  
Gets Weekends Off
 
zach141's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Apr 2007
Position: holding pattern
Posts: 128
Default

Originally Posted by vtbvtdk View Post
So I know this is probably a stupid question that I SHOULD know the answer to, but I thought I would pose it and see what people thought:

I have a student who wishes to do a little refresh flight training. He has a SEL/MEL/IRA and wants to get a little flight training in before we do his BFR so he can get back up to speed. He was wondering if it would be possible, on some of the cross country training flights, to fly to a location, drop him off, and have me fly the aircraft back solo. Is this legal? Or does it fall under and illegal commercial operation? I have been banging my head against the wall on this one, and thought I'd ask some advice. Thanks in advance.
Assuming you're training him on the way there, and you're just ferrying the aircraft back to base, there is no problem. At no point are you carrying him or his goods for hire in a passenger/cargo sense. Not offering legal advice, but I'm saying I wouldn't hesitate to do the operation as I just described it.
zach141 is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 12:09 PM
  #4  
Line Holder
 
Joined APC: May 2008
Posts: 25
Default

I agree with zach141. The flight to wherever you are going should be an instructional flight (gauging by how you are saying it), hence perfectly legal under the provisions in FAR 119. Now on the flight back, there is nothing "for sale" aboard the aircraft (you're not transporting persons or property for compensation), so this would not fall under the grounds of common carriage.

Let's even change the scenario. Imagine he rented (or is providing) the aircraft, and is willing to compensate you to fly him to the destination--no flight instruction is even intended. As long as he is not selling anything aboard the plane (like charging passengers to come along or carrying property for a customer) and you were never "holding out" your services, that would be private carriage. You flying the plane back and being paid for it isn't any different because, again, even despite the fact that he's not physically there, he's still not selling anything aboard the plane. Again, FAR 119 specifically excludes ferry flights (which is what you would be doing on the way back) from requiring an operating certificate.

I'm no lawyer, but it sounds legal to me.
Rustee is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 03:08 PM
  #5  
Prime Minister/Moderator
 
rickair7777's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jan 2006
Position: Engines Turn Or People Swim
Posts: 39,253
Default

Originally Posted by Rustee View Post
I agree with zach141. The flight to wherever you are going should be an instructional flight (gauging by how you are saying it), hence perfectly legal under the provisions in FAR 119.
The FAA does not allow any and all flying to be deemed as instruction. The purpose of the instruction is training for a cert, rating, operating privilege, even a non-FAA requirement like insurance or club check-out would be legit.

In this case, prep for a BFR would be legit, but only for a few flights. If you do this trip more than once or twice, it becomes obvious that you are transporting this guy more than training him. In the case you described, it sounds OK, but you cannot keep doing it over and over again.

If the FAA decided the flight was NOT legit flight instruction, you now have one of two scenarios:

1) CFI Provided Airplane (owns or rents): This is bad. This would probably be common carriage (an unlicensed charter op), and they would pull your tickets. You might possibly be able to make a claim of private carriage, but you would have to show reason why you would not carry the public...your relationship to the customer would be key. In this case private carriage would likely not hold up.

2) Customer Provided Airplane: You would be OK here.



Originally Posted by Rustee View Post
Now on the flight back, there is nothing "for sale" aboard the aircraft (you're not transporting persons or property for compensation), so this would not fall under the grounds of common carriage.
Correct, you can ferry an airplane with no issues.

Originally Posted by Rustee View Post
Let's even change the scenario. Imagine he rented (or is providing) the aircraft, and is willing to compensate you to fly him to the destination--no flight instruction is even intended. As long as he is not selling anything aboard the plane (like charging passengers to come along or carrying property for a customer) and you were never "holding out" your services, that would be private carriage. You flying the plane back and being paid for it isn't any different because, again, even despite the fact that he's not physically there, he's still not selling anything aboard the plane. Again, FAR 119 specifically excludes ferry flights (which is what you would be doing on the way back) from requiring an operating certificate.
I think you can "hold out" to fly someone's airplane for him...that is basically you seeking employment (even if it's temporary) as a pilot. Carriage (common or private) only applies if the pilot supplies the airplane.
rickair7777 is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 04:00 PM
  #6  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined APC: Jan 2009
Position: PA-31/left, LJ31/right
Posts: 350
Default

Originally Posted by rickair7777 View Post
I think you can "hold out" to fly someone's airplane for him...that is basically you seeking employment (even if it's temporary) as a pilot. Carriage (common or private) only applies if the pilot supplies the airplane.
Think of this statement as flying for a buisness owner who owns the airplane. I belive this is not "holding out," and falls under 91. I was recently asked to fly for a construction company owner who had lost his medical around in his BE-58P. I only fly about once a month for him, but after contacting AOPA, I was advised it was legal, and fell under part 91.

hijack over
mshunter is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 06:02 PM
  #7  
Prime Minister/Moderator
 
rickair7777's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jan 2006
Position: Engines Turn Or People Swim
Posts: 39,253
Default

Originally Posted by mshunter View Post
Think of this statement as flying for a buisness owner who owns the airplane. I belive this is not "holding out," and falls under 91. I was recently asked to fly for a construction company owner who had lost his medical around in his BE-58P. I only fly about once a month for him, but after contacting AOPA, I was advised it was legal, and fell under part 91.

hijack over
You are his employee. This has nothing to do with holding out...

Holding out is making it known to the public or a segment of the public that you will work for them (advertising, soliciting, word-of-mouth, etc).

You are allowed to "hold out" in search of employment as a pilot...to fly an airplane provided by the customer (what you do). You cannot hold out to operate an airplane provided by you unless you have a 135/121 cert (there a few exceptions such as photo and sightseeing).
rickair7777 is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 10:00 PM
  #8  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined APC: Jan 2006
Position: 737/FO
Posts: 423
Default

Rick has this correct. The instruction is for a legitimate reason - preparation for a BFR. It falls under Part 61.193(g). It needs to be documented in a logbook or other suitable form and needs to not continue for an unreasonable period of time.

The second half is a ferry flight and is exempted from part 135, 125, or 121 by part 119. Ferry flights are specifically allowed under 119.1(e)(3).

I trained an IFR student in his aircraft. Due to his initial desire to keep his airplane in a hanger and not a tiedown (the airplane, a C172, was new in 2002), he kept it at an airport 50 miles from the airport near his home. I would ferry his airplane to his home airport to meet him for his flight instruction, complete the instruction at his home airport, and then ferry the airplane back to the airport it was hangered at. This continued for a several months until he secured a sublease on a hanger at his home airport.
WEACLRS is offline  
Old 03-23-2009, 10:19 PM
  #9  
Gets Weekends Off
 
ILS37R's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Sep 2007
Position: To the right of Mickey
Posts: 129
Default

We had a similar situation recently when there happened to be a bunch of Feds hanging around. They told us, to a man:

You're okay so long as you're not dropping the student off, leaving and subsequently returning to pick up the student and fly back to the home airport.

You can take him one-way, while training, and ferry back. If, however, he wants a round-trip, he'll have to put you up in a hotel at the destination until the return.
ILS37R is offline  
Old 03-24-2009, 03:39 AM
  #10  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined APC: Nov 2008
Posts: 826
Default

Originally Posted by rickair7777 View Post
You are his employee. This has nothing to do with holding out...

Holding out is making it known to the public or a segment of the public that you will work for them (advertising, soliciting, word-of-mouth, etc).

You are allowed to "hold out" in search of employment as a pilot...to fly an airplane provided by the customer (what you do). You cannot hold out to operate an airplane provided by you unless you have a 135/121 cert (there a few exceptions such as photo and sightseeing).
Great explanation.

Misunderstanding "holding out" seems to be a general problem in understanding the dividing lines between 91 and 135/121. People talk about it as though "holding out" is some sort of evil and that any time you "hold out" you are violating some reg.

Your explanation makes it much clearer: "holding out" is a test for whether or not you are making your services available. That's all. The only time it comes into play is when you are performing a service that the regs don't permit you to perform for the public. Then "holding out" becomes part of the proof that your services were meant for the public.
NoyGonnaDoIt is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
zach141
Flight Schools and Training
10
05-18-2009 08:26 AM
RVSM Certified
Flight Schools and Training
23
02-28-2009 08:58 PM
RVSM Certified
Flight Schools and Training
22
02-27-2009 12:04 PM
NatalieP
Flight Schools and Training
4
12-15-2008 09:22 AM
purplepilot
Cargo
4
11-07-2008 01:40 PM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Your Privacy Choices