Plaintiff Andrews was seated as a United Airlines flight concluded when another passenger opened an overhead compartment and a briefcase fell, striking Andrews on the head and causing significant injuries. United permitted passengers to stow carry-on items in overhead bins. The bins had no nets or restraining devices beyond their latches, and United's procedures relied primarily on general pre-landing announcements cautioning passengers that items may have shifted during flight and to open bins carefully. Andrews presented evidence that falling baggage incidents were not uncommon industrywide and known to United; she contended United failed to exercise the heightened care California law imposes on common carriers by, among other things, inadequately warning, failing to monitor or assist with bin openings when foreseeable risks were present, allowing heavy or oversized carry-ons, and not employing additional safety measures (e.g., restraints, bin design features, weight limits, or active flight-attendant intervention). The district court granted summary judgment for United, concluding the airline's general practices sufficed and that it could not be held liable for another passenger's act. Andrews appealed.
Under California law governing common carriers, does an airline's duty of utmost care require more than general warnings and standard procedures to protect passengers from the foreseeable risk of falling overhead baggage, such that whether the airline breached its duty presents a triable question for the jury?
In California, a common carrier owes passengers the utmost care and diligence for their safe carriage and must do all that human care, vigilance, and foresight reasonably can do under the circumstances to avoid harm; however, a carrier is not an insurer of passenger safety. Whether the carrier met this heightened standard in a particular context is generally a question of fact unless no reasonable jury could find a breach. Foreseeable third-party acts do not break the chain of causation or negate the carrier's duty; rather, the carrier must take reasonable precautions, commensurate with the utmost-care standard, to guard against such foreseeable risks.
Reversing summary judgment, the court held that a reasonable jury could find United breached its common-carrier duty of utmost care by failing to take additional precautions to prevent injury from falling overhead baggage; issues of breach and causation should be decided by a jury.
The Ninth Circuit began by reaffirming that airlines are common carriers subject to California's heightened duty of utmost care. The court emphasized that this standard requires more than ordinary care without making the carrier an absolute insurer. Applying that framework, the court found ample evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that falling overhead baggage was a foreseeable risk known to United. The airline's own standard warnings acknowledging that bin contents may shift during flight, together with evidence of other falling-baggage incidents, supported foreseeability. Foreseeability triggered a further inquiry into whether United took all precautions that human care, vigilance, and foresight reasonably could require in context. The court identified several disputed factual matters bearing on breach: whether United's general cautionary announcement was adequate in content, timing, and audibility; whether flight attendants should have provided more active monitoring or assistance as bins were opened when the risk was heightened; whether United should have imposed stricter limits on size and weight of carry-ons; whether additional physical restraints or design features could have mitigated the risk; and whether the flight crew had reason to know that particular bins were improperly loaded. The court noted that industry custom is relevant but not dispositive under the utmost-care standard—compliance with common practice does not foreclose a finding that reasonable precautions required more. United argued that it could not be liable for injuries caused by another passenger opening a bin. The court rejected that contention categorically: a third party's act does not absolve a common carrier of responsibility where that act and the resulting harm are foreseeable and the carrier could have taken reasonable steps to prevent or mitigate the danger. Finally, because the record contained competing inferences on the adequacy of warnings, the need for additional precautions, and causation, summary judgment was inappropriate. These are precisely the sorts of factual determinations—what precautions were feasible, what level of risk was apparent, and whether different measures would likely have prevented the harm—that juries are tasked to resolve.
Andrews is routinely taught for three reasons. First, it illustrates the heightened duty common carriers owe and how that standard meaningfully raises the bar on what counts as reasonable precautions without imposing strict liability. Second, it shows how foreseeability interacts with third-party conduct: the fact that another passenger opened the bin does not negate the airline's duty where the risk was known and preventable. Third, it is a clear application of the summary-judgment standard in negligence cases—courts are reluctant to take breach questions from juries where competing inferences exist about the adequacy of precautions. The case remains a key precedent in disputes involving overhead-bin injuries and, more broadly, in defining the contours of carrier liability in modern transportation settings.
Andrews v. United Airlines underscores that the common-carrier duty of utmost care is a real and rigorous standard, not a rhetorical flourish. When a carrier knows of recurring risks—like falling overhead baggage—it must take meaningful, context-sensitive precautions proportionate to the danger. Generic warnings may be insufficient where evidence suggests additional, feasible measures could materially reduce harm.