Penguinforce
Pre-takeoff checklist
My friend is currently training for her commercial pilot certificate and asked me a question about her specific case in terms of if it would be legal to fly as a commercial pilot in a part 91 flight. I wasn’t too sure and now I’m genuinely curious what you all think of it as well. So here’s the scenario:
Scenario 1: My friend and her husband own a plane that is registered to the wife’s trust but both wife and husband are trustees of that trust. Her husband can do contract work in various small towns throughout the country. The places he works for can reimburse him for his travel to and from those small towns. So the question is, can her husband technically hire her to fly that plane?
The reason I’m a little confused is technically the trust owns the plane, and the husband and wife are both trustees of the wife’s trust.
My understanding is that the passenger, in this case her husband, is providing the aircraft through the wife’s trust. Therefore, the wife can operate under Part 91 rules and does not need an operating privilege under Part 119 and therefore can be compensated by the husband through the companies the husband is contracting with. Is this correct?
I have a second follow-up scenario. They have a son and daughter who are pilots as well who are not trustees. If the wife cannot be paid in scenario 1, then in scenario 2, could they “hire” their children to fly their plane for compensation? (They are both commercial rated). And a slight small question associated with this, can two commercial pilots, while flying under commercial pilot privileges, act as a safety pilot for the other while they are under foggles? Essentially, can time sharing be permitted while acting as PIC during commercial operations?
Scenario 1: My friend and her husband own a plane that is registered to the wife’s trust but both wife and husband are trustees of that trust. Her husband can do contract work in various small towns throughout the country. The places he works for can reimburse him for his travel to and from those small towns. So the question is, can her husband technically hire her to fly that plane?
The reason I’m a little confused is technically the trust owns the plane, and the husband and wife are both trustees of the wife’s trust.
My understanding is that the passenger, in this case her husband, is providing the aircraft through the wife’s trust. Therefore, the wife can operate under Part 91 rules and does not need an operating privilege under Part 119 and therefore can be compensated by the husband through the companies the husband is contracting with. Is this correct?
I have a second follow-up scenario. They have a son and daughter who are pilots as well who are not trustees. If the wife cannot be paid in scenario 1, then in scenario 2, could they “hire” their children to fly their plane for compensation? (They are both commercial rated). And a slight small question associated with this, can two commercial pilots, while flying under commercial pilot privileges, act as a safety pilot for the other while they are under foggles? Essentially, can time sharing be permitted while acting as PIC during commercial operations?