I am going to dig up this thread because I am getting dizzy reading myself into circles on 61.113. I am a newly minted PPL pilot and stretching my wings a bit and trying to fly when I can. I want to make sure I play by the rules and don't need to be caught off guard. I know that I can't fly 'compensation for hire' and know that compensation is just about everything and anything I can imagine now or even later. So, if i want to fly for business under section 61.113 (b) - to get from point A to point B, completely incidental to my primary business (I could drive my car, fly commercial, walk..):
Scenario A) I have a meeting 300 miles away. Can I fly my own plane and be reimbursed by my employer OR client for the rental & fuel expenses incurred provided I am not carrying passengers or property for compensation for hire? I see this no differently than if I took my personal car and collecting reimbursement expenses for the vehicle - but it doesn't matter how I see it. I just want to make sure I understand correctly 61.113 (b). I am the sole occupant, PIC and not carrying passengers. Can the reimbursement rate be what ever I choose or the client chooses? I don't see anywhere that dictates a specific reimbursement rate. Does it matter if it's the client that reimburses me or the client?
Scenario B) Now, say I take a fellow employee with me also needing to attend this meeting. We both need to go to this meeting and have a bona-fide reason to go to this common destination. Assuming company policy was ok with this private GA travel on the company clock, this is still acceptable but no reimbursement can be made by the company or client (third party) since there is a "passenger" on board - regardless of the need to also be at the meeting. See Mangiamel 2009 ruling:
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/agc/pol_adjudication/agc200/interpretations/data/interps/2009/mangiamele - (2009) legal interpretation.pdf
It reads to me that I can take employees but no reimbursement can be collected from any third party (employer or client). Technically I could split the incurred operating expenses with the employee but who would want to do that?.
Scenario C) Let's go one step further. Say we need to take this same trip to a business meeting but this time the client is tired of seeing me pass him overhead en route to the same meeting and wants to come along as a passenger on the next meeting. Things get more complex. Now we have a common meeting and destination but he/she is sitting in the plane. We would now split the expense fuel, rental, tie-down with me paying my pro-rata share. (61.113 (c)). I could take him or leave him but we both need to go to the same meeting. The difference now, the client is sitting in the plane instead of the highway. If I understand correctly, we both sit in the meeting, conduct business, fly home and split the costs (fuel, rental) equally.
What have I missed (except for probably everything)? It would seem that it would benefit the client (who has hired me for a primary business not associated with aviation at all) to ride with me as a passenger to this common business meeting destination and everyone pay their pro-rata share versus the client driving themselves and me flying solo and collecting reimbursement for full rental / fuel expenses incurred. This is where I am confused - so I can fly to a common destination with the client do pro-rate share of expenses but take an employee required at this meeting and there can not be any reimbursement.
I have not conducted any of these scenarios. However, I know the question is going to come up in the office and I want to be prepared with the correct answers as to what can be done and not done.
What I have been reading:
http://www.avweb.com/news/avlaw/186346-1.html
http://studentpilot.com/interact/forum/showthread.php?39978-Flight-Cost-Reimbursement
http://www.askacfi.com/7778/flying-my-business-partner-and-myself-to-client-meetings.htm
https://allaboutairplanes.wordpress.com/2011/08/17/private-pilot-flight-reimbursement-explained/
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/agc/pol_adjudication/agc200/interpretations/data/interps/2010/lamb-2 - (2010) legal interpretation.pdf
Thanks for the input and direction. For now, scenario A seems the safest bet.
Benjamin