American Guaranty & Liability Ins. Co. v. Little
This text of 328 So. 2d 706 (American Guaranty & Liability Ins. Co. v. Little) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
AMERICAN GUARANTY & LIABILITY INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Gray LITTLE, Jr., et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*707 Raggio, Farrar, Cappel & Chozen by Stephen A. Berniard, Jr., Lake Charles, Holt & Woodley by Edmund E. Woodley, Lake Charles, for defendant-appellant.
Brame, Bergstedt & Brame by Joseph A. Brame, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before CULPEPPER, DOMENGEAUX and PAVY, JJ.
DOMENGEAUX, Judge.
This is a subrogation suit by plaintiff-appeellee, American Guaranty & Liability Insurance Company, to recover the sum of $10,544.51 which amount it paid to its insureds, Bryan Bell, and Streuby Drumm d/b/a Suffolk Manor Apartments, Lake Charles, Louisiana, for property losses sustained on February 9, 1973, when a fire broke out in apartment number 148 of the complex. Made defendants in the suit are Gray Little, Jr., his insurer, Travelers Insurance Company, and Fisher Radio Corp.
After trial on the merits the District Court concluded that the fire causing the damages sued for resulted from the joint negligence of the defendant Gray Little, Jr. (the owner of the Fisher Model 390 stereo receiver referred to hereafter) and Fisher Radio Corporation (the manufacturer of said unit), and rendered judgment accordingly against those defendants and Travelers Insurance Company.
Defendants have appealed suspensively to this court. We affirm.
We find that the trial judge has adequately and correctly treated the facts and circumstances surrounding the fire and its cause, and we quote in part from his written reasons as follows:
"A fire occurred in Apartment 148 of the Suffolk Manor Apartments on February 9, 1973. At that time the apartment was leased to Gray Little, Jr., William H. Hines and Erwin A. Burge, Jr. The fire originated in the living room of the apartment. It originated at precisely the point where a Fisher Model 390 receiver was located. The Fisher receiver was a part of a stereo component system which consisted of the receiver, a record changerplayer, and two speakers . . .
The Fisher 390 stereo receiver was a combination radio and amplifier. Its radio function received AM and FM signals and its amplifier function amplified those signals. Its amplifier also amplified the signals received from other sources such as a record player. There was a Garrard record player attached to the receiver by wires. There were also two speakers attached to the receiver by wires. The speakers were on either side of the receiver and the record player was on one side of it, all on the floor. The receiver was sitting on the floor, which was covered by a shag carpet. The receiver was plugged into a wall receptacle. Mounted directly above the receiver was a table model television set which was also plugged into that same receptacle.
*708 The Fire Chief of the City of Lake Charles, Pete Cascio, testified that the fire started at the base of the south wall of the living room at the precise location occupied by the receiver. He said that the fire was put out with 70 gallons of water sprayed a little over 30 seconds. The receiver itself was burned almost beyond recognition. The shell of the metal box in which the electronic parts were housed was recognizable but everything that could be subject to ignition was burned out of and off of its contents. Likewise burned beyond recognition was the television set above it. However, none of the parties to the case thought enough about the television set and its possible contribution to this fire to have it examined or produced in court.
The chassis of the receiver was metal and it had numerous ventilation holes in it on the bottom and the top. The chassis sat upon short plastic feet estimated by the court to be ½ to ¾ high by comparison to a new Model 390 which was introduced in evidence for comparison purposes. When the set was mounted on shag carpet, it is obvious that these feet would sink to the floor and cause the fabric of the carpet to impede free air flow through the ventilation holes on the bottom of the chassis.
When Mr. Little bought this stereo receiver from Fisher he was furnished with a booklet entitled `Operating Instructions Manual' and this booklet contained the following language:
`While installation is relatively simple, certain precautions must be observed. PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THAT OUR WARRANTY DOES NOT COVER DAMAGE CAUSED BY MISHANDLING, MISUSE, EXCESSIVE LINE VOLTAGE, OR INSUFFICIENT VENTILATION. We therefore urge you to follow the instructions in this section (Keyed to figure 1) carefully and in sequence; you may then proceed directly to the [sicnext] section, OPERATING THE RECEIVER.'
Additionally, the operating instructions contained the following language:
`Place the receiver on any conveniently located shelf or table that is away from radiators, warm-air ducts, or other sources of heat. Never place the unit on a soft [sicor] yielding surface; this could impede ventilation through the underside of the chassis. Allow at least two inches clearance above and behind the unit for ventilation.'
The evidence convinced me beyond any doubt that the fire originated in the receiver. The firemen who testified explained that any fire takes a classic V pattern and that based upon that classic pattern, they could pinpoint the origin of the fire as the space occupied by the receiver. Additionally, there was the highly incriminating (so far as the receiver is concerned) showing that material from the shag carpet was baked onto the bottom side of the receiver which was sitting on the shag carpeted floor. Furthermore, only the receiver and the television set which was directly above it were totally burned. The record changer which was to the side of the receiver was not so badly damaged by fire and the speakers not as much as the record changer. In fact, only those sides of the speakers facing the receiver were charred.
A considerable amount of testimony by way of experts was introduced by the defendants. Their purpose in eliciting this testimony was to show that the fire could not have started with the receiver. A Fisher representative who qualified as an electrical engineer testified by deposition that the fire could not have *709 started in the receiver. Also, defendants used a local electronics expert in whom the court has much confidence, and he testified that it was unlikely that the fire started from the receiver. Plaintiff produced an electrical engineer of equal qualifications to the defendants' experts who explained that the fire could have originated with the Fisher product.
While the court has much respect for the experts testifying on behalf of defendants, the essential and unchanging fact that stands out in this case that renders their testimony useless to the court is that the fire did in fact start with the Fisher receiver.
The evidence so completely preponderates that the fire originated in the receiver that the court has little difficulty in making this determination of fact. There is no other point of origin that reason more compelling dictates was the cause than the receiver. To deny that the receiver was the source of the fire is almost the same as denying the fire itself.
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328 So. 2d 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-guaranty-liability-ins-co-v-little-lactapp-1976.