Country Mutual Insurance Co. v. Dead River Co.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 6, 2022
DocketCUMcv-19-359
StatusUnpublished

This text of Country Mutual Insurance Co. v. Dead River Co. (Country Mutual Insurance Co. v. Dead River Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Country Mutual Insurance Co. v. Dead River Co., (Me. Super. Ct. 2022).

Opinion

(

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-19-359

COUNTRY MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.,

Plaintiff V. ORDER

DEAD RIVER CO.,

Defendant

In this action plaintiff Country Mutual Insurance Co., as subrogee of John and Sarah

Dorsey, is seeking damages from defendant Dead River Co. for damage to the Dorseys' Cape

Elizabeth home caused by a fire that occuned in 2015.

Before the court is Dead River's motion for summary judgment.

Summary Judgment

Summary judgment should be granted ifthere is no genuine dispute as to any material fact

and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In considering a motion for summary

judgment, the court is required to consider only the portions of the record refen·ed to and the

material facts set forth in the parties' Rule 56(h) statements. E.g., Mahar v. Stone Wood Transport,

2003 ME 63 1 8, 823 A.2d 540. The facts must be considered in the light most favorable to the

non-moving party. Id. Thus, for purposes of summary judgment, any factual disputes must be

resolved against the movant. Neve1iheless, when the facts offered by a party in opposition to

summary judgment would not, if offered at trial, be sufficient to withstand a motion for judgment

Plaintiff-David Dubord, Esq. Defendant-Rosie Williams, Esq. as a matter of law, summary judgment should be granted. Kenny v. Department of Human

Services, 1999 ME 158 ,r 3, 740 A.2d 560.

In this case Country Mutual has asserted claims for negligence, breach of contract, breach

of warranty and strict liability. In its opposition to summary judgment Country Mutual

acknowledges that its strict liability claim should be dismissed. Moreover, its contract and

warranty claims merge with its negligence claim to the extent that all of those claims depend on

the contention that Dead River negligently performed its service contract with the Dorseys by

failing to repair a propane line that Dead River had not installed.

The following facts are, unless noted, undisputed:

The Dorseys' residence had a propane tank enclosed by a fence in the backyard,

approximately 50 feet from the back of the house. There was a first-stage regulator at the tank and

propane lines leading from the first stage regulator to several second-stage regulators. One of the

second-stage regulators provided propane to the Dorseys' boiler along a propane line that ran

through copper piping approximately 17 feet along the back of the Dorseys' residence to an elbow

joint. This is designated in Dead River's Statement of Material Facts (SMF) as the "Propane Line"

and will be referred to with that title in this order. The Propane Line was mounted to the home by

five plastic hangers approximately 12 inches off the ground. It was installed around the time the

Dorsey residence was extensively remodeled in approximately 2001-02.

It is undisputed that Dead River did not install the Propane Line, did not mount the Propane

Line on plastic hangers, did not own the Propane Line or the second-stage regulators, and did not

perform any work on the Propane Line.

2 The Dorseys had a service contract with Dead River under which Dead River performed

an annual tune-up of the Dorseys' boiler. It is not disputed that the annual tune-up involved

brushing and vacuuming the system, checking the gas pressure, performing an efficiency test,

checking for water leaks, and checking the various heating zones. Dead River SMF ,i 33

(admitted). Dead River has offered evidence that the annual tune-ups did not involve any

inspection or work on the exterior of the home unless requested by the homeowner. As discussed

below, this is disputed by Country Mutual.

The last annual boiler tune-up performed by Dead River at the Dorsey Residence occurred

on March 4, 2014. The fire at the Dorseys' residence occurred a year later on March 2, 2015.

Subsequent investigation revealed that the weight of snow coming off the roof had stripped the

Propane Line off the plastic hangers and pushed the Propane Line down to the ground, causing it

to become disconnected at the elbow joint. This resulted in propane leaking into the crawl space

of the residence, which eventually ignited to start the fire.

There is no evidence as to when the Propane Line became disconnected, but it is undisputed

that it was still attached to the residence before the first snow in the winter of2014-15. As noted

above, Dead River's last annual tune-up occurred at the end of the prior winter.

Discussion

1. Dead River first argues that its service contract with the Dorseys expressly excluded

propane flow and piping related to the outside storage of propane. Dead River SMF ,i 28. Country

Mutual objects that Dead River's reliance on its service contract is based on company records.

Although these may be business records, they are not attached to the Townsend affidavit, and her

recitation of what they contain is hearsay. In addition, even assuming that Dead River is correct as

3 to the service plan in question, it offers no evidence that the Dorseys were ever made aware of the

exclusion in question.

2. Dead River argues that based on the undisputed facts Country Mutual has not shown that

Dead River owed any contractual or other legal duty to the Dorseys with respect to the piping and

Propane Line which Dead River neither installed nor owned.

3. In response, Country Mutual has submitted a statement by Mark McDonald, who

Country Mutual had designated as an expert. In that statement McDonald offers the opinion, in

summary, that Dead River had such a duty based on "Gas Check" guidelines issued by something

called the Propane Education and Research Council, based on a provision of ASME B3 l.8, and

particularly based on section 8 of NFPA 54. Country Mutual contends that while Dead River's

propane delivery drivers did not have such a duty, the duty applied to the Dead River technicians

who performed annual tune-ups. See Country Mutual Opposing SMF ,i 68.

4. The first problem with McDonald's opinion is that it is contained in an unsworn

affirmation. Rule 56(e) requires that opposition to summary judgment must be made by affidavits

based on personal knowledge setting forth facts that would be admissible in evidence. The unsworn

nature of McDonald's statement is a basis to disregard McDonald's opinions in their entirety.

5. Even overlooking the unsworn nature of McDonald's opinions, those opinions do not

create a disputed issue for trial.

6. Dead River has offered evidence that it has not adopted the Gas Check guidelines. In

response, Country Mutual refers to what it contends are "publicly available records" which, it

contends, suggest that Dead River has "internally adopted" Gas Check guidelines as reasonable

standards of care. Country Mutual Opposing SMF ,i 67. Those documents (some apparently printed

out from the Internet) are not authenticated and are inadmissible hearsay that do not meet the

4 requirement that opposition to a motion for summary judgment must set forth facts that would be

admissible in evidence. Rule 56(e). 1

7. McDonald's invocation of ASME B3 l .8 is similarly unavailing. Initially, neither

McDonald nor Country Mutual explain or establish how ASME standards apply to Dead River

technicians.

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Related

Mahar v. StoneWood Transport
2003 ME 63 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2003)
Estate of Lois W. Smith v. Timothy Salvesen
2016 ME 100 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2016)
Kathleen Waugh v. Genesis Healthcare LLC
2019 ME 179 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2019)
Kenny v. Department of Human Services
1999 ME 158 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1999)

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Country Mutual Insurance Co. v. Dead River Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/country-mutual-insurance-co-v-dead-river-co-mesuperct-2022.