Daltex Inc. v. WESTERN OIL & FUEL COMPANY

148 N.W.2d 377, 275 Minn. 509, 1967 Minn. LEXIS 1072
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 20, 1967
Docket39916, 39917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 148 N.W.2d 377 (Daltex Inc. v. WESTERN OIL & FUEL COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daltex Inc. v. WESTERN OIL & FUEL COMPANY, 148 N.W.2d 377, 275 Minn. 509, 1967 Minn. LEXIS 1072 (Mich. 1967).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

On or about December 11, 1961, a fire started in a Duluth building owned and partially occupied by Western Oil and Fuel Company. This fire damaged property belonging to Leonard Leger, which was located in a part of the building leased by him for use as a service station, and a truck belonging to Daltex, Inc., which had been stored there.

Leger and Daltex each brought an action against Western for damages, claiming that the fire had been caused by its negligence. Western in its answers denied negligence on its part, alleged that the fire was caused by the negligence of its lessee, Leger, and others, and, in the action brought by Daltex, filed a third-party complaint against Leger seeking indemnity for any amount it might be required to pay Daltex. After trial the court submitted to the jury the issue of defendant’s negligence, but held that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of plaintiffs. The jury returned verdicts in their favor.

Defendant appeals from the judgments entered pursuant thereto, assigning as errors preserved by post-trial motions: (1) The trial court’s failure to grant defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the con *511 elusion of the testimony; (2) receipt in evidence of (a) a letter from the fire warden relating to the cause of the fire; (b) the fire warden’s opinion as to the cause of the fire; (c) an expert’s opinion as to the cause of the fire; (d) plaintiff Leger’s testimony that defendant allowed him a credit in the amount of his claimed property loss in the fire; (3) an instruction that if the jury believed Leger’s evidence as to the credit they could infer that defendant thereby made an admission of liability; (4) the refusal to instruct that if the cause of the fire was in the condition of the leased premises, defendant was not liable unless it knew or should have known of an unsafe condition therein and faffed to warn plaintiffs thereof; and (5) failure to grant defendant’s motion for judgment against Leger for indemnity.

Defendant claims that it was entitled to a directed verdict because all the evidence plaintiffs put forth tended to show that the fire started because an uninsulated duct running from defendant’s furnace became overheated and caused a plywood partition through which it ran to ignite, which defendant claims is incredible because it proved “beyond any question” that the duct was not a hot air duct but instead a cold air return.

The duct in question extended from the furnace on defendant’s premises through the plywood partition into that part of the building leased to Leger and from there into defendant’s office. The duct served only defendant’s premises.

Plaintiffs’ evidence as to the cause of the fire was not limited to showing that this plywood partition ignited. The evidence tended also to show that the furnace overheated and that defendant’s employees knew it; that the furnace tended to overheat because it was not large enough to heat defendant’s premises without overworking and because it was not properly maintained by defendant; and that there were combustible materials (other than the plywood partition) proximate to the furnace and its ducts. The jury could have found that the fire started by ignition of these materials.

Further we cannot say as a matter of law that the duct in question was a cold air return. Opposed to the evidence to which defendant adverts (that of two heating company employees, one of whom installed the *512 duct, who said that it was a cold air return) are the following considerations:

Two of defendant’s employees testified that on the afternoon preceding the fire they had detected a warm, metal smell emitting from the register on the above-described duct. One of them stated he had noticed that the duct would get warm on cold days and that when the register was first hooked up it blew dust all over. The Duluth fire warden testified that one of the reasons he concluded the duct was a hot air duct was that he “wouldn’t imagine a cold air duct running in that manner.” The heaviest area of char was in the area of the plywood partition, and the Duluth fire warden testified that in his opinion the fire started there. The evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding that the fire was the result of defendant’s negligence. See, Trimbo v. Minnesota Valley Natural Gas Co. 260 Minn. 386, 110 N. W. (2d) 168.

Defendant contends that the court should not have permitted the introduction into evidence of a letter from the Duluth fire warden to defendant stating that the warden assumed the cause of the fire to be “unprotected combustible material too near a furnace duct.” This evidence became relevant in explanation of the fact that defendant gave to plaintiff Leger a credit on an account running between the parties which credit was in the amount of the property loss claimed by Leger at the time the credit was given. So considered, the hearsay character of such evidence is not significant and it is immaterial whether the document was or was not admissible under the Business Records as Evidence Act, Minn. St. 600.02. The significant fact was that defendant received this letter and, having received it, gave to plaintiff Leger the accounting credit for the amount of his claimed loss. Considered in this fight, it was defendant’s response to the letter which was the meaningful fact and this was the case whether the opinion expressed in the communication was or was not a correct one.

Apart from this, receipt of the letter containing a written expression of the fire warden’s opinion was not fatally prejudicial if the opinion of this same official given at trial and subject to cross-examination was properly received. Whether it was or not will be considered in paragraph 2b of this opinion.

*513 Defendant urges that the fire warden’s opinion as to the cause of the fire elicited at the trial should have been excluded for lack of an adequate foundation.

Minn. St. 438.06 requires the fire marshal of any city of the first class to “examine into the cause of every fire which shall happen in the city and make a complete report of the same * * The witness had been employed by the Duluth Fire Department for 22 years and had attended various seminars concerned with techniques for detection of the causes of fires. In testifying in this case, the fire warden had a factual background consisting of his own personal observations and information elicited from one of defendant’s employees concerning combustible materials being near the duct which, for the reasons previously given, the jury could have found to have been a hot air conduit. The foundation for this opinion was adequate. In addition, and with specific respect to this opinion, the record shows no motion to strike the evidence based on the theory that the duct in question was a cold air duct as a matter of law. Finally, the contention that the fire warden’s testimonial opinion as to the cause of fire should have been excluded because based on the erroneous assumption that the duct which passed through the plywood was a hot air duct is answered by the discussion in paragraph 2a.

There was no error in receiving the opinion of an expert witness, offered by plaintiffs, concerning the cause of the fire.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.W.2d 377, 275 Minn. 509, 1967 Minn. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daltex-inc-v-western-oil-fuel-company-minn-1967.