Empire State Insurance Co. of Watertown v. Guerriero

69 A.2d 259, 193 Md. 506, 1949 Md. LEXIS 339
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 9, 1949
Docket[No. 5, October Term, 1949.]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 69 A.2d 259 (Empire State Insurance Co. of Watertown v. Guerriero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Empire State Insurance Co. of Watertown v. Guerriero, 69 A.2d 259, 193 Md. 506, 1949 Md. LEXIS 339 (Md. 1949).

Opinion

*511 Collins, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mary Guerriero, as plaintiff, appellee here, sued the three appellants jointly on three policies of fire insurance, in standard form, covering her property on Forrest Street in Baltimore. From a judgment in favor of the appellee the appellants appeal to this Court.

Each policy contained an extended provision to cover, among other things, “explosions.” The trial judge in his charge to the jury gave the following definition of “explosion,” to which no exception was taken by any of the parties: “Explosion is to be understood in the sense that it is used by ordinary men and not in its scientific sense. It may be regarded or defined as a bursting with violence and noise, because of internal pressure, or a sudden, violent bursting or breaking, caused by an internal force and accompanied by a sudden or rapid expansion of air and a sharp noise or report. In this sense, it is to be distinguished from an ordinary rupture or breaking without extreme violence. A mere rupture is not an explosion.”

The appellants contend (1) that the trial judge erred in admitting in evidence the testimony of Henry E. Kreis who has been engaged in the heating and power plant construction business for the past forty years and who testified as an expert in the case; (2) that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for each defendant; (3) that the trial judge erred in his charge to the jury with respect to proofs of loss and waiver thereof.

As we must pass upon the demurrer prayers it is necessary that we recite the evidence at some length. Between the hours of 7:30 and 8:00 a.m. on January 20, 1948, the husband of the appellee visited the unheated building, covered by the insurance policies, and used as a warehouse incident to the grocery business conducted by the appellee. The temperature in Baltimore on that day varied from a minimum of 21 to a maximum of 38 degrees. In order to heat water to wash bottles, clothes, and rags, he lit the gas burner under the hot water heater which he testified had been in good condition. He saw *512 nothing wrong with it at that time. He said that there was no gas escaping and no water around the heater then. In about forty-five minutes he returned to the building and found water dripping from the second to the first floor. He ran upstairs, smelled gas and turned the heater off, and then observed a stream of water coming from a hole in the coil. The loss was immediately reported to the appellants.

Mr. Henry E. Kreis, whose qualifications as an expert were not questioned, testified that he has been in the heating and power plant construction business since 1909, and has sold and installed a great many heaters of this type and has had experience with explosions of heating and hot water equipment. As a result of a telephone call he visited the appellee’s warehouse shortly after January 20th. He found the particular coil lying on a table. He examined it ánd saw the rupture in the bottom of the coil. He examined the coil and testified that in his opinion “that hole was caused by an explosion, caused by abnormal pressure within the coil, which was built up by the gas burner. The gas caused pressure inside that coil. That could come from several reasons. It could come from cloggage in the lines; it could come from overloading and building up steam pressure in the coil and the pipe work and tank, or could come from part of the line being frozen, and when the gas was turned on, it built up pressure and caused it to explode. The looks of the coil, the metal is turned out, showing an abnormal pressure pushed it out, an explosion pushed it out. In my opinion, if that coil had frozen, you would have seen water there first, some little bit of water, and shortly after you would have had a great deal of water and the coil would have cracked in a line parallel to the sides of the coil, it would not have blossomed out, ■ what we call blooming.” He testified that, even if the water had frozen in a solid mass of ice during the night and expanded and broken the coil, there probably would have been some drippage which would have been observed on the gas burner and which would have made it difficult to *513 light. He said that in his opinion the coil burst because of an explosion and that is why so much water came out of the coil, because when the burner was lit probably all of the ice in the coil thawed out, and the pipe leading from the heater to the tank was still frozen because there was no circulation up there, and when that burst the water ran freely. Of course, no one heard an explosion. When asked by the Court whether he had ever heard “of one of these things explpding,” he answered, “No, Your honor, I have never, in that type.” He evidently meant that he had never heard of an explosion in that particular design. However, he testified that he had had experience with from seventy-five to one hundred explosions in heating and water equipment. When asked how he reconciled the statement that this was an explosion, with the statement that if the water in the coil froze and the coil expanded it resulted in a bursted coil, he answered, “I said that the condition of that rupture, where that metal was turned out proved it was an abnormal pressure in there, an explosive pressure, that if that coil had frozen, it would split. I’ve seen a great many of them that have frozen and split and they split in a line parallel with the sides of the coil; they wouldn’t turn the metal out or bloom the metal out or blossom the metal out.” He emphasized in his testimony that the “blooming out” of the pipe indicates an explosion and not a freezing and if the pipe had frozen it would have split along its length. He said if the break had been caused by freezing it would split parallel with the sides of the tubing and the metal would be somewhat parted to relieve the pressure caused by the ice.

The appellants contend that the facts to be proven were within the ordinary knowledge and éxperienee of man and were not the subject of expert testimony, and the failure or inability of the appellee to produce proof of facts to support a finding of an explosion did not permit the substitution of expert testimony for factual testimony. They further contend that even though' expert testimony were admissible there was no factual basis *514 shown or stated, upon which expert testimony could be predicated, and it was improper to permit the expert to characterize the occurrence as an explosion. They contend that there were not sufficient physical facts to permit an expression of opinion and when the expert testified that in his opinion there had been an explosion, he usurped the function of the jury.

It is of course well settled that the evidence of an expert witness is not admissible if the jury is able to decide or determine the question before it without special expert testimony. The witness must not usurp the province of the jury. Baltimore Belt R. Co. v. Sattler, 100 Md. 306, 334, 59 A. 654, 3 Ann. Cas. 660; Hanrahan v. City of Baltimore, 114 Md. 517, 527, 80 A. 312; Capital Traction Co. v. Contner, 120 Md. 78, 83, 84, 87 A. 904; Griffith v. Pullman Co., 142 Md. 514, 521, 121 A. 362; Blinder v. Monaghan, 171 Md. 77, 87, 188 A. 31; Bode v. Carroll-Independent Coal Co., 172 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A.2d 259, 193 Md. 506, 1949 Md. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-state-insurance-co-of-watertown-v-guerriero-md-1949.