Ewen v. Bloch

173 So. 2d 314, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4466
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1965
DocketNo. 6325
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 So. 2d 314 (Ewen v. Bloch) 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.

Bluebook
Ewen v. Bloch, 173 So. 2d 314, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4466 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

LANDRY, Judge.

This is a tort action wherein plaintiff, Earl L. Ewen, seeks damages from defendant David Bloch for the destruction of a building and the loss of its contents by fire alleged to have been started by defendant upon his own property and negligently permitted to spread to plaintiff’s adjoining premises. The trial court rejected plaintiff’s demands and from said adverse ruling, plaintiff has taken this appeal.

The record reveals that plaintiff and defendant own adjoining commercial establishments fronting on Mississippi Street in the City of Donaldsonville, Louisiana. Although the record is not clear regarding the direction in which the buildings faced, we are of the impression they fronted easterly and therefore assume, for the purpose of the discussion which follows, that the buildings in question faced toward the east.

Explanation of the location and nature of the adjoining premises as well as certain conditions and practices which obtained prior to the fire in question, is essential to an understanding of the mixed questions of fact and law posed by the instant appeal.

Plaintiff’s principal establishment consisted of an army surplus goods store to the rear (west) of which was situated a storage shed which latter structure was unattached to the former and separated therefrom by an intervening space best described from the record as “undetermined”, but in all prooaDility being only a few feet considering the record shows only that the shed was “near” the rear of plaintiff’s building. This shed, which measured approximately 56 feet in width faced easterly or toward the back of plaintiff’s main building. It was of frame construction; its roof was covered with corrugated iron as were its north, west and south sides also. The front or eastern side of the shed was open. The depth of the shed was 24 feet running back or westerly toward the rear of plaintiff’s premises. Commencing at the southeast corner of the shed plaintiff erected a fence approximately 8 feet in height by nailing corrugated metal sheeting to a supporting framework. Said fence extended easterly toward Mississippi Street to an undisclosed point east of the rear of defendant’s building.

Defendant’s premises abutted plaintiff’s on the south, the properties being separated by an alley of undisclosed width. The depth of defendant’s building is not shown although photographs of record clearly indicate it does not extend back or westerly quite as far as plaintiff’s store.

Both plaintiff’s and defendant’s premises are bounded on the west by a concrete parking lot belonging to the First National Bank. Plaintiff’s aforesaid storage shed is situated in the extreme southwest corner of plaintiff’s lot, being bounded therefore on the west by the aforementioned parking lot and on the south by the vacant rear or western end of defendant’s property which is used by defendant and his employees as a parking area. The parking area to the rear of defendant’s establishment is bounded on the east by defendant’s clothing store, south by an undisclosed owner, west by the bank parking lot and north by plaintiff’s hereinabove described shed and fence. The dimensions of defendant’s aforesaid parking area are not shown except that it was sufficient to permit parking three vehicles south of plaintiff’s shed, behind defendant’s building, facing easterly parallel to each other and the south side of plaintiff’s storage facility.

[316]*316It was defendant’s custom to bum trash in a homemade incinerator which he kept in the rear of his building. The mentioned device consisted of a 50 gallon steel drum converted into an incinerator by the simple expedient of cutting out the metal top in such manner that it could be used as a lid to cover the barrel when in use as an incinerator. The precise location of this incinerator on the date of the fire is understandably a matter of considerable dispute between the litigants.

Defendant acknowledges that on the afternoon of September 11, 1959, between the hours of 3 and 4 p. m., he started a fire in the aforesaid incinerator. According to defendant, the fire consisted of his burning several loose scraps of paper which he discovered on the parking area behind his store. He placed the paper in the barrel, ignited it with a match, placed the cover on top so that it covered half the barrel thereby permitting combustion, watched the paper burn approximately five minutes until the fire was completely out and then returned to his establishment. Shortly thereafter he returned to the area behind his store, discovered plaintiff’s shed on fire and immediately spread the alarm.

Plaintiff pleads the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur and alternatively defendant’s negligence in: (1) Violating a municipal ordinance by igniting a fire within 50 feet of plaintiff’s shed; (2) Failing to contain said fire in an approved waste burner as specified by City ordinance; (3) Permitting said fire to spread to plaintiff’s premises; and (4) Failing to take proper safeguards to confine the fire to the incinerator and prevent its spread to plaintiff’s premises. Learned counsel for appellant maintains the trial court erred in holding appellant to a higher degree of proof of causal connection than is required by established jurisprudence in cases of this character. In this regard esteemed counsel for appellant relies heavily upon Naquin v. Marquette Casualty Company, 244 La. 569, 153 So.2d 395 and Rosebery v. L. O. Brayton & Co., La.App., 4 So.2d 777. The Naquin case, supra, announces the general rule that causation may be established by circumstantial evidence which, to establish a cause of action, need only exclude other reasonable hypotheses with a fair degree of certainty and need not necessarily negate all other possible causes. The Rosebery case, supra, which deals specifically with the obligation of one who intentionally sets a fire on his own premises for a lawful purpose, imposes liability upon such an owner in the event of his negligence either in starting the fire or guarding against its spread to adjoining properties. On these premises astute counsel for appellant argues that when plaintiff established defendant’s intentional starting of the fire on his own premises and the possibility of its spreading to plaintiff’s adjoining structure and no other possible source or cause of the burning of plaintiff’s property is shown, the burden shifted to defendant and it was then incumbent upon appellee to establish his freedom from negligence. It is further contended appellant has discharged the burden of proof imposed in fire cases as stated in the Rosebery case, supra, and our esteemed brother below erred in ruling to the contrary.

The testimony is overwhelmingly to the effect that defendant’s incinerator was customarily placed near the extreme rear of his premises, close to the adjoining bank parking lot, at a point approximately 20 feet to the south and parallel to the rear or western end of plaintiff’s shed. It further appears that three cars were daily parked to the rear of defendant’s building and to the south of plaintiff’s shed. Mrs. Rodriguez, an employee of defendant, parked her vehicle nearest appellant’s shed between the incinerator and said structure. Gaston Hirsch, a tenant of defendant, parked his vehicle parallel and to the south of Mrs. Rodriguez and defendant parked his car alongside and south of Hirsch’s. The vehicles thus parked were stationed [317]*317with their front ends facing the rear of defendant’s building and located only a few feet therefrom. The rear ends of the cars were some distance east of the west end of defendant’s property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 So. 2d 314, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewen-v-bloch-lactapp-1965.