Gallagher v. Stathis

43 S.E.2d 33, 186 Va. 444, 1947 Va. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 9, 1947
DocketRecord No. 3206
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 S.E.2d 33 (Gallagher v. Stathis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Stathis, 43 S.E.2d 33, 186 Va. 444, 1947 Va. LEXIS 169 (Va. 1947).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error, Mrs. Gallagher, is the owner of a three-story frame dwelling, which she acquired on May 8, 1936. The first and second floors of this building were each occupied by two families, and the third floor was occupied by the Stathis family consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Stathis and their three children, Newton Edward Stathis, five years old, James G. Stathis, Jr., age three, and Janice Regina Stathis, age six. This was the state of occupancy on December 13, 1944, when a fire occurred, which took the lives of the two little boys, one Newton Edward, whose death is the subject of this suit.

The third floor was the attic of the building, which was converted into a three-room apartment. There were two stairways from the ground or first floor to the second floor, and from the second floor to the attic apartment there was a single winding stairway leading to the kitchen of that apartment. One of the stairways from the first floor to the second was an exterior stairway, located at the rear of the dwelling and the other was an interior one, at the front. The kitchen in the attic was in the rear and contained one window, from which the occupants could reach the roof of the second story of the premises which projected from the building. Close to this window was the opening of the stairway which led from the kitchen to the second floor.

[447]*447Next to the kitchen, going to the front of the apartment, a doorway led into a middle room in which there were no windows. Another doorway led from this room into the front room, which was used as the bedroom of the occupants. This front room had two windows, one facing Olney Road at the front of the house and the other opening on the side. From this window on the side, there was a drop of about twenty feet to the nearest level, which was a projection of the second story roof, and an alley extended along the side of the house. The front window facing Olney Road was some twelve feet above the top of the front porch.

The fire occurred in the morning. Mr. Stathis had left home and Mrs. Stathis and her three children were in the front room. Smoke, followed by flames, was seen by some of the neighbors issuing, from the attic apartment. The fire made quick progress. The mother became frantic for the safety of her children. She opened the door leading into the kitchen, to find it enveloped in flames. The means of escape by way of the kitchen stairway was cut off. Her screams at the front window of the apartment at the front attracted the attention of a sailor and a civilian who were passing. The former secured a ladder nearby and reached the top of the front porch where he caught the little girl who dropped from her mother’s arms. The mother, badly burned, collapsed and fell out of the window, landing on the roof of the porch.

Unable to be rescued, the two little boys ran under the bed where they perished from heat and suffocation produced by smoke.

The father, as administrator, instituted this suit against Mrs. Gallagher to recover damages on account of the death of the child, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the owner in having converted the building into a tenement, with five apartments, occupied by five families living independently of each other, without obedience to the provisions of an ordinance requiring such a building to be equipped with at least two stairways.

Section 823 of the Building Code of the city of Norfolk defines a tenement house as follows:

[448]*448“Any house or building or portion thereof, which is designed to be or is used or occupied as the home or residence of more than two (2) families living independently of each other, but having a common right in the halls and stairways, water closets or toilet rooms or any of them.”

Section 958 of the Building Code referring to hotels, apartments, clubs, and tenement houses, provides that each building of these grades, “more than two stories high”, shall have at least two stairways. The sections of the Building Code of the city of Norfolk which are involved in this case became effective in May, 1918, and the applicable amendments thereto were adopted in 1930.

Section 775 in part is as follows:

“This Code shall apply to future building operations and new buildings to be erected in the city of Norfolk and nothing herein contained shall be deemed to have a retroactive effect or operation unless clearly so indicated.”

The defendant contends that the quoted ordinance applied to future building operations, and inasmuch as the building in this case was built prior to the effective date of the Code, its provisions have no retroactive effect.

We do not think that this contention is sound in view of the effect of the amendments to the Code to be found in sections 778 and 779, which are as follows:

“Sec. 778—Changes in Grade of Occupancy.
“No building, structure, or part thereof, already erected, shall be used for any purpose or grade of occupancy unless the construction and arrangement of said building, structure, or part thereof be, or shall be altered so as to be, in accordance with the provisions of this Code for said grade of. occupancy.”
“Sec. 779—Change in Grade of Occupancy—Old Buildings.
“The grade of occupancy of any building, structure, or part thereof, constructed or erected prior to the date upon which this Code shall take effect, shall not be changed if the construction of said building, structure, or part thereof, does not already conform to the requirements of this Code for [449]*449the new grade of occupancy, unless the construction of said building, structure, or part thereof be so. changed, in accordance with the requirements of this Code, as to conform to the said requirements for said new grade of occupancy.”

We think it is clear that the provisions of the above sections are clearly comprehended in the condition expressed in section 775, that the section shall have no retroactive effect “unless clearly so indicated”. It is manifest that the building in question was altered by the defendant for the very purpose of changing the grade of occupancy. The apartment occupied by the Stathis family is denominated throughout the record as the “attic”. The word “attic” has a significance which use and custom have given it. It is used interchangeably 'with the word “garret”. They each denote that part of a house which is immediately under the roof. It is not usually used and equipped to dwell in, but for storage and ventilation purposes.

The war came on after the Pearl Harbor tragedy and almost immediately there came into being a demand for houses and living quarters. This, in turn, quickened the efforts of those who owned shelters of any sort to convert them into living quarters which would produce rents and profits.

The defendant in this case seized the opportunity to make a tenement out of this old dwelling. The evidence shows her awareness of the ordinance requirements, for in December, 1944, she saw a carpenter, J. H. Carney, about building additional steps up to the third story. Her attorney made this observation during the course of the trial:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

O'Neill v. Windshire-Copeland Associates, L.P.
595 S.E.2d 281 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.E.2d 33, 186 Va. 444, 1947 Va. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-stathis-va-1947.