Gill v. Rollins Protective Services Co.

722 F.2d 55
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 1983
DocketNo. 82-1251
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 722 F.2d 55 (Gill v. Rollins Protective Services Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill v. Rollins Protective Services Co., 722 F.2d 55 (4th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

WIDENER, Circuit Judge:

Edith Gill brought this diversity action against Rollins Protective Services Company (Rollins) on behalf of herself and as committee of her husband for damages resulting from the burning of their house, in which Rollins had installed a fire alarm system. Upon Rollins’ motion, the Gills’ subrogated home insurer, United States Automobile Association, was added as a real party in interest. The case was submitted to a jury on theories of common-law negligence and violations of Virginia’s Consumer Protection Act. VA.CODE ANN. § 59.1-196 et seq. The jury returned a general verdict for the plaintiffs for $238,032.78, and Rollins appealed. We vacate and remand for a new trial.

In late August 1978, Rollins solicited Mrs. Gill by telephone to purchase its fire and burglary alarm service. A few weeks earlier, her husband had set fire to a waste paper basket, but had managed to put out the fire by himself. The husband, who suffers from Alzheimer’s Disease, and had been adjudicated incompetent to handle his own affairs, was often careless with his burning cigarettes and would empty his ashtrays into paper bags. His disease rendered him quite unaware of the dangers of his actions.

Mrs. Gill, who had to leave her husband home alone during the day while she worked, was thus very interested in the service Rollins was offering. A salesman for Rollins visited her and explained that the service was for fire and burglary detection. Mrs. Gill told him about the previous fire and why it had occurred. She described her husband’s mental condition, his smoking habits, and that he spent most of his time in the study. Mrs. Gill found that the charges for the combined fire and burglary service were more than she wanted to pay. She declined to subscribe to Rollins’ service.

A few days after his visit, the salesman called back to tell Mrs. Gill he had “the absolute system for [her] that would work perfectly.” He described the system as virtually foolproof and capable of automatically calling the fire department for help. The system was wireless, and, when installed, Mrs. Gill would absolutely not have to worry about telephoning the fire department. Her only worry would be to leave the house safely, and the system would automatically notify the fire department of all relevant information. In fact, a telephone answering service monitored the Rollins system and made any necessary telephone calls. While the salesman said nothing about how the Rollins telephone dialer mechanism would reach the fire department, Mrs. Gill understood that the Rollins system would reach the fire department directly.

The salesman also gave Mrs. Gill a brochure, “Your Personal Security Analysis,” describing the Rollins system. According to the brochure, the virtually foolproof wireless system would continuously monitor the house and automatically notify the proper authorities over the customer’s existing telephone system, in the event of a fire. The system would sound inside and outside alarms and turn on indoor lights. Because the system was wireless and contained its own emergency power source, the paper went on, it had no lines that could be cut, thus rendering it inoperative in a fire.

[57]*57Mrs. Gill decided to subscribe to Rollins’ service, and she signed its “Installation-Service Agreement,” which she had glanced over. The Agreement, which is a form contract furnished by Rollins, says nothing about the system’s supposed capabilities or Rollins’ monitoring responsibilities. On September 9, 1978, Rollins installed a fire alarm system in the Gill house. Although Mrs. Gill had told Rollins about her husband’s condition and habits, and his spending most of his time in his basement study, Rollins put no fire or smoke detectors in the study.

Just after midnight, April 11, 1979, before she went to bed, Mrs. Gill smelled an odor like that of a hot new appliance. She, at that time, was in the kitchen immediately above the study. Mrs. Gill thought nothing of that until she was later awakened by the outside alarm of the Rollins system. The inside alarm, however, did not sound; nor did the inside lights turn on. Mrs. Gill saw that the basement was filled with dense smoke. After attempting to save her dogs from the fire, she and her husband left the burning house and waited for the fire department. She did not telephone for help because of Rollins’ advice to her that she would have nothing to worry about in case of a fire except getting out of her house. Neighbors, concerned about the alarm, telephoned the local Emergency Communications Center, which eventually dispatched a police car to the Gills’ house. Upon arriving and seeing the flames, the police called for fire equipment. The Emergency Communications Center had no record of receiving an alarm from Rollins, and Rollins had no record of an alarm sent from the Gills’ house. The house was totally destroyed by the fire, which investigation revealed was started by careless smoking in the Gills’ basement study.

Steven Swab, a fire cause and origin expert, investigated the fire at the Gills house. He found that the fire started about 12:20 a.m., ten minutes or so before Mrs. Gill smelled the peculiar odor. The fire burned for 30 to 40 minutes before spreading beyond the study. At trial, Swab opined that the Rollins system was inadequate because, among other reasons, it did not have a fire or smoke detector in the basement study. His opinion was that (because help would have been obtained), a fire would not have spread beyond the study if the room had had a smoke detector. Furthermore, if the fire alarm had been properly transmitted when the external alarm sounded, the fire could have been confined to one quarter of the basement.

Swab further testified that the Rollins system was improperly installed and inadequate because it had no line-seizure device. This device, which costs about $20, would have preserved the system’s ability to call out if any one extension telephone line of the four in the house had been destroyed by fire, leaving the central line intact. The system that Rollins installed lost its ability to call out when any telephone line shorted out.

Rollins had a line-seizure device available when it installed its system, but never told Mrs. Gill about it. The central alarm box was in the basement laundry room, separated from the origin of the fire by a masonry wall. This box, which was eventually destroyed with the house, if it had been fitted with a line-seizure device, would have remained intact long enough to make a telephone call when the external alarm sounded, even though other wiring within the house had burned and shorted out.

The “Installation-Service Agreement,” which Mrs. Gill signed two days after Rollins installed its system, contained the following provision with respect to damages:

It is further agreed that Rollins is not an insurer of the Customer’s property and that all charges and fees herein provided for are based solely on the cost of installation, service of the system and scope of liability hereinafter set forth and are unrelated to the value of the Customer’s property or the property of others located in the Customer’s premises.
The parties agree that if loss or damage should result from the failure of performance or operation or from improper installation or servicing of the system, that [58]

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Gill v. Rollins Protective Services
722 F.2d 55 (Fourth Circuit, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
722 F.2d 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-rollins-protective-services-co-ca4-1983.