Harford Mutual Insurance v. Apria Healthcare, Inc.

159 F. App'x 479
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2005
Docket04-2542
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 F. App'x 479 (Harford Mutual Insurance v. Apria Healthcare, Inc.) 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
Harford Mutual Insurance v. Apria Healthcare, Inc., 159 F. App'x 479 (4th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The Harford Mutual Insurance Company (“Harford”), subrogee of Carriage Hill Apartments, appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment that Apria Healthcare, Incorporated (“Apria”) was not negligent in distributing, delivering, installing and storing oxygen cylinders, nor had it failed to provide adequate warning or instruction for its products. Harford also appeals certain evidentiary decisions of the district court. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the issues of duty of care and negligence. Because we find that the district court properly granted summary judgment on these issues, we need not reach the issue of its evidentiary decisions.

I.

Harford provides insurance coverage to Carriage Hill Apartments (“Carriage Hill”), an apartment complex in Maryland. In December 1999, one of Carriage Hill’s apartment buildings was severely damaged by a fire accidentally started when the five-year old grandson of tenant Daisy Blakes played with matches on Blakes’s bed. Harford paid approximately $1.5 million to Carriage Hill to cover this damage.

Apria operates a nation-wide business that delivers such products as cylinders of medical oxygen to its customers’ homes. At the time of the events central to this case, Apria had delivered medical oxygen cylinders to Daisy Blakes for several months. When they were delivered, Apria placed its cylinders on a bookshelf in Blakes’s seventeen-by-eleven foot bed *481 room. By December 1999, Blakes’s garden apartment contained approximately thirty oxygen cylinders. Twenty-seven cylinders were recovered after the fire.

Harford contends Apria’s oxygen cylinders exacerbated the fire. It filed suit against Apria, alleging negligence in failing to properly deliver, install and store medical oxygen cylinders in Blakes’s apartment. Specifically, Harford asserted that the relevant paragraphs of NFPA 99, which require gas equipment used in home health care to be stored at least twenty feet from combustible materials or in a “fire rated cabinet”, were incorporated into Maryland law, and created a statutory duty of care. In addition, Harford alleged that Apria failed to warn the tenant of the fire and explosion hazards associated with such cylinders. Apria moved for summary judgment, arguing that the standard sought to be applied for oxygen storage was not incorporated into Maryland law, and that no evidence had been offered regarding the alleged defectiveness of the warning label.

The district court granted Apria’s motion for summary judgment on all claims. Harford appeals this judgment.

II.

This court reviews de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. See Monumental Paving & Excavating v. Pennsylvania Mfrs. Assoc. Ins. Co., 176 F.3d 794, 797 (4th Cir.1999).

A. Duty of Care

Appellate briefing and oral argument in this case have narrowed this issue to whether the entirety of the National Fire Protection Association’s (“NFPA”) Model Code 99 (“NFPA 99”) has been incorporated into NFPA Model 101, and whether sufficient evidence has been offered that Apria’s alleged violation of County Code 11-265 caused the damage.

1. NFPA 101 and NFPA 99

The NFPA is a private association that publishes model codes. Model Code NFPA 99 is entitled “Standard for Health Care Facilities.”

Chapter 18 of NFPA 99 is entitled “Electrical and Gas Equipment for Home Care.” It “addresses the requirements for the safe use of electrical and gas equipment used for medical treatment outside health care facilities.” Paragraph 18-3.8 provides that “[g]as equipment used in the home for health care shall conform to such requirements of Chapter 8 as applicable.” Chapter 8 of NFPA 99 addresses the storage requirements for the types of oxygen cylinders that were in Blakes’s apartment. Paragraph 8-3.1.11.2 provides that:

Oxidizing gases such as oxygen ... shall be separated from combustibles or incompatible materials by either:
1. A minimum distance of 20 ft (6.1 m); or
2. A minimum distance of 5 ft (1.5 m) if the entire storage location is protected by an automatic sprinkler system designed in accordance with NFPA 13 ...; or
3. An enclosed cabinet of noncombustible construction having a minimum fire protection rating of one-half hour for cylinder storage. An approved flammable liquid storage cabinet shall be permitted to be used for cylinder storage.

Paragraph 8-2.1.2.2 provides examples of combustible materials that may be found near patients, including “hair oils, oil-based lubricants, skin lotions ... [and] bed linen.”

Blakes’s bedroom was eleven by seventeen feet. And the oxygen cylinders were *482 stored on a bookshelf in her bedroom. There has been no suggestion that the apartment had an automatic sprinkler system. Therefore, under NFPA 99, the oxygen cylinders arguably should have been placed more than twenty feet away from any combustible materials. At issue in this case is whether the relevant paragraphs of NFPA 99 have been incorporated into Maryland law.

“NFPA 101” is the 1997 edition of National Fire Prevention Associations Life Safety Code and was incorporated by reference in Maryland’s State Fire Prevention Code. Md. Regs.Code. Tit. 29, § 06.01.06(B)(2)(a) (1999).

Chapter 33 of NFPA 101 states that the listed “documents or portions thereof are referenced within this Code as mandatory requirements and shall be considered part of the requirements of this Code.... The numbers in parentheses represent the paragraph numbers from chapters of this Code that reference the given publication in a mandatory way.” (Emphasis added.) The reference to NFPA 99 appears as follows:

NFPA 99, Standard for Health Care Facilities, 1996 edition.
[6-4.4 Exception, 7-2.4, 12-2.9.2, 12-2.10.2, 12-3.2.1, 12-3.2.2, 12-3.2.3, 12-3.2.4, 12-5.1.2, 12-5.1.3, 12-6.2.9.2, 12-6.3.2.1, 12-6.3.2.2, 13-3.2.2, 13-3.2.3, 13-3.2.4,13-6.2.9.2,13-6.3.2.1,13-6.3.2.2]

The NFPA 101 paragraphs following the NPFA 99 reference each require that NFPA 99 be applied under certain circumstances. The references from Chapters 6 and 7 apply to laboratories. Eleven of the nineteen references to NFPA 99 are in Chapter 12, which applies only to “New Health Care Occupancies.” Appellee’s Ad-den.15. Six of the nineteen references to NFPA 99 are in Chapter 13, which applies only to “Existing Health Care Occupancies.” Paragraph 8-3.1.11.2 does not appear as a mandatory reference. And none of the other references relate to home use of oxygen use.

Harford maintains that NFPA 101 incorporated the entirety of NFPA 99 by reference, and, therefore, that NFPA 99 has the authority of law in the state of Maryland. Harford’s primary argument involves a parentheses/brackets distinction. The NFPA 101 paragraphs that follow NFPA 99 are enclosed in brackets, not parentheses.

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159 F. App'x 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harford-mutual-insurance-v-apria-healthcare-inc-ca4-2005.