Hoon v. Lightolier

857 A.2d 1184, 158 Md. App. 648, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 15, 2004
Docket2596, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 857 A.2d 1184 (Hoon v. Lightolier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoon v. Lightolier, 857 A.2d 1184, 158 Md. App. 648, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 147 (Md. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

SALMON, J.

This is a products liability case by homeowners and their insurer against the manufacturer of a light fixture. The fixture, as one of its component parts, had a safety device that was designed to make the light blink on and off if the insulation in the immediate vicinity of the fixture got too hot. Alternating the electric current in this manner lowered the *651 temperature emitted by the lightbulb and warned users of the problem.

The fixture was accompanied by a label telling the installers of the fixture not to place insulation within three inches of it. The installer of the fixture failed to heed the warning. As a result, heat from the fixture was entrapped, and the insulation ignited, causing a devastating fire. To complicate matters, the safety device, because of either a manufacturing defect and/or negligent design, did not operate properly, and the lights never blinked. In litigation that followed, the owners of the home damaged by the fire contended that their property loss had two concurrent causes: (1) the failure of the installer of the light fixture to abide by the manufacturer’s warning and (2) the failure of the safety device to prevent the fire due to its negligent manufacture and/or defective design.

Summary judgment was entered in the Circuit Court for Kent County in favor of the manufacturer of the light fixture. One of the grounds for summary judgment was that (purportedly) the sole proximate cause of the fire was the failure of the installer of the light fixture to heed the manufacturer’s warning. The .motions judge rejected the argument that the negligent manufacture and/or design of the safety device was a concurrent cause of the fire.

The major issue presented in this appeal is whether the motions judge was legally correct in granting summary judgment on the ground that the third party’s failure to heed the manufacturer’s warning was the sole proximate cause of the fire.

I. FACTUAL SUMMARY 1

Due to fire damages mentioned above, David and Texie Hoon (“the Hoons”) and their insurer, Federal Insurance *652 Company, brought suit in the Circuit Court for Kent County against Lightolier, a Genlyte Thomas Company, LLC (“Ligh-tolier”), and others.

Lightolier is the manufacturer of light fixtures, which were installed by Gede Installation, LLC (“Gede”), in the Chester-town, Maryland, residence of the Hoons. Lightolier affixed to each of the light fixtures a label containing the following words:

WARNING-RISK OF FIRE
DO NOT INSTALL INSULATION WITHIN 3 INCHES OF FIXTURE SIDES OR WIRING COMPARTMENT NOR ABOVE FIXTURE IN SUCH A MANNER TO ENTRAP HEAT.

A similar warning was enclosed in the box in which the light fixtures were shipped.

On each of the light fixtures installed by Gede were self-heating thermal protectors (“SHTPs”), which were intended to cycle, i.e., regulate the electric flow to the bulb so that the light would blink on and off if the area adjacent to the fixture got too hot. As designed by Lightolier, the SHTPs were located approximately three inches from the base of the light fixture. A purpose of the blinking light feature was to alert the consumer to the insulation problem (and/or the light- *653 fixture problem) so that corrective action could be taken. Another purpose of the blinking lights was to lower the temperature of the lightbulb and prevent overheating.

Attached to the fixture was another label, which read:

NOTICE — THERMALLY PROTECTED FIXTURE BLINKING LIGHT MAY INDICATE INSULATION TOO CLOSE TO FIXTURE OR IMPROPER LAMP.

When Gede installed the light fixture in the Hoons’ residence, its agents placed the fixture flush against the insulation, thus allowing heat from the light fixture to become entrapped when the light was turned on. The parties agree that Gede acted negligently when it installed the fixture within three inches of the insulation. 2

On November 2, 1998, the ceiling in the immediate vicinity of one of the light fixtures installed by Gede caught fire. The fire caused over $1.5 million in damages to the Hoons’ residence. It is undisputed that one of the causes of the fire was the fact that insulation was placed too close to the light fixture. It is also undisputed, at least for purposes of this appeal, that the SHTPs that were part of the fixture did not function properly because the light in the fixture did not cycle when the heat started to rise, due to the thermal insulation being too far removed from the heat source, i.e., the fixture’s bulb.

Prior to the fire — exactly when is not revealed in the record — two other Lightolier fixtures, which were located in the Hoons’ kitchen, began to blink. The two fixtures were the same model as the one that did not cycle and was at the fire’s point of origin. The Hoons and their agent recognized the significance of the blinking lights, accessed the area where these lights were installed, saw that they were covered in insulation in violation of the warnings on the fixtures, and *654 removed the insulation. Nevertheless, neither the Hoons nor their agents checked the nearby fixture whose entrapped heat caused the fire.

Section N.410-68 of the National Electric Code 3 provides as follows:

410-68. Temperature. Fixtures shall be so constructed that adjacent combustible material will not be subject to temperatures in excess of 90°C (194°F).

Expert testimony produced by plaintiffs and considered by the motions court showed that, although the specific ignition temperature of the insulation varied with the rate of heating and the moisture content of the surrounding material, the ignition point of the fire at the Hoons’ residence was between 350° and 500° Fahrenheit. The plaintiffs also proffered expert testimony to the motions court showing that Lightolier improperly designed the self-heating thermal protector, which allowed the fire to start. The design defect was that the heat sensor in the SHTPs was too far removed from the heat source (i.e., the bulb in the fixture); the improper location caused the SHTPs not to cycle as temperatures became excessive. 4

*655 Lightolier filed a motion for summary judgment and argued:

It is undisputed that ([1]) someone misused the fixture by installing insulation within three inches of the fixture and (2) by installing insulation too closely to the fixture, Gede ... acted contrary to warnings on the fixture, to warnings in the instruction booklet accompanying the fixture, and to common knowledge in the insulation and construction industry. According to [pjlaintiffs, had Gede adhered to the warnings on the product, their damages would not have resulted.

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Related

Lightolier v. Hoon
876 A.2d 100 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2005)
Coroneos v. Montgomery County
869 A.2d 410 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
857 A.2d 1184, 158 Md. App. 648, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoon-v-lightolier-mdctspecapp-2004.