Merrimack Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Lanasa
This text of 118 S.E.2d 450 (Merrimack Mutual Fire Insurance Co. v. Lanasa) 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.
Opinion
MERRIMACK MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
v.
Mrs. Giuseppa LANASA.
Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia.
Edward A. Marks, Jr., Richmond (Sands, Anderson, Marks & Clarke, Richmond, on brief), for plaintiff in error.
Robert H. Patterson, Jr., Richmond (William A. Forrest, Jr., McGuire, Eggleston, Bocock & Woods, Richmond, on brief), for defendant in error.
Before EGGLESTON, C. J., and SPRATLEY, BUCHANAN, WHITTLE, SNEAD, and I'ANSON,JJ.
SPRATLEY, Justice.
Mrs. Giuseppa Lanasa, sometimes hereinafter referred to as the insured, owned a one-story building on Franklin Street, in Richmond, Virginia. The building was insured against loss by fire by Merrimack Mutual Fire Insurance Company, hereinafter *451 referred to as the insurer. The policy of insurance contained a provision exempting the insurer from liability for loss occurring, "As a result of explosion or riot, unless fire ensue, and in that event for loss by fire only." On June 27, 1957, while the policy was in force, the building was demolished by fire and explosion. Payment for loss was refused by the insurer and Mrs. Lanasa brought this action. The insurer denied liability, asserting that the loss was occasioned by an explosion, and was, therefore, not covered under the terms of its policy. Trial by jury resulted in a verdict for the insured, which was approved by the trial court. Upon petition of insurer we granted a writ of error.
The material evidence, stated in the light most favorable to the insured, in view of the jury's verdict, is as follows:
The building of Mrs. Lanasa was occupied and used as a wholesale fruit storage house by her son, Vincent Lanasa. It contained six rooms, each 18 feet square, which were used alternately for refrigeration and ripening purposes. Four rooms were on one side of the building and two on the other, with a hallway between. The floors were of concrete and the sidewalls were of cork, with wood ceilings about 7 feet above the floor. About 3 feet above the wood ceiling was another ceiling enclosing a space into which gases created by the ripening processes of the fruit could escape through an opening between the wood ceiling and the sidewalls. In each room there was a gas jet on the back wall, the flame from which furnished the heat for ripening the fruit. Each room had an entrance door and two smaller ventilation doors, one on each side of the entrance door, similar to refrigerator doors. A switch controlling the electric lights in each room was located in the hallway immediately to the right of the door as one enters.
On the night of June 26, 1957, Vincent Lanasa placed a load of bananas in Room No. 2, the second room from the front of the building. He hung the bananas in bunches, measuring two and one-half feet in diameter, to hooks on joists in the ceiling. He turned the gas jet about half-way on and lighted the gas to start the ripening process, and left the building. He returned the next morning at 5:00 a. m., and began an inspection of the several rooms. Detecting the odor of gas in Room 2, he turned the electric light on in that room from the switch in the hallway, entered the room, and finding the gas jet not burning, turned it off. He left a crack, 2 or 3 inches, in the door, opened the refrigerator doors, extinguished the electric light, and continued his inspection tour of the remaining rooms. An hour later, after performing other duties, Lanasa returned to Room 2 to determine the temperature from a thermometer hanging from the ceiling in the middle of the room. Before entering, he cut the light on by means of the electric switch in the hallway, opened the door, and walked about 8 feet to the center of the room. He then looked up through the thickly strung banana bunches, saw a fire above them; and said it looked, "Red. Just like a regular fire, any other ordinary fire. Like you burn wood, or anything." He said as "everything started to burn," he tried to get out of the room, and when he got near the door, with the fire all about him, "the explosion blew me and knocked me out." The fire practically enveloped him, burning his hands, face, hair and clothes.
Lanasa later regained consciousness and got out of the building. He was carried to a hospital, where he remained for a period of ten weeks with severe burns on his body. After being discharged, he underwent further treatment for nine weeks for third-degree burns, which, according to his physician, resulted from fire and not explosion.
Jerry Burke, a mechanical engineer, who qualified as an expert witness on the phenomena of fire and explosion, testified in response to a hypothetical question based on *452 the testimony of Lanasa, that in his opinion the fire described by Lanasa was a gaseous fire, and that such a fire is substantially the same as "a fire of wood, or coal, or any other combustible material;" that it could have resulted in the destruction of the building; that the fire was not an explosion and would not have usually resulted in an explosion unless the air pressure was increased, and could not expand; that such a fire may exist and be extinguished by an explosion without leaving evidence of fire; and that this occurs "right regularly." He said that there was no difference between the fire that Lanasa described as seen by him before the explosion and the one hereinafter described which followed the explosion. He further said that the explosion which resulted from the first fire was because it was contained; but that there was no explosion from the second fire because it was not contained.
Both Burke and a witness for the insurer expressed the opinion that the "flicking" or "switching" on of an electric switch provides a possible activating agency of ignition, that is, when it furnishes a spark near a collection of gas mixed with a certain amount of air and the mixture becomes subject to pressure by confinement of space.
John F. Finnegan, Jr., Battalion Chief, Richmond Bureau of Fire, said that he responded to a call to the Lanasa Building on June 27, 1957, at 6:30 a. m. Three fire engine companies went to the scene in his charge. Upon arrival, he found the building in "shambles," and he thought it was "obvious that there had been an explosion." He ordered the gas cut off and proceeded to make an inspection of the building; but found it impossible for him or his men to go more than 15 or 20 feet inside the structure without endangering their lives. He thus restricted his examination to that portion of the building in front known as the office. One wall had been pushed out, another blown down, and the roof blown upward. Not finding any fire, Finnegan released two of his fire units and they returned to their firehouse.
He kept one on standby for an emergency. About fifty minutes after he released the two units, and during the continuation of his inspection, a police officer reported to him "a small amount of smoke coming out of the top of the building." Finnegan looked, saw the smoke, ordered ladders and ascended to the upper front level of the building. He then saw that, "approximately, on the second floor in the back toward the back of the building in a group of containers such as orange crates, banana crates and so forth, there was a flame visible about the size of this chair. (the witness chair.)" He said that as he attempted to extinguish the fire, "A flash, screen of fire, came over the top of our heads," and the whole upper portion of the building was on fire in a matter of four or five minutes.
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118 S.E.2d 450, 402 Va. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrimack-mutual-fire-insurance-co-v-lanasa-va-1961.