Pearl Assurance Co. v. Reily

127 So. 2d 266, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1792
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1961
DocketNo. 50
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 127 So. 2d 266 (Pearl Assurance Co. v. Reily) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearl Assurance Co. v. Reily, 127 So. 2d 266, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1792 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Pearl Assurance Company, Ltd., Fire Association of Philadelphia and General Insurance Company of America, subrogee real and personal property insurers of Ralph K. Rothrock, instituted this suit against the defendants, James W. Reily, Rothrock’s lessee and his liability insurer, American Employers Insurance Company, and Robert V. Corkern, conducting his business under the trade name of Cork-ern Refrigeration Service, and his liability insurer, New Amsterdam Casualty Company, endeavoring to recover $30,406.64, representing the amount of money paid by plaintiffs to Rothrock to reimburse him for real and personal property destroyed by a fire in his premises, designated as 5316-18 Dryades Street. Plaintiffs assert the fire occurred as the result of a defective motor in Reily’s refrigerator, and rely on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. Alternatively, they insist that the negligence of Reily in maintaining or of Corkern in repairing the refrigerator caused the fire or that the negligence of both concurred in producing the hazardous condition that caused the conflagration.

All of the defendants pleaded the exceptions of no right or cause of action, which were overruled. Defendants Corkern and his insurer, New Amsterdam Casualty Company, then answered through the medium of a general denial. Defendants Reily and his insurer answered denying the existence of any negligence, and in the alternative pleaded Rothrock’s contributory negligence as a bar to plaintiffs’ recovery.

From a judgment in favor of the defendants dismissing plaintiffs’ suit, they have prosecuted this appeal.

In their pleadings the defendants raised various claims and defenses among themselves. Suffice it to say that we find it unnecessary to discuss this phase of the case in view of the result that we have decided should be reached herein.

The record reveals the fire was discovered by Rothrock at 7 a. m. on May 9, 1953. He related that he noticed smoke emanating from the eaves of the roof in the rear of his home and notified the fire department. The fire was extinguished at about 8:30 a. m. Rothrock examined the upper apartment immediately thereafter and noticed that the effects thereof were most heavily concentrated in the kitchen area of the upper apartment, which, at that time, was leased to the Reilys. In the kitchen the most severely burned area was the wall to the rear of a 1937 cork-constructed Kel-vinator refrigerator; a hole was also burned through the floor to the supporting joists under the refrigerator. This appliance was totally destroyed by the flames.

Two other appliances were also located in that kitchen, a gas stove and an electric dishwasher. Over the stove was installed a ventilating fan, designed to remove cooking odors from the kitchen. Rothrock said that prior to the fire the Reilys’ refrigerator vibrated constantly and could be heard in his apartment below. This last statement was corroborated by his wife.

The Reilys were not in New Orleans when the fire occurred. They both denied that the refrigerator operated noisily or vibrated. In any event, within ten days before the fire, Corkern’s employees serviced the refrigerator three times in order to repair and adjust the thermostat thereof. The first servicing revealed that the temperature was too high, and the latter two, that it was too low. However, the final visit was made on May 7th, which was two days before the fire, and the box thereafter appeared to function normally.

The remainder of the testimony inscribed in the record was offered on behalf of plaintiffs and defendants by refrigeration and electrical experts and investigators, to either prove or disprove that the fire originated in the refrigerator’s motor.

James M. Shilstone, a representative of Shilstone Testing Laboratory, engaged by the plaintiffs to determine the origin of the fire, related that he examined the premises eleven days after the fire and caused photo[268]*268graphs to be made of the damage. It was his opinion that the fire originated in the kitchen since the area near the refrigerator was most heavily damaged.

William E. Cooke, chief inspector and surveyor for Shilstone, accompanied James Shilstone to the scene. He also observed that the most heavily damaged area of the apartment was in the vicinity of the refrigerator. Cooke inspected the dishwasher and thereafter ruled this appliance out as a possible cause of the fire since the rubber hose near the wiring was not burned. The gas stove, similarly, was not the source, reasoned Cooke, because the burned damage appeared primarily on the exterior thereof. Cooke related he did not examine the refrigerator since his laboratory had engaged Earl Jennings, a refrigeration expert, to make the inspection.

Cecil M. Shilstone, á partner in Shilstone Testing Laboratories who ultimately compiled the report rendered to the plaintiffs’ agent, described the condition of the kitchen when he inspected the burned apartment. The heaviest concentration of damage to the walls and the floor of the kitchen was in the area occupied by the refrigerator. An electrical fixture in the kitchen ceiling was completely burned out. He repeated that there was a hole in the floor beneath the refrigerator; relative to the condition of the appliances, Shilstone said the dishwasher was scorched and charred only externally, while the refrigerator had been totally consumed by the fire, except for the metal parts contained therein. In describing the construction of the refrigerator he asserted that it was built with the compressor unit on the bottom, which rested on a steel plate approximately nine inches from the floor; to the rear thereof was a fan which drew in air to cool it; the air sucked in by the fan was directed toward the floor. Shilstone then expressed this opinion:

“This investigation conclusively indicates the fire * * * originated in the kitchen and was caused by the compressor assembly unit of the electric refrigerator.”

He cited several factors upon which this conclusion was predicated. First, the hole in the floor under the refrigerator indicated that the fire burned there with the most intensity and second, the electrical connections to the motor were completely burned. He discounted both the dishwasher and the stove as causes of the fire because of the lack of internal damage to both units. Similarly, he did not consider the burned out ceiling fixture as a cause because he explained that fire burned up and not down.

Shilstone’s positive testimony was weakened considerably on cross examination when it was disclosed that he originally employed Earl Jennings, a refrigeration expert, to examine the refrigerator for the purpose of determining whether the motor caused the fire. Despite this expert’s report to Shilstone to the effect the refrigerator did not cause the fire, Shilstone disregarded the report. He emphasized that he had hired the expert because no one in his organization was as eminently qualified to evaluate the condition of this appliance; however he later ignored the report rendered by Jennings and pinpointed the refrigerator’s motor as the cause of the fire without first consulting and securing the opinion of another refrigeration expert. Shilstone asserted that after engaging Jennings he later concluded the man was incompetent. To cite an example of Jennings’ lack of understanding of the problems, Shilstone explained that Jennings ruled out the refrigerator because the solder in the armature of the compressor’s motor was not melted, which would indicate the fire did not originate from the internal portion of the motor.

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Bluebook (online)
127 So. 2d 266, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearl-assurance-co-v-reily-lactapp-1961.