Shepherd v. Finer Foods, Inc.

165 So. 2d 750
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 24, 1964
Docket33032, 032-A, 032-B
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 165 So. 2d 750 (Shepherd v. Finer Foods, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepherd v. Finer Foods, Inc., 165 So. 2d 750 (Fla. 1964).

Opinion

165 So.2d 750 (1964)

I.W. SHEPHERD and Clara M. Shepherd, G.M. Brown, d/b/a Brown Tractor Company, and W.B. Dunn Company, Inc., a Florida corporation, Petitioners,
v.
FINER FOODS, INC., a Florida corporation, Respondent.

Nos. 33032, 032-A, 032-B.

Supreme Court of Florida.

June 24, 1964.
Rehearing Denied July 27, 1964.

*751 Starry & Thompson, Tallahassee, for petitioners.

Parker, Foster & Madigan, and Hall, Hartwell & Hall, Tallahassee, for respondents.

HOBSON, Justice (Ret.).

The petitioners herein were plaintiffs respectively in three separate negligence actions against respondent corporation which was the defendant in each case. The suits were consolidated for trial in the Circuit Court in and for Jefferson County, Florida. The jury rendered a verdict in each of the actions against Finer Foods, Inc., the defendant at the trial level, and the court entered judgments predicated upon the several verdicts. After motions for a new trial were denied, Finer Foods, Inc. appealed to the District Court of Appeal, First District. Said Court rendered an opinion in which it reversed the judgments and remanded the causes for a new trial.

The petition for writ of certiorari which is now before us is directed to the above-mentioned decision of the District Court. The petition is founded upon the theory of conflict with the decisions of the Supreme Court of Florida in the cases of King v. Weis-Patterson Lumber Company, 124 Fla. 272, 168 So. 858, and Weis-Fricker Mahogany Co. Inc. v. King, 139 Fla. 539, 190 So. 880. It is further contended that the District Court in its decision misunderstood, misconstrued and misapplied the decisions of this Court in Voelker v. Combined Ins. Co. of American (Fla. 1954), 73 So.2d 403, and Commercial Credit Corp. v. Varn (Fla. App. 1959), 108 So.2d 638.

We quote from the District Court's opinion the following statement of facts which that Court said appeared to be the pertinent facts "established by substantially uncontradicted testimony of the trial:"

"The grocery store operated by the defendant had for several years been heated by a gas heater suspended from *752 the ceiling in a storage room at the rear of the store. The employees of the defendant had customarily stacked paper and the crocus sacks on top of the heater or on its sides. The serviceman for the liquid petroleum gas company had several times warned the defendant's employees, including the store manager, that those sacks in such proximity to the heater constituted a fire hazard in violation of recognized standards, but these sacks continued to be stacked on the heater. In fact, a few hours before the fire in question broke out this serviceman repaired the heater and placed on the floor the sacks he found on the heater. After he left, but before the fire, the defendant's store manager replaced those sacks on the top of the heater.
"Two of the defendant's employees testified that less than a month before the said fire, the sacks on top of the heater had caught fire.
"There is no direct evidence in the record that the fire which destroyed the building had started in the gas heater or because of the sacks on top of it catching fire. The evidence indicated, however, that the fire started in the storage room where the heater was located. Two witnesses saw flames in that room during the early stages of the fire, and one of them testified that the fire broke through the roof `in the near vicinity' of the location of the gas heater."

The District Court, after having enucleated the facts, stated:

"We have no difficulty in concluding that the evidence is sufficient to support the jury's finding that the defendant was negligent because of its employees' stacking the sacks on the gas heater despite warnings of the fire hazard. But the question is fraught with difficulty as to whether the evidence supports the finding that such negligence was the proximate cause of the fire that destroyed the building. Such a finding is, of course, essential to a defendant's liability in negligence actions."

We agree with the determination that the evidence is sufficient to support the jury's finding that the defendant was negligent. We also concur in the conclusion that it was necessary for the jury to find that such negligence was the proximate cause of the fire that destroyed the building. However, we have not found it as difficult as the District Court stated it found it to be to determine whether the evidence supports the finding that the negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the fire. Our only difficulty stems from our inability to understand the necessity for the jury to compound inferences in these cases in order for it to decide whether the negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the fire that destroyed the building.

There was but one fire which caused the damage which in turn brought about these lawsuits. There is direct and positive testimony that a serviceman repaired the heater a few hours before the fire in question broke out. The heater was lighted, consequently we are at a loss to understand the statement in the opinion of the District Court:

"In arriving at their verdict against the defendant, the jury had to infer that the fire originated in the heater and, having made that finding, the jury had to infer further that it was the sacks negligently stored on the heater that caused the heater to originate the fire." (Italics supplied.)

Surely the District Court did not mean that it was necessary to infer that the fire originated in the heater, but rather that the flame in the heater or the heat generated by it, because of the burlap bags and paper or cardboard being stacked on top of the heater or on its sides, ignited these inflammable materials, which fire thus created, destroyed the building. It is a fact which requires no inference that the liquid *753 gas heater had been repaired and when last observed was lighted. To this extent it had fire in its burner or at least in the pilot.

We agree with the District Court's statement that "in order to arrive at their conclusion the defendant was liable for the damages caused by the fire, the jury would have to infer that the fire started as a proximate result of the defendant's negligence in stacking the sacks on the heater." We believe, however, that this is the only inference which the jury was required to glean from the circumstantial evidence. The fact that there was a flame or fire, if you please, within the liquid gas heater was established by direct testimony and in fact is not disputed.

The jury had before it the direct testimony of at least one witness that less than a month before the fire which gave rise to this litigation the sacks on top of the heater had caught fire, having been ignited by the flame from the liquid gas heater or the heat generated by it. The burning sacks were removed and the fire extinguished. This fact was not only known to the defendant through its employees but the defendant also knew, or should have known, because its agents or employees had been told, that the placing of crocus sacks and strips of pasteboard on top of the heater or on its sides constituted a fire hazard in violation of recognized standards. The serviceman who repaired the heater a few hours before the subject fire broke out removed the sacks he found on the heater and placed them on the floor.

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165 So. 2d 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-finer-foods-inc-fla-1964.