Virginia Heart Institute, Ltd. v. Northside Electric Co.

277 S.E.2d 216, 221 Va. 1119, 1981 Va. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 24, 1981
DocketRecord 790001
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 277 S.E.2d 216 (Virginia Heart Institute, Ltd. v. Northside Electric Co.) 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.

Bluebook
Virginia Heart Institute, Ltd. v. Northside Electric Co., 277 S.E.2d 216, 221 Va. 1119, 1981 Va. LEXIS 256 (Va. 1981).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Virginia Heart Institute, Ltd. (Institute) filed a motion for judgment against Northside Electric Company (Northside), a Virginia partnership, alleging, inter alia, {1) that Northside, while performing electrical work for an expansion of the Institute building, neutralized or disconnected the fire detection system in the building, and recklessly and negligently failed to reactivate or reconnect the system before leaving the premises on December 18, 1975; (2) that on the *1121 evening of December 18, 1975, a short circuit occurred in the structure causing a fire which completely destroyed the building; and (3) that because of the negligence of Northside in failing to reactivate or reconnect the fire alarm system, the fire was not discovered in time to extinguish it and prevent a loss to the Institute.

In its grounds of defense Northside denied that it was guilty of any negligence and further alleged that the Institute was guilty of contributory negligence. In a supplemental grounds of defense, Northside pleaded the statute of limitations, Code § 8-24 (now Code § 8.01-243 with major changes), claiming that the suit was not filed within one year after the loss. The court ordered a jury trial on the issue of liability alone, and the jury returned a verdict for Northside.

The Institute assigns error to the action of the court in submitting the issue of contributory negligence to the jury and in giving Instruction 9 dealing with permissible inferences from withholding material evidence. Northside assigns cross-error alleging that there was not sufficient evidence of primary negligence to submit such issue to the jury.

Sometime during the evening of December 18, 1975, a fire ignited at the Institute building on Berrington Street in the City of Richmond and subsequently completely destroyed the building and its contents. The Richmond Fire Bureau unsuccessfully attempted to extinguish the blaze after responding to a call received from a call box near the Institute building at 1:07 a.m. on the morning of December 19, 1975. Fire engines arrived at the scene at 1:10 a.m.

The Institute had been in the process of expanding its building through construction of a second floor. Century Construction Company (Century) was the general contractor for the job. Northside was employed as the electrical subcontractor to extend the fire and intrusion alarm systems in the Institute building to the new addition, having originally installed those systems in the building several years previously.

The fire and intrusion alarm systems installed at the Institute operated on entirely different, independent circuitry, but both were monitored by a single control panel located within the building. The fire alarm system consisted of strategically placed ionization (smoke) and thermal (heat) detectors wired in series to the control panel. Fire detection by one of these units caused a bell alarm to sound and a telephone dialing mechanism to deliver a prerecorded emergency message to not more than ten programmed numbers. The systems were powered by regular AC current supplemented by emergency battery power (DC). If both power supplies were shut down simul *1122 taneously, the system was rendered inoperative. In addition, either the alarm or dialing mechanisms could be easily disconnected at the control panel, and disabling one system would not affect the other. The intrusion alarm system was deactivated by use of a key prior to entry into the building and likewise reactivated when the last person left the building. The fire alarm system, however, was designed to be in continuous operation and override the intrusion alarm system should a fire and intrusion occur simultaneously.

On the morning of December 18, 1975, there were several employees of both Century and Northside working on the addition. Edward Pulley, foreman for Northside, and his helper were working on the second floor of the building pulling low voltage wires for the fire and alarm systems in the second floor addition. Dr. Charles Baird, President of the Institute, employees and patients were on the first floor, as well as Dr. Baird’s secretary, Carolyn Sheffield, whose office was centrally located in the building. On the wall in Sheffield’s office was the alarm bell, and in a smaller room adjoining her office was the control panel and dialer for the fire and intrusion alarm systems.

At trial Dr. Baird testified that the alarm bell had sounded several times on the morning of December 18, 1975, causing the police department to respond to the automatic dialer on at least one occasion and generally disrupting the office. When Dr. Baird complained to Pulley, Pulley stated “he would take care of it” and then went into the room where the control panel was located. Dr. Baird testified that he could not see what, if anything, Pulley did to the control panel, but the alarm bell never sounded again. Dr. Baird’s testimony was substantially corroborated by that of Sheffield and the foreman for Century. In fact, Sheffield testified that Pulley told her the alarm might sound that morning because he was working on the systems but that he intended to disconnect it.

A Chief of the Richmond Fire Bureau investigated the fire at the Institute and testified that, in his opinion, the fire originated in a ceiling joist in the film-viewing room located in the center of the first floor in the north end of the building. He estimated that the fire began at approximately 9:00 p.m. on the evening of December 18, 1975, and that the fire could have remained in its “incipient stage” for “a long, long period of time before it was hot enough to begin to emit smoke or any visible means of burning” and it was “bound to have smoldered for quite some time. . . within one or two hours.” The Chief also believed that given the location of the fire it was entirely possible that visibility of any flame or smoke from the outside would not have come until much later.

*1123 Dr. Baird testified that around 11:15 p.m. on the evening of December 18, 1975, he and his wife, in the company of two friends, drove by the Institute. Although they stopped the car, none of the four got out, and Dr. Baird merely pointed out the new addition. Neither Dr. Baird nor any of the others saw anything amiss.

Sometime after the fire, an adjuster for the Institute’s insurance company removed the dialing mechanism from the building and had it examined by an expert who determined that the dialer was in working order. The other parts of the system, including the control panel and detectors, were not retained by anyone. The expert who examined the dialer testified at trial that the dialer “did operate fine on the power source.” He also stated that the mechanism lacked the capacity to record whether any of its calls had actually been received, that “it will just say the message whether there is a ring there or not”; that it was designed to dial the number and deliver the message, alternating from one number to the other, for a five-minute period, after which it stopped; and that it was possible that the message was not delivered even if the machine had functioned properly.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.E.2d 216, 221 Va. 1119, 1981 Va. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-heart-institute-ltd-v-northside-electric-co-va-1981.