Virginia Surety Co. v. Schlegel

434 P.2d 722, 200 Kan. 64, 1967 Kan. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1967
Docket44,841
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 434 P.2d 722 (Virginia Surety Co. v. Schlegel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Surety Co. v. Schlegel, 434 P.2d 722, 200 Kan. 64, 1967 Kan. LEXIS 467 (kan 1967).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hatcher, C.:

This appeal stems from a controversy over a bailment destroyed by fire. The bailor proceeded against the bailee and a third party, operating on the bailee’s premises, in the alternative as permitted by K. S. A. 60-220 (a).

The petition insofar as material here alleged:

“That on or about April 22, 1963, plaintiff, Stanley Dilley’s trailer was located in defendant Schlegel’s Garage, and that the agents, servants and employees of the defendant Wichita Insulation Co., Inc., were working in the garage, and that on said date due to the negligence of the defendant Ben Schlegel d/b/a Schlegel’s Garage or the defendant Wichita Insulation Co., Inc., or both, plaintiff Stanley Dilley’s trailer caught fire causing plaintiff damage in the amount of $6,338.03.”

Schlegel, the bailee, answered admitting that the trailer was located in his garage and that a fire occurred therein but that he was without information with which to affirm or deny the remaining allegations of the petition.

The Wichita Insulation Company, the third party, answered admitting that its employees worked at the Schlegel Garage at the *66 date alleged and that a fire occurred but denied that it dr its employees were guilty of negligence which caused the fire.

A pretriál conference resulted in a comprehensive order which provided in part:

“1. The parties have agreed to be bound by the following stipulations:
“a. Plaintiff Stanley Dilley owned a refrigerated trailer which was damaged by fire when the trailer was located in defendant Ben Schlegel’s garage at 3536 Southeast Boulevard, Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, on April 22, 1963.
“b. .Employees of defendant Wichita Insulation Company were working in the defendant Schlegel’s garage on the day of the fire.
“2. The remaining issues of fact to be determined are as follows:
“a. What caused the fire?
“b. Who caused the fire?
“c. Were' either Ben Schlegel or Wichita Insulation Company guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the fire?” (-The insuror’s rights to subrogation are omitted as not material to the issues presented.)

At the trial the plaintiff presented testimony which we summarize at some length, as the issues present mixed questions of fact and law.

The owner and operator of the Schlegel Garage testified that he was in the garage during the day of the fire until about 7:30 P. M. Two employees of the Wichita Insulation Company were there when he left. He stated:

“. . . They were working on the balcony area installing insulation in the roof. The floor of the balcony is 1 x 6 wood floor with spaces from K to M inches between the boards. All the doors were locked on the bottom floor. Frank Myers of Wichita Insulation had a key. I was waiting for Louis Brandonj who came about 6 or 6:30 p. m. I probably did smoke the day of the fire in my office. I don’t recall being in the parts room. I was in the shop area. My son secured the parts area doors. I didn’t see him do it. My son was the last one in the parts room. I left around 6:30 or 7 p. m. I didn’t smell smoke when I left.”

Donny Cook’s testimony covered the smoking of cigarettes over the parts area:

“I am an employee of Wichita Insulation and I was working at Schlegel’s Garage the day of the fire with Williamson. We went up on the balcony from about 5 to 5:30 p.m. until 9:00 p. m. We took one or two breaks to smoke. We stopped to smoke together. We extinguished our cigarettes by rubbing them into a 1 x 12 plank and left them there. There were no ashtrays. I didn’t check with the proprietor as to’ the advisability of smoking on the balcony. I didn’t see any ‘no smoking’ signs. We took care of the ashes just like as if you were smoking out in the barn or out in the car, or outside on the! sidewalk, your ashes fall off. You don’t notice. You just flick them off. They fall off, *67 you know. I didn’t smell any smoke when I left the building. After 5:30 I saw Ben Schlegel and another fellow. I saw them go into the stockroom. Neither Mr. Williamson or I was ever in the parts area.”

The City Fire Marshal testified:

“. . . It is possible to determine the cause of a 'fire by examining the physical remains after a fire has been extinguished. Causes of fires fall into particular types of categories. Careless smoking may be one; ■ matches; electrical wiring; appliances; spontaneous heating; rubbish accumulation, overheated grease; and overheated cooking and heating equipment. I arrived at the fire scene and determined the fire started on the first floor level in the parts room. The fire had burned longer on the first floor level-and had caused the deck to collapse. In making my investigation of this) fire I ruled out some of the known causes of fire. Process of elimination is one of the ways used as an aid in determining the cause of a fire. I have an opinion as to the cause of this particular fire. I checked the wiring and found nothing abnormal about it.”

Stanley J. Spingler, investigator for the City of Wichita Fire Department, testified:

“Investigation is trying to find the cause of the fire and to further investigate whatever the possibilities are. I have attended the Kansas Inspection School at Manhattan and the Arson Seminar at Norman, Oklahoma. I investigated the fire at Schlegel Garage. I arrived on the 23rd at around 2 o’clock and met Fire Marshal Longnecker and talked to Ben Schlegel and looked over the fire scene for about two hours. I came in through the reception room into the parts area and saw parts bins tipped over, burned debris, and the deck had collapsed. In my opinion the low point of a fire is the spot where the fire starts and most fires bum up and out from the low spot. You determine the low point by tracing the fire pattern back and search the fire area until you come to that by the pattern in which the fire burned. It is necessary to determine the origin of the fire before you can determine the cause. From the pattern of the burning the fire started in the first floor and traveled up the west wall of the office and it would be on the north side of the parts room, up on to the cock loft (balcony) and spread underneath the cock loft. I determined that the fire started in that area from the evidence that was found and when we cleaned out the debris, papers, and from the fire pattern. In this location we found trash cans, metal barrels, and there was debris in this barrel of burned papers, and from where this barrel was setting, the pattern was that it came from the barrel and went to the side and up. From my investigation the low point of the fire was in the area of the trash containers. After this I went to Wichita Insulation and tried to talk to the two men that worked there. They were gone and I went back to the scene of the fire and from there I went to No. 11 Station and talked to the Fire Fighters. I went back to the fire scene that evening and again looked it over.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
434 P.2d 722, 200 Kan. 64, 1967 Kan. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-surety-co-v-schlegel-kan-1967.