Wallace v. Ohio Dept., Commerce, Unpublished Decision (10-19-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 2000
DocketNo. 99AP-1303 (REGULAR CALENDAR)
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wallace v. Ohio Dept., Commerce, Unpublished Decision (10-19-2000) (Wallace v. Ohio Dept., Commerce, Unpublished Decision (10-19-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Ohio Dept., Commerce, Unpublished Decision (10-19-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

OPINION
This is an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment of the Ohio Court of Claims rendered in favor of defendant, Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of State Fire Marshal, on plaintiffs' negligence action.

On December 29, 1999, plaintiffs, John Wallace, Willa D. Wallace, Nancy G. Tolliver, Willie Workman, Zilla Joan Sansom, Clyde R. Sansom, Linda Carmon, Charles Cooper, Gregory Lee, Paul Wilks, Marcia S. Garrett, Richard Pruitt, Rhonda Ferguson and Amy Pruitt, filed a complaint in the Court of Claims against defendant. Plaintiffs' complaint alleged that, on July 3, 1996, plaintiffs and/or their decedents were patrons and invitees on the premises of a fireworks store located at State Route 217, Scottown, Ohio, operated by Flying Dragon, Inc., d.b.a. The Ohio River Fireworks Company. The complaint alleged that, on that date, a fire was "allowed to start in fireworks that were openly displayed" in the store. Plaintiffs alleged that, pursuant to R.C. 3737.22 and 3743.01et. seq., defendant had certain powers, duties, obligations and responsibilities with respect to manufacturers, suppliers, wholesalers and retailers of fireworks. Plaintiffs further alleged that defendant negligently and carelessly failed to exercise reasonable and ordinary care with respect to those powers, duties, obligations and responsibilities, resulting in death or injury to plaintiffs or their decedents.

By entry filed September 2, 1998, the trial court bifurcated the issues of liability and damages for trial. The matter came for trial before the Court of Claims beginning on March 15, 1999.

The following facts are drawn primarily from the trial court's decision, which comprehensively sets forth the factual background of the case and the basis of the court's decision. At the time of the incident, Flying Dragon, Inc., was licensed as a wholesaler of fireworks pursuant to R.C. 3743.16. The wholesaler license is the only type of fireworks sales license issued by the state and, during the time period at issue, such license permitted its holder to sell both "Class C" and "Class B" fireworks. Class C fireworks are common "backyard fireworks," intended for use by the general public, while Class B fireworks contain greater amounts of explosive material and can only be sold to licensed exhibitors for use at public fireworks exhibitions.

The Ohio River Fireworks Company was located on a hill in a rural area of Lawrence County. The store consisted of a thirty-two by forty-foot concrete block building, with a concrete floor and a metal roof supported by wooden rafters. The main entrance door and two windows were located on the front wall, while a second door was located at the rear of the store. The interior walls contained wooden storage shelves, while three additional rows of metal shelves created four aisles within the store. The main showroom building was used for the sale of Class C fireworks to the general public, and additional storage for Class C fireworks was provided by six trailers parked along the east side of the store. Class B fireworks were stored in a separate building located southwest of the main building.

The main building had a "full suppression" overhead sprinkler system that received water from an elevated pond located on a hill behind the store. A valve located inside the store on the back wall manually controlled water flow to the sprinkler system. A pressure gauge in the northwest corner of the building displayed the static water pressure in the sprinkler system. The trial court found that "[t]he sprinkler system's control valve had been turned off some time prior to the fire, rendering it inoperable."

On the date of the incident, Richard Pruitt, a store employee, observed Todd Hall and three other individuals walk through the entrance gate and approach the store. When Hall walked into the store, another employee working at an outside cash register shouted to Pruitt that this individual was carrying a lit cigarette. Pruitt followed Hall into the store and observed Hall standing next to a stack of "crackling wheel" fireworks that were displayed on a shelf near the northwest corner of the building. Pruitt then observed Hall use the cigarette to light the fuse of a firework, causing the firework to immediately begin emitting sparks. Pruitt shouted at Hall to stop, and Pruitt attempted to extinguish the exploding fireworks by "stomping" on them. During this time, Hall exited through the rear door of the store. When Pruitt realized that the fire was out of control, he warned the occupants to leave the building, and Pruitt fled the building through the front door exit.

After exiting the building, Pruitt pursued and caught up with Hall; at that time, Pruitt observed that Hall was both physically and mentally impaired. Pruitt enlisted the help of other individuals to detain Hall until the police arrived. Hall's three companions were also detained. When Pruitt returned to the store, the building was engulfed in smoke and flames. Nine people died and eleven others were injured from the fire.

At trial, the court heard expert testimony regarding the effectiveness of a functional sprinkler system in reducing smoke and fumes, and increasing survivability in a fireworks fire. Plaintiffs' fire protection expert, David Demers, concluded that the system installed at the store was capable of functioning if the water supply had not been shut off. Demers opined that the heat from the fire would have caused the first sprinkler head to have opened within thirty seconds after the fireworks were ignited, and that the sprinkler's discharge would have been sufficient to limit the fire and resulting toxic gases.

Defendant's expert, Dr. John Hoffman, determined that a conservative estimate for the atmospheric level of carbon monoxide gas in the store after a thirty-second burn period was eight percent, or 80,000 parts per million ("ppm"). Even at levels below that number, carbon monoxide enters the blood stream and combines with normal hemoglobin to produce "carboxyhemoglobin," a compound that prevents the absorption of oxygen. The lack of oxygen to body tissues and organs results in mental disorientation and then physical incapacitation. The trial court noted that, "[a]lthough it is difficult to accurately determine the level of CO that existed in the store in the moments following the onset of the blaze, the expert testimony presented at trial by both parties described an environment that would quickly cause incapacitation." In this regard, plaintiffs' toxicology expert, Dr. Yves Alarie, testified that, in an atmosphere of 20,000 ppm of carbon monoxide, survivability would be limited to approximately four and one-half minutes. Defendant's pathology expert, Dr. George Nichols, opined that at a carbon monoxide level of 80,000 ppm, incapacitation would occur after only two or three breaths.

The trial court noted that other highly toxic gases emitted by the burning fireworks, such as hydrogen cyanide and formaldehyde, also would have affected survivability. The court found that, given the lethal environment that developed within thirty seconds after the fireworks ignited, "even a fully functioning sprinkler system would not have completely prevented plaintiffs' injuries." However, the court also found that "defendant's argument that an operational sprinkler system would have made little or no difference in the outcome is implausible."

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Bluebook (online)
Wallace v. Ohio Dept., Commerce, Unpublished Decision (10-19-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-ohio-dept-commerce-unpublished-decision-10-19-2000-ohioctapp-2000.