WALMAC COMPANY, INC. v. Zurich Insurance Company

333 A.2d 686, 114 R.I. 410, 1975 R.I. LEXIS 1430
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 21, 1975
Docket73-251-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 333 A.2d 686 (WALMAC COMPANY, INC. v. Zurich Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WALMAC COMPANY, INC. v. Zurich Insurance Company, 333 A.2d 686, 114 R.I. 410, 1975 R.I. LEXIS 1430 (R.I. 1975).

Opinion

*411 Paolino, J.

These two cases involve claims under fire insurance policies issued by the defendants. The cases were originally brought in the Sixth Division District Court where judgments were entered for the defendants. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court, and the cases were consolidated for trial and heard before a justice of that court sitting with a jury. The jury returned a general verdict for the defendant in each case, and then the plaintiff, without filing a motion for a new trial in either case, appealed to this court.

The pertinent facts are briefly as follows. The defendants each issued a standard fire insurance policy to plaintiff, effective from August 22, 1960 to August 22, 1963, on premises located at Weybosset and Eddy Streets in Providence. On December 10, 1962, at 7:22 p.m. the Providence Fire Department, under the command of the then Lieutenant Eugene F. Gilchrist, responded to an alarm at the insured premises. i ""i

*412 The plaintiff filed claims under the policies for damages it claimed resulted from the fire. The defendants disclaimed liability under the policies. As a result of such disclaimer plaintiff brought suit.

Although in the absence of a motion for a new trial, it is our duty to consider all of the evidence and reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to defendant, 1 we shall set forth briefly the evidence presented by the opposing parties in order to present a clearer picture of the background of this dispute.

At the trial in the Superior Court plaintiff presented witnesses who testified that due to accumulated gas in the boiler there was a sudden explosion of flash fire; that the boiler had ruptured due to an explosion and flash fire; that the “transite” plate above the boiler was black from soot and surrounded by charred lumber; and that the jacket and enamel coating on the exterior of the boiler were burned off. One of plaintiff’s witnesses, a plumber and heating expert, testified that in his opinion, the burning of the jacket and charring off of the coating could have been caused by fire.

Another of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that he saw evidence of fire, that he smelled fumes and smoke, that the ceiling was burned, all charred, scorched above the boiler, and that the boiler jacket was completely ruptured and the boiler wide opened and all burned. The plaintiff presented other witnesses who testified to the same effect.

*413 The defendants’ testimony is in direct conflict with plaintiff’s with respect to the question of whether or not there had been a fire or explosion. Lieutenant Gilchrist testified that when he arrived at the premises he observed that the sprinkler alarm bell was sounding; that the boiler was in a cherry-red condition at the bottom one-third; that by the term “cherry-red” he meant that the degree of heat in the boiler gave it the appearance of being “cherry-red”; that a sprinkler-head over the boiler had been activated; that the fire department arrived at approximately 7:23 p.m. and left 46 minutes later at 8:09 p.m.; that he ordered his men to stop laying the hoses when he saw it was the boiler and he shut off the sprinkler system; that no hoses or equipment were used; and that he shut off the main gas supply to the boiler, which started a cooling-down process.

He further testified that there was no explosion in the fire box, nor evidence of any burning outside the boiler; that in looking around in the basement he did not see any charred joists nor did he observe the ceiling charred; and that upon his return to the station he made out a report entitled, “Report of Alarm other than for Fire in a Building.”

The defendants also presented the deposition of Joseph Raymond Jansen, a former inspector in the Fire Prevention Bureau of the Providence Fire Department. He gave his deposition on September 11, 1970, because of the fact that he had retired from the fire department and was moving permanently to Florida. His testimony is in substance as follows. On December 10, 1962, he was an inspector in the Providence Fire Department, where he had been employed for approximately 33 years. A day or two after December 10, 1962, he went to plaintiff’s premises to investigate the call for apparatus on December 10, 1962. He went down to the basement and found that all of the asbestos had been washed off the top of the boiler because of the effect of the sprinkler which was overhead. The boiler appeared to him *414 to have been red hot. He had an opportunity to inspect the wood beams and floor joists around or near the boiler and found no evidence of damage to the beams or the joists. He found no evidence of smoke, smudge or soot to indicate that a fire had been present in the area. He inspected upstairs to see whether there was any evidence of smudge, soot, or smoke on the first floor above the cellar. He found none. He found no evidence of fire damage at any place in the building at any time after the alarm on December 10, 1962.

■ Inspector Jansen further deposed that at no time did he ever indicate to Mr. Walter I. Sundlun, an officer of plaintiff corporation, that there had been a fire on the premises. He stated that it was the sprinkler alarm that activated the call for the Providence Fire Department apparatus. On cross-examination he stated that during his years of service with the department he had investigated- eight or nine hundred fires. He further stated that his opinion concerning the lack of fire and damage resulting therefrom to plaintiff’s building was based on his personal observations at the insured premises and his previous experience in the Providence Fire Department.

I

The first assignment of error urged by plaintiff is that the trial justice erred in sustaining defendants’ objection to Walter I. Sundlun participating in the case as- a trial counsel. Mr. Sundlun, a member in good standing of the bar of this state, testified that he was the treasurer of plaintiff corporation and its attorney for a number of years. He commenced these actions in his capacity as corporate counsel. His firm, Baker and Sundlun, and Raymond Surdut, Esquire, appear as attorneys of record for plaintiff. Mr. Sundlun and his son are stockholders of plaintiff corporation. Mr. Surdut opened plaintiff’s case to the jury and then called Mr. Sundlun as the first witness. When the first recess was called, defendants’ counsels indicated to the trial *415 justice in chambers their objection to Mr. Sundlun’s participation as both a witness and trial counsel. The trial justice .sustained the objection and allowed Mr. Sundlun to appear as a witness only. The trial justice made the same ruling in rejecting Mr. Sundlun’s request to address the jury in closing arguments.

In requesting permission to participate as trial counsel, Mr. Sundlun admitted that it was not a “* * * very palatable thing for a lawyer to do, to be a witness and counsel too.” He said that while he had absolute confidence in Mr. Surdut as a lawyer, he did not believe Mr. Surdut was as fully informed about the case as he was.

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Bluebook (online)
333 A.2d 686, 114 R.I. 410, 1975 R.I. LEXIS 1430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walmac-company-inc-v-zurich-insurance-company-ri-1975.