Thе appellant, Empire State Building Company (Empire), appeals from a jury verdict rendered in the District Court for Douglas County, Nebraska. The jury found for the appellee, Joseph C. Bryde (Bryde), and against Empire on Empire’s claim for damages caused by the alleged negligence of Bryde. For reasons more fully set out hereafter, we reverse and remand for new trial.
Empire is the owner of a commercial building in downtown Omaha, Nebraska. Bryde, one of Empire’s tenants, operated a Quik Print shop in space located on the street lеvel of Empire’s building. In addition to occupying the street-level storeroom,
It is undisputed that it was Bryde’s practice to take the trash accumulated from the daily operation of his business and place it in plastic garbage bags which were then clipped shut and piled in the basement area. The contents of the plastic bags consisted of shredded paper, plates used in the cameras, blotter stock paper used to clean the presses, smoking material, cotton swabs, and generally the trash from a normal business day.
Bryde stored the plastic bags in the basement until he felt there was a sufficient number to justify having them hauled away. At the time of the fire, there were at least 30 of such bags stacked in the basement of the Quik Print shop.
Vernon Trapp, chief of the arson bureau of the Omaha Fire Division, testified that the causе of the fire was the accumulation of trash in the basement of the Quik Print shop. A second witness for Empire supported this view. Both witnesses testified that “but for” the storing of the trash, the fire would not have occurred.
The first assignment of error we consider, and the one material to our dеcision herein, concerns the instruction given by the trial court to the jury over the objection of Empire. The trial court first instructed the jury regarding the pleadings filed by Empire. In its instruction, the trial court advised the jury: “The plaintiff alleges in its Second Amended Petition that the defendant was negligent in the following respects:
“1. In stacking discarded trash in plastic bags containing paper and other debris and leaving same in the premises occupied by the defendant;
“2. In permitting flammable fluids to be discarded in plastic bags with paper therein and leaving same in the prеmises occupied by defendant;
“3. In permitting plastic bags containing discarded cigarettes and other refuse to be stacked in the basement of the premises occupied by the defendant along with paper and other refuse.”
The trial court then instructed the jury: “Plaintiff furthеr alleges that the aforementioned negligence of the defendant was the sole and proximate cause of the fire, doing damage to the building of the plaintiff . . . .” The trial court then properly instructed the jury that plaintiff further alleged “said fire . . . started in the discarded trash by rеason of the ignition of the fluids and paper contained in the plastic bags referred to in the foregoing specifications of negligence, either by ignition caused by a cigarette or by spontaneous combustion of the papers and fluid contained in said plastic bags.” Indeed, there was no error in this portion of the instruction, for the court properly advised the jury what it was that the plaintiff had alleged.
However, in a subsequent instruction, the trial court instructed the jury as follows: “Before the
plaintiff can recover, the burden is upon the рlaintiff to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, each and all of the following elements or propositions:
“1. That the defendant was negligent in one or more of the elements or particulars numbered and stated in Instruction No. 2.
“2. That said negligenсe, if any, of the defendant was the proximate cause, or a proximately contributing cause, of the fire.
“3. That as the direct and proximate result of said negligence of the defendant and resultant occurrence the plaintiff sustained damages.
“4. The amount in money of the damages thus sustained.”
That portion of the instruction was indeed correct and properly instructed the
It is in this regard we believe that the trial court was in error. The authorities have made it clear that there really are several different and distinct causes of action relating to fires. One, оf course, is the negligent setting of a fire. Another, however, is the negligent storing of combustible material without regard to how the fire started. In 35 Am. Jur. 2d Fires § 27 at 607 (1967), the author notes: “Liability for damage caused by the spread of fire from defendant’s premises may be predicated on his negligence in keeping his premises in such a condition that such a result was likely. So, where one negligently stores combustible material on his property in such a way that it is reasonably foreseeable that fires will start thereon and spread to the property of another, he may be held liable for damage caused when this occurs, although the fire starts accidentally. ...”
Two decisions, among many, supporting this view are
Quaker Oats Co. v. Grice,
We are unable to find any case in Nebraska which has directly addressed this point. Cases from other jurisdictions, as already noted, have made it clear that liability for damages caused by a fire are not limited only to those who actually ignited the fire but may also extend to those who so negligently maintain their premises that it can be said that the resulting damages
In the case of
Arneil v. Schnitzer,
The cause of action involved herein, as alleged by Empire, was not the negligent starting of a fire, but the negligent maintaining of the premises which, when confronted by fire, proximately caused the damages to Empire and which, but for the negligent maintaining of the premises, would not have resulted in the damages. The cause of action, therefore, is not for negligently starting a fire but, rather, for negligently storing combustible material on the premises.
The question that must therefore be answered is what is the burden of proof imposed upon one who seeks to recover damages for another’s negligently maintaining a premise which proximately cаuses damages to the plaintiff. To answer that question we must examine what it means to have “the burden of proof” in a particular cause of action.
It is elemental that the plaintiff is only required to assume the burden of proof of those elements necessary to еstablish his cause of action even if he unnecessarily pleads matters which are not necessary elements of the cause of action. In
Carlson v. Nelson,
In the instant case, the cause of action was founded upon the negligent storing of the material, as opposed to the negligent starting of a fire. Therefore, how the fire started was of no moment insofar as plaintiff’s cause of action was concerned.
While it is true that Empire invited some of its difficulty by pleading a matter which it was not required to plead, that does not permit the court to instruct the jury on that matter, particularly where an objection is raised. We noted in
Several other errors are assigned by Empire. In view, however, of the action we take herein, we deem those errors not necessary for our consideration at this time. The judgment is reversed and the case remanded with instructions to grant a new trial.
Reversed and remanded
FOR A NEW TRIAL.
