46 Va. Cir. 323 | Norfolk Cir. Ct. | 1998
The Court has reviewed carefully the motions for summary judgment filed by each of the parties, the applicable pleadings, memoranda supporting the motions, and the applicable legal authority. The agreed issue is the applicability of the “fireman’s rale” to the factual allegations of this particular case.
Plaintiff argues that the 1992 amendment to Va. Code § 8.01-226 effectively abrogated the fireman’s rale. It is the Court’s view that the language of the amendment does not eliminate this long-held doctrine and further, had the Legislature intended that result, they would have acted in a more specific way. At the time the amendment was enacted, the combined cases in Benefiel v. Walker, 244 Va. 488 (1992), were pending before the Supreme Court. These cases involved third party negligence, and in both cases, lower courts had denied recovery based on applicability of the fireman’s rale. The 1992 legislative enactment seemed designed to address the very same issue subsequently decided by the Supreme Court in Beneflel. In Beneflel, the Court was very careful to draw the distinction between those situations where the injury occurred from the very circumstance which gave rise to the emergency and those circumstances where the negligent act was subsequent to that giving rise to the emergency. This Court finds that the ordinary care duty contained in the 1992 amendment applies to those circumstances set forth in Beneflel which did not constitute a risk of injury inherent in the plaintiffs employment.
For the reasons stated, both the motions for summary judgment are overruled.