Do I Have to Save the Entire Fire Scene?
20 Tips for Determining the Cause of a Fire Loss Without Spoiling the Evidence
- To subrogate a fire loss, you must determine the causes of the loss.
- Knowing the causes of the fire loss, you can determine the responsible parties.
- Fires result from the combination of a fuel and an ignition source.
- Identify potential ignition source
- Identify potential fuels.
- Identify the sequence of events that caused the ignition source and fuel to come together.
- Liquids don't burn, vapors do.
- Natural gas is lighter than air.
- If natural gas is the fuel, the fire is probably up high.
- Debris removal may be necessary to get to the evidence.
- Debris removal is done after documentation; spoliation is a concern, but needlessly putting parties on notice is as big a concern.
- As soon as possible, potential parties are identified and put on notice.
- For a gas fire, you may want to pressure test the gas piping.
- Do not use test pressures that are too high for testing gas lines.
- A gas test can eliminate a pre-fire gas leak but will not necessarily prove it.
- Unscrewing joints may destroy evidence: don't do it.
- Identify all appliances that need to be collected.
- All parties need to agree on the evidence to be saved.
- All parties need to agree on a written protocol for all tests before the testing is performed.
- Don't forget things in the origin area that need to be evaluated.
Conclusions:
- It is critical to preserve whatever evidence can be saved for as long as reasonably possible.
- Potential claimants must give notice to all interested parties as quickly as possible.
- There are high standards when it comes to saving evidence from a fire loss.
- A defendant has a duty to investigate once it is provided a notice of a fire loss.
- A defendant has to be allowed a reasonable time to perform their investigation.
- You do not have to save the entire fire scene.