What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Oregon
I had a house fire recently at a rental property I was living at, resulting in something like $200k worth of damage. I did not have renter's insurance (but I do now!). From what I have heard, the fire investigator believes the cause was a guest's cigarette butt (I don't smoke) that had been incompletely extinguished in a flower pot, and caught the pot on fire. In conversations immediately following the fire, everything I heard sounded positive for the whole thing to be written off as an accident. However, I got a scary letter the other day from my landlord's insurance company, stating that their investigation so far indicates I may be liable due to negligence. They want to talk to me before they conclude the investigation.
My questions:
1. Am I definitely liable for the actions (including negligence) of my guests? If the guest in question is willing to explicitly assume liability, can I be relieved of it myself?
2. Was it actually negligent to extinguish a cigarette in a flower pot? It's an easy mistake to make, to think that this is safe, being ignorant of the fact that bits of dry plant matter could smolder and be sufficient to ignite a blaze in a pot of dirt. Since the fire I've heard multiple stories from people about this happening, but it still sort of surprises me -- we tend to think of dirt as not being flammable. In any case, ignorance is not the same as negligence, is it? Why should this be considered negligence?
3. If the insurance company finds me liable, should I fight it in court?
4. Am I required to talk to the insurance company? Is it a good idea?
I had a house fire recently at a rental property I was living at, resulting in something like $200k worth of damage. I did not have renter's insurance (but I do now!). From what I have heard, the fire investigator believes the cause was a guest's cigarette butt (I don't smoke) that had been incompletely extinguished in a flower pot, and caught the pot on fire. In conversations immediately following the fire, everything I heard sounded positive for the whole thing to be written off as an accident. However, I got a scary letter the other day from my landlord's insurance company, stating that their investigation so far indicates I may be liable due to negligence. They want to talk to me before they conclude the investigation.
My questions:
1. Am I definitely liable for the actions (including negligence) of my guests? If the guest in question is willing to explicitly assume liability, can I be relieved of it myself?
2. Was it actually negligent to extinguish a cigarette in a flower pot? It's an easy mistake to make, to think that this is safe, being ignorant of the fact that bits of dry plant matter could smolder and be sufficient to ignite a blaze in a pot of dirt. Since the fire I've heard multiple stories from people about this happening, but it still sort of surprises me -- we tend to think of dirt as not being flammable. In any case, ignorance is not the same as negligence, is it? Why should this be considered negligence?
3. If the insurance company finds me liable, should I fight it in court?
4. Am I required to talk to the insurance company? Is it a good idea?