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PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Monday, May 6, 2024

After two girls die in house fire, lawsuit filed against property owner, manager in Lancaster County

State Court
Richardlorwig

Orwig | Orwig Law Offices

LANCASTER – The family of both a young woman and toddler who died in a residential structure fire in Columbia Borough in January 2020 have filed legal action for survival and wrongful death, against both the owner and property manager.

Michelle L. Hoffman (administratrix of the Estate of Cami Jo Combs) of Columbia and Austin Michael Flowers (administrator of the Estate of Callie Jo Flowers) of Marietta first filed suit in the Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas on Sept. 10 versus Ray M. Kreider of Columbia and Raymond J. Shade (a.k.a. Raymond Joseph Shade Jr.) of Manheim.

The suit explains on Jan. 4, the defendants were the owner and property manager, respectively, of a residential rental property located at 218 South 2nd Street in Columbia. The property was a two and a half-story brick exterior wood frame structure, including a full unimproved basement.

In April 2019, Kreider and Hoffman entered into a one-year lease agreement for the property, with a monthly rent total of $1,000 to be collected by Shade. Hoffman moved into the home in late April 2019, accompanied by Cami Jo Combs, 20; Callie Jo Flowers, 2; Tori Lefever, 25; Talia Rose Lefever and Talisha Arial Lefever, both 3; Charlie Combs, Cami Jo’s father, and Eric Rigglemen Jr., Cami Jo’s boyfriend.

“On the morning of Jan. 4, 2020, the plaintiff, her daughter Tori and Tori’s twin daughters prepared to leave the residence at approximately 9:15 a.m., for a scheduled doctor’s appointment concerning the minor children of Tori. On the morning of Jan. 4, 2020 and prior to leaving the residence that morning, neither Michelle L. Hoffman, nor her daughter Tori, operated the kitchen stove used for any purpose,” the suit says.

“At approximately 9:15 a.m. on Jan. 4, 2020, plaintiff, her daughter Tori Lefever and the two minor children left the residence to get into their automobile to drive to the medical appointment. At this time, Cami Jo Combs and her minor daughter Callie Jo Flowers remained sleeping in their second-floor bedroom. Prior to driving away to attend the medical appointment, Tori Lefever remembered that their pet dog had not been placed in the living room while they would be away. Tori Lefever returned into the house, sent into the kitchen area and removed from the kitchen floor a black plastic waste basket and placed it on top of the stove so the pet dog would not rummage through it during their absence. The family members then resumed their trip to the medical appointment.”

13 minutes later, the Lancaster County Wide Communications offices received a report of a residential fire in the property in question, including entrapment of persons in the building. After the Columbia Borough Fire Department arrived to the scene, it was noted that there were no smoke detectors or alarms sounding, and both Cami Jo and Callie Jo were unconscious and in cardiac arrest.

Both of them would succumb to burn injuries and smoke inhalation.

Subsequent investigation revealed that the home’s two smoke detectors did not emit any warning signals, and the suit charges the defendants with violating numerous safety and occupancy codes due to their alleged negligence in failing to correct this circumstance.

For multiple counts of wrongful death, survival, implied warranty of habitability, negligence, punitive damages and landlord-tenant violations, the plaintiffs are seeking compensatory damages, jointly and severally in excess of $50,000, plus interest, delay damages, costs and such other damages as the Court deems just and proper.

The plaintiffs are represented by Richard L. Orwig of Orwig Law Offices, in Wyomissing

The defendants have not yet secured legal counsel.

Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas case CI-21-06251

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com

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