I've done a lot of triac circuits of late, and when the load is inductive, you use a resistor and cap in series on the output, as Dave said earlier, to get rid of the dv/dt caused by the inductive load. The pair is typically called a "snubber." It serves the exact same purpose as a reverse-biased diode across a (DC) relay coil when it's controlled by a transistor.
Recall that inductors resist change in current by "supplying" voltage. If the voltage gets high enough - as it does when the circuit is abruptly turned off instantaneously zeroing the current - then it will falsely trigger the SCR (or triac, which is not much more than two back-to-back SCRs with a common gate).
Now, whether the cap in this case is acting as a snubber or not... that I'm not sure.