Adams v. J. Meyers Builders, Inc.

671 F. Supp. 2d 262, 2009 DNH 181, 81 Fed. R. Serv. 212, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113855, 2009 WL 4348675
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 2, 2009
DocketCivil 08-cv-425-JL
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 671 F. Supp. 2d 262 (Adams v. J. Meyers Builders, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. J. Meyers Builders, Inc., 671 F. Supp. 2d 262, 2009 DNH 181, 81 Fed. R. Serv. 212, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113855, 2009 WL 4348675 (D.N.H. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

JOSEPH N. LAPLANTE, District Judge.

Tracy and Paul Adams have sued J. Myers Builders, Inc. (“Myers”) for negligently starting a fire that destroyed their home and its contents. A Myers employee allegedly caused the fire by improperly disposing of material contaminated with a wood preservative, which combusted. Each party moves in limine to preclude certain of the other party’s expert witnesses from testifying at the upcoming jury trial; the Adamses have also moved in limine to exclude any reference to their property insurance, which compensated them for some, but not all, of their losses. This court has subject-matter jurisdiction over this matter between the Adamses, Maryland citizens, and Myers, a New Hampshire corporation, under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) (diversity).

After oral argument, the court grants the Adamses’ motion to exclude Myers’s damages experts and any reference to the Adamses’ property insurance, and denies Myers’s motions to exclude the Adamses’ liability and damages experts. Because Myers failed to provide timely reports from its damages experts as required by Rule 26(a)(2)(B), those witnesses cannot testify at trial by operation of Rule 37(c)(1). No report was required of the Adamses’ damages expert under Rule 26(a)(2)(B), however, and their liability expert employed a sufficiently reliable methodology so as to testify to his conclusions at trial. Finally, evidence of the Myers’s property insurance is inadmissible under Rule 411 of the Federal Rules of Evidence.

I. Background

The Adamses entered into a written contract with Myers to build them a custom home in Littleton, New Hampshire, just north of Franconia Notch in the White Mountains. While Myers was at work on the house, the Adamses moved into a rental property nearby. After that property was sold to a third party, requiring the Adamses to move out, Myers agreed to finish one or two rooms in the Littleton house so that the Adamses could begin living there, even though construction was still incomplete.

The Adamses moved their furniture and other belongings into the unfinished home, storing most of the items in the basement. At that point, much of the home had been wired for electricity, including outlet boxes, though the sockets had not been installed. The Adamses took up residence in one of the bedrooms, plugging a lamp into an extension cord that Myers employees had run from the house’s switchboard.

On July 4, 2007, a day or two after the Adamses had moved in, a Myers employee, William Blay, was at work in a corner of the basement, preparing cedar shakes for installation on the exterior of the home. This process involved dipping each shake by hand into a five-gallon tub of a Sikkens brand wood preservative, “Cetol SRD,” *265 wiping off the excess with a sponge, and placing the shake into another five-gallon tub to dry. The shakes were then leaned along the basement wall to rest atop strips of cardboard and wood laid over plastic sheeting. The label on the Cetol container warned that “WASTE SOAKED WITH CETOL SRD MAY SPONTANEOUSLY CATCH FIRE IF IMPROPERLY DISCARDED. IMMEDIATELY AFTER EACH USE, PLACE ... WASTE IN A SEALED, WATER-FILLED METAL CONTAINER.” Blay did not read this warning, but still knew that wood preservative could spontaneously ignite.

Blay has since stated that, when he finished working that day, he discarded latex gloves and at least one paper towel he had used in the dipping process — and which were contaminated with the preservative— into a plastic garbage bag. The parties dispute whether Blay discarded only the gloves and a single paper towel that he used to wipe his hands at the day’s end, or additional paper towels, and whether Blay left the garbage bag in the area of the basement where he had been working, or disposed of it in a trash bin elsewhere on the property. 1 Blay has also testified that a piece of the Adamses’ furniture, a box spring, had been left leaning up against an outlet box in the area of the basement where he had been working. The Adams-es, however, maintain that there were no electrical outlets or wiring, or even any electrical tools or appliances, in that area, save for an overhead light fixture with no bulb in it.

That night, in the bedroom where the Adamses were staying, Tracy Adams noticed a pungent smell. Later, on Paul Adams’s way to the basement to shut off the lights for the evening, he encountered “grayish-black” smoke coming up the basement stairs. As he descended he saw flames and black smoke emanating from the corner of the basement where Blay had been working. By the time the Little-ton Fire Department had arrived, fire was venting from all windows and doors in the rear portion of the structure. Despite the department’s efforts, the fire soon engulfed the whole building, which eventually collapsed. The entire home and nearly all of its contents were destroyed.

Within the next few days, Timothy Austin, an investigator retained by the Adams-es’ property insurer, examined the scene of the fire and interviewed Blay and the Adamses. Austin, a certified fire investigator, has worked in that capacity for more than 20 years, analyzing the cause and origin of approximately 12,000 fires and testifying in a number of cases in state and federal court. Based on his investigation of the fire at the Adamses’ home, Austin determined that the contaminated materials Blay placed in the garbage bag in the basement had spontaneously ignited, with the flames quickly spreading to the cedar shakes he left drying nearby. 2

In support of this finding, Austin relied on the pungent odor Mrs. Adams had noticed, which he considered “consistent” with the debris in the garbage bag “heating up and off-gassing just prior to flaming ignition,” as well as Mr. Adams’s account *266 that he had discovered the fire “in the exact location where Mr. Blay was dipping cedar shake shingles earlier that day.” Austin also ruled out all other imaginable causes of the fire, including an electrical one (he found no sources of electricity near the fire’s origin) and arson, by the Adams-es or someone else (he found no evidence of that, either).

Thus, Austin concluded, Blay had caused the fire by disposing of materials containing the wood preservative in a manner contrary to that specified by the warning label. Austin did not, however, conduct his own test of the potential for the wood preservative to spontaneously ignite, rejecting that step as unnecessary in light of the label — which, in his view, reflected that the manufacturer had already conducted such tests itself.

The Adamses filed a claim with their property insurer, OneBeacon Insurance Company, seeking more than $1 million in losses they sustained in the fire, including nearly $440,000 in lost personal property. Following an analysis by Dean Zwicker, a OneBeacon employee with 25 years’ experience adjusting property damage claims, OneBeacon paid the Adamses the maximum available under their policy, which did not entirely cover their loss.

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Bluebook (online)
671 F. Supp. 2d 262, 2009 DNH 181, 81 Fed. R. Serv. 212, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113855, 2009 WL 4348675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-j-meyers-builders-inc-nhd-2009.