Estate of Seaman ex rel. Seaman v. Hacker Hauling

840 F. Supp. 2d 1106, 2011 WL 6938346
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedOctober 18, 2011
DocketNo. C10-4094-MWB
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 840 F. Supp. 2d 1106 (Estate of Seaman ex rel. Seaman v. Hacker Hauling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Seaman ex rel. Seaman v. Hacker Hauling, 840 F. Supp. 2d 1106, 2011 WL 6938346 (N.D. Iowa 2011).

Opinion

AMENDED ORDER

PAUL A. ZOSS, United States Chief Magistrate Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the defendants’ motion for sanctions. Doc. No. 19. The plaintiff resisted the motion (Doc. No. 22), and the defendants filed a reply (Doc. No. 23). The Court heard telephonic oral arguments on the motion on October 7, 2011. During the telephone conference, the parties were offered an opportunity to present evidence at an in-court hearing, but declined. The motion now is fully submitted.

BACKGROUND

On the morning of January 25, 2010, Candace Seaman was driving southbound on Interstate 29 in Monona County, Iowa, in her Chrysler Cirrus. Blizzard-like weather conditions, including high winds [1108]*1108and blowing snow together with drifts and snow-packed pavement, made traveling on the highway treacherous, so Seaman pulled over to the right shoulder. Saber Amin was following Seaman in a Chevrolet Geo Tracker,' and he pulled over behind Seaman. Later, Seaman pulled back onto the highway, and Amin followed suit. The two vehicles collided and spun out of control.

Defendant Wade Harrington was traveling southbound on Interstate 29 in a Volvo semi tractor-trailer owned by defendant Hacker Hauling. He came upon the spinning vehicles and struck the rear end of Seaman’s vehicle. Amin and Harrington were not hurt in the collision, but Seaman was seriously injured and died the next day.

Because of the poor highway conditions and inclement weather, the Iowa State Patrol was unable to make any measurements or conduct a detailed site or vehicle inspection. Patrol officers had the wreckage of the Seaman vehicle towed to Schroder’s Services, Inc., in Onawa, Iowa, where it was placed in storage.

The defendants’ insurer, Western National Insurance Company (“Western National”), was notified of these events on the day of the accident and immediately assigned a claim representative, Katie Scanlan, to the file. On February 2, a week after the accident, Western National received a letter from attorney John Gray stating that his law firm had been retained to represent the Seaman estate and Seaman’s husband, Paul Seaman. Gray requested that the semi tractor not be repaired and that the semi’s “black'box” be retained. Scanlan called Gray the following day, February 3, and advised him that repairs to the semi tractor had been suspended. She also told him that Western National would be assigning an appraiser to look at Seaman’s Chrysler and take some photographs, and that the appraiser would be contacting him to find out where the vehicle was being stored. On February 3, Gray also retained Jeffrey Peterson, an engineer specializing in accident reconstruction, “to reconstruct the accident to determine the speed of the Harrington Volvo semi tractor and trailer at the time of the crash.” Doc. No. 19-2 at 52. About the same time, Western National hired forensic collision analyst Roger Burgmeier to investigate the accident on its behalf.

On February 11, Scanlan and Gray agreed that Burgmeier would download the semi’s black box/electronic control module (“ECM”) without Peterson being present, with the understanding that Western National would share the results of the download with Peterson when. Western National received them. In Scanlan’s notes, she wrote that she expected Burgmeier to inspect the Seaman vehicle as early as February 12. Doc. No. 22-2 at 34. That did not happen. On February 12, Burgmeier photographed the Harrington semi tractor and downloaded its ECM, but did not inspect the Seaman vehicle.

On February 24, Gray called Scanlan to make arrangements for Peterson to inspect and photograph the semi tractor. During the conversation, Scanlan informed Gray that an “independent appraiser” would be contacting him to make arrangements to see the Seaman vehicle. On March 2, the appraiser went to the Schroder Services storage lot and photographed the Seaman vehicle. Western National obviously knew where the vehicle was being stored, but did not notify Gray in advance that the Seaman vehicle was being photographed that day. On March 4, Peterson, plaintiffs expert, inspected both the Seaman vehicle and the semi tractor. Western National was not notified in advance that Peterson was inspecting the Seaman vehicle that day.

On March 12, Gray called Scanlan and informed her that Peterson had completed [1109]*1109his inspection of the semi tractor and that it could be repaired. Gray inquired about the download results from the semi tractor’s ECM and was told that Western National had not yet received them. Gray did not tell Scanlan that a few days earlier a Highway Patrol officer had called his office and advised him that the Patrol no longer needed to have the Seaman vehicle stored (Doc. No. 19-2 at 32-33; Doc. No. 22-2 at 46), or that the day before the March 12 telephone call his office had negotiated the transfer of the Seaman vehicle to Schroder Services in exchange for storage fees (Doc. No. 22-2 at 46). On the other hand, Scanlan did not tell Gray that Western National wanted to have an expert inspect the wreckage of Seaman’s Chrysler.

On March 19, a week after Gray’s call to Scanlan, and 53 days after the accident, Paul Seaman transferred title to the Seaman vehicle to Schroder Services to satisfy a $1,325 claim for storage fees. Doc. No. 22-2 at 47. The Seaman vehicle then was crushed for scrap. The data from the ECM in the Seaman vehicle was not downloaded or otherwise preserved. Western National was not notified in advance that title to the vehicle was being transferred to a third party or that the vehicle was going to be crushed.

On March 25, Scanlan contacted Burgmeier and asked him to travel to Iowa to inspect the Seaman wreckage. On March 31, before Burgmeier took any action on this request, Gray wrote a letter to Scanlan asking about the results of the download, which he had not yet received.1 At the end of the letter, he stated the following:

[T]he towing charge bill from Schroder Services Inc. is enclosed. Our firm made the payment, but we will be looking to add this to the list of damages. The Schroder Services also alleged a storage fee of $1,325; this was satisfied by allowing Schroeder to salvage the 2000 Chrysler Cirrus LXI.

Doc. No. 22-2 at 48. It is likely that the Seaman vehicle was crushed before Gray wrote this letter.2 On May 6, 2010, 101 days after the accident, Burgmeier contacted Gray to arrange for an inspection of the Seaman vehicle. Doc. No. 22-2 at 52. Gray advised Burgmeier that the vehicle had been sold and scrapped. On September 1, Gray, on behalf of the Seaman estate, sent a letter to Western National demanding compensation for damages arising out of the accident in the amount of $1,381,161.30. Doc. No. 19-2 at 44-50.

On September 8, Burgmeier notified Scanlan by letter that he had completed his review of the facts surrounding the collision. Doc. No. 22-2 at 35-36. He stated that the plaintiffs failure to preserve the “critical evidence” of the salvage remains of the Seaman vehicle “effectively eliminate[d] the opportunity to precisely evaluate the impact speed of the Volvo truck.” Nevertheless, Burgmeier opined “with absolute certainty” that Seaman’s and Amin’s driving conduct before the collision “directly contributed to the cause of this collision.

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Bluebook (online)
840 F. Supp. 2d 1106, 2011 WL 6938346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-seaman-ex-rel-seaman-v-hacker-hauling-iand-2011.