Gayhart v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 4, 2025
Docket7:23-cv-01680
StatusUnknown

This text of Gayhart v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company (Gayhart v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gayhart v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company, (E.D.N.C. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA SOUTHERN DIVISION Case No. 7:23-CV-01680-M

SHERI ANN GAYHART, ) Plaintiff, V. ORDER SOUTHERN FARM BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, ) Defendant.

This matter comes before the court on Defendant Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company’s (the “Defendant’s”) motion for partial summary judgment [DE 25], Plaintiff Sheri Ann Gayhart’s (the “Plaintiff’s”) motion for partial summary judgment [DE 29], and Plaintiff's motion in limine [DE 33]. For the reasons that follow, Defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part, and denied in part as moot, Plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment is denied, nud Plaintiff's motion in limine is denied in part and denied in part without prejudice. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The following facts are undisputed, except where noted: Plaintiff is a citizen and resident of Onslow County, North Carolina. DE 26 at 1. She is married to Chester Gayhart. Jd. The Gayhart’s son is Craig Evan Gayhart, now deceased (“Decedent’’). Jd.; DE 30 at 1.

Decedent was born in May 2001. DE 30 at 1. He graduated from high school in June 2020 and began working as an emergency medical technician (“EMT”). /d. Decedent lived with his parents in Jacksonville, North Carolina. /d. The year before Decedent graduated from high school, Plaintiff obtained a life insurance policy (the “Policy’’) for him, which Defendant issued. DE 26 at 2; DE 31-1 at 21-22. The Policy listed Decedent as the Primary Insured and Plaintiff as the Owner of the Policy. /d.; DE 31-1 at 21-22. The face amount of the Policy was $250,000. Jd. The Policy also had a Children’s Term Rider (the “Rider”), which would pay out $20,000 in the event that a child of the Insured died while the Rider was in force. Jd. at 2-3; see also DE 27-2 at 3-4. The Policy contains an Incontestability Clause, which provides that, subject to one exception not relevant here, Defendant may not contest the Policy “after it has been in force during the lifetime of the Insured for two years.” /d. at 2; see also DE 27-2 at 3. The Policy also contains a Suicide Clause, which states that “[{i]f the Insured dies by suicide while sane or insane within two years from the Date of Issue . . ., the total liability of [Defendant] will be limited to the refund of the premiums actually paid.” /d.; see also DE 27-2 at 3. The term “suicide” is not defined in the Policy. See id. On August 18, 2021, approximately 21 months after the Policy issued, Plaintiff and her husband went to a local fast-food restaurant to pick up dinner. /d. at 3. Decedent was at their home. Jd. Plaintiff texted Decedent to ask whether he wanted any food, to which Decedent responded: “I’m fine, Thank You. Goodnight.” Jd. Plaintiff and her husband returned home to find Decedent on the kitchen floor with a gunshot wound to his head. /d. at 3-4; DE 27-9 at 5; DE 27-10 at 4-5. Plaintiff called 911 and reported that Decedent killed himself. /d.; DE 27-9 at 5.

Law enforcement arrived on the scene shortly before 7:00 p.m. DE 27-11 at 2. An officer located Decedent “laying in the supine position on the kitchen floor.” Jd. at 4. Decedent’s □□□□□ was up against the base of the refrigerator and his feet were near the cabinets by the sink.” Jd. Decedent, who has right-handed, had an entrance wound on the right side of his head above his right ear, and an exit wound on the left side of his head. DE 27-10 at 4; DE 31-1 at 108. On the kitchen counter, the officer observed “a silver Smith & Wesson revolver that appeared to have blood and human hair on the muzzle,” indicating that the firearm was pressed to the side of Decedent’s head when it fired. DE 27-11 at 4; see also DE 27-10 at 4 (reflecting “C shaped barrel mark to the top of the [entrance] wound”’); DE 31-5 at 11; DE 36-3 at 26. Nearby, on the stove, was “a cell phone playing a video.” Jd. The officer could not locate a pulse on Decedent, and “‘did not perform any life saving measures” because “the sustained injury” was “incompatible with life.” Jd. Another officer arrived on the scene shortly thereafter. Jd. at 5. Law enforcement conducted ‘“‘a security sweep of the residence” but “did not locate any other persons.” Jd. They also did not “observe any evidence” that would “indicate a struggle took place.” Jd. Detective Tollefsrud, a detective with the Onslow County Sheriff's Office, arrived next. Id. at 6. He interviewed Mr. Gayhart, Plaintiff's husband. Jd. Mr. Gayhart indicated that his son “has never been suicidal,” but “does have a sick sense of humor’ and “has made suicidal comments,” but that “no one has ever taken it seriously” because Decedent “always” said he was “Just joking.” /d. at 7. Detective Tollefsrud interviewed Plaintiff next. Jd. Plaintiff stated that “she keeps a revolver .. . in the kitchen cabinet by the sink.” Jd. The gun was kept “fully loaded with live

rounds.” /d. In addition, the kitchen cabinet “has clear glass on the doors,” so “anyone could have seen the gun in the cabinet.”’ Jd. Further investigation revealed several “live rounds of .38 special ammunition laying on the floor.” Jd. Law enforcement found “one spent cartridge” in the gun, which was “in the ‘12:00’ position,” such that “the bullet would have had to be placed perfectly for it to be aligned in going off.” Id. at 7-8. Decedent’s phone was “playing . . . a music video” on “youtube,” and “was hooked to Bluetooth via a ear piece which was laying on the floor under” Decedent. Jd. at 8. “Detective Tollefsrud went through” Decedent’s phone while on the scene and found “nothing suspicious.” Id. He also searched Decedent’s bedroom “and found nothing suspicious.” Jd. Subsequent investigation by law enforcement revealed additional evidence on Decedent’s phone. First, approximately one hour before his death, Decedent was in the process of drafting an email to his manager at work. See DE 31-3 at 1. The draft message highlights a series of workplace concerns, including that Decedent and his fellow “EMTs are overworked and truly underpaid.” Id. at 3. The record does not reflect that Decedent ever sent the email to his manager. In addition, Detective Tollefsrud located a note on Decedent’s phone entitled “If I Die — Kinda Will.” DE 27-11 at 9. The note explains Decedent’s desired funeral arrangements, a general plan for disposition of his possessions, and includes messages to certain family and friends. DE 31-3 at 6-10. The note bears a time stamp reflecting that it was last edited on September 6, 2020, nearly one year before Decedent’s death, but this evidence is disputed. See id. at 6; see also DE 49-1 at 2 (deposition testimony indicating that “last modified date” of note “was actually May 13™

of 2024”)!. In her deposition, Plaintiff stated that she told Decedent “to make . . . a will,” so that she would “know what [Decedent] wanted done with [his] things if something happened.” DE 31- 1 at 125. After securing and processing the scene, law enforcement contacted Nurse Sharon Brookins, the medical examiner for Onslow County. DE 27-16 at 3. Around 9:00 p.m. that evening, Brookins said that ‘as of now no autopsy would be performed” and that the incident would be classified as “an accidentail [sic] shooting death,” because “there was no suicidal history and Decedent could have “just been playing with the gun,” resulting in “an accident.” DE 27-11 at 8. A “Preliminary Summary” by Brookins further reflects that Decedent had “‘no known medical history,” “no history of substance” or alcohol “abuse,” and “no history of depression or suicidal ideation.” DE 27-10 at 5. Decedent also had “a full time job and work friends he socializes with.” Id. Because law enforcement “did not find any [evidence of] premeditation,” such as a “suicide note,” Brookins determined “Decedent’s Death . . . to be Accidental.” Jd.

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Gayhart v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gayhart-v-southern-farm-bureau-life-insurance-company-nced-2025.