Howard Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 2021
Docket21-5186
StatusUnpublished

This text of Howard Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co. (Howard Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co., (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0446n.06

No. 21-5186

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Sep 30, 2021 HOWARD ANTHONY JESMER, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE WESTERN ERIE INSURANCE COMPANY, ) DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE ) Defendant-Appellee. ) )

BEFORE: SUTTON, Chief Judge; McKEAGUE and WHITE, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Howard “Anthony” Jesmer (Jesmer)

appeals the grant of summary judgment against him in this insurance coverage dispute. Jesmer

argues that the district court erred in concluding that his answer to a question on an insurance

application rendered his policy void under Tennessee law. We AFFIRM.

I.

A.

This action concerns coverage under an insurance policy issued to Jesmer by Defendant-

Appellee Erie Insurance Company (Erie). On January 30, 2018, Jesmer applied for property

insurance to cover “comprehensive perils” to his home at 310 Fields Drive in Arlington,

Tennessee.1 R. 24-5, PID 147. As part of the application process, Jesmer and his father, Howard

1 As Jesmer notes in his brief, the application signatories mistakenly dated the application “January 30, 2017,” when the correct date was January 30, 2018. The district court also cited this incorrect date. The policy’s stated “origin date” is “02/2018,” and the policy period extended from February 1, 2018 to February 1, 2019. R. 24-5, PID 147. No. 21-5186, Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co.

Jesmer (Howard), met with an Erie agent at 310 Fields Drive. Jesmer answered the insurance

application’s questions about the property. As Jesmer answered the questions orally, the insurance

agent completed the written questionnaire. Jesmer answered “no” to the question “Is Applicant

conducting any business or occupational pursuits at the premises?” Id. at PID 148. The application

required that applicants provide “true and complete answers to the questions in this application”

and warned that “[a]n incorrect answer, intentional or not, to any information may jeopardize

[Erie’s] acceptance of this application.” Id. at PID 148; R. 25-1, PID 168–69. Jesmer and the

agent signed the completed application. Jesmer “glanced” at the application before signing it. R.

25-1, PID 169–70. Erie issued a policy on the 310 Fields Drive property providing coverage for

certain residential and property losses from February 1, 2018 to February 1, 2019.

In October 2018, Jesmer filed a timely proof of loss under the insurance policy stating that

a “fire of unknown origin [had] completely burned [his] dwelling and all its contents.” R. 1-2,

PID 5. Jesmer claimed $760,732.96 in covered losses. Erie denied Jesmer’s claim, and its agent

subsequently informed Jesmer’s counsel that the claim had been denied, in part, because

[a]t the time the application for insurance was completed, Mr. Jesmer was working in a business owned by his father known as H&M Recycling. That business was being operated from the Insured location which involved keeping tow trucks and vehicles on the premises. After Mr. Jesmer’s father moved from the insured location, Mr. Jesmer continued the business from the premises.2

R. 1-3, PID 24.

In October 2019, Jesmer sued Erie in state court to recover benefits under the insurance

policy, and Erie removed the case to federal court.

2 Erie also informed Jesmer that it had denied his claim due to “post-loss misrepresentations,” including disputed ownership of the property and an apparent attempt to sell it. R. 1-3, PID 24. However, these issues were not addressed by the district court and are not before us.

-2- No. 21-5186, Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co.

B.

It is undisputed that at the time Jesmer signed the insurance application, he was working

for his father Howard’s towing company, H&M Auto Recycling (H&M), and had been doing so

since approximately the age of seventeen. H&M acquires automobiles and either disassembles

them for scrap or fixes them for resale. In approximately 2015, Howard moved the business from

its previous location in Mississippi to the 310 Fields Drive property. Jesmer testified at

deposition that his work for H&M consisted of “picking up vehicles” and driving them wherever

directed by his father. R. 24-4, PID 139 (“My dad, he calls me, and he says go pick up this, and

I go . . . . I go from Memphis – I can go from Memphis to pretty much anywhere, go to Nashville,

over to Oklahoma, everywhere.”). H&M paid Jesmer $1,000 in cash weekly to do this work. It is

undisputed that Jesmer regularly kept H&M tow trucks at 310 Fields Drive for use when

dispatched on a call.

Howard’s deposition testimony described a more expansive version of Jesmer’s role in the

business. Howard explained that Jesmer was “steadily . . . running” the H&M business “at [the

310 Fields Drive] house” while Howard was “opening up the other tow yard in Orange Beach.”

R. 24-3, PID 130. Howard explained that Jesmer’s job was to “run” the business from the property,

id., and that it was helpful for Jesmer to live at the house because doing so would prevent people

from “stealing” the company vehicles. Id. at PID 132–33 (answering “Yeah, [Jesmer] was living

there” in response to the question “What was keeping them from stealing things[--]was someone

living in the house?”). Howard additionally confirmed that “[e]ight [tow] trucks that [Jesmer]

runs” were “operating out of 310 Fields Drive until the fire loss,” and then later clarified that “four

to eight” tow trucks “always were at 310” at any given time, in addition to “whatever personal

vehicles” had been towed there. Id. at PID 133–34. Howard also said that the company would

-3- No. 21-5186, Jesmer v. Erie Ins. Co.

stow the towed vehicles at 310 Fields Drive “when [a vehicle] c[a]me[] in really late or if [the

customer] c[ouldn]’t buy it until the next day or the next week.” R. 25-1, PID 178.

Jesmer attested in an affidavit that he “do[es] not have any ownership interest in H&M

Recycling,” that he works as “a tow truck driver for H&M Recycling,” that “[t]he only time a

vehicle from a tow was brought back to 310 Fields Drive, Arlington, Tennessee was if it was to[o]

late to deliver the vehicle to its desired location,” that “[i]f [he] brought a vehicle back to 310

Fields Drive, Arlington, Tennessee it would be delivered to its destination the next day,” and that

“[v]ehicles were rarely brought to 310 Fields, Arlington, Tennessee.” R. 26, PID 183.

Lisa Keller, an underwriter for Erie who was familiar with the insurance policy issued to

Jesmer, stated in an affidavit attached to Erie’s summary judgment motion that “[h]ad the

application submitted by Anthony Jesmer disclosed that he was operating his father’s business out

of the insured premises the policy would not have been written because Erie Insurance Company’s

risk of loss would have increased.” R. 24-6, PID 151–52.

Based on this record, Erie moved for summary judgment on the ground that Jesmer’s

insurance policy was void ab initio due to a material misrepresentation regarding business

activities on the premises. The district court agreed and granted summary judgment to Erie.

II.

This court reviews an order granting or denying summary judgment de novo. Patton v.

Bearden, 8 F.3d 343, 346 (6th Cir. 1993).

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