Jerry Childress v. State Farm Fire and Casualty Company

96 F.3d 1438, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 28781, 1996 WL 521061
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 16, 1996
Docket95-1283
StatusUnpublished

This text of 96 F.3d 1438 (Jerry Childress v. State Farm Fire and Casualty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerry Childress v. State Farm Fire and Casualty Company, 96 F.3d 1438, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 28781, 1996 WL 521061 (4th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

96 F.3d 1438

NOTICE: Fourth Circuit Local Rule 36(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Fourth Circuit.
Jerry CHILDRESS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 95-1283.

United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

Argued March 6, 1996
Decided Sept. 16, 1996

ARGUED: Anthony Elmer Collins, Wise, Virginia, for Appellant. Howard Chowning McElroy, WHITE, BUNDY, MCELROY, HODGES & SARGENT, Abingdon, Virginia, for Appellee.

Before ERVIN and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge.

OPINION

ERVIN, Circuit Judge:

After a fire destroyed his house, Jerry Childress tried to recover under his State Farm Fire and Casualty Company homeowner's policy. State Farm denied the claim on the grounds that Childress had intentionally set the fire and had intentionally concealed or misrepresented material facts during the investigation. A jury found that State Farm had proven by clear and convincing evidence that Childress made material false statements during the investigation, but found that State Farm had not proven by clear and convincing evidence that Childress had intentionally started the fire.

Childress contends that he is entitled to a new trial because the jury's two-part verdict was inherently inconsistent. That argument fails. Because the responses to the two special interrogatories can be reconciled under several possible theories, the jury's resolution of this case must stand.

Childress further argues that the district court should have granted his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict,1 or in the alternative, for a new trial, because State Farm presented insufficient evidence to prove that he intentionally made false, material statements during the investigation. Again, Childress is not persuasive. State Farm presented enough evidence contradicting Childress's statements to have convinced a reasonable jury that Childress concealed or misrepresented material facts. We affirm.

I.

Jerry Childress's home in Dickenson County, Virginia, was destroyed by fire on Sunday night, June 13, 1993. Childress lived alone and was the sole named insured on a homeowner's insurance policy in effect at the time of the fire.

According to Childress, there had been an electrical storm on the Saturday night before the fire. On Sunday morning, only a trickle of water flowed from the bathroom faucet. After he was unable to fix the problem using the switch and breaker, Childress went to shower at his parents' house, about 5 minutes away. From there he went to church, and then to his fiancee's house. Later that afternoon, Childress returned to the house with his father to work on the water problem. Still unsuccessful, Childress drove his father home and returned to his fiancee's, leaving the breaker off and all the doors and windows secured. Childress's father twice returned to the house that day. Neither Childress nor his father noticed anything unusual or amiss during any of their visits to the house.

At about 11:00 p.m., Childress drove back to his house to sleep. He testified that, when he arrived at about 11:30, he saw flames burning through the gable at the upper right end of the house. He went first to the garage to save his father's car. The car was gone, but his brother's motorbike was there, and Childress pushed it away from the house. Childress testified that he was unable to enter the house because of the heavy smoke and instead drove to his parents' house to call for help. When fire fighters arrived about fifteen minutes later, flames had consumed the house and had burned out the floor joists in the middle of the house.

On June 14, 1993, State Farm agent Liz Woodward retained Kenneth Riddleberger, an independent expert, to determine the cause of the fire. Riddleberger examined the fire scene on June 15, 1993, in the presence of Woodward and Childress. In the yard, in an area between about thirty and fifty feet from the house, Riddleberger found large unblackened pieces of glass, which apparently had been blown out by an explosion. The glass had come from a window in the right rear section of the house, where the master bedroom, hallway, utility room, closet, and bathroom were located. Because the glass was not blackened by smoke, Riddleberger concluded that the explosion occurred at the time the fire was ignited. Woodward and Riddleberger later testified that Childress told them that he had heard an explosion from the right side of the house after he arrived home to find the house in flames.

Inside the right rear section of the house, Riddleberger found evidence consistent with a high intensity fire and the presence of flammable liquids. In the basement of the right rear section of the house, Riddleberger found a piece of melted glass and a melted steel gun barrel. Riddleberger testified that temperatures exceeding 1,350 degrees would have been required to melt the glass and temperatures higher than 2,600 degrees would have been required to melt the gun barrel--heat far exceeding that of a normal house fire. In typical fires, thin glass will sag slightly, but not melt, and a gun barrel will not ordinarily melt.

While at the scene on June 15th, Riddleberger told Childress and Woodward that he concluded that the fire had been caused by an explosion in the right rear section of the house, intentionally created with a flammable liquid. Childress told Riddleberger that no flammable liquids, aerosols, bottled gas, or heat-producing appliances were present in the living area of the house.

On June 15, Riddleberger took two samples of flooring from the house. Returning on July 14, 1993, Riddleberger took a sample of scrapings from the melted gun barrel and Woodward took two samples of liquid stored in two containers found in a livestock trailer on Childress's property. An independent chemical analyst, Richard Henderson, tested the samples for flammable liquids. One of the flooring samples, and both of Woodward's liquid samples tested positive for a petroleum product in the "kerosene range" (which includes kerosene, number one fuel oil, jet fuel, and some charcoal lighters). The barrel scrapings sample tested positive for a petroleum product in the "medium range" (including mineral spirits, charcoal lighter, paint thinner, and some solvents).

The positive flooring sample was then analyzed by Douglas Crawford, a Mississippi State Laboratory chemist, and tested positive for ammonia and nitrate. The compound ammonium nitrate is explosive, and when combined with kerosene, produces a substance called ampho, used as an explosive in mining and constructing roads and ditches.

Thomas Eaton, an independent expert in fire causation and electrical and mechanical failures, also went to the house with Woodward on July 14, 1993. Eaton later testified that he examined the utility pole, the outdoor and attic heat pump units, the service entrance panel, the washer and dryer, the microwave and range top, and the well pump, but found no problems that might have caused the fire. Eaton concluded that lightning did not cause the fire.

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96 F.3d 1438, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 28781, 1996 WL 521061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerry-childress-v-state-farm-fire-and-casualty-company-ca4-1996.