Margaret A. Mathis, Individually and on Behalf of Her Late Husband, Jerry F. Mathis v. Allstate Insurance Company

959 F.2d 235, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 13213, 1992 WL 70192
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1992
Docket91-5754
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 959 F.2d 235 (Margaret A. Mathis, Individually and on Behalf of Her Late Husband, Jerry F. Mathis v. Allstate Insurance Company) 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
Margaret A. Mathis, Individually and on Behalf of Her Late Husband, Jerry F. Mathis v. Allstate Insurance Company, 959 F.2d 235, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 13213, 1992 WL 70192 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

959 F.2d 235

NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
Margaret A. MATHIS, individually and on behalf of her late
husband, Jerry F. Mathis, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 91-5754.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

April 8, 1992.

Before RALPH B. GUY, Jr. and ALAN E. NELSON, Circuit Judges; and REAVLEY, Senior Circuit Judge.*

PER CURIAM.

A Tennessee plaintiff, who had sought to collect on a homeowner's insurance policy after her house was destroyed by fire, appeals a jury verdict rendered in favor of defendant Allstate Insurance Company, which had asserted the defense of arson. Plaintiff challenges the sufficiency of the evidence of arson, the dismissal of her claim for outrageous conduct and intentional infliction of emotional distress, the directed verdict for Allstate on her claim of bad faith, the jury instructions, and various evidentiary rulings. Finding no error, we affirm.

I.

In 1988, Margaret and Jerry Mathis built two adjacent speculation houses in Tennessee with profits from the recent sale of their Florida home and inheritance money Mr. Mathis had recently received. These funds totalled $114,000. The newly constructed houses cost approximately $45,000 each to build. The house that burned, and in which the Mathises were then living, had been on the market for 18 months for $51,900. The other house, unoccupied at the time of the fire, was for sale for $54,900. There was no mortgage on either house.

The Mathises purchased homeowners insurance (for both houses) from defendant Allstate in June 1988. The burned house was originally insured for $50,000 plus contents coverage of $35,000. Over the next year, the Mathises periodically increased the contents coverage, so that it totalled nearly $70,000 at the time of the fire in December 1989. These increases were to cover the furniture and stereo equipment the Mathises had been buying. The premium payment for the last coverage increase was received the day before the fire.

During this time, the Mathises also purchased two new vehicles. The first of the monthly $750 loan payments became due in November 1989.1 Toward the end of 1988, Mr. Mathis was employed as co-owner of a telemarketing service. Mrs. Mathis was unemployed, receiving disability and Social Security payments.

There were two fires on the night of December 18, 1989. It was the second which gutted the house. Mrs. Mathis testified that she was awakened by smoke at 1:30 a.m. and alerted her husband, who discovered a fire in the lower level of the house. Mrs. Mathis gathered her seven-year-old granddaughter and the family dogs and took them to the Mathises' other house. The power had been turned on in that vacant house approximately two months earlier. Mrs. Mathis then ran to a neighbor's house and called the local volunteer fire department.

When the firemen arrived, they entered the garage and found a bag of garbage and two rolls of insulation on fire. Nearby was a space heater whose cord had been burned in two. The fire was doused with 50 gallons of water, leaving the garage floor drenched. The firemen also unplugged the heater cord and dragged the heater and insulation outside. At trial, two firemen and the fire chief testified that the fire was completely extinguished when they left the scene. Plaintiff contended that the fire was still smoldering.

Mrs. Mathis and her granddaughter then returned to their other house. Mr. Mathis stayed in the garage for a while, eventually joining his wife in the other house. Twenty to 30 minutes after the firemen had gone, Mrs. Mathis, alerted by her barking dogs, looked out the front door and saw that the first house was again ablaze. She again rushed to the neighbor's house and called the fire department. By the time the firemen returned, the house was fully engulfed; 1,800 gallons of water were sprayed on it, to no avail.

For seven months following the fire, the Mathises lived in the vacant house next door, sleeping on a mattress on the floor and lacking even a kitchen table. According to plaintiffs' brief, the Mathises made an $80,000 down payment on a new home at the end of this period.

After an investigation of the fire, Allstate refused to pay the Mathises' claim. The couple's ensuing lawsuit in Tennessee state court was removed to federal district court on the basis of diversity. After a two-day trial, the jury returned a verdict for Allstate Mrs. Mathis's motion for a new trial was denied. She now appeals.2

II.

Mrs. Mathis first contends that the evidence was insufficient to establish the "motive" prong of the three-part arson defense.3 Under Tennessee law, Allstate had to prove by a preponderance not only that the fire was intentionally set and that the insured had an opportunity to set it (or had it set by someone else), but also that the insured had a motive for setting the fire. McReynolds v. Cherokee Ins. Co., 815 S.W.2d 208 (Tenn.Ct.App.1991). Our standard of review is clear. "In determining whether the evidence is sufficient to support a jury verdict, the evidence, and the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom, must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.... [We] must determine whether any reasonable jury could have reached the verdict based on the evidence presented at trial." MacNaughton v. United States, 888 F.2d 418, 421 (6th Cir.1989). The record reveals ample evidence from which a jury could properly conclude that Allstate had proven the arson defense.

The only evidence regarding the fire's cause came in the form of testimony by Tennessee State Fire Marshal Bill Cliett; Allstate's fire investigator, Gary Young; and forensic chemist Dennis Akin, who tested fire debris samples gathered by Young. Cliett testified that, based on his six- to seven-hour survey of the property a few days after the fire, he had concluded that the fire had been intentionally set. He ruled out accidental causes, including an electrical fire. He said he found evidence that someone had poured a liquid accelerant on the garage floor around the Mathises' pick-up truck. He also said that it would have taken at least an hour and a half, and not merely 25 minutes, for an unaccelerated, naturally burning fire to move from the garage area to the roof.

Young testified that he had examined the debris for eight hours the day after the fire and again a month later and that, in his opinion, the fire had been set deliberately with gasoline.

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