Phillips-Foster v. Unum Life Insurance Co. of America

302 F.3d 785
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 2002
Docket01-3570, 01-3648
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 302 F.3d 785 (Phillips-Foster v. Unum Life Insurance Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips-Foster v. Unum Life Insurance Co. of America, 302 F.3d 785 (8th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Sarah Phillips-Foster brought this declaratory judgment action against UNUM Life Insurance Company of America which had insured her deceased husband, Mark Foster. UNUM declined to pay her the policy proceeds because of a contractual suicide exclusion and because of her suspected involvement in Foster’s death. She sued the company and other beneficiaries, and the district court 1 granted summary *789 judgment to UNUM. Phillips-Foster appeals from the final judgment dismissing UNUM from the case, and we affirm.

I.

Mark Foster worked as a pharmacist for Drug Emporium, Inc., which had contracted with UNUM to provide life insurance benefits for its employees. As a pharmacist with less than five years in the position, Foster received a basic life insurance benefit in the amount of $100,000 and accidental death and dismemberment (AD & D) coverage in “[a]n amount equal to [his] life amount.” In addition he purchased “Option B” which provided supplementary life coverage in the amount of $100,000. Both the AD & D and the supplementary life insurance coverage was subject to a suicide exclusion; the basic life benefit was not.

At the time of Foster’s death Phillips-Foster was the beneficiary for both the basic life and the AD & D coverage. Foster had made her the beneficiary on March 11, 1997, several weeks before their marriage, in place of Victoria Poshard, a former girlfriend. The supplemental Option B enrollment form designated Jeramy T. Foster as primary beneficiary, and Craig A. Foster, Ian G. Foster and Angela (Foster) Whitwam as contingent beneficiaries. Jeramy and Angela were Foster’s children from his first marriage to Susan Larson, and Craig and Ian were children from his second marriage to Nancy Ruhland. 2

Foster was found dead on July 18, 1997, some four months after he married Phillips-Foster and named her a beneficiary. On the morning of July 18, Foster’s nephew, Brent Thompson, contacted the Minneapolis Police Department to report that Foster was missing. Later that morning his body was found on the side of St. Croix Drive in rural Dairyland Township in Douglas County, Wisconsin. The body was dressed completely in white, and the cause of death appeared to be a gunshot wound to the chest. The Douglas County Sheriff began a homicide investigation, and the police later concluded that Foster had been shot with a .44 caliber rifle. A note was found in his shoe that had writing on both sides. One side said “Jack Frazier isn’t here, but it’s Jimmy Bailey? or look alike?” On the other side of the note was “Geez it’s 3 toughs. Hope I’m OK.”

The day after discovering Foster’s body, investigators from the Douglas County Sheriffs Department and the Minneapolis Police Department interviewed Thompson, Phillips-Foster, and their housemate, Greg Friesner. Phillips-Foster told them on July 19 that she had last seen Foster at Madden’s Resort near Brainerd, Minnesota on the afternoon of July 17. In a statement she gave on July 29, Phillips-Foster told police that at Madden’s she and Foster had talked about threats he had received from Jack Frazier and Jimmy Bailey. Thompson told the detectives that he had last seen Foster between 2 and 2:30 a.m. on the morning of July 18, when Foster told him that he was having problems with Jack Frazier and was going to meet him at a Country Kitchen to straighten things out. Thompson said that Fries-ner had told him that he and Foster had seen Frazier on a motorcycle at an Amoco station near their house on the evening of July 17. 3 Two of the investigators noted that during the meeting with Phillips-Fos *790 ter and Thompson on July 19, neither inquired about how or where Foster had been killed.

In a second interview on July 19, Thompson told an investigator that Foster had expressed concern about his safety on July 17 because Frazier had demanded that he “make some drugs for him” or else he would “take care of [Foster] and his family.” Thompson also opened a letter that Foster had left for him in the event that he died. The letter, dated July 15, 1997, expressed Foster’s concern that he was in danger and provided instructions for obtaining his life insurance proceeds, for making funeral and wake arrangements, and for placing an obituary in Twin Cities and Eau Claire newspapers. During this same interview Friesner reported that Frazier was “totally obsessed” with Phillips-Foster and that he had made threats against Foster because of his relationship with her.

Phillips-Foster had been romantically involved during the 1990s with Jack Frazier and with James “Jimmy” Bailey, Jr., and both men were known to have been angry with her and Mark Foster. Bailey and Phillips-Foster had had a child together in 1991 — Jake Phillips. Bailey also suspected that he might be the father of Phillips-Foster’s first child, Roy Phillips, who had been born in 1990. 4 In the mid-1990s Jack Frazier moved in with Phillips-Foster and her roommate/lover, Jackie. Frazier and Phillips-Foster developed a romantic relationship, and Jimmy Bailey became involved with Jackie and later married her. Frazier and Phillips-Foster continued their relationship until February 1997, when she ended it and moved in with Mark Foster. Phillips-Foster and Foster were married on April 1, 1997. Tensions between Bailey, Frazier, Phillips-Foster, and Foster came to a head in May, 1997, at a custody hearing on the competing claims of Bailey and Phillips-Foster. Frazier allegedly made threats against Foster at the hearing, and Bailey allegedly assaulted both Foster and Phillips-Foster after losing the custody battle.

Douglas County investigators interviewed Jack Frazier at a restaurant about a week after Foster’s body was discovered. He told them that when he read in the newspaper that Foster had been found dead in Dairyland, Wisconsin, he knew he would be contacted by the police because Phillips-Foster was trying to set him up. When asked about his whereabouts on July 17 and 18, he claimed that he had traveled from Minneapolis to Salem, Massachusetts on July 14 and returned home on the evening of July 18. He supported his alibi by turning over an itinerary from Yada Systems for his travel on those dates, a dated Northwest Airlines baggage claim check, and his personal calendar.

After talking with Frazier, the Douglas County Sheriffs Department became increasingly suspicious that Thompson, Friesner, and Phillips-Foster were involved in the death of Foster and that he might have had a role in his own death. They began to suspect that the note in Foster’s shoe about Frazier and Bailey, the July 15 letter to Thompson about Foster’s fears, the reported sighting of Frazier at the Amoco station the night before the murder, and the story about meeting Frazier at a Country Kitchen were intended to lead them to the conclusion that Frazier had killed Foster. The investigators also came to suspect that the death scene was selected to lead them to Frazier since he owned property in Pine County, *791 Minnesota, which was not far from the murder site in Douglas County, Wisconsin.

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