Roberts v. Wabash Life Insurance

410 N.E.2d 1377
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1980
Docket1-1179A307
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 410 N.E.2d 1377 (Roberts v. Wabash Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Wabash Life Insurance, 410 N.E.2d 1377 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

RATLIFF, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Geneva Roberts filed actions against Wabash Life Insurance Co. and Modern Woodmen of America, and her four sons filed an action against Occidental Life Insurance Co. in an effort to collect the proceeds of policies which had been issued insuring the life of their husband and father, Clarence Roberts. The Brown Circuit Court entered judgment in favor of the insurance companies after trial of the consolidated actions. We affirm.

FACTS

Clarence Roberts and his wife, Geneva, lived approximately three miles north of Nashville, Indiana, at the intersection of Road 135 and Grandma Barnes Road. Located west of their house was a barn which they utilized as a garage and storage area. On November 18, 1970, Ella Cummings, a neighbor of Clarence Roberts, observed leaves burning at the base of a tree located near the barn on the Roberts’ property. In retrospect Mrs. Cummings surmised that she could have extinguished the small fire herself if she had stopped at that time. Instead, she went to her home and called the fire department at 6:15. When the fire engine arrived at 6:30, the barn was already destroyed; witnesses recalled that the fire spread rapidly through the structure. Several vehicles were parked in the east portion of the barn. Neighbors and passers-by managed to save only one of the vehicles, Clarence Roberts’ pick-up truck.

Because of the limited water supply, the firemen directed their efforts primarily toward protecting nearby buildings. Eventually they moved across the debris spraying water to cool the ashes. Their path led them to a shotgun lying across the charred remains of a body.

The Brown County coroner took the body to Indianapolis for. an autopsy. Funeral services were conducted for Clarence Roberts, and the body was buried at a local cemetery. Because the investigation of the fire produced a long list of perplexing questions for which the investigators could not find plausible answers, the body was exhumed on December 21, 1970.

After the wife and sons of Clarence Roberts were unsuccessful in their attempts to collect approximately $640,000 in life insurance proceeds, they filed actions against the insurance companies. The evidence at trial reflected contrasting images of Clarence Roberts.

Clarence Roberts’ attorney and physician described Roberts as a very civic-minded person who enjoyed an excellent reputation in the community. During the late 1960’s, Clarence Roberts experienced financial problems due to losses suffered by several grain elevators which he owned. Lawsuits were filed against him during the summer *1380 of 1969. Roberts reportedly became increasingly despondent.

In June 1970 Clarence Roberts hinted of suicide during a conversation with his attorney. After discussing but rejecting the possibility of filing a petition in bankruptcy, Roberts told another attorney on November 3, 1970, “... my widow will be the richest one in Brown County.”

Some persons surmised that Clarence Roberts accidentally set the barn afire while shooting himself. Roberts kept gasoline for his lawn mower in the barn, and that fact was offered as an explanation for the rapid burning of the structure. The autopsy revealed no gunshot wound. Although the shotgun had been fired, the position of the gun over the body was not compatible with the substantial recoil which would have followed its firing.

Clarence Roberts obtained a loan from Wabash Life Insurance Co. in 1967 or 1968 for the purpose of financing construction of an apartment complex. The relationship turned into a fiasco. Wabash eventually alleged that Roberts had submitted altered bills and fictitious bills for which Wabash had paid Roberts. At the time of trial Wabash estimated that the fraudulent bills totalled a minimum of $131,000 and perhaps more than $200,000.

Alvin Haggard, who owned Al’s Friendly Tavern, had known Clarence Roberts for forty years. Roberts confided in Haggard concerning his financial problems. According to Haggard, Roberts “wanted to get out of the mess he was in.” Haggard never heard Roberts mention suicide. In mid-September 1970 Roberts showed Haggard a card for a Swiss bank account. Clarence Roberts told Haggard that Roberts had more than $100,000 on deposit in his own Swiss bank account.

Several people who were acquainted with Clarence Roberts saw Roberts in Morgan-town on the morning of November 17,1970. Roberts was accompanied by a man who was not known by Roberts’ friends in Mor-gantown. The man, who was approximately the same size as Roberts but older than Roberts, was wearing a dirty brown plaid shirt. The stranger suffered some sort of seizure while in Morgantown. Clarence Roberts put the man into Roberts’ car and drove toward Nashville.

Early in the afternoon of November 18, 1970, a bank officer went to the home of Clarence Roberts. He wanted to discuss with Roberts a note on which the bank suspected Roberts had forged the signature of his brother, Carson Roberts. Clarence Roberts, who was aware of the bank’s suspicions, did not respond to the knock on the door.

Charles Roberts saw his cousin, Clarence Roberts, mulching leaves at Clarence Roberts’ home late in the afternoon of November 18, 1970. Charles talked with Clarence briefly. Clarence, who was wearing a solid-color blue shirt, commented that his wife, Geneva, and his son, Loren, had gone to Columbus for supper. Clarence invited Charles to join him for a sandwich, but Charles declined the invitation. Charles departed. Fifteen minutes later, Charles Roberts received word of a fire at Clarence Roberts’ property. Charles returned to Clarence’s property approximately twenty-five minutes after Charles’ departure; the roof of the barn had already collapsed due to the fire.

The Brown County coroner was concerned with establishing identity as well as cause of death for the body found amidst the debris of Clarence Roberts’ barn. The body was severely burned, and the only distinctive piece of clothing to survive the fire was a portion of a brown plaid shirt. Dr. Benz, who performed the autopsy, deemed definite identification of the body impossible. Dr. Benz noted an absence of carbonous material in the respiratory tract and an absence of internal burning of the respiratory tract, but tests showed the presence of 80-86% carbon monoxide in the blood. Dr. Benz opined that the person had died from the carbon monoxide intoxication prior to the fire.

In December the bank repossessed Clarence Roberts’ pick-up truck. The bank’s representative soon became aware of a mas *1381 sive leakage of fumes into the cab of the truck. Inspection revealed thirty or more holes in the exhaust system. The holes looked as if they had been made with a hammer and punch.

On the morning after the fire, the. coroner located Clarence Roberts’ Masonic ring beneath several inches of ashes. The ring showed little fire damage. An expert witness testified that the solder in the ring should have melted at a much lower temperature than the temperature required to disintegrate the fingers, hands, and arms. The witness, John Kennedy, studied photographs which had been taken during and after the fire and also examined some of the bones from the body.

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410 N.E.2d 1377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-wabash-life-insurance-indctapp-1980.