Shevonne Moore v. Allstate Vehicle & Property Insurance Co.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 5, 2026
Docket3:24-cv-01010
StatusUnknown

This text of Shevonne Moore v. Allstate Vehicle & Property Insurance Co. (Shevonne Moore v. Allstate Vehicle & Property Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shevonne Moore v. Allstate Vehicle & Property Insurance Co., (N.D. Ohio 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

SHEVONNE MOORE, CASE NO. 3:24 CV 1010

Plaintiff,

v. JUDGE JAMES R. KNEPP II

ALLSTATE VEHICLE & PROPERTY INSURANCE CO., MEMORANDUM OPINION AND Defendant. ORDER

INTRODUCTION Currently pending before the Court is Defendant Allstate Vehicle and Property Insurance Company’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 27); Plaintiff opposes (Doc. 35) and Allstate replies (Doc. 36). Also pending is Intervening Defendant Lakeview Loan Servicing, LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 26); Allstate opposes (Doc. 30), and Lakeview replies (Doc. 32). Jurisdiction is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. For the reason set forth below the Court denies both motions. BACKGROUND Factual Background This case involves a dispute regarding insurance coverage for a July 2023 fire at a Plaintiff’s residential property at 75 Birckhead Place in Toledo, Ohio. See Doc. 1. Prior Insurance Coverage / Fire Prior to coverage under the currently-at-issue Allstate Policy, Plaintiff had an insurance plan covering the property under the Ohio FAIR Plan. (Plaintiff Examination Under Oath (“EUO”), at 22).1 Prior to June 2022, Plaintiff lived at the property for sixteen or seventeen years. Id. at 25. In June 2022, Plaintiff’s property was damaged by smoke from a fire. Id. at 23, 67. The Ohio FAIR Plan provided coverage for the damage, including amounts for personal property, the building structure, and temporary housing. See id. at 21-23, 38-40, 43-45. After the June 2022 fire, Plaintiff did not live in the property, nor was her personal

property there, because the property was undergoing repairs. See id. at 20-25; see also id. at 41- 42 (describing contractor and anticipated timeline for completion). Plaintiff further testified there was no water or electricity service at the property in 2023 (before or after the subsequent, July 2023, fire presently at issue). Id. at 49, 55-57, 92.2 The water was turned off after the first fire in June 2022. Id. at 56. At the time of her deposition in October 2023, Ohio FAIR Plan had stopped paying for Plaintiff’s temporary housing, and she was paying out of pocket Id. at 44-46. Before the June 2022 fire, Ohio FAIR Plan instructed Plaintiff she needed to fix her back balcony or it would not continue to insure her. Id. at 73; see also id. at 81-82 (testifying regarding Ohio FAIR Plan ceasing insurance). She did not fix it and therefore sought a

homeowner’s insurance policy from a different company. Id. Application for Allstate Policy Plaintiff applied for an Allstate homeowner’s insurance policy over the phone through agent J. Mark Atkins. Id. at 76. Atkins asked Plaintiff questions and filled out the application. See id.; Atkins Depo., at 25; see also Atkins Depo., at 15-16 (stating that Atkins fills out the application based on information provided by the customer).3

1. The transcript of Plaintiff’s EUO is located at ECF Doc. 35-1. 2. Plaintiff also testified that she did not have natural gas service at the house. (Plaintiff EUO, at 50). 3. The transcript of Atkins’s deposition is located at Doc. 35-3. References to page numbers are to the internal deposition page number, not the ECF page number. Atkins testified he did not ask Plaintiff if her home was under construction: Q: Okay. Do you remember talking to Shevonne Moore about the dwelling being under construction?

A: No.

Q: Okay. Do you know if you asked her if it was under construction?

A: I did not because the home was completed. There was no indication that it was under construction. She never mentioned anything.

(Atkins Depo., at 87). Plaintiff also testified she affirmatively told Atkins she was making repairs: Q: Is there anything else that you remember that he did ask you?

A: Was - - he asked he how long I’d been there, was I making any repairs, and I told him.

Q: You told him what?

A: That I had in - - to make repairs, and he said you can make all the repairs you need to make to your home. And that was it.

(Plaintiff EUO, at 78). Plaintiff testified she did not recall if Atkins asked her if she was living at the property or if she had prior losses. (Plaintiff EUO, at 76). Plaintiff further testified she did not tell him she had a prior fire because “[h]e didn’t ask.” Id. at 77. She also responded affirmatively to the question: “Did you tell him that you lived at 75 Birckhead Place?” but stated she did not recall whether she told him she lived elsewhere when applying for the policy. Id. at 76-77. Atkins also testified in various ways regarding whether he had asked Plaintiff if she lived at the property: Q: Okay. And then it says, will the residence be occupied within the next 30 days and the answer is yes. Do you remember asking that question?

A: I asked her if she lived there and she said yes.

Q: Okay. A: That was part of her - - when we go through - - it’s part of the process. We want to make sure it’s a primary address, not a secondary or a rental.

Q: Okay. And it doesn’t specifically ask for a primary address though, does it?

A: It does on one of the pages somewhere. Because if it was not a primary it would - - if it were a secondary, it would be a different policy. If it were a rental, it would be a different policy.

Q: Okay. And did you - - do you remember, like explaining to her what residence - - or primary residence is or what that definition is?

A: I do not remember.

Q: You just asked if she lived there?

A: Correct. If it’s her primary address.

* * *

Q: And we are still on page 4 of Exhibit A. Will the residence be occupied within the next 30 days. That’s a question written there, correct, Mr. Atkins?

A: Yes.

Q: And was that answer automatically uploaded or did Ms. Moore provide that response?

A: Yeah. She - - that’s based on her information. She gave me no indication that she was not living there.

Q: Okay.

A: Because she - - the time - - amount of time she had been there.

(Atkins Depo., at 71-74). Atkins testified that as part of the application process, he runs a “comprehensive loss run evaluation,” referred to as a “CLUE” report. See id. at 12-13. Atkins believed this to be “an industry-wide system.” Id. at 47. Atkins testified he will “follow up with questions” on such reports if there are, e.g., losses reported. Id. at 24. Atkins ran this report as to Plaintiff and “[n]o losses were returned.” Id. at 47. Atkins had the ability to override or adjust the losses reported based on information provided by the applicant. Id. at 49 (“You can go in and add losses, if they provide them, you can go in and remove a loss if the customer disputes it.”). Atkins confirmed that the absence of any loss reported on the application was not a result of him removing any

losses. Id. at 50. Atkins further testified the five-year loss history section of the application “was based on the information that came back from the loss reports and information gathered from [Plaintiff].” Id. at 74-75 (explaining loss information application is generated from the loss report unless Atkins “override[s] it based on information provided from the customer”). He did not recall whether he asked Plaintiff specifically about the five year loss history. Id. The application itself states Plaintiff has lived at the address for five years,4 and that she purchased the property in October 2010. (Doc. 9-2, at 1, 4). It states Plaintiff lives in the building as an “owner” and that it is her primary residence. Id.at 4. In response to the question “Will the

residence be occupied within the next 30 days?” the application says “YES.” Id.

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Shevonne Moore v. Allstate Vehicle & Property Insurance Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shevonne-moore-v-allstate-vehicle-property-insurance-co-ohnd-2026.