Tabisz v. Foremost Insurance Group

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedSeptember 16, 2020
Docket3:19-cv-01013
StatusUnknown

This text of Tabisz v. Foremost Insurance Group (Tabisz v. Foremost Insurance Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tabisz v. Foremost Insurance Group, (N.D. Ind. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION

JEREMY TABISZ, ) ) Plaintiff ) ) vs. ) CAUSE NO. 3:19-cv-1013 RLM-MGG ) FOREMOST INSURANCE GROUP, ) ) Defendant )

OPINION AND ORDER It’s a credit to the nation’s court systems that today’s issue arises so infrequently: defendant Foremost Insurance Group moves to dismiss Jeremy Tabisz's suit against it on grounds of witness tampering. While at St. Joseph’s Medical Center for a chest X-ray on March 12, 2019, Abigail Stantz decided to visit her neighbor, Mr. Tabisz, who was in the hospital with severe intoxication and a psychotic episode. Ms. Stantz says that during that visit, Mr. Tabisz told her he planned to burn his house down and go across the country with his dog with $80,000 in insurance proceeds. Four nights later, a fire destroyed Mr. Tabisz’s house. Foremost Insurance denied coverage on the belief that Mr. Tabisz had burned the house down, and Mr. Tabisz brought this suit against Foremost in the St. Joseph Superior Court. Foremost removed the case to this court, with federal jurisdiction based on the parties’ diverse citizenship. The attorney who filed the case on Mr. Tabisz’s behalf withdrew his appearance for reasons unrelated to this case, leaving Mr. Tabisz unrepresented for a few months. While Mr. Tabisz was between lawyers, Foremost served him with notice of its intent to take several depositions on Monday, June 29, 2020 (all events pertinent to the dismissal motion happened in 2020), beginning with Ms. Stantz. On Saturday, June 27, Mr. Tabisz and Ms. Stantz had a

conversation, which might have been bisected by an hour or two, in which the deposition and the hospital conversation were discussed. This is the conversation in which Foremost claims that Mr. Tabisz tampered with witness Stantz. Mr. Tabisz made an audio recording of part of the conversation; he believes he recorded 70 minutes of an 80-minute conversation; Ms. Stantz believes the conversation was longer and was divided by an intermission. He says he made the recording because he wanted to protect himself since he had no lawyer. The

court can’t evaluate the credibility of that explanation because the court doesn’t understand a connection between self-representation and recording the conversation. Re-creating the entire conversation is surprisingly difficult because the participants’ memories diverge dramatically, and surrounding events cast doubt over everything. We begin with what is undisputed: On the morning of Friday, June 26 (the day before the conversation on which Foremost relies), Ms. Stantz left a message on Foremost’s attorney’s voice mail. She expressed concern that if she testified

in court, Mr. Tabisz’s “very, very evil” friends might be there and retaliate against her. She said she had suffered 13 or 14 strokes and her doctor would be concerned that she was risking another by testifying. She expressed the belief that it was her duty to testify but that she didn’t want to testify if Mr. Tabisz would be there. Ms. Stantz left her number and asked the attorney to call back. Ms. Stantz testified that she was scared when she made that call. Ms. Stantz left another voicemail for Foremost’s lawyer at 7:00 p.m. on

Saturday, June 27 (though Ms. Stantz said on the message that it was Friday). She said she had just spoken to Mr. Tabisz, who didn’t want her testify: “he just felt that I did not need to testify, that I need to stay home and keep my mouth shut, and he would handle everything, and I didn’t need to go to court or anything like that. And he also said he was worried, too, because he also knows I have TIAs, too.” Ms. Stantz said she planned to come to the deposition, but she expected to bring a note from her doctor saying whether she should testify. She asked the lawyer not to tell Mr. Tabisz about the call because “he will get furious,

and he will retaliate, probably ….” Ms. Stantz left two messages on Foremost’s attorney’s voicemail on Sunday, June 28 (the day before the scheduled deposition). In her 1:30 call, Ms. Stantz said she didn’t think she’d be able to make to the deposition, that Mr. Tabisz had been “counseling” her and would go after her. Ms. Stantz again expressed concern that Mr. Tabisz’s “buddies” might be there. She said she couldn’t come, and that she “like[s] to breathe.” She also made reference to Mr. Tabisz having brought her husband (who was four years dead) into it and having

said something about red powder. Ms. Stantz testified that she was “really shaky” when she made that call and wound up in the hospital for three days (in fact, she gave a sworn statement the following day). The day’s other voice message makes the most specific references to threats, and so is quoted here in full, with apologies for length of the quoted material: Hi, Julia. This is Gail Stantz – or Abigail Stantz. I have a big problem with Jeremy. I’m getting threats now from him. He told me I need to watch my mouth, watch what I do, because he can put me behind bars. And then he started recording everything we talked about, and he said she was going to put me under the bus, and I said whatever. And then he said, “Oh, by the way, I’m recording everything you say.” And I said, “Oh, okay, great, that’s fine, I have nothing to hide.” But I’m at the point now that I’m having a headache in the back from my stroke. He told me that I had no business – that I need to watch my back or something. I don’t remember what it was exactly, but he, he made it clear to me that I need to watch what’s going on, and I had no business being there, and he’s going to make sure that I don’t go. And that was, you know, we talked about that before he started recording everything on his cell phone. Everything. He took pictures of me talking to him, talking to him, answering his questions. And I answered them for him the way he would want them so that he doesn’t retaliate on me. He is right, I was always wrong, according to him. And I am going to tell you want, I am terrified, I have not slept in 13 nights now. I am just stressed out because of him, and his house fire, and everything that’s going on. I want out. I want to live. I don’t want to het threatened by other people that are being called as a witness. I, I don’t want it, and I – I cannot have it. And I’m hoping that Dr. Afyouni did a paper for me – I will find out more tomorrow – that I’m not able to testify. I do have one stating I have strokes. I do have a paper with that already. But I just want you to know that I am not – I cannot testify. I know it’s late and I backed out before, but I have a habit called breathing, and I don’t want to be harassed by anyone. I don’t want to be questioned by anyone. I usually – 99 percent of the time, I keep to myself. I’ve got things to do and it’s, I don’t, I talk to Jeremy once in a while, and last night, it just so happened we had a long conversation about when he was in the hospital and everything like that, and I’m not – I’m not to bring anything like that up for him? So anyway, I just – I’m sorry, I cannot do this. You probably don’t have a case now, but I am sorry. I, I just can’t do it. And I cannot deal with the threats. He threatened my dead husband with something called red powder. My husband has been dead almost four years. He had no right bringing that up, that my husband died, and he knew what that was. He tried telling me a couple of months back that my husband was in Iraq. My husband’s never been in a war. He’s never fought or anything. He was in the Army, but he never left Fort Riley, Kansas, until he got discharged. So it’s just – I think – I’m sorry, Julia, I am so sorry. I’m so sorry. Hopefully you can prosecute him without me there because I cannot – he told me about other people that are testifying, and that will also come after me. So I just can’t do this. I can’t do it. I like to breathe. I can’t do it. I’m sorry, Julia. Have a great day.

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Bluebook (online)
Tabisz v. Foremost Insurance Group, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tabisz-v-foremost-insurance-group-innd-2020.