Wilder v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Insurance

912 S.W.2d 722, 1995 Tenn. App. LEXIS 468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 14, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 912 S.W.2d 722 (Wilder v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilder v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Insurance, 912 S.W.2d 722, 1995 Tenn. App. LEXIS 468 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

CANTRELL, Judge.

This action on an insurance policy involves issues of arson, fraud in the claims process, the admissibility of the plaintiffs’ statement under oath, and prejudgment interest. The Chancery Court of Franklin County granted judgment to the plaintiffs. We modify the chancellor’s award of prejudgment interest. Otherwise, we affirm.

I.

In 1983 the plaintiff, Billy Wilder, moved into a house owned by his parents. In 1986 he married Lillian Wilder. Early in 1989 Mr. Wilder’s father died and Mr. Wilder’s mother conveyed the house to him and Lillian. Billy Wilder obtained a homeowners policy from Tennessee Farmers Mutual Insurance Company, insuring the house for $40,000 and its contents for $24,000. In the summer of 1989, Mr. Wilder and Lillian separated, partly because of Mr. Wilder’s heavy drinking. Lillian Wilder had her own apartment, but Billy Wilder frequently stayed there with her, rather than at the house.

On October 17, 1989, seventy-one days after the effective date of the insurance policy, the house and its contents were damaged by fire. The insurance company suspected that the fire had been deliberately set, because its investigators found traces of an accelerant in the house. They also found a witness who testified that Mr. Wilder had hired him to burn the house. For this reason, and also because they thought Mr. Wilder had fraudulently misrepresented the value of the real and personal property destroyed, the insurance company denied the claim. The Wil-ders sued for payment.

After a bench trial the chancellor held the case under advisement for two years and four months, and then issued a memorandum opinion finding for the plaintiffs. The final judgment included damages of $26,500 to the house, $6,500 for loss of personal property, and $15,957.20 in prejudgment interest calculated from the date of the fire.

II.

The Arson Defense

The defendant’s policy excludes recovery if the loss occurred from “an action by or at the direction of an insured person committed with the intent to cause a loss.” If Mr. Wilder either started the fire or hired someone else to do it, the insurance company has a complete defense to this claim.

There is no evidence that Mr. Wilder set the fire himself: The appellant does not argue that he did. It relies on the suspicious circumstances shown by the post-fire investigation and the evidence of the witness who said Mr. Wilder hired him to burn the house.

There is evidence that the fire was deliberately set. A fireman who answered the call to extinguish the blaze testified that there seemed to be multiple, unconnected fires in several rooms and that the fire patterns indicated an accelerant had been used. Arson investigators for the state and for the defendant were of the same opinion.

The evidence on which the defendant relies most heavily is the testimony of Jerry Pruett, who drifted into the community in 1987 and lived in his van at various locations while he did odd jobs around the community. He met Mr. Wilder in July of 1989 at Mr. Wilder’s mother’s home, where he parked his van a few times. He and Mr. Wilder drank together. He testified that once at Mrs. Wilder’s home Mr. Wilder offered him $5,000 to burn his house. According to Mr. Pruett, Mr. Wilder thought that if he could get the insurance money from the house he could keep it from his estranged wife. Mr. Pruett said that a few days later he told Mr. Wilder, “I guess I’ll go ahead and do it.” He testified that he went over to the house at night, between the ninth and the eleventh of October in 1989, and started a fire in a utility closet with some paper and rags. He did not start multiple fires nor did he use any type of liquid accelerant. It should also be noted *725 that the dates do not correspond to the actual date of the loss.

Mr. Pruett testified that he was staying with Jay Corker, Mr. Wilder’s uncle, on the twenty-first of October when Mr. Wilder arrived drunk and picked a fight. When Mr. Pruett got the best of him, Mr. Wilder gave up and they started to walk back to Mr. Corker’s trailer, when Mr. Wilder pulled a knife and slashed Mr. Pruett’s stomach, saying, “That’s for burning my house.”

Mr. Wilder denied all of the facts about hiring Mr. Pruett to burn the house. He acknowledged that the fight occurred at his uncle’s trader but said Mr. Pruett started it and threatened him with a hunting knife. He was not sure when the fight occurred with reference to the date the house burned.

On this question the chancellor found:

The Court, after due consideration of all the facts and testimony in this case, is of the opinion that the Plaintiff did not retain the services or have Jerry Pruitt burn his dwelling. There does not appear to be any evidence in the record that the Plaintiff was suffering any great or tremendous financial hardship at the time of the fire. The record indicates the Plaintiff was attempting to sell his home which was free of all debt. While it is true the Plaintiff had never engaged in what I would call steady and gainful employment, he had always had a source of money through the financial support of his parents. Although there were times when that financial support would be less than others, it would appear he was never in dire financial straits. It is true the Plaintiff was a heavy drinker and was at times known to drink to excess with Jerry Pruitt. However, it appears that he and Mr. Pruitt were not always on friendly terms and in fact on two occasions had harsh words for one another, one of which resulted in Jerry Pruitt being stabbed by the Plaintiff. The Court, having had an opportunity to view the video testimony of Jerry Pruitt, does not find Mr. Pruitt to be a credible witness. The Court is of the opinion that the word of Jerry Pruitt that he was retained or asked by the Plaintiff to set fire to the dwelling is not in this case sufficient to make a finding that Plaintiff, who has denied doing this, was in fact guilty of complicity in committing arson. Therefore, since the burden of proving civil arson is on the defendant, the Court is of the opinion this burden has not been carried by the weight of all the evidence.

It seems to us that the arson defense rests on the testimony of Mr. Pruett. He alone supplies the motive for Mr. Wilder to bum the house: to prevent his estranged wife from getting her share of it in a divorce. Although the defendant argues that Mr. Wilder was in need of money because of other circumstances, the record does not show that he was having difficulty, existing as he always did on his mother’s largess, doing odd jobs, living with his estranged wife.

As the chancellor’s findings indicate, he simply did not believe Mr. Pruett. The credibility determination is entitled to great weight on appeal, Town of Alamo v. Forcum-James Co., 205 Tenn. 478, 327 S.W.2d 47 (1959). Having reviewed the evidence in the record, we are convinced that the chancellor was justified in finding that Mr. Pruett lacked credibility. Although we could conclude that the fire was deliberately set by somebody, the only evidence linking the fire to Billy Wilder was that of Mr. Pruett. Therefore, we affirm the chancellor’s decision on the arson defense.

III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
912 S.W.2d 722, 1995 Tenn. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilder-v-tennessee-farmers-mutual-insurance-tennctapp-1995.