A Georgia man suspected of arson turned himself in to U.S. Marshals on Thursday morning. Fity-eight year-old Phillip Roger Bennett set his neighbor's house on fire after a dispute over grass.

Marty Corbitt said he was at his home in Carterville, Ga., watching cartoons with his 3-year-old daughter when Bennett, his neighbor, came over with two gas cans.

"He kicks my door, tells me I've got five seconds to come outside. I turn around and call 911," Corbitt told WXIA. "And while I'm on the phone he comes back with two gas cans in his hand. Walks up to my kitchen door again, takes a gas can, smashes it against the glass, breaks the first pane. Then he turns around and grabs a brick, throws it through the window.

"And then he grabs a gas can and starts pouring it into the kitchen. And as he's pouring he takes his lighter and lights it. And flames were everywhere."

Corbitt and his daughter were able to escape but he lost everything in the fire. At the time of the incident his wife and mother were not home.

Corbitt and Bennett lived across the street from each other and police say they got into a disagreement over the length of Corbitt's grass. Corbitt said the day Bennett set his house on fire he was going to cut the grass.

Corbitt said the two men had been neighbors for almost four years and had never a dispute until last week. He told the station that Bennett was cursing and yelling at him and even slapped him because he wanted him to cut the grass.

"I honestly can't imagine what goes through someone's head to make them want to murder someone and their child over grass," Corbitt said. "He was actually a pretty good neighbor up until last week. And then he just went complete psycho."