Byer v. H. R. Ritter Trucking Co.

35 A.2d 633, 131 N.J.L. 199, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 27, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 633 (Byer v. H. R. Ritter Trucking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byer v. H. R. Ritter Trucking Co., 35 A.2d 633, 131 N.J.L. 199, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 172 (N.J. 1944).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thompson, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in the New Jersey Supreme Court upon a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff-appellee in an action for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligent operaiion of a truck owned by the appellant.

Appellant grounds its appeal upon the trial judge’s denial of its motions for a nonsuit and for a directed verdict. The motions were based on defendant’s contention (a) that the plaintiff failed to prove any actionable negligence on defendant’s part, and (b) that plaintiff’s own negligence proximately contributed to his injuries, thereby barring as a mat *200 ter of law his right to recovery. These are the only issues involved in the present appeal. •

The appellant was engaged in the business of hauling oil and petroleum products, and in such transportation.it was accustomed to crossing the Delaware Eiver bridge. The appellee was employed on the bridge at the toll collector’s station alongside of the so-called twelfth or outside lane approaching the City of Camden. His duty required him to.reach out and collect the toll tickets from the drivers of passing vehicles at this point. He was engaged in such duty on the day of the accident in question, when one of the appellant’s trucks approached the toll booth and stopped for the purpose of the toll ticket transaction. His contention is, generally speaking, that while engaged in taking the required ticket from the driver of the truck on this occasion, and before completing the act of regaining his position on the platform, from which he had to reach toward the driver, which reaching occasioned a certain amount of leaning in the direction of the driver because of the fact that the latter was in a location behind the wheel on the left side of the cab of the vehicle, the driver started the truck with a jerk, causing it to strike the plaintiff before he could-resume his upright position on the toll platform, which is a narrow concrete space at a level of about eight inches above the roadway, the collision of the truck with the body of the plaintiff precipitating him to the roadway and causing his injuries. .

The plaintiff himself was the only witness who testified as to what actually happened that caused him to be injured. Two other toll collectors saw him in the roadway and picked him up a little distance beyond his toll booth station after the truck had driven off. They did not see the accident. It is said that no driver of any of appellant’s trucks knew of or reported any accident, so that there was no testimony from that.quarter as to what happened. Plaintiff’s own story, therefore, is the only direct evidence of the circumstances of his injury. He testified that he “leaned on the cab and reached over to get the two tickets the driver had and. just as I had them in my hand, something pinned me or jerked away from me and pinned me and I whirled around, struck *201 the building, struck the tractor again, threw me forward, and 1 slipped there and fell off the curb, and the wheels caught my hips.” ¡ “I mean the truck gave away from me, went away from me suddenly.” “I fell right down off the curb, against the wheels.” “All I can remember, I tried to get out of the way of the rest what was coming, tried to pull myself up off the roadway and get on the platform.” He further testified as follows:

“Q. Mr. Lloyd said to you that you collected the toll and then you slipped and that’s all you know. What made you slip ?
A. The truck hit me.
Q. When you say it hit you, what do you mean?
A. It hanged me in the side of the hip here and it whirled me. Just as the driver pulled away, he jerked away, something struck me. I don’t know whatever hit me but it whirled me.
Q. When the truck hit you and jerked was it a usual jerk or an unusual jerk that trucks start with?
A. No, it was an unusual one.
Q. What actually caused you to slip as you said and fall, you don’t know, do 3rou?
A. J don’t know.”

On cross-examination the plaintiff further testified:

"Q. How are instructions given 3rou as to your duties?
A. We learned that by ourselves when we went on the job.
Q. And where a driver is seated over on the left-hand side of the truck, how do you get the ticket?
A. Jby reaching up after it.
Q. And does he have to reach over and help you?
A. Oh, yes, he has to lean quite a ways over.
Q. And that is what happened the day you were hurt?
A. That’s what happened.
Q. The driver leaned over and yon reached up and took his ticket?
A. I reached up and got his ticket.
Q. And the minute 3'ou get 3'our ticket you get back out of the way?
A. Get out of the way and (-heck it up.”

*202 The witness, Ephraim Sharp, captain of the toll collectors on the bridge, stated, as to the method of the toll collector getting the fare or ticket, “You must step. That driver has to reach over, in order to get that, or you would have to get inside the vehicle or get up on top of it to get your ticket, and we don’t want our men to do that. Q. That would be dangerous? A. Yes, sir.”

We think the foregoing constitutes a fair recital of the pertinent testimony, and summary of the situation at the time of the accident, and that the facts and fair inferences therefrom created a question for the jury to decide, as to whether or not under all the circumstances the defendant’s employee-driver was negligent to the extent of proximately causing plaintiff’s injury. Here was a man stationed on a very narrow platform adjacent to the roadway on which motor vehicles passed the toll station on their way across the bridge. His duly was patently that of securing the tickets or cash for the toll charge from the passing vehicles, among which were types of vehicles like those owned by the defendant and operated by its employees. The practical requirements in connection with the payment and receipt of the toll fare as between the driver and the toll collector were manifestly that, the driver being on the left-hand of his vehicle, and the toll collector stationed at the right-hand, outside the vehicle, both would tend to reach toward each other in the act of passing and receiving the fare. That would seem to be the natural inclination of any two people joining their efforts in a common transaction of the character of that involved in this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A.2d 633, 131 N.J.L. 199, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byer-v-h-r-ritter-trucking-co-nj-1944.