Ceccomancino v. D'Onofrio

168 A. 578, 111 N.J.L. 494, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 168 A. 578 (Ceccomancino v. D'Onofrio) 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
Ceccomancino v. D'Onofrio, 168 A. 578, 111 N.J.L. 494, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 389 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wells, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant Sam Kosher, from the judgment entered in the Supreme Court, Morris County Circuit, on verdicts rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, aggregating $1,781 against the defendants Sam Kosher and Sam Berger.

The actions were brought by the plaintiffs-respondents (hereinafter referred to as the plaintiffs) to recover damages for the personal injuries sustained by them as a result of a collision between a Ford sedan, in which they were riding, and the automobiles of the defendants Sam Kosher and Sam Berger.

There were four defendants, Anthony D’Onofrio, in whose car the plaintiffs were riding, Sam Kosher, the appellant, who was the driver of one of the cars figuring in the accident, *496 Sam Berger, the driver, and Dora Berger, the owner of the third car.

A nonsuit was entered as to the defendant Dora Berger and the case was apparently not pressed against the defendant D’Onofrio. Only Sam Kosher appeals.

The accident occurred about midnight, Juty 17th, 1932, between Mount Freedom and Morristown, Mew Jersey, on the “Mount Freedom road,” an improved highway sisteen feet in width. The plaintiffs were returning to their home in Dover, Mew Jersey, from a trip to Mew York and Coney Island and were proceeding in a Ford sedan, owned and operated by D’Onofrio, in a northerly direction toward Mount Freedom. The defendant Sam Berger and appellant Sam Kosher, were coming from Mount Freedom to their homes in Union City, Mew Jersey, and proceeding in separate automobiles, Kosher following Berger, in a southerly direction, when the automobile of Berger came into contact with D’Onofrio’s Ford and immediately thereafter a second collision occurred between the car of appellant and the Ford of D’Onofrio, resulting in the injuries for which the judgments appealed from were awarded.

The appellant sets down three grounds of appeal.

First that the court erred in not granting at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ case, the appellant’s motion for a nonsuit, and second, because the court erred in not granting at the conclusion of the whole ease, the appellant’s motion for a direction of a verdict. Both motions were based on the ground that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the appellant. As to these two points, which may be dealt with together, there was testimony from which the jury could find that the car in which' the plaintiffs were riding was traveling on its right side of the road up a long hill slowly — in first or second gear — and that D’Onofrio, the driver, observed Berger’s car about three hundred feet away, coming toward him at a fast rate of speed, as was indicated by its bobbing headlights, and when the Berger car reached a point about twenty-five feet away from the D’Onofrio car it swerved to its left side of the road and struck the D’Onofrio car a glancing blow, *497 turning it slightly to the left, and almost immediately thereafter, and while the D’Onofrio car was still on its right side of the highway, appellant’s car, closely following the Berger car, crashed into the D’Onofrio car with such violence as to turn it over three times; that the Berger car continued after the impact down the road one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet and appellant’s car seventy-five to ninety feet, while the D’Onofrio car stopped almost at the place of the accident and still on its right side of the roadway.

The appellant, by way of defense, adduced testimony tending to show that he was driving his car along the Mount Freedom road, a distance of about forty to fifty feet behind the car driven by his friend, Sam Berger, at a speed of about twenty-twenty-five miles an hour and on the right side of the road; that he saw the car in which the plaintiffs were riding coming towards him, in front of Berger’s car, but where on the highway he did not know; that the car in which the plaintiffs were riding clipped Berger’s car, which was on its right side of the road, and then before appellant knew anything, felt himself toppling over; but at the time of the collision with the car in which plaintiffs were riding, appellant was on the right side of the road; that the accident happened so quickly he didn’t have an opportunity to apply his brakes, although he could stop his car within a distance of fifteen feet and in an emergency, less than that; that the D’Onof rio car went one hundred to one hundred and forty, or one hundred and fifty feet up the hill after the accident, before it stopped. There was conflicting testimony as to the skid marks — by which car made and what they indicated.

Appellant in his attempt to escape the charge of negligence made against him by the plaintiffs and place the responsibility for the accident solely on the negligence of D’Onofrio, puts great stress on the admission of D’Onofrio that he did not see appellant’s car on the highway until after Berger’s car and D’Onofrio’s car had come in contact, although he admitted that he could see for some distance in the direction from which appellant’s ear came on the night of the accident.

Assuming that negligence on the part of D’Onofrio might *498 be inferred from this testimonoy — the trial court was confronted with the fact that the inference also could be legitimately made that the reason D’Onofrio and the plaintiff Mary Ceccomancino did not see appellant’s car was that it was following too closely behind the Berger car to be seen, and that under the circumstances of the case it was the province of the jury and not the judge to determine what inferences should be drawn.

Appellant insists all that the evidence shows is that an accident occurred — but that plaintiffs failed to prove by the preponderance of the evidence that appellant was negligent and that it was this negligence which was the cause of the accident.

Appellant cites Parave v. Public Service Interstate Transportation, 109 N. J. L. 155; 160 Atl. Rep. 375, to the effect that as a general rule the mere showing of an accident causing the injuries sued for is not alone sufficient to authorize an inference of negligence; that negligence is a fact which must be shown. It will not be presumed. We are in accord with this.

The same case, however, citing Podolsky v. Sautter, 102 N. J. L. 598, also holds “before the trial judge can take away from the jury the question whether or not the negligence of the defendant is the proximate cause of the injury and determine that question himself, the facts must not only be undisputed, but the inference to be drawn from those facts must be such that fair-minded men ought not to differ about them.” And also that a motion for a nonsuit or to direct a verdict for the defendant, based upon the evidence to establish a cause of action, admits the truth of the plaintiff’s evidence and of every inference of fact which can be legitimately drawn therefrom, but denies its sufficiency in law.

The jury was justified in finding from the evidence presented on behalf of the plaintiffs that the turning in by the appellant from his right half of the highway to the left of the center thereof was the proximate cause of the accident.

Section 5, article 8 of chapter 281

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 A. 578, 111 N.J.L. 494, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ceccomancino-v-donofrio-nj-1933.