Dubit v. Sheffield Farms Co., Inc.

193 A. 546, 118 N.J.L. 411, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 348
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 A. 546 (Dubit v. Sheffield Farms Co., Inc.) 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
Dubit v. Sheffield Farms Co., Inc., 193 A. 546, 118 N.J.L. 411, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 348 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Perskie, J.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. By concession of counsel for the respective parties, the sole question in issue is whether the employe’s death was the result of an accident which arose out of and in the course of his employment.

Sheffield Farms Company, Incorporated, operate grocery stores. In addition to groceries, it also sells provisions, vegetables and milk. It operates twelve of such stores in Bergen county. Decedent was employed by Sheffield Farms Company, Incorporated, which was the respondent below and is the prosecutor here, as manager of its store at Ridgefield Park, New Jersey. In the sense that a purchaser is obliged to pay in cash for the merchandise when it is delivered to him, either at the seller’s store or at the purchaser’s home, or at the place designated by him, prosecutor conducts this store on what is characterized as a “cash and carry” basis. Prosecutor advertised by a sign on the front of the store (Exhibit P-5) that “orders [were] taken for daily route *413 delivery.” It is of no moment whether this sign relates, as prosecutor contends it does, to its milk business alone for which, we are told, it maintains a daily route delivery. For, prosecutor provides general delivery facilities. It provides trucks for that purpose but they apparently are not used frequently; they are only used when, in the judgment of the manager, the merchandise to be delivered constitutes a “great or big” enough load; prosecutor also provides a delivery boy. But that does not constitute all of the delivery facilities which it provided. Did it not also permit its managers (including decedent) to make deliveries with or without their own cars, and within or without the territorial limits of the particular municipality in which the store managed was located? More as to this later.

Decedent was paid $30 a week plus a sum equal to two per cent, upon all sales which he actually made. By further concession, his salary averaged $34 a week; his hours of employment were between seven A. M., to six p. M. The closing hour, however, varied; it was usually as soon after six p. x. as in the judgment of the manager the store could conveniently be closed.

Decedent lived in Bayonne, Yew Jersey, about fifteen miles from prosecutor’s store. He drove to and from his work in his own automobile, maintained and operated at his own expense. In pursuance of a prevailing practice among prosecutor’s managers, decedent openly solicited orders from his friends in Bayonne, caused these orders to be filled and placed in his car during business hours, and personally and publicly delivered them after closing hours by the use of his own car.

About seven p. m., on October 12th, 1931, decedent was driving home, and in his car were the filled orders which he had obtained from his friends in Bayonne for delivery to them. His car, for some unexplained reason, left the public road, at a point about five hundred feet south of the Public Service power station on Tonnele avenue, route Yo. 2, in the township of Yorth Bergen, Yew Jersey, turned down an embankment and dropped into a hole where he was found unconscious; his car was found overturned and alongside his *414 body; the groceries and provisions intended for delivery were strewn about the scene of the accident. Decedent was taken to the Jersey City Medical Center where, about three minutes after his admission, he was pronounced dead. Upon his person were found six delivery slips; they were all dated October 12th, 1931, and all were in the handwriting of the deceased. The names on some of the slips corresponded to the names of some of the witnesses who testified that they had given decedent orders which he was to have delivered to them on the day of the accident; and the groceries and provisions strewn about the scene of the accident likewise corresponded to the orders given and to be delivered.

In the bureau, the referee determined as a fact that the groceries and other commodities in the car added nothing to the risk or hazard; that in no way did they play any part in the casualty and same could have occurred with an empty machine as well as with one containing these orders; that there was no necessity to, and decedent did not, deviate from his regular route to his home; that what decedent did was outside the scope of his contractual obligation; and, therefore, concluded that petitioner had failed to sustain the necessary burden of proving that decedent met with an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.

The learned judge of the Common Pleas Court took the contrary view. He found that there was no proof of any order given decedent prohibiting the use of his car for the purpose of making deliveries personally; that decedent was given wide discretion of judgment in the management of the store, including the use of facilities for delivery provided by prosecutor, or the use of his own car, and that prosecutor well knew of the practice employed by decedent and its other managers in making personal deliveries; that the prosecutor, therefore, “acquiesced therein and consented thereto.” Accordingly the judgment of the bureau was reversed. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.

Prosecutor now argues generally that the death of decedent was not the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. More particularly, is it argued *415 that the death of decedent was not the result of an accident “in the course of” his employment. That argument is made to rest upon the premise that the decedent was at the time of the accident performing an act of his own choosing, outside the sphere of his contract of employment, and contrary to the order of the prosecutor. In short, prosecutor takes the position that decedent’s death was the result of an accident common to the traveling public on the road at that particular time and not by reason of the fulfillment of his contract of service with the prosecutor, or anything reasonably incidental thereto.

Prosecutor seeks to sustain its argument by the claims that the proofs tend to show that it maintained sufficient trucks and other facilities for delivery purposes; and that it specifically forbade decedent, as it did all of its managers, from making deliveries in their own cars. While the proofs, as already indicated, do support the claim that prosecutor maintained trucks and other delivery facilities, yet we search the record in vain to find proof of the fact, and industry of counsel points to none, that decedent was forbidden to use his car to make deliveries. Such proof is simply not present. Of the several managers who testified, all but one never knew nor heard of the existence of such a prohibitory order. The testimony of the one manager who testified to the contrary is not at all clear or convincing. But it is clear, notwithstanding his alleged knowledge of the order and the fact that a breach thereof would lead to his dismissal, that as late as Eebruary 8th, 1932, he made a delivery in his own car from his store in Jersey City to a purchaser in Bayonne, New Jersey. He was not discharged. The proof is clear - that the other managers made deliveries both within and without the territorial limits of the municipality in which the store they managed was located.

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Bluebook (online)
193 A. 546, 118 N.J.L. 411, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubit-v-sheffield-farms-co-inc-nj-1932.