Eastlack v. Mitten

162 A. 551, 109 N.J.L. 556, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 17, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 162 A. 551 (Eastlack v. Mitten) 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
Eastlack v. Mitten, 162 A. 551, 109 N.J.L. 556, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 419 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brogan, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in the Supreme Court Circuit of Gloucester county in a death action in the sum of $10,000. The deceased drove an automobile truck loaded with farm produce on to a ferryboat that ran between Camden, New Jersey, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the night of October 23d, 1930. His was the last vehicle on the rear of the boat on the left side of the driveway. As is the custom, chocks were placed in back of the rear wheels to prevent the auto truck from rolling. The defendant’s auto truck was directly in front of that of the deceased, a Ford truck with a low body extending back from its rear wheels.

When the ferryboat docked at Philadelphia, the deceased was found to have been injured in some manner. He was taken at once to the hospital where, two days later, he died. He was forty years old, had enjoyed good health and left surviving him a wife and two children. The medical testimony disclosed that the deceased had been severely injured *558 externally and internally. At the time he entered the hospital he had bruises on both his chest and back as well as severe abdominal pain. The medical testimony disclosed that he died of a ruptured organ in the abdominal region; that the deceased received these injuries by the application of external force from the back and front, the more severe pressure being from the back. A post-mortem examination disclosed bruises in the external lining of the heart through the diaphragm and large lacerations of the liver, which testimony was corroborated. There is, however, no substantial dispute regarding the injuries suffered by the deceased, but they become of importance because of 'the fact that no one saw the accident which caused the death.

Several disinterested witnesses testified that most of the passengers and vehicles had disembarked when the injured man was discovered. The first intimation they had of an accident was when they heard the deceased scream and, upon investigation, found him apparently in pain, holding his stomach. He was standing in front of his own car and, as the testimony shows, leaning against his radiator, whence he staggered around to the running board of his car, holding his stomach and his back. The auto truck of the decedent had not moved. There was no jar from the boat; there were chocks under the wheels; the gears disengaged; the engine not started; the emergency brake on. These conditions obtaining, it was a physical impossibilty for the truck of the decedent to have come forward and caused the accident.

The defendant’s driver admitted that the back of his truck would be in line with the back of the decedent were he bending over to crank his car and it was in front of his own car and in back of defendant’s car that decedent was discovered.

The appellant argues for reversal on three grounds. First, the trial court should have granted the motion for nonsuit at the close of the plaintiff’s case. Second, that a direction of the verdict should have been granted at the conclusion of the whole case. Third, that the trial court erred in charging the jury.

*559 While it is true that there was no eye-witness to the accident, yet wo think that the facts and circumstances surrounding the case were sufficiently proven to justify the trial court in denying a motion for nonsuit and likewise in denying a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant.

On motion for a nonsuit all of the facts proven in the plaintiffs case are, for the purpose of the argument, taken as admitted and every inference of fact which legitimately can be drawn therefrom. Jones v. Public Service Railway, 86 N. J. L. 648.

The deceased received his injuries from being crushed between two heavy objects. The force to which he was subjected must, by necessary inference, have come from one or the other of these automobiles. It could not have-come from some extraneous source because the decedent was discovered in the briefest interval of time after the application of these external forces. He screamed and the witnesses immediately went to him. He "was hurt either by his own car or the car in front of him. He was discovered between the two cars, the rear of the defendant’s and the front of his own. Now his own car, as has been demonstrated, had not moved on its own power. It is a most reasonable and almost necessary inference, from the testimony, to conclude that it did not move under any outside power because the ferryboat did not go into the slip with a jar and if his car moved at all of its own momentum it would have rolled backwards, which, of course, could do no injury to the decedent in the position in which he was. But chocks were behind the wheels to prevent such backward motion and while it is possible that he might have been injured in the front part of his body by cranking the car, as has been suggested by defendant’s counsel, certainly the crank of an automobile could not have inflicted injuries to his back. This suggestion is totally disposed of by the medical testimony, which has not been contradicted, that the decedent died from pressure exerted upon him more from the back than from the front.

At the time the decedent was discovered the defendant’s truck was moving and had stopped again after going some distance preparatory to leaving the ferryboat.

*560 One witness, an employe on the ferryboat, testified that the defendant’s truck “fired off” and that is the time “lie hollered” (meaning the ■ deceased) and, further, that the defendant’s truck was moving and that the truck of the deceased had not moved. This testimony of course was a fact issue for the jury to determine as indeed it did determine that, the truck of the deceased had not started while the truck of the defendant had started.

The defendant also complains against the charge of the court. The court charged, he says, as follows: “That the plaintiff’s claim in this case was that the injury to Mr. Eastlack, the decedent, which afterwards resulted in his death, was caused by the truck of the defendant, John W. Mitten, being backed into him so that he was injured in the back and other places as testified to here in court.”

As I read the court’s charge to the jury, it was: “The plaintiff in this ease claims that on October 23d, 1930, J. Wilbert Eastlack, the husband of the plaintiff, was on the ferryboat Ocean City, crossing from Camden to Philadelphia, on what is known as the Reading ferry, in a truck which was driven on the boat and located on the rear of the ferryboat on the left-hand side; that directly in front of this truck driven by Mr. Eastlack, &c.” In other words, the court, in charging the jury, outlined what the plaintiff’s contention was. This was not error and a reading of the court’s entire charge demonstrates how plainly the court impressed the jury that it was the jury’s province alone to determine from the testimony what the true facts in the case were. The court had a right to comment on the testimony if in his judgment it was proper so to do, so long as he leaves to the jury to determine the facts and draw their own conclusions therefrom. Kneip v. New York and Long Branch Railroad, 102 N. J. L. 374.

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 551, 109 N.J.L. 556, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastlack-v-mitten-nj-1932.