Lane v. Oil Delivery, Inc.
This text of 524 A.2d 405 (Lane v. Oil Delivery, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
I. WILLIAM LANE AND BETTY G. LANE, PLAINTIFFS-RESPONDENTS,
v.
OIL DELIVERY, INC., DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*415 Before Judges KING, HAVEY and MUIR, Jr.
Wolff, Helies & Duggan, attorneys for appellant (John Peter Duggan on the brief).
Kraft & Hughes, attorneys for respondents (Mark F. Hughes, Jr., on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by MUIR, Jr., J.A.D.
Defendant appeals and plaintiffs cross appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiffs which was subsequently molded and corrected by the trial court into a $278,677.20 judgment with interest from September 25, 1983.
On August 10, 1983, plaintiffs, William and Betty Lane, and the American National Fire Insurance Company filed a complaint against defendant, Oil Delivery, Inc. The complaint and its later amendment sought damages for losses incurred by the *416 Lanes in a fire at their home and for the subrogated claim of American for monies paid to the Lanes under a policy of insurance.
The complaint alleged negligence, breach of contract and strict liability in tort as grounds for liability. Defendants answered and asserted a separate defense of negligence on the part of the Lanes.
The jury, finding negligence of both parties as proximate causes of the fire and damage sustained, determined defendant to be 60% negligent and the Lanes to be 40% negligent. It assessed total damages sustained by the plaintiffs at $425,985.
The trial judge denied motions by the defendant for a new trial or remittitur. He further denied plaintiffs' motion for a new trial, judgment notwithstanding the verdict and additur. However, he granted plaintiffs' motion for correction of mathematical error by the jury, adding $38,477 to the amount of the judgment. The court, relying on R. 4:42-11(b), then awarded interest from September 25, 1983, a date six months after the fire.
On appeal, defendant contends:
I. FINDING DEFENDANT SIXTY PERCENT NEGLIGENT WAS AGAINST THE WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.
II. WHERE AMOUNT OF VERDICT IS SO DISPROPORTIONATE WITH PROOFS AS TO DEMONSTRATE MISTAKE, THE CASE MUST BE REMANDED.
III. TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY ALLOWED PLAINTIFFS TO RENDER TESTIMONY ON ITEMS OF PERSONALTY.
Plaintiffs, on cross appeal, contend that:
I. THE REPAIRMEN SAW NO RISK IN STORING LOGS NEAR AN OIL BURNER, SO A JURY SHOULD NOT FIND A HOMEOWNER NEGLIGENT ON THAT BASIS.
II. SERVICEMEN ARE STRICTLY LIABLE IN TORT, SO THE JURY SHOULD HAVE BEEN INSTRUCTED ON ITS HIGHER STANDARDS OF CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE.
III. CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE SHOULD USE THE SAME STANDARDS IN NEGLIGENCE ACTIONS AND IN STRICT LIABILITY ACTIONS.
IV. INSURERS HAVE THE RIGHT TO SUE AND THE JURY SHOULD KNOW THAT PART OF ITS VERDICT WILL GO TO THE INSURER.
*417 V. INTEREST SHOULD RUN FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRE.
VI. OWNERS OF PERSONAL PROPERTY ARE COMPETENT TO TESTIFY AS TO THE VALUE OF THAT PROPERTY.
VII. REPLACEMENT COST IS THE PROPER VALUE FOR DAMAGED PROPERTY.
VIII. THE TRIAL JUDGE PROPERLY CORRECTED HIS ERROR IN SUPPLYING A SUM TO THE JURY AND IN CORRECTING THE VERDICT.
IX. IN THE EVENT OF A RETRIAL, THESE RULINGS SHOULD BE MADE:
A. OWNERS ARE ENTITLED TO DAMAGES FOR THEIR TIME IN BUYING REPLACEMENTS OF THEIR BURNED PERSONAL PROPERTY, FOR LOSS OF USE AND QUALITY OF LIVING AND FRIGHT.
B. THE BOCA CODE CONTROLLED MAINTENANCE, SO IT SHOULD GO INTO EVIDENCE.
C. THE DECORATOR'S TESTIMONY AS TO VALUE WAS ADMISSIBLE.
[We have deleted those portions of our opinion related to issues other than claims regarding nature of proof and measure of damages for personalty losses sustained by the plaintiffs Lanes.]
III.
We now turn to the defendant's challenge to the damage award by the jury which resulted in the molded, corrected judgment amount of $278,677.20.
The jury set the Lanes' damages at $425,985. This figure represented the total losses claimed for house reconstruction, living expenses during reconstruction, loss of jewelry and personalty replacement costs. The Lanes set out the personalty replacement costs in a 31-page list. Prior to their testimony on the value of the personalty, the trial judge ruled the measure of damages should be the market value at the time of the fire.
The value of personalty the jury accepted came from a total of the figures on the 31-page list. On that list, the Lanes set forth each item of personalty and their estimated value or the actual cost of the item. In their testimony, they did not state how they arrived at the value for each item. Instead, they selected an apparent cross section of the items.
As to the value of items specifically covered, Mr. Lane set the value based on his experience in buying the articles in the past, *418 pricing them at stores or in newspaper ads. Mrs. Lane, who testified essentially on her clothing and furniture in the house, based her opinion on her experience as the owner of a retail clothing store and as supervisor of charity flea markets.
The list did not distinguish actual cost from estimated cost. Instead, it listed figures under the heading "approximate cost."
The judge, in his charge to the jury, stated:
Basically what we are taking as the value is that which existed as of the date of the fire. Now, this may require some effort on your part but I think that as intelligent people you can do this. You are going to have the purchase price, you will have some indication of when the item was purchased or some cases received as a gift. You should be able using common sense to make a determination as to whether that [sic] items depreciated in value or appreciated in value between the time of the acquisition and the time of the fire. If it is an item which was salvageable and has been repaired you can consider the cost of the repairs as the damage sum available arriving from that item. Again, I'm speaking not of speculation, but of those claims which have been proved by a preponderance of the evidence. And I would add that in speaking to you about damages and how to calculate them, I'm not suggesting to you that necessarily you should find that the situation requires you to award damages. If you should, I have tried to give you an idea of how it is that you should calculate those figures.
During the course of deliberations, the jury sought the totals on the 31-page list. The judge told the jury totals could be provided. The jury then asked, "Are we to add all moneys and if agreed, that would be item three on questions."[1]
The trial judge sent the following note in response:
The "original cost" column totals $209,615.[2]
The "repair cost" column totals $38,477.
Those two columns together total $248,092.
The judge gave no instruction regarding the use of the note.
All parties agree the jury added the $209,615 for personalty to the $216,370 total of the other three items to arrive at their *419 verdict.
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524 A.2d 405, 216 N.J. Super. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-oil-delivery-inc-njsuperctappdiv-1987.