LORENZO-NODA v. KAZAK

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 27, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-13414
StatusUnknown

This text of LORENZO-NODA v. KAZAK (LORENZO-NODA v. KAZAK) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LORENZO-NODA v. KAZAK, (D.N.J. 2022).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

: ANTONIO LORENZO-NODA, : : Civil Action No. 18-13414-AME Plaintiff, : : v. : OPINION : CARL KAZAK, et al., : : Defendants. : :

ESPINOSA, Magistrate Judge

This matter is before the Court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff, appearing pro se, opposes the motion and cross-moves for summary judgment. The Court has reviewed the parties’ written submissions and decides the motions without oral argument. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 78(b). For the reasons that follow, both the motion and cross-motion for summary judgment are denied. I. BACKGROUND This negligence action arises out of a motor vehicle accident involving a dump truck operated by plaintiff Antonio Lorenzo-Noda (“Plaintiff”) and a tractor trailer operated by defendant Carl Kazak (“Kazak”) and owned by defendant Armellini Express Lines, Inc. (collectively “Defendants”). The accident occurred on May 3, 2017, at approximately 1:24 p.m., on the southbound New Jersey Turnpike portion of Interstate 95 (the “Turnpike”), in or about the vicinity of the Turnpike’s junction with Interchange 9. The two vehicles collided when the front of Defendants’ tractor trailer struck the rear driver’s side of Plaintiff’s dump truck. These basic facts concerning the accident appear to be undisputed. However, Plaintiff and Defendants disagree on many other details, asserting substantially differing versions of how the accident occurred. According to Defendants, Kazak was operating his tractor trailer in the Turnpike’s right

lane of travel. At about the junction of the Turnpike and Interchange 9, Kazak observed a dump truck proceeding along the adjacent merge lane, located to the right of the Turnpike’s mainline roadway. When he first saw the dump truck, Kazak estimates it was about a quarter mile ahead of him. Kazak maintains that at the time, his vehicle was traveling at a speed of 63 miles per hour, while the dump truck was traveling much slower, perhaps 30 miles per hour according to Kazak’s best estimate. Kazak contends he took his foot off the accelerator, dropping his speed to give himself an opportunity to decide what maneuver to take and to give the dump truck room to enter the roadway. Kazak explained at his deposition that he did not apply the brake because he did not observe the dump truck activate a turn signal and thus had no reason to believe he was going to

come into the right lane. He testified that had he seen the turn signal, he would have applied the brake to slow down his tractor trailer. Kazak further testified that, seeing the dump truck in the merge lane to his right, he checked to the left, to determine if he could perform a lane change and give the dump truck room to enter the roadway. According to Kazak, he continued to check his mirror for a lane change opportunity, but by that time, Plaintiff’s dump truck had entered the right lane. Kazak stated his tractor trailer was unable to avoid Plaintiff’s slower moving vehicle, and thus, just as the dump truck merged into the right lane, the front right side of Defendants’ tractor trailer struck the rear left side of the dump truck driven by Plaintiff. After the collision,

2 Kazak applied the brakes and turned his steering wheel to the right, aware that there were other vehicles in the lane to his left. The tractor trailer came to rest on an embankment to the right of the road, without jackknifing or rolling over. Kazak then exited the vehicle, apparently without injury.

Plaintiff offers a materially different version of the events leading to the collision. He asserts that the collision did not occur as he was in the process of merging onto the Turnpike. Rather, he maintains he had already entered the roadway and was traveling in the right lane when Defendants’ tractor trailer hit his dump truck from behind. Plaintiff states that, on the day of the accident, he was driving the dump truck for his employer H&O Trucking, with which he had then been employed for approximately eight months. Plaintiff asserts he was traveling a familiar route, having driven it several times per week in the course of his employment. He had been traveling on Route 18 and exited in East Brunswick to connect with the southbound Turnpike at Interchange 9. Plaintiff claims that just prior to the accident, he had been proceeding in the Turnpike

merge lane, which he describes as a lengthy strip of road, running parallel to the right lane of travel on the Turnpike for approximately a quarter of a mile. Contrary to Defendant’s claim, Plaintiff asserts that he activated his turn signal to indicate he intended to enter the right lane of travel from the merge lane. Plaintiff claims he had an unobstructed view of the right lane and saw no vehicles approaching in that lane for at least a quarter of a mile at the time of the merge. Based on these observations, Plaintiff states he entered the right lane of travel safely, at approximately mile marker 83.1, driving at a speed of 30 miles per hour and then accelerating to 47 miles per hour a tenth of a mile later, at mile marker 83.0. Plaintiff asserts he traveled along

3 the Turnpike’s right lane, continuing to accelerate for another 145 yards or so. It was at this point, Plaintiff maintains, that Defendants’ tractor trailer struck his dump truck, just before mile marker 82.9. Plaintiff asserts the collision occurred during a lane change maneuver by Kazak. He avers:

Defendant Carl Kazak turned the wheel to the right before impact to change lanes in an imprudent manner, in an attempt to pass the truck in front of him on the right. Once committed to the maneuver, he encountered Plaintiff’s truck, which was traveling on the right lane at a speed of approximately 50 MPH. Defendant’s entire front plowed into Plaintiffs [sic] left rear corner and left rear tires diagonally.

(Pl. St. of Undisputed Material Facts, ¶ 14.) It is undisputed that, following the collision, a New Jersey State Trooper responded to the scene of the accident. The Trooper spoke with both drivers, although Plaintiff’s ability to communicate with the Trooper was impeded by a language barrier.1 The crash investigation report prepared by the Trooper concluded that the accident occurred due to Plaintiff’s failure to yield to Defendants’ tractor trailer as the dump truck attempted to merge into the mainline of the Turnpike from the Interchange 9 onramp. The report further concluded Defendants’ tractor trailer was therefore unable to avoid Plaintiff’s dump truck. Plaintiff was issued a citation for violating N.J.S.A. 39:4-97.1, for driving at “such slow speed as to impede or block the normal and reasonable movement of traffic….” The charge was later dismissed by the Township of East Brunswick Municipal Court.

1 Plaintiff states that he does not speak or understand English, a fact Defendants do not contest. Indeed, Kazak testified at his deposition that he was unable to communicate with Plaintiff following the accident because of the language barrier between them. Plaintiff acknowledges that a co-worker who was traveling the same route in a separate vehicle, a few minutes behind Plaintiff, stopped after the accident and tried to help Plaintiff communicate with the Trooper. However, Plaintiff denies that he told the co-worker or Trooper that the accident occurred while he was merging onto the Turnpike and maintains that it happened after he had safely merged onto the roadway and traveled over 320 yards.

4 Plaintiff filed this lawsuit on or about August 6, 2018, in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Union County. The Complaint asserts only one cause of action, alleging Plaintiff sustained severe personal injuries in the May 3, 2017 motor vehicle accident because of Defendants’ negligence.

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