Molnar v. Hildebrecht Ice Cream Co.

164 A. 300, 110 N.J.L. 246, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 31, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 164 A. 300 (Molnar v. Hildebrecht Ice Cream Co.) 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
Molnar v. Hildebrecht Ice Cream Co., 164 A. 300, 110 N.J.L. 246, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 473 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bbogan, J.

The instant case brings to this court an appeal from ten judgments for plaintiffs recovered in the Supreme Court Circuit of Mercer county. Three of the cases had been brought in the Supreme Court, Mercer Circuit, and three in the Mercer County Circuit Court. Five suits were for personal injuries and one for death, brought by an administratrix ad prosequendum under the Death act. The six cases were then consolidated and the following verdicts obtained by the several plaintiffs:

*248 (a) (1) George Molnar, an infant, personal injuries, verdict ................... $2,500.00

(2) Andrew Molnar, father, loss of services, &e............................. $250.00

(b) (3) Yustina Rosinski, admrx. ad prosequendum,, verdict..................... $12,500.00

(c) (4) John Brovak, an infant, personal injuries, verdict.................... $500.00

(5) Michael Brovak, father, loss of services, &c............. $100.00

(d) (6) Anna Hage, personal injuries ....... $2,500.00

(e) (7) Doris Cook, an infant, personal injuries, $2,500.00

(8) Mary Cook, her mother, loss of services, &e.............................. $250.00

(f) (9) Edna O’Shea, an infant, personal injuries ........................... $2,500.00

(10) Mary O’Shea, her mother, loss of services, &c......................... $250.00

A rule to show cause was obtained in each case and discharged by the trial court, after argument, except in that of Yustina Rosinski, administratrix ad prosequendum, where the trial court reduced the verdict to $8,500, which sum that plaintiff accepted.

The claims of these parties arose out of the following happenings, and under these circumstances: On August 2d, 1929, the defendant Hildebrecht Ice Cream Company, was in control of the operation of an automobile truck, loaded with ice cream, at the southeast corner of Lamberton and Cass streets, a public highway in the city of Trenton, New Jersey, and it appears that the driver, in order to avoid striking an automobile moving easterly to this intersection, made a sharp left-hand turn which resulted in the truck being overturned near the said southeast comer where it lay for perhaps half an hour before the happenings, complained of, occurred. During this half hour interval, Tyler, the foreman of the Hildebrecht Ice Cream Company’s maintenance department, summoned Charles H. Sutorius, trading as the Tex Wrecking Service, the other defendant here, who was in the business of *249 removing disabled automobiles and who, shortly thereafter, arrived with his automobile truck and apparatus and set to work at righting the truck and removing it from the highway.

There was evidence in the case that Sutorius and Tyler together applied themselves to the task of removing the truck; that they first placed hooks upon parts of the truck which were affixed to cables, which, in turn, were attached to a winding drum, which was part of the apparatus of the wrecker. The first effort to raise the truck was unsuccessful and there was testimony that on this first attempt it was raised perhaps twelve inches from the ground, then was lowered again, settling with a jar, followed by a rush of black smoke almost immediately and then flames. Now prior to this, gasoline had leaked from the tank of the overturned truck onto the street. The truck driver had been dispatched by Tyler, the foreman, to get a policeman to the scene and during his absence, the gasoline on the roadway flared up and the six persons were burned, one of whom died from his injuries. Suit was brought by or on behalf of all these persons against the. Hildebrecht Ice Cream Company and Sutorius jointly and verdicts for plaintiffs obtained.

Preliminary to considering the grounds for reversal, certain questions must be settled. The reasons assigned on rule to show cause in each case obtained on behalf of Hildebrecht were (1) that the verdicts were excessive; (2) that the verdicts were contrary to the charge of the court, reserving for appeal (a) that the plaintiffs should have been nonsuited; (b) that there should have been a direction of verdict in favor of the defendant, and (3) testimony which was objected to was admitted by the trial court.

On the rules to show cause obtained in behalf of the other defendant, Sutorius, or Tex Wrecking Service, the reasons filed in support of the rule were (1) verdicts were excessive; (2) verdicts were contrary to the charge of the court, and (3) verdicts were against the weight of the evidence. The legal questions reserved by this defendant were (a) plaintiffs should have been nonsuited on the opening made by counsel; (b) plaintiffs should have been nonsuited at end of their case; *250 (c) defendant should have had a direction of verdict in its favor at the end of the whole case, and (d) admission of testir mony by trial court over objection.

These several points set out in connection with the rules to show cause and the questions reserved for appeal become important in the light of the argument made in this court by counsel for the respondents who argue as follows: Since the reasons filed, upon which motion for a new trial is rested, include the point that the verdict is contrary to the weight of evidence and, after hearing, the court discharges the rule, the defendants estop themselves from arguing the questions of nonsuit or direction of verdict on appeal even though same are reserved. In support of this contention, counsel relies upon Holler v. Ross, 67 N. J. L. 60, and Cleaves v. Yeskel, 104 Id. 497. Counsel urges, in a word, that the questions are res adjudícala. That would be sound were it not for the fact that the second reason, namely, that the verdict was contrary to the charge of the court in the Hildebreeht’s case, and the same reason with the additional one that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence in the Sutorius case were, by order of the trial court and on application by counsel for each defendant below, exscinded from the reasons filed by such ■counsel for setting aside these verdicts. In other words, they were set up at first but expressly not considered or adjudicated on the argument of these several rules to show cause, only one ground having been argued (i. e., amount of verdict) and adjudicated, with the result mentioned above.

It is of course obvious that the theory and conduct of counsel in arguing a rule to show cause, and latterly an appeal to a higher tribunal, must be consistent. If it be argued in support of a rule to show cause that the jury’s finding was contrary to the charge of the court, it is a postulate of that statement that the charge to the jury, had it been followed by the jury, would have resulted differently. This is another way of saying that the charge to the jury was without fault as a matter of law. It is equally obvious that the court is in control of the rule to show cause allowed and the reasons that are filed, to this extent that it may state on the record by *251

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 300, 110 N.J.L. 246, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molnar-v-hildebrecht-ice-cream-co-nj-1933.