Parave v. Public Service Interstate Transportation Co.

160 A. 375, 109 N.J.L. 155, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 160 A. 375 (Parave v. Public Service Interstate Transportation 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
Parave v. Public Service Interstate Transportation Co., 160 A. 375, 109 N.J.L. 155, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 292 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wells, J.

This is an appeal from three judgments entered in the Supreme Court on a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant in the Gloucester Circuit.

The actions were brought under the Death act to recover damages for the pecuniary loss sustained by the plaintiffs because of the deaths of their intestates in a collision between a Ford ear in which the three decedents were riding and an automobile passenger bus owned and operated by the defendant.

The cases were tried together and on rules to show cause, based only on the excessiveness of the verdicts, two of the verdicts were reduced by the Supreme Court.

The complaints alleged that on October 29th, 1930, the decedents were occupants of a Ford automobile which was being operated by Joseph Parave, and proceeding in a southerly direction along the public highway known as Del-sea Drive in the township of Franklin, county of Gloucester and State of New Jersey; that the defendant was operating its bus along the Delsea Drive proceeding in a northerly direction, and that as the Ford automobile in which the decedents were riding and the bus of the defendant approached the intersection of the Delsea Drive with the public highway leading from Delsea Drive to Ionia (known as the Williams-town road), the defendant negligently operated its bus at a high and unlawful rate of speed, and without due regard for the rights and safety of other persons using said highway, and negligently failed to have the bus in proper mechanical order and the brakes in good proper working condition, and negligently operated it from the right or easterly side of the Delsea Drive to the left or westerly side thereof, so that it collided into and against the automobile in which decedents were passengers, resulting in their deaths.

The answers deny the allegations of the complaints, except *157 the ownership and operation of the bus, and plead contributory negligence on the part of decedents.

At the close of the plaintiffs’ case, the appellant moved for nonsuits in all three cases, which motions were denied and exceptions taken thereto. The reasons advanced for the motions for nonsuits were that there was no proof of any negligence nor any proof of any facts which give rise to an immediate inference of negligence which was the proximate cause of whatever had taken place: and that there was no proof in the cases that the decedents were in an automobile which was being operated in a southerly direction along Delsea Drive nor that it collided with the bus of the defendant, nor that an accident took place as the result of negligence which was the proximate cause, on the part of defendant, in which accident the decedents met their deaths.

At the close of the entire case, the appellant moved for the direction of verdicts for the same reasons given in the motions for nonsuits with the additional reason that the decedents were guilty of contributory negligence.

These motions were also denied and exceptions taken thereto.

The propriety of the judge’s rulings is before us on an appeal from the judgments.

“A motion for a nonsuit admits the truth of the plaintiff’s evidence, and every inference of fact that can be legitimately drawn therefrom, but denies its sufficiency in law. And the same rule by parity of reasoning is applicable as to a motion to direct a verdict for the defendant, based upon the insufficiency of the evidence to establish a legal cause of action.” Fox et ux. v. Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., 84 N. J. L. 726; 87 Atl. Rep. 339. Citing Weston Co. v. Benecke, 82 N. J. L. 445.

“A refusal to nonsuit, for failure of proofs, will not justify a reversal if the defect be supplied by evidence thereafter taken during the progress of the cause.” Maudsley v. Richardson & Boynton Co., 101 N. J. L. 561.

Counsel for appellant at the argument abandoned the plea •of contributory negligence.

*158 A brief recital of the facts as they appeared in the case will, we believe, suffice to dispose of the points advanced by defendants for the reversal of the judgments.

Por the plaintiffs, Arthur Merini, an Italian who understood, but could not speak English fluently, testified that on the night of the accident he was proceeding in an automobile in a southerly direction along the Delsea Drive on his way from Philadelphia to “Vineland. Por some distance before he reached the Williamstown cross-road he had noticed an automobile following him on the right side of the Delsea Drive and going also in a southerly direction, the light of which he could plainly see in his mirror; that as he approached the said cross-road the automobile continued to follow in the rear; and that he also saw approaching him a bus traveling-in the middle of the Delsea Drive, and that shortly after Merini had passed the Williamstown cross-road this bus passed him going in the opposite direction, and that in his mirror he saw lights of the automobile still back of him and the rear red lights of the bus which had passed him and he saw the bus shoot across the road to its left, heard a crash and he no longer saw the lights of the automobile that had been following him, but saw the bus go across the road to its left and into a, field.

He didn’t stop because he had no money with him and feared he wouldn’t make home that night with his disabled car.

Merini also testified that no automobile was coming out of the Williamstown road on to the Delsea Drive at or near the time of the collision.

There was other proof from which the jury could find that defendant’s bus swerved from its proper side of the Delsea Drive to the left side thereof and finally stopped at a point more than one hundred feet from the intersection of the center line of Delsea Drive with the Williamstown cross-road and from forty to fifty feet to the west of the westerly edge of the concrete part of the Delsea Drive and that the collision occurred at or near the center of these two intersecting roads; that the Pord automobile was found immediately after the *159 collision a few feet from the bus with its rear up against a tree, facing south, its left side smashed in, that the glass and other broken parts were all on the westerly side of Delsea Drive; that the front part of the bus was damaged; that three boys were found between the Ford automobile and the bus, about thirty-five feet from the westerly edge of the Delsea Drive; that these boys were taken to the hospital and there died and were identified as the plaintiff’s intestates and as the same boys who had started out together that same evening in a small car. The operator of the bus admitted that he had a collision with a Ford automobile on the night in question at or near the place of the accident and that afterward he saw the three passengers that were in the Ford automobile; and that they were lying about thirty feet from the automobile after the collision.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 375, 109 N.J.L. 155, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parave-v-public-service-interstate-transportation-co-nj-1932.