Pfender v. Torres

765 A.2d 208, 336 N.J. Super. 379
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 16, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 765 A.2d 208 (Pfender v. Torres) 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.

Bluebook
Pfender v. Torres, 765 A.2d 208, 336 N.J. Super. 379 (N.J. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

765 A.2d 208 (2001)
336 N.J. Super. 379

Katherine PFENDER and Walter Pfender, husband and wife, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Joseph A. TORRES and Don Rosen Imports, Inc., Defendants-Respondents.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued December 13, 2000.
Decided January 16, 2001.

*210 Mark R. Kehoe, Philadelphia, PA, argued the cause for appellants (Monteverde, McAlee, Fitzpatrick, Tanker & Hurd, attorneys; Mr. Kehoe, on the brief).

Mitchell S. Berman, Vineland, argued the cause for respondents (Eisenstat, Gabage, Berman & Furman, attorneys; Mr. Berman and Patricia A. Powell, on the brief).

Friedman, Bafundo & Porter, Cherry Hill, for amicus curiae Association of Trial Lawyers of America (Robert A. Porter, on the brief).

Before Judges COBURN, AXELRAD and LANDAU. *209

*211 The opinion of the court was delivered by COBURN, J.A.D.

In this automobile accident case, plaintiffs filed a pretrial motion for discovery of the defendant-driver's statements to his insurer describing the event. The judge denied the motion on the ground that the statements were protected from discovery by the attorney-client privilege and the work-product rule. Subsequently, a jury found both participants in the accident negligent, assigning 70% of the fault to plaintiff Katherine Pfender, a pedestrian, and 30% to the defendant-driver. Plaintiffs appeal. We reverse and remand for a new trial because we are satisfied that the statements were discoverable and because they reveal information that might well have led the jury to a contrary result.

I

On October 31, 1996, plaintiff Katherine Pfender was injured at a gas station when defendant Joseph A. Torres drove his employer's car over her foot. She testified that after purchasing cigarettes at the island, she looked for approaching cars, saw none, and started walking away. After taking two or three steps, she sensed something coming and at that moment the car's right front tire drove over her left foot. When a station attendant yelled at the driver, he backed up, driving over her foot a second time. Immediately after the contact, she said that she saw the driver, Torres, speaking on a mobile telephone. Torres testified on direct-examination that he entered the gas station at a speed of "[a]pproximately five miles per hour." He said he was coming to a stop at an island when "something or someone" that he had not previously observed "stepped out and right into my right fender." At that point he was "almost to a complete stop" and he "heard the impact or someone screaming." He immediately put his car in reverse. He denied that he was speaking on his mobile telephone at the time. On cross-examination, Torres admitted that it was possible that he entered the gas station at a speed of ten miles per hour. He claimed that when he saw plaintiff she was at the side of his car.

In summation, defense counsel emphasized three points: (1) the records for the mobile telephone indicated it was not in use at the time of the accident; (2) there was no evidence that Torres was driving at an undue speed; and (3) the injured plaintiff falsely claimed that she had been standing at the island as Torres pulled into the gas station so that he should have seen her earlier and been able to avoid the accident. In regard to the two latter points, defense counsel's comments included these statements:

In fact the only evidence was from him [Torres] that he was driving five, maybe ten miles an hour through this gas station parking lot and as he was pulling up to the pumps. So I would suggest to you that there's no evidence of undue speed.
....
The next issue ... with respect to the allegation that Joe was negligent is whether or not he could see her as he was pulling up to the pumps. As you remember, he admitted that he didn't see her until he saw her from his peripheral vision just about the time that she was walking into the right front fender of his car. He didn't see her before that.... [I]f she was standing ... where she says she was standing ..., Joe Torres could have seen her. Well, Joe admitted that in his testimony. If she was standing there, he could have seen her as he was pulling up to the pumps.
....
I agree with that. But I will suggest that that's not where she was standing. She wants you to believe that she was standing there so that you'll decide that Joe could have seen her and could have taken some efforts to avoid hitting her when she walked out into his path of travel.

*212 At our request, defense counsel submitted for in camera review the transcripts of two tape-recorded statements given by Torres to an insurance investigator who introduced himself as the agent for the insurer of Torres' employer, defendant Don Rosen Imports, Inc. ("DRI"). The agent did not indicate that he was there to represent or protect Torres.

In the first statement, dated August 8, 1997, Torres acknowledged that the car he was driving was owned by his employer but provided to him for business and pleasure. He said that when he drove into the gas station he was traveling at "5, 10, maybe 15 [miles per hour]." He then said that as he was "coming and proceeding to slow down, I probably at the most was doing 10, 15 MPH, if that." Needless to say, those descriptions of his speed might well be seen as inconsistent with his trial testimony.

The statement also differed sharply from his trial testimony on the question of when and where he first saw plaintiff. He said he first saw her

[at] the island, and she turned and stepped down from the island into my path. So she must have just paid for her cigarettes and then proceeded to turn and step, as quickly as it happened, it didn't look like she even looked.

In the second statement, taken on October 2, 1997, this dialogue occurred:

COULD YOU ESTIMATE YOUR SPEED ... AT THE TIME OF THE IMPACT?
Maybe 5MPH and it wasn't like I was flying thru the island.

Universal Underwriters Insurance Company insured both defendants. It opened a file in this matter in response to a July 7, 1997 letter from plaintiffs' attorney to DRI asserting their claims. The claims examiner certified that he assigned the investigation to an outside adjuster "specifically in response to the claim being asserted, and the potential lawsuit, on behalf of Mrs. Pfender." He further certified that he asked the adjuster to

take statements from Mr. Torres both to learn about the facts surrounding the happening of the accident and for use in defense of the claim and any lawsuit. Although no lawsuit had yet been filed, and we had not yet assigned an attorney to defend our insured, the attorneys we utilize, including [the attorney who was eventually assigned this case] request that we have statements from insured's employees who are involved in accidents, so that any available defenses can be prepared.

Torres, demonstrating what some might consider a remarkable understanding for a layman of the law of attorney-client privilege, certified as follows:

At the time I gave these statements, it was my understanding that these were confidential communications between myself and a representative of my insurance company, the purpose of which was to defend me and my employer from the claim being asserted by Mrs. Pfender for personal injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
765 A.2d 208, 336 N.J. Super. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfender-v-torres-njsuperctappdiv-2001.