Tildesley v. Joline

35 A.2d 699, 131 N.J.L. 179, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 27, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 699 (Tildesley v. Joline) 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
Tildesley v. Joline, 35 A.2d 699, 131 N.J.L. 179, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 167 (N.J. 1944).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.

This is plaintiff’s appeal from a judgment in favor of the corporate defendants, based on a verdict directed by the trial court. The individual defendant, Joline, admitted liability and a judgment was entered against him which is not before us on appeal. As to the corporate defendants, the sole ground of appeal is the direction of the verdict.

The suit arises out of a lamentable accident which occurred on a bridge over Shark River, Monmouth County, in the small hours of February 27th, 1942.- Deceased was the bridge tender on that bridge and was struck and fatally injured by an automobile driven by .defendant Joline, proceeding in a southerly direction across the bridge. The claim against the corporate defendants is based on the rule of respondeat superior. ■ The position taken by the defendants was that the relation of master and servant was non-existent because of deviation, that Joline at the time of the accident was on business of his own, and as to the Associated Press there was- the further claim that Joline was not a servant but merely an independent contractor.

With these preliminary observations we pass to the story of the accident.

Joline was a reporter on the regular staff of a daily newspaper published in Long Branch by the defendant Monmouth County Publishing Company, which latter was under contract with the Associated Press to supply news during certain hours. He had an automobile, registered in his wife’s name which he used in doing his work, and for which the Long *181 Branch paper furnished gasoline and oil. Shortly after midnight of February 26th-27th Joline was at Eatontown, about four miles west of Long Branch, at a meeting, under instruciions of his paper, and received instructions by telephone to go at once to Belmar, a summer resort on the coast about eight miles south of Long Branch, and “cover” the case of a ship that was burning a few miles off the coast. He left the meeting and drove to Bradley Beach, a short distance north of Belmar, parked his car, and walked south to Shark River Inlet, over which the coast road was carried on a bridge. From the bridge he observed the fire for a time, and finally at about 3 :15 A. ir. he concluded to return to his home, and report by telephone. It was very cold and he was so chilled that he craved some coffee and resolved to seek a lunch wagon. He went to his car, started north, hut turned west (inland) to a road paralleling the coast, called Main Street, which crosses Shark River Inlet on another bridge, and continued south on that road, all the time looking for a lunch wagon, and while crossing that bridge struck and fatally injured plaintiff’s intestate. He had then traveled about a mile and a half to the south, directly away from his home, which was to the north, with an object personal to himself and in no way connected with this employment. The trial court properly ruled that the deviation was a material one and that having turned directly away from his proper objective on a personal errand, the rule of respondeat superior was not applicable.

Appellant’s counsel relies, for a reversal, on six cases in our courts, all of which are clearly' distinguishable. In general, It is to be observed, that where the divergence from the shortest route is no more than a reasonable detour, incidental in character, there is at least a question for the jury as to abandonment of service to the master; but where, as here, the servant has for the- time turned in a direction diametrically opposite to the proper one, and for his own purposes, no jury question as to the deviation is presented. The (Vises cited for appellant are not to the contrary. In Ferris v. McArdle, 92 N. J. L. 580, the deviation was in a sense customary, and known to the employer as a practice. In *182 Dunne v. Hely, 104 Id. 84, the truck was headed for the garage, its home, but was proceeding bjr an indirect route “a block or so out of the way” (page 86). In Axford v. Purity Bakeries Co., 112 Id. 594, the truck was in fact on its proper course, but carrying a badly injured child, who had just been picked up, the driver intending to turn off to a neighboring hospital. In Celidonio v. A. Z. Motors Co., 121 Id. 377, a Supreme Court case, the driver, on his way to the garage, felt ill and on the way deviated to his own house (inferably in the same general neighborhood, page 379), for his customary medicine. In Arrington v. White and Koar, 126 Id. 551, White, the driver for Hoar, owner, was on his way to Hoar’s house and took a route which was not the shortest but which led to his destination. A judgment against Hoar was affirmed here, we holding that the question of deviation was for the jury. In Wasserman v. Schnoll, 129 Id. 224, the driver was on his master’s biisiness and on his way to headquarters, but he took a somewhat longer route to accommodate a friend by taking him home on the way. These are the cases relied on by appellant.- In each of them the question was whether the servant had for the noiice wholly abandoned his obligation to his master and devoted his master’s automobile to an alien purpose; and this was held to be for the jury. But the circumstances of the present case clearly bring it within the ruling of such cases as Cronecker v. Hall, 92 Id. 450, and Okin v. Essex Sales Co., 103 Id. 217, a Supreme Court decision affirmed by us in 104 Id. 174, 181.

Joline, called for plaintiff, testified on direct: “Q. Well, you didn’t feel that your night’s work was over on that particular news beat, did you? A. Yes, I figured I had enough. Q. You figured you had enough? A. Yes.” On cross, he testified that “in the normal course of events” he would write up the story when he “went in the office at 7:30 in the morning.” "Q. In other words, there was nothing further that you had to do for the Long Branch Record or the Monmouth County Publishing Company as far as this story is concerned after you left the inlet, is that correct? A. No, I didn’t have to do anything.” It seems quite clear,' therefore, that the *183 question of deviation was for the court, and properly decided as regards the Monmouth County Publishing Company.

The further point is made for the appellant, that Joline was under some obligation as an employee of the Associated Press, to telephone to the latter some report of what he had ascertained by his errand to Belmar, and that he expected to telephone from the lunch wagon if there was a telephone available. But we are unable to find anything in the proofs to sustain the claim that the relationship between that defendant and Joline was the relationship of master and servant. The Associated Press had no control over Joline.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A.2d 699, 131 N.J.L. 179, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tildesley-v-joline-nj-1944.