VLADIMIR DIAZ VS. HERBERT J. REYNOSO (L-8244-19, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 1, 2021
DocketA-1285-20
StatusPublished

This text of VLADIMIR DIAZ VS. HERBERT J. REYNOSO (L-8244-19, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (VLADIMIR DIAZ VS. HERBERT J. REYNOSO (L-8244-19, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) 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
VLADIMIR DIAZ VS. HERBERT J. REYNOSO (L-8244-19, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1285-20

VLADIMIR DIAZ,

Plaintiff, v. APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION HERBERT J. REYNOSO and June 1, 2021 AWJ INC., d/b/a EL TANGO APPELLATE DIVISION ARGENTINA GRILL,

Defendants,

and

ANGEL DOMINGUEZ,

Defendant-Respondent,

THE CITY OF ENGLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY, a Municipal Corporation of the State of New Jersey, County of Bergen, its Officials, Employees and/or agents, ANTHONY GALLO, Individually and as a Police Officer of the City of Englewood, and LOTHAIRS PORTER, Individually and as a Police Office of the City of Englewood,

Defendant-Appellants. ______________________________ Argued April 26, 2021 – Decided June 1, 2021

Before Judges Sabatino, Gooden Brown, and DeAlmeida.

On appeal from an interlocutory order of the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Bergen County, Docket No. L-8244-19.

James F. Dronzek argued the cause for appellants (Chasan Lamparello Mallon & Cappuzzo, PC, attorneys; James F. Dronzek, of counsel and on the brief; Ryan J. Gaffney, on the brief).

Peter E. Mueller argued the cause for respondent (Harwood Lloyd, LLC, attorneys; Jeanne O. Marino, of counsel and on the brief; Peter E. Mueller, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

SABATINO, P.J.A.D.

This interlocutory appeal from a Rule 4:6-2(e) dismissal order raises novel

issues of legal duty and tort liability in a drunk driving context.

The issues concern whether a volunteer who assures police officers at a

roadside stop of an apparently inebriated driver that he will take the driver and

his car safely to a residence—but thereafter relinquishes the car to the driver

before reaching that destination—can be civilly liable as a joint tortfeasor if the

driver then collides with and injures another motorist.

A-1285-20 2 In the present case, police officers stopped a driver who was traveling in

the wrong direction on a one-way street. Perceiving the motorist was unfit to

drive, the officers asked him if he could arrange for someone to pick him up.

The motorist called a friend, who quickly arrived and assured the officers that

he would drive the motorist and his car to another location. Relying on this

assurance, the police issued a traffic ticket for a moving violation to the motorist

and allowed the friend to drive him away. Minutes later, the friend returned the

car to the motorist at a railroad crossing and separated from him. The motorist,

who was intoxicated well over the legal limit, resumed driving and crashed his

car into the plaintiff's vehicle. He later pled guilty to committing assault by auto

while under the influence of alcohol.

The severely injured plaintiff sued the driver, a restaurant where the driver

had been drinking that night, the police officers and their city employer, and the

volunteer. The volunteer moved to dismiss the claims against him, arguing he

owed no legal duty that could make him civilly liable to any extent for this

accident.

After reviewing a video of the motor vehicle stop and a prosecutor's

investigative report, the motion judge concluded the volunteer breached no legal

duty to the injured plaintiff. The judge accordingly dismissed plaintiff's claims,

A-1285-20 3 as well as the police defendants' related cross-claims for contribution, against

the volunteer. This appeal ensued.

Applying statutory public policies and allied common law principles, we

reverse the trial court's dismissal order.

We hold that a volunteer who fails to discharge his commitment to the

police in such a situation and who willingly allows a visibly intoxicated motorist

to resume driving can bear a portion of the civil liability for an ensuing motor

vehicle accident caused by that drunk driver. The presence of such a legal duty

will hinge upon whether the volunteer is advised by the police, or objectively

has reason to know from the surrounding circumstances, that his or her promise

is an important obligation and that failing to carry it out could result in civil

financial consequences.

In recognizing these legal duties that may have been assumed by the

volunteer, we do not absolve any other parties whose negligence, if proven,

contributed to the harm, including the drunk driver himself, the police officials

who failed to field test or arrest him, and the restaurant that served him alcohol.

Their own respective shares of fault would need to be determined and allocated,

based upon customary rules of proximate causation and joint tortfeasor liability.

A-1285-20 4 Because discovery had only just begun in this case and the factual record

is not sufficiently developed to resolve these issues, the dismissal of the

volunteer as a co-defendant was premature. We therefore remand for further

proceedings in accordance with the principles stated in this opinion.

I.

The record existing as of the time of the motion ruling 1 reflects the

following sequence of events.

The Four Friends and the Drinking of Alcohol That Night

At approximately 7:00 p.m. on September 22, 2018, defendants Herbert

J. Reynoso and Angel Dominguez, accompanied by their friends Luis Gonzalez

and Daniel Paredes, attended a rooftop party in Fort Lee. After leaving the party

around 11:00 p.m., the four men went to El Tango Argentina Grill ("El Tango")

in Englewood. They stayed at El Tango until approximately 1:45 a.m. on

September 23. According to Reynoso's guilty plea colloquy, he consumed at

1 We were advised at oral argument that several depositions were taken after we granted leave to appeal, and that the dismissed co-defendant's counsel participated, provisionally, in those depositions. We were not informed of additional facts that may have emerged or were clarified at those depositions, and appropriately confine our review to the record provided to the motion judge.

A-1285-20 5 least two cocktails, a shot of tequila, and two beers at El Tango without eating

any food there.

When they left El Tango, the group divided. Reynoso left El Tango

driving his own vehicle, an Audi sedan, with Gonzalez as a passenger.

Meanwhile, Paredes left in his own vehicle, a handicap-equipped van, with

Dominguez as a passenger.

The Traffic Stop and the MVR Footage

Shortly thereafter, at about 1:53 a.m., Englewood Police Officer Anthony

Gallo observed Reynoso's Audi make a turn going the wrong direction on Grand

Avenue in Englewood, a one-way street. Gallo radioed for back-up and

proceeded to stop Reynoso's vehicle. 2

2 Substantial portions of the stop were captured on Gallo's mobile video recorder ("MVR") footage filmed from his squad car. The video, which is about seventeen minutes long, was provided to the trial court and referred to several times during the motion argument. It is also discussed in the county prosecutor's investigative report.

The audio track of the recording picked up much, but not all of, the conversations that occurred during the traffic stop. Although the parties did not have a transcript of the audio track prepared, their briefs essentially agree on the wording of certain statements, and the judge and counsel referred to those statements at the motion hearing. To the extent our opinion conveys what appears on the soundtrack, we do so with the caveat that no verbatim transcript was created.

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VLADIMIR DIAZ VS. HERBERT J. REYNOSO (L-8244-19, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vladimir-diaz-vs-herbert-j-reynoso-l-8244-19-bergen-county-and-njsuperctappdiv-2021.