Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1934

Myles v. Sussman

Myles v. Sussman
Supreme Court of New Jersey · Decided March 23, 1934 · Cuhiam
12 N.J. Misc. 341; 171 A. 547; 1934 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 128

Myles v. Sussman

Opinion of the Court

Pee Cuhiam.

This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit of the Essex County Circuit Court in an action for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff in being struck by a motor truck. The trial court based its judgment of nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff “failed to make an adequate observation.” These are the facts. Plaintiff, a passenger on a bus which was traveling northerly on Grove street in Montclair, New Jersey, alighted, when the bus stopped, at a cross street known as Tuxedo road. She passed in front of the bus, which was at a standstill, and proceeded over the crosswalk almost to the opposite side when the defendant’s truck, traveling northerly, struck and injured her.

*342The court was of the opinion that the facts in this case were sufficiently similar to those in the case of Branigan v. Demarest, 109 N. J. L. 123 ; 160 Atl. Rep. 319, so as to-make the ruling in that case dispositive of the issue here. We do not think so and consequently there will be a reversal.

In the Branigan case the pedestrian likewise passed in front of a standing bus and was struck by an automobile that came from behind and passed the bus on its left. In that case the plaintiffs view of vehicles coming from the left rear was-obscured by the bus and it was manifest that there the plaintiff made no effective observation to convince herself that there were no vehicles approaching. Here the situation was-different. The plaintiff, Mrs. Myles, testified that from the observation made by her she could “see away down to the-end of the next block,” meaning the block to her left, which was the direction from which the defendants’ truck came. On cross-examination, plaintiff was even more definite, repeating that she could see “away down to the next block,” and that she looked to the right and left. Manifestly, if she-could see for a distance of a block in the direction from which the truck came, her vision could not have been obscured by the bus and the plain inference is that she was clear of the bus at the time of making this observation.

The only evidence upon which the negligence on the part, of the defendants in the operation of the truck could be predicated was that which described the truck as coming “very fast.” It was within the province of the jury, if they believed the testimony adduced for the plaintiff, viz., that Mrs. Myles looked to the left and right; saw no motor truck approaching within the distance of a block; that the truck approached very fast and ran the plaintiff down—to infer that the truck was negligently operated. Questions of negligence and contributory negligence are essentially fact questions for the jury.

On motion for nonsuit the trial judge is bound to accept as true the plaintiff’s evidence with all of the legitimate inferences that such evidence will support. The plaintiff’s-right to recovery is not barred because the plaintiff does not *343see the automobile which strikes and causes injury since our cases and common experience recognize that reasonable use of the powers of observation may be made and yet the presence of an automobile not disclosed. Puorro v. Salerno, 109 N. J. L. 381; 163 Atl. Rep. 527.

The judgment will therefore be reversed and a venire de novo awarded.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.