130 N.J. Super. 481 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1974
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiffs appeal from a denial of their motion for new trial after an adverse jury verdict, in this automobile negligence action involving the death of a pedestrian. They assert as grounds that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence and that the trial judge erred in permitting defendant to read extensively from his deposition during the presentation of plaintiffs’ proofs. We find no merit in either ground.
The accident in question occurred in the early morning dark on Ponte 27 in South Brunswick. It was not denied that an automobile operated by defendant struck and killed plaintiffs’ decedent as he was apparently crossing the highway on foot. Defendant testified on his own behalf, and while this testimony may have had some inaccuracies and inconsistencies, nothing approaching negligence as a matter of law, asserted by plaintiffs, appears. Clearly a jury question was made out, fairly submitted, and decided. We find the trial judge to be justified by the record in his observation at the motion for new trial that he was not persuaded of a miscarriage of justice. In such circumstances he correctly refused to preempt the jury function. Dolson v. Anastasia, 55 N. J. 2 (1969). Nor does our careful review of the record disclose a miscarriage of justice under the law. Our duty in this respect, then, is to affirm. R. 2:10-1; Poison, supra.
In the first place, the rule neither says nor implies that which plaintiffs attribute to it. We will not intrude on a salutary and respected long-standing rule of procedural discretion on the basis of an imagined implication. In addition, such an interpretation would prevent the trial judge from accomplishing one of his most important tasks: the preven
The judge below demonstrated a perfect awareness of the problem and the rationale we here articulate, and at the same time impressed upon the record the soundness of the exercise of his discretion in his explanation at the time as to why he overruled plaintiffs’ objection and permitted the reading. He said lie felt that to permit the contiguous reading "would make more sense to the jury * * * than it would when you [defendant] present your case.” We think, in this ease at least, he was entirely right.
Here plaintiffs belatedly also claim, as plain error since no objection appeared below in this regard (see above), that defendant was permitted to read too much of his own deposition. We need not here determine that issue. We have reviewed the record carefully and find such error — if indeed it was error — lacked the necessary capacity to produce an unjust result in any event. R. 2:10-2.
Affirmed.