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PER CURIAM.
Plaintiff Leonides Stergios was hit by a bus. She and her husband Peter (collectively plaintiffs) filed a civil action naming the New Jersey Transit Corp., New Jersey Transit Bus Operations, Inc. and the driver, Paul Lowney. Invoking the New Jersey Tort Claims Act (TCA),
Plaintiffs settled their claims against the driver and New Jersey Transit, and the trial court dismissed them with prejudice. Plaintiffs appeal a grant of the Borough's motion for summary judgment, and the Borough does not contend it was entitled to immunity pursuant to
The evidence, viewed favorably to plaintiffs, can be summarized as follows. Shortly before 5:30 p.m. on August 10, 2011, plaintiff Leonides Stergios and the six to eight other passengers remaining on the commuter bus disembarked at a sheltered bus stop. The sheltered bus stop is situated in a park owned by the Borough, which is adjacent to the Garden State Parkway. Employees of the Borough's Department of Public Works erected the shelter behind a curb they also installed.
The shelter is at the curb on a one way street and on Borough property. It is not an official stop. Nevertheless, the driver regularly drove this route twice a day five days a week and generally stopped there as a courtesy, as did other drivers. Travelling in the proper direction, the driver entered the narrow roadway leading to the stop and stopped with the bus faced to continue down the street so he could return the bus to the garage.
There were no sidewalks leading from the shelter to the nearby parking lot farther down the street where plaintiff had left her car. She walked in the street beside the curb to get to her car, because there was a hedgerow sufficiently proximate to the curb to preclude her walking on the ground beyond the curb. The lay-out of the street, its narrow width, the curb and the proximity of the hedgerow is depicted in photographs submitted on the motion.
As the driver moved on he did not notice plaintiff, hit her and drove one wheel over her leg. The seriousness and permanency of plaintiff's multiple and complex injuries was undisputed. There was no evidence the Borough made any effort to deter New Jersey Transit from allowing its drivers to stop at the shelter erected by its employees.
The TCA defines the cause of action.
A "`dangerous condition' is defined in the Act as `a condition of property that creates a
Given the location of a parking lot beyond the bus stop, a jury could reasonably conclude there was a substantial risk that a commuter returning to a car from the bus stop and having no other route but the roadway would be struck by a vehicle from behind. A jury could also reasonably infer the Borough had actual notice of the relative locations of the shelter stop, curb and parking lot, the hedgerow and the absence of a guardrail and sidewalks. Indeed, a reasonable jury could infer the Borough exacerbated the risk by erecting this shelter at the curb.
The Borough argues that even if it had actual or constructive notice, the evidence would not permit a jury to find its failure to correct the condition was "palpably unreasonable."
Focusing on plaintiff's and the bus driver's patently negligent conduct, the Borough contends that no reasonable jury could find the condition of its property was a proximate cause of this accident. But it is well-settled that "[w]ith respect to concurrent proximate causation, a tortfeasor will be held answerable if its `negligent conduct was a substantial factor in bringing about the injuries,' even where there are `other intervening causes which were foreseeable or were normal incidents of the risk created.'"
For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude summary judgment was improvidently granted, vacate the judgment in the Borough's favor and remand for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings. We do not retain jurisdiction.