This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited.
PER CURIAM.
On September 29, 2006, plaintiff Michael Ripley, then thirteen years old, sustained serious injuries while riding his bicycle in Montville when he was struck by a vehicle operated by defendant Charles J. Schmidt. In May 2010, suit was filed on plaintiff's behalf against defendant alleging negligence. The case went to trial in 2015. In addition to jury instructions on defendant's duty of care, the trial court instructed the jury, over plaintiff's objection, that plaintiff had the same duty of care as a motorist making a left-hand turn across traffic. The jury subsequently found defendant was not negligent. Plaintiff timely moved for a new trial, specifically challenging the jury instruction on his duty of care. The trial court denied plaintiff's motion. Plaintiff now appeals the trial court's instruction on his duty of care and its denial of his motion for a new trial. After reviewing the record and applicable law, we affirm.
We derive the following facts from the trial record. On the date of the accident, plaintiff and his friend of the same age, Peter,
On the afternoon of the accident, defendant attended a meeting of the local library board. The meeting finished shortly before 5 p.m., and defendant started to drive home, heading north along Changebridge Road. Defendant lived in Montville for approximately thirty years, so he was familiar with Changebridge Road. At that time, Changebridge Road had one travel lane in each direction, with a painted white line delineating a narrow paved shoulder strip.
When defendant first saw plaintiff and Peter riding along the road, he was travelling at approximately forty miles per hour. As defendant approached plaintiff, he slowed his vehicle to approximately thirty-five miles per hour and shifted toward the left side of the northbound travel lane. According to defendant, he saw plaintiff riding to the right of the white shoulder line, then all of the sudden, plaintiff was right in front of his vehicle. Defendant hit his breaks "a second" before impact, and then saw plaintiff "come up onto the hood of my car." The impact occurred directly in front of Peter's home.
At trial, defendant did not object to the testimony of plaintiff's accident reconstruction expert, James Eastmond, a former police officer based in North Carolina. Eastmond did not personally travel to the accident site, but instead had an associate take pictures and measurements of the scene. In performing his calculations, Eastmond assumed defendant was travelling thirty-five miles per hour. He further assumed, based upon the police report, that defendant applied his brakes approximately twenty-three feet before impact and continued to travel twenty-three feet after impact. He further estimated it took plaintiff less than one second to go from the shoulder area to the point of impact; notwithstanding this estimation, Eastmond concluded that defendant had enough time to brake and avoid striking plaintiff.
Plaintiff did not object to the trial testimony of defendant's accident reconstruction expert, William Martin, a retired police officer based in Philadelphia. Martin testified defendant was between forty and seventy-eight feet away when plaintiff entered defendant's path. Martin concluded that plaintiff made a left turn from the northbound shoulder and his bike was traveling straight across the street, "almost perpendicular" to defendant's vehicle, at the moment of impact. Martin based his opinion on the damage pattern to the front of defendant's vehicle, as well as the fact that plaintiff's momentum (in riding from right-to-left in front of defendant's vehicle) caused him to end up in the opposite, south-bound lane of Changebridge Road.
After closing arguments, the court instructed the jury on the law, including the duty of care owed by each party. Plaintiff objected to a jury instruction regarding his duty in making a left-hand turn, asserting no direct evidence showed he was turning left at the time of the accident.
Over plaintiff's objection, the trial court instructed the jury with respect to plaintiff's duty in making a left-hand turn. In pertinent part, the judge instructed the jury,
The court also provided the following instruction based upon
The court further instructed the jury that no person shall turn "without giving an appropriate signal . . . in the event any other traffic may be affected by such movement."
After deliberating, the jury completed the verdict sheet answering only question one; by a 7-1 vote, the jury found defendant was not negligent. As instructed, the jury did not reach the remaining five questions on proximate cause and plaintiff's negligence.
In
Review of jury instructions is a two-step process. First, this court must determine whether an error actually occurred. "In civil matters, the trial court should give an instruction that appropriately guides the jury on the legal basis of a plaintiff's claim or a defendant's affirmative defense, so long as there is a reasonable factual basis in the evidence to support that claim or defense."
In this case, plaintiff maintains the court inappropriately used
Plaintiff maintains the left-hand turn charge was inappropriate because the accident did not occur at an intersection. Plaintiff correctly states the left-hand turn charge is appropriate for issues arising under
Plaintiff contends
Next, plaintiff asserts the evidence was insufficient for the jury to find plaintiff was making a left-hand turn when the accident occurred. We disagree. The record contains sufficient facts to support the left-hand turn charge. Although plaintiff could not remember the accident or whether he made a left turn, circumstantial evidence permitted inferring he was crossing the road when defendant hit him. Plaintiff testified he was travelling to Peter's home for dinner. The accident occurred on Changebridge Road in front of Peter's home. According to defendant's expert, plaintiff was "almost perpendicular" to defendant's vehicle, at the moment of impact. The trial court properly concluded, "There is evidence from which the jury could find [plaintiff] turned left." Based on the "reasonable basis in the evidence," a jury could infer plaintiff was engaged in a left turn toward his intended destination at the time of the collision, warranting the left-hand turn charge.
Next, plaintiff asserts the trial court's jury instructions were inappropriate because the jury could have found plaintiff was not travelling on the "roadway." Plaintiff's argument is contrary to the record. In fact, plaintiff's expert testified plaintiff "entered the roadway . . . where impact occurred."
Separate from challenges to the left-hand turn charge, plaintiff asserts charging the jury regarding
In short, plaintiff's claims of error regarding the trial court's left-hand turn charge lack merit. "The requested instruction generally should be given, as long as there is a reasonable basis in the evidence to support the predicate factual contention that can trigger the charge, in light of the proofs and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from those proofs."
Lastly, when examining the denial of a motion for a new trial, this court may not reverse the trial ruling "unless it clearly appears that there was a miscarriage of justice under the law."
Affirmed.