PER CURIAM.
After plaintiff Anthony Guerriero was struck and injured by a go-kart owned by defendant Jeffery Wernes in the parking lot of Wernes's employer, defendant Visual E-Fex, plaintiff filed a negligence action against Wernes and Visual E-Fex.
Wernes.
Plaintiff has appealed and argues that the judge erred by granting Visual E-Fex's motion to dismiss and allowing his expert's deposition to be presented to the jury. After reviewing the record in light of the contentions advanced on appeal, we affirm the judge's decision to grant Visual E-Fex's motion to dismiss, but reverse and remand the judgment entered in favor of Wernes.
Visual E-Fex owns and operates a commercial signage business in West Linden, where it makes customized signs and also applies vinyl decals to cars and other equipment. The shop is located off Saint Georges Avenue and adjoins a strip mall.
For the three years prior to the incident on August 5, 2008, Visual E-Fex had employed Wernes as "a shop hand." Wernes was responsible for "keep[ing] the order of the shop[,]" and he also installed signs and lettering, answered the telephone, and dealt with customers. Wernes was not employed to sell go-karts or any other type of vehicle.
In April 2008, Wernes purchased a go-kart from an online dealer. "It came in a paper box" and Wernes had to "put it together" by installing "the wheels and the top part of the cage." As he did so, he "[p]retty much just skimm[ed] through" the manual "to find what I needed." Wernes operated the go-kart sporadically between April and August 2008. He started it about ten times and drove it on only three or four occasions. Wernes testified
By July 2008, Wernes had decided to sell the go-kart because he was having financial problems. He placed an ad on Craig's List, but did not receive any viable responses. At the shop, he talked about the go-kart with Albert Angrisani and Paul Deem, the owners of Visual E-Fex. Deem told Wernes that he could park the go-kart in front of the shop in an effort to sell it. Angrisani agreed to this arrangement. Both Angrisani and Deem testified that Visual E-Fex was not in the business of selling vehicles and would not receive any financial or other benefit from permitting Wernes to park the go-kart in the parking lot with a "for sale" sign on it. Because Wernes had never had any mechanical problems with the go-kart, he never informed Angrisani or Deem of any concerns about the vehicle's safety. Neither owner ever touched or operated the go-kart.
Wernes brought the go-kart to the shop three or four days before August 5, 2008. During that time, no one expressed any interest in purchasing it.
In "mid to late July" 2008, plaintiff had dropped off a Fender Stratocaster guitar at the shop to have some "lettering" placed on it. He returned to the shop between 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. on August 5, 2008 to pick up the guitar. Plaintiff did not notice the go-kart when he entered the shop. He brought a case of beer for the owners. Angrisani and plaintiff drank a beer and talked about the guitar with Deem. Angrisani testified that plaintiff was "happy" with the work.
Plaintiff went outside the shop to take a telephone call. He testified he had finished conducting his business in the shop at that point. Plaintiff saw the go-kart while he was outside and, after completing his call, he returned to the shop to "inquire[] about" it. Angrisani directed him to Wernes.
Plaintiff and Wernes went into the parking lot to look at the go-kart. Plaintiff stood near his truck. Wernes stood outside the go-kart, with his foot on the brake pedal, and started it. Wernes testified that the go-kart "immediately shot forward and pinned [plaintiff] against his vehicle." Plaintiff suffered a compound fracture of his right leg. Angrisani called 9-1-1 and an ambulance arrived to transport plaintiff to the hospital. He was on crutches and had to use a cane for the next six months.
At the conclusion of plaintiff's case, the trial judge granted Visual's E-Fex's motion for an involuntary dismissal of the claims against it pursuant to
Plaintiff's case continued against Wernes. Prior to trial, plaintiff retained an expert, Peter Chen, to inspect the go-kart and instruction manual and prepare a report concerning whether there were any mechanical defects in the vehicle. Chen was employed by CED Technology, a Connecticut company.
Chen prepared a report that identified design flaws in the go-kart and numerous issues with the instruction manual. The attorney for Maxtrade, LLC took a discovery deposition of Chen during the discovery period. The deposition was attended by the attorneys for plaintiff, Visual E-Fex, and Wernes.
After plaintiff settled his claims against Maxtrade, LLC, he abandoned his plan to call Chen as a witness at trial. The record also indicates that Chen advised the parties that it was likely that his employer would not let him have time off to appear at the trial. Prior to jury selection, Wernes stated that he wanted to call Chen as a witness, if he was available. Therefore, the judge included Chen's name on the list of potential witnesses provided to the jury during voir dire. However, the judge ruled that Wernes would not be permitted to say anything to the jury about Chen's potential testimony during his opening statement "unless [Chen] calls back and says he's coming." Chen subsequently advised Wernes that he would not be available to testify at the trial.
After plaintiff rested his case, Wernes made a motion for permission to read portions of Chen's discovery deposition to the jury.
Thereafter, Wernes's attorney read the portions of Chen's deposition where he was critical of the go-kart's design and instruction manual. The judge then permitted plaintiff to read the portions of the transcript he believed were advantageous to his claims. After the deposition was read to the jury, Wernes rested without calling any witness.
In rebuttal, plaintiff sought to read portions of a discovery deposition provided prior to trial by Maxtrade, LLC's "liability expert," George Meinschein, who had opined that someone had modified the go-kart and that this was the reason for the vehicle striking plaintiff. The judge denied plaintiff's motion, stating, "I'm not [going to] allow it in because I — not only is [Meinschein's deposition testimony] highly prejudicial, I don't think it's reliable."
The jury returned a five-to-one verdict for Wernes and judgment was entered in his favor. This appeal followed.
Plaintiff first contends that the trial judge erred in granting Visual E-Fex's motion for an involuntary dismissal at the end of plaintiff's case. We disagree.
In reviewing a decision to grant a motion for involuntary dismissal, our task is to determine whether "the evidence, together with the legitimate inferences therefrom, could sustain a judgment in plaintiff's favor."
Applying this standard, we discern no basis for disturbing the trial judge's decision to dismiss plaintiff's claims against Visual E-Fex. Plaintiff argues that the judge should have permitted the jury to consider whether Visual E-Fex could be found liable for Wernes's conduct under the respondeat superior doctrine. This argument lacks merit.
"Although as a general rule of tort law, liability must be based on personal fault, the doctrine of
Here, it is clear that Wernes was not acting within the scope of his employment with Visual E-Fex when he started the go-kart in the parking lot. As the trial judge found, Wernes was hired to work in the shop, not to sell go-karts. Visual E-Fex was not in the business of selling go-karts and it received no financial benefit from permitting Wernes to park his vehicle in the parking lot with a "for sale" sign. No customers came to the shop because the go-kart was for sale and plaintiff did not even notice the vehicle until after he had completed his transaction in the shop on August 5, 2008. Therefore, the judge properly dismissed plaintiff's respondeat superior claim against Visual E-Fex.
Plaintiff's reliance upon
Plaintiff next argues that the judge erred in granting Visual E-Fex's motion for involuntary dismissal on the issue of negligence. Plaintiff alleges that he was a business invitee of Visual E-Fex and that the owners of the shop should have been aware of the "dangerous condition" of the go-kart.
As our Supreme Court has held:
Applying this standard to the circumstances of this case, and giving plaintiff the benefit of all of the favorable inferences, we again perceive no reason for disturbing the trial judge's decision to dismiss plaintiff's claim against Visual E-Fex.
Plaintiff's proofs clearly showed that, in the four months Wernes owned the go-kart, it had never lunged forward as it did on the date of the accident. Wernes was unaware of any mechanical problems with the go-kart and, therefore, he had no basis for advising Angrisani or Deem that the vehicle was "dangerous" or would create a condition that would render the parking lot unsafe. The shop's owners never drove, or even touched, the go-kart. Plaintiff provided no expert testimony that the go-kart was "inherently dangerous" or that Angrisani and Deem should have taken any precautions concerning it. No evidence was presented that the condition of the parking lot contributed in any way to the accident.
Because no rational factfinder could find that Visual E-Fex breached a duty owed to plaintiff under the circumstances of this case, we affirm the trial judge's decision to grant the shop's motion for an involuntary dismissal on the issue of negligence.
We now turn to plaintiff's argument that the judge mistakenly permitted Wernes to read portions of Chen's discovery disposition to the jury. "Evidentiary decisions are reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard because, from its genesis, the decision to admit or exclude evidence is one firmly entrusted to the trial court's discretion."
The law concerning use of an expert witness's deposition at trial is well-settled. Discovery depositions of experts are taken pursuant to
The general admissibility of depositions in an action is covered by
Thus,
Wernes argues that it would have been inequitable to bar him from using Chen's discovery deposition because Chen was in Connecticut and could not be subpoenaed to testify. Without Chen's testimony, Wernes asserts the jury would not have been informed that the go-kart had design flaws and a faulty instruction manual. This argument is unpersuasive.
Wernes bases his argument on
Here, Wernes did not retain an expert to address possible defects in the go-kart's design or instruction manual. He did not decide to attempt to call Chen as a witness until the trial was about to commence and did not seek permission to read his discovery deposition to the jury until the trial was already underway. All of this could have been avoided had Wernes conducted a
Affirmed in part (dismissal as to Visual E-Fex), and reversed and remanded in part for further proceedings against Wernes consistent with our opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.