Opinion
Submitted October 25, 1940 —
Decided February 4, 1941.
Where an injured plaintiff was not an invitee, but at best a licensee, and there was no evidence of willful or wanton negligence on defendant's part in operating her automobile, it was error to refuse a nonsuit on her motion.
On appeal from the Supreme Court.
For the plaintiffs-respondents, Hugh C. Spernow ( Hunziker Hunziker, of counsel).
For the defendant-appellant, William W. Evans.
This is defendant's appeal from a judgment recovered by the plaintiff, an infant, for personal injuries, and by his father as next friend for his expenses arising therefrom. The case was tried before. There were then additional defendants. A jury verdict for the plaintiffs against this defendant was set aside on rule to show cause. The details of that trial and the subsequent happenings are not important here. Since the last trial the defendant, Solveig Berg, has been married and now appears under her marriage name.
The appellant, a school pupil of seventeen years of age, at the time in question, drove her automobile several blocks from the school, during the noon recess, into the city of Paterson for the purpose of getting her lunch at a local drug store. While returning from lunch she stopped and took into her car a group of girl-pupils who were walking back to school. Several boys, including the infant plaintiff, upon witnessing this occurrence, decided to join the girls and ran out to the car and assumed various positions on the running boards. The evidence shows that the plaintiff John Kelliher, Jr., was told to get off the running-board, which he did, but later seated himself on the front bumper of the car. The car had only traveled a few yards when it ran into or was "sideswiped" by another car and the boy's leg was broken.
The grounds of appeal are two in number (1) refusal to nonsuit; (2) refusal to direct a verdict.
That the plaintiff John Kelliher, Jr., occupied no relationship to the defendant other than that of trespasser, or at best a licensee is clear. There was no evidence of this kind of negligence in the case. He had not been invited to get on the car by the defendant nor by anyone who was defendant's agent for that purpose. Some of the school girls already in the car called out to the boy, "hop on." That was the extent of the so-called invitation. There was no testimony from which a jury could legitimately infer that the "invitation" came from the defendant or had been given with her authority, express or implied. The defendant, it is argued, did not remonstrate against plaintiff's sitting on the bumper, but that fact would not convert the status of the plaintiff into that of an invite.
We do not think the facts sufficient to bring the matter within the rule of Myers v. Sauer, 117 N.J.L. 144 , wherein the status of plaintiff was held to be a fact issue. Compare, also, Myers v. Sauer, 116 Id. 254.
Under the proofs in the case the plaintiff was not an invitee; he was at best a licensee; and there being no evidence of negligence that was willful or wanton on the part of the defendant, it was error not to have granted a nonsuit on defendant's motion. See Faggioni v. Weiss, 99 N.J.L. 157 ; Lutvin v. Dopkus, 94 Id. 64; Danbeck v. New Jersey Traction Co., 57 Id. 463, and Solomon v. Public Service Railway Co., 87 Id. 284.
The judgment is reversed.
For affirmance — None.
For reversal — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, PARKER, CASE, BODINE, DONGES, HEHER, PERSKIE, PORTER, DEAR, WELLS, WOLFSKEIL, RAFFERTY, HAGUE, JJ. 14.