NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2716-17T2
LISA HATTRICH and JOHN
HATTRICH,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CLYDE NEIL and COUNTY OF
OCEAN,
Defendants,
and
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Defendant-Respondent.
____________________________________
Argued November 28, 2018 – Decided December 17, 2018
Before Judges Nugent and Mawla.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Ocean County, Docket No. L-0462-15.
William D. Wright argued the cause for appellants (The
Wright Law Firm, attorneys; William D. Wright, on the
briefs.)
Christopher J. Riggs, Deputy Attorney General, argued
the cause for respondents (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
General, attorney; Melissa Dutton Schaffer, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Christopher J. Riggs, on
the brief).
PER CURIAM
This is an automobile negligence action. Plaintiffs, Lisa Hattrich and John
Hattrich, appeal the summary judgment dismissal of their complaint against the
State of New Jersey. Their complaint alleged, among other things, that a
dangerous condition at a State-controlled intersection was a proximate cause of
the vehicular accident in which Lisa Hattrich was injured. We conclude
plaintiffs failed to establish a triable issue as to whether the dangerous condition
alleged by them was a proximate cause of the accident. We thus affirm.
Plaintiffs commenced this action by filing a three-count complaint. In the
first count, they alleged defendant, Clyde Neil, negligently disregarded a red
traffic light in Barnegat at the intersection of Route 72 West and Barnegat
Avenue, causing his vehicle to collide with Lisa Hattrich's vehicle. In the second
count, they alleged the negligence of fictitious persons and entities contributed
to the collision. In the third count, they alleged the State or the County of Ocean
maintained a dangerous condition at the intersection, namely, a traffic light
"designed in such a way that: a) The timing of the signals caused drivers to
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2
proceed through a red signal; b) The signals themselves are difficult or
impossible for passing drivers to see."
Plaintiffs amended the complaint to remove the County of Ocean as a
defendant and settled their claim against Clyde Neil. The State moved for
summary judgment three times. The court denied the first two motions without
prejudice so that the parties could further investigate matters affecting the State's
claim of plan or design immunity. The third time, the trial court granted the
motion.
The motion record establishes that in the early afternoon of April 29,
2014, a Ford Fusion driven by plaintiff Lisa Hattrich and a Nissan Altima driven
by defendant Clyde Neil collided in the intersection of Barnegat Avenue and
State Highway Route 72 West in Ship Bottom. Barnegat Avenue is a north-
south four-lane highway, two lanes in each direction. The speed limit is twenty-
five miles per hour. Route 72 West has two westbound lanes. The speed limit
is forty miles per hour. Neither the weather nor the road conditions were
contributing factors to the accident. Traffic lights controlled traffic flow
through the intersection. Before the cars collided in the intersection, Lisa
Hattrich had been driving north on Barnegat Avenue, and Clyde Neil had been
driving west on Route 72.
A-2716-17T2
3
When deposed, Lisa Hattrich said she stopped her Ford Fusion in the right,
outside northbound lane of Barnegat Avenue because the traffic light for
northbound Barnegat Avenue was red. She was the first vehicle stopped in that
lane for the red light. After waiting for "[a] minute, two minutes maybe[,] [n]ot
very long[,]" the light turned green. As soon as the light turned green, she "went,
and before [she] knew it . . . [she] was in the oncoming lane across the
intersection and some woman was opening [her] door and helping [her] out of
the car." Clyde Neil's car had collided with Lisa Hattrich's Fusion and the force
of the impact had propelled the Fusion into the oncoming traffic lanes.
Before the parties exchanged discovery, Clyde Neil died of causes
unrelated to the accident. His interrogatory answers included the following
written statement he made to his insurance company on May 2, 2014, three days
after the accident: "I drove through intersection w[hen the] light turned yellow
other car hit me, she was going N on Barnegat Avenue." Based on that
statement, the State included the following paragraph in the statement of
undisputed material facts it submitted in support of its summary judgment
motion:
Clyde Neil passed away from conditions that
were unrelated to the accident. He was not deposed,
and there is absolutely no evidence that he had
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difficulty seeing the traffic signal at the intersection of
Route 72 West and Barnegat Avenue.
Plaintiffs responded:
Denied. The fact that defendant Neil failed to
obey the traffic signal as set forth in the police report is
evidence that he did not see it. Likewise, plaintiff's
expert provides a detailed analysis of why drivers in
Neil's position frequently failed to observe the signal.
...
Plaintiffs' liability expert, the Director of Transportation Research
Corporation, explained that "westbound 72W is controlled by two signal faces,
a near-side over the right lane and a far-side over the left lane." Embedding a
photograph in his report, the expert found "[i]t . . . evident from the photo . . .
that the near-side signal face over the right lane is positioned in extremely close
proximity (less than 10 feet) to the stop line." The expert concluded that as a
"consequence of this close proximity of the signal head to the stop line . . .
drivers lose sight of the overhead signal as they approach the intersection."
There is no indication in the expert's report that he considered Clyde Neil's
statement about how the accident occurred.
Based on materials obtained from the New Jersey Department of
Transportation, plaintiffs' expert determined that with respect to "the
signalization at the subject intersection[,] . . . the yellow change interval was
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[four]-seconds and that there was a [two]-second all red interval." The expert
also reviewed a database of accident reports concerning the intersection. He
noted that since July 2007, there had been fourteen accidents involving vehicles
westbound on Route 72 and vehicles northbound on Barnegat Avenue, the
majority of which involved vehicles travelling in the right westbound lane of
Route 72 West. He concluded:
As documented in the reviewed accident report
database, the behaviors of right-lane westbound Route
72W drivers are consistent with their losing sight of the
overhead signal as they approach the intersection i.e.,
failing to see the signal turn from yellow to red at a
sufficient distance from the signal to come to a safe
stop. An explanation of this behavior is that the
improper placement of the right-hand lane traffic signal
(insufficient distance beyond the stop line) reasonably
causes drivers to lose sight of the signal face sooner
than had the signal been properly positioned.
The expert noted the Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices
(MUTCD), adopted by the State, contains "a mandatory requirement that no
signal face be positioned less than 40 feet beyond the stop line." The MUTCD
also includes "a guidance requirement that 'if a signal face controls a specific
lane or lanes of an approach, its position should make it readily visible to road
users making that movement.'"
A-2716-17T2
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The parties presented conflicting evidence as to whether the painted stop
line for westbound Route 72 West traffic was in the same location as depicted
in a 1967 New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) "as-built"
drawing. They also presented conflicting evidence as to whether the distance
from the stop line to the traffic signal face was the same in the as -built and at
the time of the accident.
A DOT engineer certified in a conclusory statement his "measurements
revealed that distance between the painted stop line and near side traffic pole
structure on Route 72 west . . . is in the same location as depicted in the NJDOT
As-Built plan dated February 21, 1967." Based on aerial photographs, plaintiffs'
expert found it "clear that the placement of the stop bar and traffic light shown
in the aerial photographs do not match the dimensions shown on the As-Built
drawing." A Professional Land Surveyor retained by plaintiff reviewed the as-
built plan and then "personally took measurements of the intersection." The
surveyor found it "clear that the distance between the stop line and the signal
face do not match the dimensions and specifications shown on the As -Built
drawing." Specifically, the distance between the stop line and signal face
depicted on the NJDOT as-built plan is approximately four feet. The surveyor's
field measurements revealed the distance to be 13.3 feet.
A-2716-17T2
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Based on the parties' submissions and arguments, the trial court granted
summary judgment to the State. The court determined, among other findings,
the State was entitled to design immunity, N.J.S.A. 59:4-6. The court also
determined plaintiff had not established that the intersection was in a dangerous
condition or that the distance between the stop line and traffic signal for Route
72 West traffic was the proximate cause of the accident. This appeal followed.
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that genuinely disputed issues of material fact
precluded summary judgment. They contend they made a prima facie case "of
dangerous condition liability under N.J.S.A. 59:4-2" and the State failed to meet
its burden of proving it was entitled to plan or design immunity. They also argue
that the grant of summary judgment to the State was premature because the State
had failed to provide certain discovery.
Appellate courts "review[] an order granting summary judgment in
accordance with the same standard as the motion judge." Bhagat v. Bhagat, 217
N.J. 22, 38 (2014) (citations omitted). Our function is not "to weigh the
evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is
a genuine issue for trial." Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520,
540 (1995) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249
(1986)); accord R. 4:46-2(c). A trial court's determination that a party is entitled
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8
to summary judgment as a matter of law is not entitled to any special deference
and is subject to de novo review. Cypress Point Condo. Ass'n v. Adria Towers,
LLC, 226 N.J. 403, 415 (2016). "Only when the evidence is so one-sided that
one party must prevail as a matter of law should a court enter summary
judgment." Petro-Lubricant Testing Labs., Inc. v. Adelman, 233 N.J 236, 257
(2018) (internal quotations omitted).
Plaintiffs alleged Lisa Hattrich was injured as the result of a dangero us
condition of public property. The New Jersey Tort Claims Act (TCA), N.J.S.A.
59:1-1 to 12-3, establishes liability for a dangerous condition of public property
in N.J.S.A. 59:4-2, which provides:
A public entity is liable for injury caused by a condition
of its property if the plaintiff establishes that the
property was in dangerous condition at the time of the
injury, that the injury was proximately caused by the
dangerous condition, that the dangerous condition
created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of
injury which was incurred, and that either:
a. a negligent or wrongful act or omission of an
employee of the public entity within the scope of his
employment created the dangerous condition; or
b. a public entity had actual or constructive notice of
the dangerous condition under section 59:4-3 a
sufficient time prior to the injury to have taken
measures to protect against the dangerous condition.
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Nothing in this section shall be construed to impose
liability upon a public entity for a dangerous condition
of its public property if the action the entity took to
protect against the condition or the failure to take such
action was not palpably unreasonable.
Thus, two elements a plaintiff must prove to establish a public entity's liability
for a dangerous condition of its property are "the existence of a 'dangerous
condition'" and "the condition proximately caused the injury." Vincitore v. N.J.
Sports & Exposition Auth., 169 N.J. 119, 125 (2001).
Here, to satisfy their burden of demonstrating a triable issue existed as to
proximate cause, plaintiffs proffered the opinion of their expert. He opined that
the insufficient distance between the Route 72 West stop line and the traffic
signal — which would cause drivers to lose sight of the traffic signal and fail to
see the signal turn from yellow to red at a sufficient distance from the signal to
come to a safe stop — was a "significant contributory and causal factor of the
accident." However, "[a] party's burden of proof on an element of a claim may
not be satisfied by an expert opinion that is unsupported by the factual record or
by an expert's speculation that contradicts that record." Townsend v. Pierre, 221
N.J. 36, 55 (2015). Plaintiffs' expert opinion on causation was unsupported by
the record and based on nothing more than speculation.
A-2716-17T2
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Townsend, too, involved an intersectional collision. The tortfeasor, who
was northbound, intended to make a left turn to proceed west on the intersecting
street. Id. at 44. When she stopped at a stop sign for northbound traffic, her
view was obstructed by overgrown shrubbery on the property on the
intersection's southwest corner. Ibid. She testified at her deposition she edged
up far enough to see approaching traffic in the eastbound lane of the intersecting
street. Id. at 44-45. Her passenger corroborated her testimony. Id. at 45. As
she began her left turn, she collided with an eastbound motorcycle, whose driver
died as the result of injuries sustained in the accident. Ibid.
In opposing the property owner's summary judgment motion, the
motorcyclist's estate presented the testimony of an expert. Id. at 46. The expert
opined that "'[t]he restricted substandard and unsafe intersection sight distance
was a significant contributing cause' of the accident." Id. at 48 [alteration in
original]. The expert considered and rejected the tortfeasor's testimony that her
view was not blocked by the shrubbery. Ibid. The expert believed that "given
[the tortfeasor's] testimony that the bushes obstructed her view of eastbound
traffic . . . , and given that she never saw the approaching motorcycle, I
reasonably conclude that she did not have an unobstructed view of [eastbound
traffic] when she proceeded into the roadway." Ibid.
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The Supreme Court found the expert's opinion that the shrubbery
obstructed the tortfeasor's view of approaching traffic to be not only
unsupported, but contradicted by the facts in the record, and thus a net opinion
on the element of proximate cause. Id. at 57. The Court noted the expert's
opinion on causation "diverged from the evidence." Ibid. The Court explained
that the expert "did not apply his engineering expertise to present empirical
evidence undermining [the tortfeasor's] undisputed and corroborated testimony
that when she turned left, her view of [eastbound] traffic . . . was unimpeded."
Ibid.
The Supreme Court found significant the expert "took no measurements
to demonstrate the line of vision of a driver located at the point at which [the
tortfeasor] recalled making her left turn." Ibid. The Court emphasized the
expert's opinion did "not suggest that at the location identified by [the tortfeasor]
as the point at which she turned, the shrubbery was capable of blocking a driver's
view of oncoming traffic." Ibid.
We find Townsend controlling. Here, plaintiffs' expert did not appear to
consider Clyde Neil's statement that he observed the traffic signal turn to yellow.
The expert took no measurements to determine at what point a driver on Route
72 West would lose sight of the traffic signal. And though he knew the speed
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limit was forty miles per hour, the expert made no effort to calculate how far
through the intersection a car would have traveled during the seconds that
elapsed between the driver losing sight of the yellow traffic signal and the signal
turning green for Barnegat Avenue traffic. In short, the expert's opinion was
based on nothing more than speculation. The net opinion was insufficient to
create a triable issue as to proximate cause. Townsend, 221 N.J. at 55. For that
reason, the trial court correctly determined the State was entitled to summary
judgment.
Although the motion record contained genuinely disputed issues of
material fact that precluded summary judgment on the State's plan or design
immunity defense, the issue is moot in light of our conclusion concerning
plaintiffs' failure to establish a triable issue on the element of proximate cause.
Plaintiffs' argument concerning discovery is without sufficient merit to warrant
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
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