Case Name: JAMES GREEN, PETITIONER-RESPONDENT, v. FRANK DeFURIA AND JOHN BENEDETTO, t/a BLACK AND WHITE GARAGE, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS
Court: New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New Jersey
Decision Date: 1955-03-16
Citations: 34 N.J. Super. 521
Docket Number: 
Parties: JAMES GREEN, PETITIONER-RESPONDENT, v. FRANK DeFURIA AND JOHN BENEDETTO, t/a BLACK AND WHITE GARAGE, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.
Judges: 
Reporter: New Jersey Superior Court Reports
Volume: 34
Pages: 521–533

Head Matter:
JAMES GREEN, PETITIONER-RESPONDENT, v. FRANK DeFURIA AND JOHN BENEDETTO, t/a BLACK AND WHITE GARAGE, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey Appellate Division
Argued March 7, 1955
Decided March 16, 1955.
Ooldmann, S. J. A.'D., dissented.
Before Judges Goldmann, Ekeund and Coneokd.
Mr. Henry F. Hoey, Jr., argued the cause for defendants-appellants {Mr. William P. Braun, attorney).
Mr. Herman M. Wilson argued the cause for petitioner-respondent {Mr. Harvey A. Lied, attorney).

Opinion:
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Conford, J. A. D.
Here the Workmen's Compensation Division held that the injury petitioner sustained did not arise out of and in the course of his employment by the appellants and denied compensation. The County Court reversed. Hence this appeal.
Petitioner was employed by defendants as a night gasoline station attendant, selling gasoline and oil and answering the telephone for tow calls. He had worked for the defendants for six months prior to the accident. On June 11, 1953, while on duty, he had the company of a man known to him only as "Frankie" who occasionally visited with petitioner while he was working. Between 1 A. m. and 2 A. M. the horn of an automobile parked and unattended at a closed gas station across the street from where the petitioner was employed began sounding and continued for five or ten minutes before he went over and disengaged the wire of the car to stop the noise. After doing this petitioner stepped back and fell into a grease pit, sustaining the injuries for which ho sought compensation in the Division.
Plaintiff testified that the noise irritated him and annoyed the neighbors who were calling out to him to eliminate it. He also testified that after the noise began the telephone in his station rang and he could not understand what was being said because of the noise and the fact that the station door was open and near the phone. He said that it was for these reasons that he went on his ill-fated venture across the street.
On cross-examination, petitioner was asked whether one of his employers, Mr. Benedetto, had not told him prior to the date of the accident never to leave the gas station. Petitioner's response was: "He spoke to me time and again never to leave the gas station alone." The most recent such direction was the night before the accident. In relation to this subject, Mr. Benedetto testified that his instructions to petitioner were:
" never to leave the place alone but that alone meant never to leave anybody in there because even people sitting in the office if he is pumping gas they steal cigarettes and other things. That alone meant never to leave anybody else in there or anybody. — never to leave the premises. He knows that."
The statement, "He knows that," was ordered stricken upon motion. This appears to us to have been erroneous since the fair inference of the comment by the witness, in the light of the remainder of his testimony, was that petitioner was apprised of the direction never to leave the premises. Entirely without regard to the stricken statement, however, the record establishes petitioner's knowledge in relation to the direction, as Benedetto immediately thereafter was asked:
"Q. And he was specifically told to stay on the premises? A. Never to leave the premises."
On cross-examination the witness explained that the purpose of his direction to the petitioner never to leave the premises was to prevent petty stealing by loiterers. On re-direct examination he said that the phone in the office was some 12 to 14 feet from, the door of the station and that the door could be closed. It also appeared that at the time of the accident the police were on the way to the scene as a result of calls from persons aroused by the noise and that when they arrived there they found petitioner in the pit; also that a neighbor had by that time come onto the street to see about the noise.
The deputy director in the Workmen's Compensation Division held that "petitioner was a volunteer at the time he left his place of employment and went across the street to stop the blowing of the horn." He further ruled "that the act of the petitioner in leaving his place of employment and going across the street to another gas station to stop the blowing of the horn of an automobile located there was not part of his employment but was an act separate and apart from his duties for the respondent," and that for these reasons he had not sustained his burden of proof to establish that he suffered an injury as a result of an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.
On appeal to the Essex County Court, the ruling in the Division was reversed. The county judge found that petitioner's explanation as to why he went across the street was entitled to credence; that "his leaving of his post was designed to serve the business of his master"; and that the risk to which he subjected himself must be held to have been an incident of his employment as distinguished from one, the genesis of which was dissociated from his duties and hence, voluntary and self-serving in nature." The court further found that petitioner had not violated any orders pertaining to his employment; that the requirement that he should not leave the premises alone was met by petitioner, notwithstanding his crossing of the street, either because the premises were left in the custody of "Frankie" or because they were at no time beyond petitioner's view. lie also held that respondents' contention that compensation should be disallowed because petitioner was engaged in tampering with a motor vehicle, in violation of R. S. 39:4-49, was without merit since his actions did not amount to malicious conduct resulting in damage to or loss of dominion over a vehicle of another and, therefore, did not transgress the intent of the statute.
In undertaking the resolution of this appeal, we' may make new or amended findings of fact when necessary to accord with substantial justice, R. R. 1:5-3; 2:5, but are to be mindful of the principle that where a County Court reverses a finding of fact by the Workmen's Compensation Division, we are to accord much weight to the finding of the County Court "and not disturb it unless we are well satisfied that the finding is a mistaken one" either in fact or in law. Galloway v. Ford Motor Co., 7 N. J. Super. 18, 23 (App. Div. 1950) ; Vandenberg v. John De Kuyper & Son, 5 N. J. Super. 440, 447 (App. Div. 1949).
In our opinion, the County Court erred in one of its factual conclusions and was thereby led into material legal error. We find it unnecessary to determine whether, as the County Court found, petitioner was in fact proceeding about the business of his employer rather than solely to accommodate the neighbors and assuage his personal irritation and impatience at the continuance of the noise when he went across the street. Much could be said to support the conclusion of the deputy director that petitioner was not in fact on the business of his employer at the time. It is difficult to give credence to his explanation that he had to stop the noise in order to be able to hear on the phone, in view of the ease with which he might have solved that problem by the simple expedient of closing the door when he answered the phone. However that may be, the judgment under appeal must be reversed because the substantial preponderance of the evidence leads to our firm finding of fact that petitioner was specifically enjoined by his employers not to leave the premises, and thence to our conclusion in law that his injury while so doing takes him out of the coverage of the statute.
Petitioner's testimony that he was told "time and again" not to "leave the premises alone" is, on its face, susceptible either of the construction that he was not to leave the premises unattended or that he was not to leave them at all. Any doubt on this score, however, was eliminated by the testimony offered by appellants to the flat effect that petitioner was not to leave the premises. We do not believe the County Court was justified in discarding this testimony for the mere reason that the appellant, Benedetto, explained what was meant by the instruction, "not- leaving the premises alone," particularly when • it is clear from his > testimony that his meaning in that regard, i. e., that the petitioner was not to leave the premises, was made known to petitioner. ' The rule which appellants contend they fixed to govern petitioner's conduct' was reasonable and the testimony on their behalf as to its existence credible. • No attempt was made by petitioner to contradict or impair Benedetto's testimony by way of rebuttal. There is no fair basis upon which we can ignore it.
Even if we were to indulge petitioner's argument and the County Court's finding that the working rule was that petitioner should not leave the premises unattended, the rule was here breached. "Erankie" had no relationship or responsibility to appellants. Nor, insofar as they were eoncerned, as was testified on their behalf, was he an authorized custodian of the premises. The premises were indeed left unattended when petitioner left to stop the noise.
The authorities establish beyond any possibility of misconstruction that where an employee disobeys "specific instructions limiting the sphere of the locus of the employment" any resulting injury is thereby taken out of the application of the statute as it then does not arise out of and in the course of the employment. Reimers v. Proctor Publishing Co., 85 N. J. L. 441 (Sup. Ct. 1914); Reis v. Breeze Corporations, Inc., 129 N. J. L. 138, 145 (Sup. Ct. 1942); Bigos v. Waddill & Skelly, 4 N. J. Super. 3, 7 (App. Div. 1949). Nor does it make any difference, as was urged for petitioner at the oral argument, that he left the locus of employment to do what seemed to him his job for appellants, assuming he did. The circumstance that they were actually engaged in work appertaining to their employment at the time they had left the locus of employment did not help the petitioners in the Reimers and Bigos cases, supra.
We are, moreover, satisfied that appellants' instructions to petitioner were a command and in the nature of a fixed and mandatory working rule, rather than a mere admonition or warning. Cf. Wettstein v. Whitall-Tatum Co., 127 A. 323, 324, 3 N. J. Misc. 99 (Sup. Ct. 1925); Waskevitz v. Clifton Paper Board Co., 7 N. J. Super. 1 (App. Div. 1950).
We are therefore constrained to find that petitioner's disobedience of his employers' standing instructions took him out of the sphere of the locus of his employment and thereby made his consequent injury non-recoverable. Eor this reason, the judgment below must be
Reversed.