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Date: 08-09-2015

Case Style: Fernandes v. DAR Development Co

Case Number: A-37-13

Judge: Justice Jaynee LaVecchia

Court: SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY

Plaintiff's Attorney: Joseph K. Cobuzio

Defendant's Attorney: Gerald H. Clark

Description: As plaintiff Rolando Fernandes and his boss, Mario Freitas
(Mario),1 were installing a sewer pipe on a residential
construction site, the wall of the trench in which Fernandes was
working collapsed, burying him up to his chest. Mario promptly
extricated plaintiff and later drove him home. Fernandes was
seriously injured and has not worked since that day.
Fernandes filed a complaint against the general contractor,
DAR Development Corp. and DAR Construction, Inc. (collectively
DAR or defendant), seeking compensatory damages. At trial, the
court rejected defendant’s request to charge comparative
negligence. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff.
In resisting defendant’s request to charge Fernandes’
negligence, plaintiff invoked Suter v. San Angelo Foundry &
Machine Co., 81 N.J. 150 (1979), to argue that a worker’s
negligence should not be submitted to the jury in negligence
claims by an injured worker against third parties, such as a
general contractor. He also argued that the record provided no
evidential support for a comparative negligence charge.
The Appellate Division affirmed the decision by the trial
court refusing to submit the issue of plaintiff’s negligence to
the jury. In doing so, the appellate panel invoked not only the
leading authority on negligence claims by injured workers
1 We refer to Mario Freitas by his first name to avoid confusion. We intend no disrespect by this practice.

3
arising from workplace accidents against third parties, but also
authority governing workplace accidents involving unsafe or
defectively designed equipment. The Appellate Division’s
analysis of the comparative negligence issue requires this Court
to determine whether the negligence of an employee injured in a
workplace accident may be submitted to the jury.
We conclude that in negligence claims by injured workers
against third parties, such as a general contractor, there is no
sound reason to depart from settled precedent that an employee’s
negligence may be submitted to the jury when evidence has been
adduced that the injured employee unreasonably confronted a
known risk and had no meaningful choice in the manner in which
he completed that task. We also determine, like the Appellate
Division, that in this case the evidence produced at trial
provided no basis to submit the issue of Fernandes’ negligence
to the jury.
I.
A.
The following facts are derived from evidence adduced at
trial. On October 9, 2004, plaintiff was working at a
residential construction site in Warren. DAR was the general
contractor on the project; plaintiff’s employer, C. Freitas
Plumbing and Heating, Inc. (Freitas), was the plumbing
subcontractor. DAR and Freitas had a well-established

4
relationship; between 2002 and 2004, DAR awarded contracts for
nearly 100 percent of its excavation work to Freitas.
Construction of the home required digging an approximately
700-foot-long trench (the sewer trench) that extended from the
home to the street. The two-and-one-half-foot wide and
approximately five-foot deep trench included a makeshift
stairwell to enable workers to enter and exit the trench easily.
It is undisputed that plaintiff and Mario, the president of
Freitas, arrived at the jobsite together. At the time of the
accident, plaintiff was connecting sewer pipes inside the trench
while Mario used a backhoe to excavate the trench. As plaintiff
climbed the staircase, the trench collapsed, burying him chest
high in dirt and stones. Plaintiff was seriously injured and
unable to continue working. Mario drove him home and picked up
plaintiff’s son Andre, also an employee of Freitas, to finish
work at the jobsite.
The parties agreed that the accident would not have
occurred had the trench been outfitted with safety devices
designed to prevent a collapse. The central dispute at trial
was whether DAR or Freitas bore the responsibility for taking
those precautions. Plaintiff presented evidence that DAR
violated regulations promulgated pursuant to the Occupational
Safety and Health Act of 1970 (the Act), 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 651 to
78, which required a general contractor to prevent cave-ins by

5
installing a trench protection system known as a trench box. In
response, DAR presented evidence that plaintiff was an
experienced trench worker who was well aware of both the hazards
associated with excavation and the necessary safety precautions.
Plaintiff testified that he began working for Freitas when
he moved to the United States in 2001. Prior to that, plaintiff
spent nineteen years working as a plumber in his native country.
Throughout his career, plaintiff completed “hundreds if not
thousands” of pipe installations. He acknowledged his
familiarity with the hazards associated with excavation work.
Plaintiff initially testified that Freitas did not utilize
trench protection systems, and that such a system was
unavailable to him at the time of his accident. However, on
cross-examination, plaintiff acknowledged that, at his
deposition, he testified that Freitas used trench protection in
“some places” and that plaintiff himself had utilized protective
measures on “many” occasions. At trial, plaintiff explained
this contradiction by specifying that Freitas “never had a
trench box.” Rather, Freitas utilized a brace constructed of
two sheets of plywood separated by hydraulic stretchers to
prevent cave-ins. Plaintiff stated that sometimes the workers
would be responsible for deciding whether to use the protective
system if it had been brought to the jobsite. He admitted that

6
if he “left in the morning with the box and if [he] had it with
him when [he] got to work, [he] would use [it].”
One such occasion when plaintiff could have chosen to use
trench protection was at the Warren jobsite during the four- or
five-day period prior to his accident. During that period,
plaintiff used a backhoe to excavate the trench while other
workers connected pipes inside the trench. Plaintiff testified
that he did not elect to use a trench protection system on those
days. However, on re-direct, plaintiff clarified that Mario was
ultimately responsible for deciding whether to employ trench
protection. Counsel read into the record a portion of
plaintiff’s deposition testimony stating that he hesitated to
make “too many suggestions” because he feared he would be fired.
Mario testified that in August 2003, Freitas purchased
three sets of trench boxes certified by the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA). Thereafter, Freitas conducted
employee meetings regarding trench safety and proper use of the
boxes. Plaintiff attended those meetings. Mario testified
that, although the Act only required the use of trench systems
in locations where the trench was deeper than five feet, his
company also employed protective measures in sections of trench
that were considered unstable, regardless of their depth. Mario
disputed plaintiff’s assertion that plaintiff would be fired if
he requested that trench protection be used on a particular

7
project, explaining that like every Freitas employee, plaintiff
was responsible for determining when it was necessary to employ
a trench box. Mario instructed his workers to take the trench
boxes to their jobsites on a daily basis, and all of the workers
were aware of the importance of using trench protection.
On cross-examination, Mario admitted that he had no formal
OSHA training. He acknowledged that Freitas had no established
health and safety protocol and asserted that DAR did not require
one. DAR made no inquiries to him about Freitas’ safety
protocol, did not request a breakdown of the amount of money
earmarked for such concerns, and did not conduct OSHA training
on DAR-Freitas jobsites. No one from DAR had ever addressed
safety protocol with Mario.
Norberto Jean Salle, DAR’s project manager for the Warren
jobsite, testified that he was the highest authority on safety
at the site and was onsite daily. Like Mario, Jean Salle had
not received OSHA training, although he had received
construction safety training while studying to become an
architect in Argentina. Jean Salle confirmed that DAR did not
have a written health or safety program or conduct safety
meetings on the Warren jobsite, although it did provide
subcontractors with verbal instructions about necessary safety
precautions.

8
Evidence presented at trial suggested that the trench was
between four feet and five feet, eight inches deep at the point
of collapse. Mario testified that he examined the trench on the
morning of plaintiff’s accident and determined that protective
measures were not necessary because “the dirt . . . was good.”
Jean Salle also concluded that a collapse was unlikely.
Vincent Gallagher testified on behalf of plaintiff as an
expert in the field of construction site safety management and
OSHA compliance. According to Gallagher, in accordance with
OSHA regulations, DAR was the “controlling employer” on the
Warren jobsite. As such, DAR was required to hire “safe”
subcontractors, to ensure that subcontractors designated a
“competent person” to enforce OSHA regulations, and to monitor
the work to ensure it was being performed in a safe manner.
Gallagher opined that DAR increased its profits by
regularly hiring unscrupulous subcontractors who did not adhere
to OSHA standards. In support of this conclusion, Gallagher
referenced deposition testimony by a Freitas employee uninvolved
in this litigation, who testified that he had worked in more
than one hundred trenches on DAR-Freitas projects, that all were
deeper than five feet, and that trench boxes were never used.
Plaintiff’s son Andre, who had worked on five to ten DAR-Freitas
projects, testified that the excavations in those projects had
at times required digging deeper than five feet and that trench

9
boxes were not used. Based on those depositions, Gallagher
concluded that it was “very common” for workers on DAR-Freitas
projects to conduct excavation work without suitable protection.
Gallagher opined that the trench in this case was likely to
collapse and cause injury for two reasons. First, the trench
was excavated out of fill soil. Unlike virgin earth, which
hardens over time, fill soil has “loose compaction,” which makes
it prone to collapse. Second, because the two-and-one-half-foot
wide trench was “narrow” it was more likely to cause serious
injury upon collapse. Gallagher relied on deposition testimony
of one of Freitas’ employees, who testified that fifteen to
twenty cave-ins had occurred in the sewer trench in the four
days prior to plaintiff’s injury.
Defendant’s construction safety and civil engineering
expert, Timothy Carlson, testified that as the sewer trench
approached the house, it converged with an area previously
excavated to permit installation of a gas line. The gas-line
trench, which was approximately two-to-three-feet wide, was
backfilled with sand in order to support the line and prevent it
from rupturing. Carlson noted that, unlike clay, sand flows
when disturbed. He opined that plaintiff’s accident occurred
because the sewer trench came too close to the gas-line trench,
causing the sand from the gas-line trench to flow into the sewer

10
trench. The flowing sand weakened the walls of the sewer
trench, causing the collapse.
Carlson also referred to OSHA regulations. He testified
that there are two critical aspects to OSHA’s excavation
standards: first, identification of a “competent person,” who is
able to “recognize a hazard and has the authority to do
something about it,” and second, mandatory use of a trench
protection system in an excavation deeper than five feet. He
agreed that when excavating a trench less than five-feet deep,
the competent person is responsible for determining whether
protective measures are necessary. Carlson opined that Mario
was the competent person on the Warren jobsite. On cross
examination, Carlson admitted that, although OSHA training would
be helpful to the competent person, the regulations did not
require it. He reiterated that Mario was the competent person
on the jobsite despite Mario’s admitted lack of OSHA training.
On cross-examination, Carlson testified that typically,
general contractors on residential jobs do not conduct safety
meetings on the jobsite. Carlson opined that, as the general
contractor, DAR did not have a responsibility to ensure that
each subcontractor’s employees received safety training.
Carlson stated that it was the responsibility of Freitas to
train its workers to complete their assigned tasks safely.
Despite this statement, Carlson acknowledged that, in accordance

11
with the Act, a general contractor has a non-delegable duty to
ensure the safety of a workplace.
At the charge conference, DAR requested a comparative
negligence charge. It asserted that the jury should be
permitted to consider plaintiff’s negligence based on his entry
into the trench on the day of the accident, which DAR reasoned
was unreasonable conduct in light of plaintiff’s extensive
excavation experience, his understanding of the hazards
associated with trench excavation, and his occasional
responsibility for deciding when it was necessary to use trench
protection. Plaintiff’s response to this request was two-fold.
First, he contended that as a matter of public policy
comparative negligence has no place in a workplace injury trial
dealing with injuries sustained by a worker while performing his
assigned task. Second, the evidence adduced at trial did not
suggest that plaintiff unreasonably proceeded in the face of a
known risk or was “horsing around.”
The trial court denied DAR’s request, concluding that the
record was devoid of evidence suggesting that plaintiff entered
the trench despite knowing it was unsafe. In its charge, the
trial court instructed the jury that a general contractor has a
non-delegable duty to maintain a safe workplace. The court
informed the jury that a general contractor must exercise
reasonable care under general negligence principles to protect

12
its workers -- and those of its subcontractors -- from
foreseeable harm. The court also instructed the jury that
noncompliance with construction safety standards promulgated by
the construction industry and OSHA may be considered evidence of
negligence but that those standards did not conclusively
establish negligence on the jobsite.
The jury returned a unanimous verdict in favor of plaintiff
awarding damages of $792,000.
B.
Defendant appealed, asserting that the trial court’s
refusal to charge comparative negligence constituted reversible
error. In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division
determined that the trial court properly denied a comparative
negligence charge because defendant “failed to present competent
evidence that at the time of the accident, plaintiff voluntarily
and unreasonably proceeded in the face of a known danger --
which is the standard against which an injured construction
worker’s conduct is measured.” In reaching that conclusion, the
Appellate Division cited Kane v. Hartz Mountain Industries,
Inc., 278 N.J. Super. 129 (App. Div. 1994), aff’d o.b., 143 N.J.
141 (1996), and Suter and its progeny, a line of cases
traditionally applied to products liability matters.
Defendant petitioned for certification, limited to the
comparative negligence issue. This Court granted defendant’s

13
petition, 216 N.J. 86 (2013), and permitted the New Jersey
Association of Justice (NJAJ) to appear as amicus curiae.
II.
Defendant asserts that the Appellate Division erred by
applying Suter in its analysis of the availability of a
comparative negligence instruction in this case. In Suter,
supra, this Court held that a plaintiff’s comparative negligence
could not be considered when the plaintiff, an employee in an
industrial setting, was injured while using a defective machine
in an intended or reasonably foreseeable manner. 81 N.J. at
167. Defendant contends that the Suter rule applies only in
products liability cases, and that the Appellate Division’s
extension of the Suter rule to this case contradicts Kane,
supra, 278 N.J. Super. at 150.
In relying on Kane, defendant argues that the jury should
have been permitted to consider whether plaintiff used the care
of a reasonably prudent person in entering the trench without
safety equipment. Defendant asserts that it is fundamentally
unfair for it to be found negligent for failing to recognize
that the trench was at risk of collapse without allowing the
jury to consider whether plaintiff, who had more than twenty
years of construction experience and acknowledged his

14
familiarity with the dangers associated with excavation, should
also reasonably have recognized that risk.
Plaintiff argues that the trial court correctly removed the
issue of plaintiff’s negligence from the jury. Plaintiff
asserts that there was no evidence from which a reasonable juror
could have concluded that he knowingly, deliberately, and
unreasonably proceeded in the face of a known danger. Plaintiff
contends that there was no evidence to suggest that he failed to
use the degree of care of a reasonably prudent person under all
the circumstances of this case, either in incurring a known risk
or in the manner in which he proceeded in the face of that risk.
Instead, plaintiff emphasizes that the trench collapsed while it
was being excavated by his boss and plaintiff was performing his
assigned task of connecting pipes under his boss’s direct
supervision. Accordingly, plaintiff asserts that the trial
court correctly concluded that there was no evidence to support
a comparative negligence charge.
Moreover, plaintiff argues that the Suter rule should be
invoked in all workplace injury cases against third parties.
Plaintiff contends that Suter has consistently been interpreted
broadly to bar a third-party defendant from asserting
comparative negligence in claims raised by a plaintiff who
sustained a workplace injury.

15
Amicus NJAJ urges this Court to extend the rule in Suter
to prohibit the comparative negligence defense in construction
worksite cases where the injured worker had no “meaningful
choice” but to work under hazardous conditions. In light of the
non-delegable duty of a general contractor to maintain safe
working conditions, amicus asserts that workers should not be
held responsible for their failure to discover hazards and
dangers resultant from the contractor’s breach of that duty.
Amicus also argues that workers who continue to work in
recognized hazardous conditions should not be barred from
recovering for injuries sustained as a result of those
conditions in situations where the worker’s only choice was to
continue working or be fired. Amicus urges this Court to
distinguish this case from Kane, where the plaintiff was injured
after choosing not to utilize available personal safety
equipment. Amicus insists that plaintiff had no meaningful
choice of whether to work in hazardous conditions. Rather, he
had two options on the day of the accident -- climb into the
trench and perform his assigned task or be fired. Finally,
amicus asserts that comparative negligence should not apply when
a plaintiff’s injury results from a defendant’s breach of a
statute specifically designed for the protection of workers.

16
III.
A.
To prevail on a claim of negligence, a plaintiff must
establish four elements: (1) that the defendant owed a duty of
care; (2) that the defendant breached that duty; (3) actual and
proximate causation; and (4) damages. Townsend v. Pierre, 221
N.J. 36, 51 (2015) (citing Polzo v. Cnty. of Essex, 196 N.J.
569, 584 (2008)). Ordinarily, the plaintiff bears the burden of
proving the defendant’s negligence and that such negligence was
the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. Myrlak v. Port
Auth. of N.Y. & N.J., 157 N.J. 84, 95 (1999). “To act non
negligently is to take reasonable precautions to prevent the
occurrence of foreseeable harm to others.” Weinberg v. Dinger,
106 N.J. 469, 484 (1987) (citing People Express Airlines, Inc.
v. Consol. Rail Corp., 100 N.J. 246, 267 (1985)). The
“[a]bility to foresee injury to a potential plaintiff does not
in itself establish the existence of a duty, but it is a crucial
element in determining whether imposition of a duty on an
alleged tortfeasor is appropriate.” Carter Lincoln-Mercury,
Inc. v. EMAR Grp., Inc., 135 N.J. 182, 194 (1994) (internal
citation omitted).
In ordinary negligence actions, the plaintiff is not
required to establish the applicable standard of care. Rather,
“‘[i]t is sufficient for [the] plaintiff to show what the

17
defendant did and what the circumstances were. The applicable
standard of conduct is then supplied by the jury[,] which is
competent to determine what precautions a reasonably prudent man
in the position of the defendant would have taken.’” Davis v.
Brickman Landscaping, Ltd., 219 N.J. 395, 406-07 (2014)
(alterations in original) (quoting Sanzari v. Rosenfeld, 34 N.J.
128, 134 (1961)).
As we explained in Davis, supra, cases in which the
defendant is not obliged to identify the standard of care are
those “involv[ing] facts about which ‘a layperson’s common
knowledge is sufficient to permit a jury to find that the duty
of care has been breached without the aid of an expert’s
opinion.’” Id. at 407 (quoting Giantonnio v. Taccard, 291 N.J.
Super. 31, 43 (App. Div. 1996)). In some cases, however, the
collective experience of the jury is not sufficient to measure
the defendant’s conduct. See Sanzari, supra, 34 N.J. at 134-35.
In those cases, the plaintiff must establish the standard of
care governing the defendant’s conduct and the deviation from
that standard through reliable expert testimony. Davis, supra,
219 N.J. at 407. Claims involving workplace accidents commonly
fall into the category in which the plaintiff must produce
reliable expert testimony to establish the standard of care and
to explain how the defendant’s actions departed from that

18
standard. Costantino v. Ventriglia, 324 N.J. Super. 437, 442
(App. Div. 1999), certif. denied, 163 N.J. 10 (2000).
The standard of care is derived from many sources,
including codes adopted by the Legislature, regulations adopted
by state and federal agencies, and standards adopted by
professional organizations. OSHA was enacted “to assure so far
as possible every working man and woman in the Nation safe and
healthful working conditions” by “encouraging employers and
employees in their efforts to reduce the number of occupational
safety and health hazards at their places of employment.” 29
U.S.C.A. § 651(b)(1). As authorized by Congress, 29 U.S.C.A. §
655(a), OSHA has promulgated mandatory occupational safety and
health standards to further this goal. See generally Labor, 29
C.F.R. §§ 1902-1990 (2014). Those regulations impose general
standards governing construction sites and standards specific to
excavations. Safety and Health Regulations for Construction, 29
C.F.R. § 1926 (2014); Excavations, 29 C.F.R. § 1926(P) (2014).
Relevant to the facts of this appeal, the regulations
permit general contractors and subcontractors to make their own
agreements with regard to the division of labor, however, “[i]n
no case shall the prime contractor be relieved of overall
responsibility for compliance with the requirements of this part
for all work to be performed under the contract.” Rules of
Construction, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.16 (2014). OSHA has also adopted

19
regulations that specifically govern excavations, including
trenches associated with the installation of utilities.
Specific Excavation Requirements, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.651(b)
(2014). This Court has determined that “OSHA regulations are
pertinent in determining the nature and extent of any duty of
care”; however, a violation of such a standard is no more than
evidence of negligence, “if the plaintiff is a member of the
class for whose benefit the standard was established.” Alloway
v. Bradlees, Inc., 157 N.J. 221, 236 (1999) (citing J.S. v.
R.T.H., 155 N.J. 330, 349 (1998); Carrino v. Novotny, 75 N.J.
355, 359 (1979)). Similarly, noncompliance with an industry
standard does not conclusively establish negligence.
Wellenheider v. Rader, 49 N.J. 1, 7 (1967).
B.
Under the common law, a defendant could raise a plaintiff’s
contributory negligence as an affirmative defense to liability.
Ostrowski v. Azzara, 111 N.J. 429, 436 (1988). This doctrine
served to bar recovery by a plaintiff whose fault, no matter how
slight, contributed to the accident. Id. at 436. “Fault in
that context meant a breach of a legal duty that was comparable
to the duty of the other actors to exercise such care in the
circumstances as was necessary to avoid the risk of injury
incurred.” Id. at 436-37.

20
In 1973, the Legislature adopted the Comparative Negligence
Act (the CNA), N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.13. The purpose of the
CNA was to “ameliorate the harshness of the common-law
contributory negligence doctrine.” Waterson v. Gen. Motors
Corp., 111 N.J. 238, 267 (1988); see also Release from Office of
the Governor, May 24, 1973 (commenting that “[n]o longer will a
seriously [injured] person be prevented from obtaining
compensation for his injuries merely because he was partially
responsible, in a minor way, for the accident in which he was
injured”). “Comparative negligence, thus, grew out of an
‘equitable desire to mitigate the unfairness associated with the
total bar to recovery posed by common law contributory
negligence.’” Waterson, supra, 111 N.J. at 267 (quoting Suter,
supra, 81 N.J. at 161). A second underlying principle of the
CNA is the idea that “every person has an obligation to exercise
reasonable care for his or her own safety. It is only fair that
each person only pay for injuries he or she proximately caused.”
Ibid.
The CNA requires the finder of fact in any negligence
action to determine “[t]he extent, in the form of a percentage,
of each party’s negligence or fault.” N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a)(2).
The injured party is permitted to recover if his or her
“negligence was not greater than the negligence of the person
against whom recovery is sought or . . . the combined negligence

21
of the persons against whom recovery is sought.” N.J.S.A.
2A:15-5.1. If the injured party is permitted to recover, his or
her damages will be “diminished by the percentage sustained of
negligence attributable” to that individual. Ibid.
This rule extends to an employee who is injured in a
workplace accident and “sues a third person in an ordinary
negligence action.” Kane, supra, 278 N.J. Super. at 150. In
Kane, an experienced ironworker was severely and permanently
injured while erecting the structural steel frame of a
warehouse. Id. at 134. The day of the accident was cold and
rainy. Id. at 136. The weather deteriorated during the
morning, causing work to cease after the lunch break. Ibid.
The plaintiff and his foreman climbed the partially erected
structure to retrieve their tools and to secure the site. Ibid.
The plaintiff was sitting on a steel beam when a strap attached
to a column snapped, causing him to lose his balance and fall to
the ground. Ibid. No safety nets had been installed at the
site, and the plaintiff was not wearing a safety belt. Id. at
137. The parties disputed whether safety belts were available
at the worksite. Ibid.
On appeal, the Appellate Division reversed and ordered a
new trial because the jury had been improperly instructed on the
standard of care owed by the general contractor and the
structural steel subcontractor. Id. at 143. In contemplation

22
of another trial, the appellate panel addressed and rejected the
plaintiff’s argument that the trial court erred by submitting
the issue of his negligence to the jury. Id. at 149. The
plaintiff maintained that Suter precluded the submission of this
issue to the jury. Ibid.
The Appellate Division summarized the rule permitting
submission of an employee’s negligence if an employee sues a
third party in a negligence action as follows:
It is well established that an employee’s contributory negligence is generally available as a defense when the employee sues a third person in an ordinary negligence action. See 2B Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 75.21 at 14-572 (1989). Further, plaintiff being a member of the workforce, with all the compulsions attendant to that status, is a factor which is subsumed in the jury’s analysis of whether he acted prudently, and the jury may be so instructed. See McGrath v. American Cyanamid Co., 41 N.J. 272, 275 (1963) (a man who must work to live is not necessarily negligent whenever he continues to work after learning of a hazard; the inquiry is whether he failed to use the care of a reasonably prudent person under all of the circumstances either in incurring the known risk (i.e., staying on the job) or in the manner in which he proceeded in the face of that risk). In addition, plaintiff would not be barred from recovery by virtue of contributory negligence if “such negligence was not greater than the negligence of the person against whom recovery is sought or was not greater than the combined negligence of the persons against whom recovery is sought.” N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1.
[Id. at 150-51.]

23
This Court affirmed without opinion. 143 N.J. 141.
A jury may consider a plaintiff’s negligence only when the
evidence adduced at trial suggests that the plaintiff was
somehow negligent and that negligence contributed to the
plaintiff’s damages. Roman ex rel. Roman v. Mitchell, 82 N.J.
336, 343 (1980) (affirming determination that there was
“sufficient evidence of [plaintiff’s] contributory negligence to
submit that issue to the jury pursuant to the comparative
negligence statute,” where evidence adduced at trial revealed
that infant plaintiff, who had been riding his bicycle on New
Jersey Turnpike, was injured when wheel separated from dump
trunk careened across highway and struck plaintiff); Massotto v.
Pub. Serv. Coordinated Transp., 71 N.J. Super. 39, 45 (App. Div.
1961) (holding that “[w]hen the evidence discloses that the
plaintiff was not guilty of any negligence which contributed to
the happening, it is improper and unwarranted to submit the
issue of contributory negligence to the jury”). Whenever a
party asserts a plaintiff is negligent, the defendant must prove
that the plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the accident or
was a “substantial contributing factor to the injuries
sustained.” Waterson, supra, 111 N.J. at 252-53.
IV.
A.

24
Although Kane rejected the contention that Suter and its
progeny bar submission of an injured employee’s negligence in
negligence actions against third parties, plaintiff renews his
argument that this Court should extend the Suter rule to
negligence actions based on workplace injuries at large. We
begin and end our discussion of this argument by reviewing the
treatment of this same argument in Kane.
The Appellate Division in Kane considered the issue of
whether the plaintiff steelworker’s negligence should be
submitted for the jury’s consideration in the context of an
ordinary negligence claim by an employee injured in a workplace
accident against the owner of the project and the general
contractor. Kane, supra, 278 N.J. Super. at 134. In that
context, the appellate court stated that an employee’s
negligence is “generally available as a defense . . . in an
ordinary negligence action,” and emphasized that “no decision
has applied the Suter rule to a workplace injury not caused by a
defective machine or product.” Id. at 150.
The Kane panel did not rely simply on the absence of
precedent to reject the proposition that an employee’s
negligence should not be submitted to a jury in a negligence
action by an injured worker against a third party. The panel
proceeded to highlight the context of Suter and Green v.
Sterling Extruder Corp., 95 N.J. 263 (1984), and distinguish

25
those cases from a workplace negligence claim against third
parties. Id. at 149-50. The Kane panel emphasized that Suter
involved a strict liability action against a machine
manufacturer by an employee assigned to work on a piece of
machinery without safety devices, id. at 149 (citing Suter, 82
N.J. at 155-57), and that Green involved a negligence action
against a machine manufacturer by a factory worker using a
defective machine for its foreseeable purpose, id. at 149-50.2
Finally, the Kane panel underscored the policy supporting
the comparative negligence bar in strict liability actions. The
appellate court emphasized that “contributory negligence was not
a ‘viable defense in a design defect case when . . . an employee
in an industrial setting, using the machine in an intended or
reasonably foreseeable manner, is injured because of that
defect, and in the absence of that defect the injury would not
have occurred.’” Id. at 149 (quoting Suter, supra, 81 N.J. at
177).
We decline plaintiff’s invitation to extend the Suter rule
governing employee negligence to workplace accidents outside the
product liability context. The principles of Suter remain sound
2 The appellate panel also recognized that the Suter rule had been extended to accidents involving equipment other than plant machinery, such as a tractor-trailer. Kane, supra, 278 N.J. Super. at 150 (citing Tirrell v. Navistar Int’l, Inc., 248 N.J. Super. 390, 401 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 126 N.J. 390 (1991)).

26
as applied to the narrow realm of cases that fall under its
umbrella: cases in which an employee is injured when using a
defective piece of equipment in a reasonable and foreseeable
manner to complete his assigned task. A rule barring jury
consideration of an employee’s negligence is inapplicable to
suits arising out of injuries sustained while an employee on a
construction worksite is engaged in an assigned task. In so
holding, we expressly affirm the rule announced in Kane and
disapprove of the Appellate Division’s analysis of the issue in
this appeal to the extent it suggests that the Suter rule
applies to bar the comparative negligence defense in all cases
arising out of injuries sustained while an employee is engaged
in a task on his employer’s behalf.
A veritable catalog of industry standards and government
regulations address the standard of care on various worksites
and prescribe safety standards for specific activities, such as
excavations to install utilities. For example, the Act requires
an employer to “furnish a place of employment which [is] free
from recognized hazards” likely to cause death or serious harm.
29 U.S.C.A. § 5654(a)(1). To that end, an employer performing
excavation work is required to take measures to protect
employees working in trenches deeper than five feet or in more
shallow trenches when a “competent person” determines that there
is an “indication” of a potential cave-in. Requirements for

27
Protective Systems, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652(a) (2014). However,
unlike the manufacturer of an industrial machine, who has an
absolute duty to produce a machine that is safe to operate, a
general contractor is expected to protect its workers from the
myriad of potential dangers encountered on a construction site
“so far as possible.” 29 U.S.C.A. § 651(b). The vast
discrepancy between the level of control asserted by the
manufacturer of an industrial machine and that of a general
contractor on a construction site mandates that the result of
this case be different from that in Suter.
As noted in Kane, supra, employees bear some responsibility
for their personal safety on a construction site. 278 N.J.
Super. at 150. An employee is required to perform his or her
assigned tasks in a manner which is reasonably safe under all of
the circumstances associated with the task. The relevant
inquiry in gauging the level of an employee’s responsibility for
his or her injuries is whether he or she failed to use the care
of a reasonably prudent person under all of the circumstances,
either in continuing to work in the face of a known risk or in
the manner in which he or she proceeded in the face of that
known risk. See McGrath, supra, 41 N.J. at 275. The issue of a
plaintiff’s negligence may only be submitted to the jury when
the evidence adduced at trial suggests that a worker acted

28
unreasonably in the face of a known risk and that conduct
somehow contributed to his or her injuries.
We recognize the continued validity of our statement in
McGrath, supra, where we noted that a man or woman who must work
to live is not necessarily negligent when he or she proceeds
with an assigned task after learning of a hazard. 41 N.J. at
275. The demands of employment, and the reality of the power
imbalance between employer and employee, may therefore be
considered in determining whether an employee acted prudently in
continuing to perform his or her assigned task in the face of a
known risk. The fact that “plaintiff [was] a member of the
workforce, with all the compulsions attendant to that status, is
a factor which is subsumed in the jury’s analysis of whether he
acted prudently, and the jury may be so instructed.” Kane,
supra, 278 N.J. Super. at 150 (citing McGrath, supra, 41 N.J. at
275). The jury should also consider the effect of the
plaintiff’s expertise and training on his or her determination
of whether to proceed with the assigned task and the manner in
which to do so. Subsumed into that analysis, therefore, is
whether the plaintiff unreasonably confronted a known risk and
whether he had a “meaningful choice” in the manner in which he
completed his assigned task.
B.

29
Notwithstanding the rule permitting an employee’s
negligence to be considered in a negligence action against a
third party arising from a workplace accident, the trial judge
properly rejected defendant’s request for a comparative
negligence charge. Here, the record is abundantly clear that
plaintiff did not proceed unreasonably in the face of a known
risk.
The record is devoid of any evidence that plaintiff knew
the sewer trench was close to the previously excavated gas-line
trench or that the neighboring trench was filled with sand. The
record provides no evidence that plaintiff learned during his
twenty years as a plumber that sand could flow from one trench
to an adjacent one, causing the latter to collapse. The record
demonstrates that plaintiff received no training about workplace
safety from the general contractor or his employer. The record
also demonstrates that plaintiff had no opportunity on that day
to independently assess the stability of the trench.
Mario and plaintiff arrived at the worksite together.
Mario operated the machine that dug the trench, and plaintiff
entered the trench to connect successive sections of pipe.
Notably, plaintiff’s employer proceeded that day without using
any protective devices. Mario was the “competent person” on the
Warren jobsite, and he bore the duty of inspecting the
excavation work to determine if a cave-in was likely.

30
Regardless of plaintiff’s years of experience or actual
knowledge about the danger of this particular excavation, the
Act places the burden of deciding when and where to take
protective measures squarely on Mario, the “competent person,”
and on the general contractor. Moreover, even if plaintiff knew
that a cave-in was likely, his behavior must be evaluated
against that of a reasonably prudent person in his exact
circumstances, and that evaluation includes whether he had a
meaningful choice in the manner in which he performed his
assigned task on that day. In short, there is no evidence that
plaintiff failed to act with the care of a reasonably prudent
person in choosing to complete his assigned task on the day of
the accident.
V

Outcome: The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.

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