On January 29, 2021, Plaintiff Michael Shaw tripped and fell while crossing Kearny Avenue due to a large pothole in the middle of the street. He suffered significant injuries including a broken right hip, chronic lumbar strain, and aggravation of other pre-existing conditions. The issue in Shaw v. Town of Kearny, 2025 N.J. Super. Unpub. LEXIS 937 (App. Div. June 4, 2025) was whether the Township was deemed to have notice of the alleged roadway defect and, hence, could be responsible for his accident.
Typically, in accidents involving potholes, the public entity responsible for the roadway will not be held liable due to lack of notice of the pothole. Usually, they will not have actual notice of the pothole because they can appear suddenly. Further, it is often hard to prove constructive notice for the same reason. However, the facts in the Shaw case were different. Plaintiff was able to present sufficient facts to establish that the pothole was present for years and was so obvious that Kearny, using due care, should have discovered it. Hence, sufficient facts exist to establish constructive notice.
Plaintiff suffered his injury on a dark night, after parking his car on Kearny Avenue to visit a nearby bakery to make a purchase. The bakery was on the opposite side of the street from where he parked. He went to the bakery and, on the way back, crossed in the middle of the street, not in the crosswalk. He was holding a box of custard cups, not looking down and encountered a large pothole and fell. The pothole was 4 feet in length, 12 inches wide and the deepest section was about 2-3 inches deep.
At the trial court level, the trial judge found that the Township did not have actual or constructive notice of the pothole, granted summary judgment, and dismissed the lawsuit. This appeal ensued.
The Appellate Division, however, disagreed with the trial court. While there was no proof of actual notice, it held that there were facts sufficient to establish constructive notice. It found that the record did include imagery from 2012-2015 showing evidence of cracking and surface depressions. The formation of a pothole appeared on images as of July 2018 and, by October 2020, further images showed continued pavement deterioration, and evidence of large pothole formation.
During this time, Kearny was engaged in a variety of roadway inspection, planning, project finance and repair activities on Kearny Avenue. Other areas near this pothole were patched and repaired in 2018 and 2019. Plaintiff’s expert opined that the accident site continued to deteriorate. Giving all inferences to Plaintiff, the Appellate Division found that there was ample evidence for a jury “to conclude that the Kearny Avenue pothole was a dangerous condition sometime after 2015; the dangerous condition existed for a significant period of time prior to the accident; and the dangerous condition was obvious, so much so that Kearny, using due care, should have discovered it.”
The Court noted that the record showed a continually deteriorating pothole near the middle of the roadway in the Kearny central business district where the Township had multiple opportunities to discover it. Hence, the Appellate Division disagreed with the trial court’s assessment as to the lack of notice and reversed the court’s order for summary judgment.