NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-2241-98T2
CLETIS MILLER, Individually and
as Executor under the Last Will
and Testament of ANN T. MILLER,
Deceased,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ESTATE OF WALTER SPERLING,
COLETTA SPERLING, Executrix,
Defendant-Respondent.
___________________________________
Argued November 15, 1999 - Decided December
23, 1999
Before Judges Petrella, BraithwaiteSee footnote 11 and
Coburn.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Essex County.
Willard E. Byer, Jr. argued the cause for
appellant; Cletis Miller submitted a pro se
brief.
Michael J. Lunga argued the cause for
respondent (Lunga, Evers & Johnson,
attorneys; John J. Abromitis, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.
Plaintiff Cletis Miller, on behalf of himself and the estate
of his deceased wife, Ann T. Miller, appeals from a summary
judgment dismissing his pro se complaint against the estate of
Walter Sperling that alleged that Sperling, Ann Miller's doctor
since the 1970's, participated in a conspiracy with his wife's
then familySee footnote 22 to put his wife on birth control pills.
The Millers were married in 1972. At that time Ann Miller
was forty years of age. Plaintiff alleges that commencing in
1972, Doctor Sperling prescribed Ovulen 28 to his wife, telling
her it was a medication for her nerves rather than a birth
control medication. Plaintiff also asserts that in connection
with a 1985 physical examination of Ann Miller, Dr. Sperling
admitted that he had prescribed the birth control medication at
the urging of decedent's family as they were concerned that
decedent would not be capable of raising children.
No litigation was instituted for malpractice or any other
claim prior to Ann Miller's death, although in 1985 he and his
wife sought, but were unable to procure, legal assistance to
bring a claim against Dr. Sperling, a pharmacist and a bank on
the basis that he and his wife were denied the right to have
children. Plaintiff claims he only became aware that Ovulen 28
could cause heart attacks and strokes, particularly in older
women, after his wife had died from "suspected acute myocardial
infarction"See footnote 33 on March 30, 1996, at the age of sixty-five.
Plaintiff filed his pro se complaint on March 17, 1998, on
various theories including a claim that Dr. Sperling's
prescription of Ovulen 28 from 1972 until allegedly 1985 was a
proximate cause of his wife's death. Plaintiff asserts without
supporting documentation, that Ovulen 28 was taken off the market
at some unspecified date, allegedly due to its serious side
effects. However, no expert report or any evidence to support
his claims was ever submitted to the motion judge. In addition,
there is no record of any prescription written by Dr. Sperling
for Ovulen 28 after 1980, although the record contains thirteen
pages of prescription records showing numerous different
prescriptions from 1978 through 1996 that were written for the
Millers (a few were for their pet).See footnote 44 There is no record of any
prescription for "Ovulen 28" after 1980. Plaintiff has
nonetheless asserted that his wife somehow continued to obtain
prescription renewals and take Ovulen 28 until 1985, thinking it
was a tranquilizer.
Defendant contended in the motion for summary judgment, that
the two year statute of limitations, N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2, barred
plaintiff's claims. The estate asserts that plaintiff and his
wife knew (or should have known) they had a cause of action for
medical malpractice in 1985 when Dr. Sperling allegedly admitted
prescribing Ovulen 28 for birth control and that the failure of
the Millers to act between that time and the next two years bars
the claim. Defendant adds that summary judgment was properly
granted, even though plaintiff did not have Dr. Sperling's
medical records for the deceased. There were no records
available because Dr. Sperling had retired in March 1985, and
sold his practice (apparently including his medical records).
Sperling died in 1997. Defendant also argues that the estate was
entitled to judgment because plaintiff failed to obtain an expert
report establishing a causal link between Dr. Sperling's pre-1985
prescription of Ovulen 28 and the 1996 death of plaintiff's wife,
and that plaintiff failed to submit an affidavit of merit as
required by N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26 et seq.
In granting defendant summary judgment, the motion judge
applied the discovery rule and noted that the time of accrual of
the cause of action is decided by the Court under Lopez v. Swyer,
62 N.J. 267 (1973). The judge held that plaintiff knew or should
have known of a cause of action against Dr. Sperling in 1985 when
he learned that Ovulen 28 was a birth control drug and that the
statute of limitations (N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2) barred the action.
On appeal, plaintiff claims that the statute of limitations
should not have run because he did not discover that Ovulen 28
was a possible cause of his wife's death and the basis for a
legal action until his wife's death. He also argues, for the
first time on appeal, applicability of the wrongful death statute
and its separate statute of limitations.See footnote 55
I.
On a summary judgment motion, plaintiff (as the party here
who opposed the motion) is given the benefit of the reasonable
inferences the facts will support.
Brill v. Guardian Life Ins.
Co. of Am.,
142 N.J. 520 (1995);
Judson v. Peoples Bank & Trust
Co. of Westfield,
17 N.J. 67 (1954). An opposing party who
offers no substantial or material facts in opposition to the
motion cannot complain if the court takes as true the
uncontradicted facts in the movant's papers.
Id. at 75;
R. 4:46
5. Disputed issues that are "of an unsubstantial nature" cannot
overcome a motion for summary judgment.
Brill,
supra (142
N.J.
at 530). Of course, mere speculation is not taken into account.
See Rooney v. Township of West Orange,
200 N.J. Super. 201, 205
(App. Div. 1985);
Exxon Corp. v. Wegner,
154 N.J. Super. 538, 547
(App. Div. 1977).
We initially consider Miller's individual claim of
malpractice. In some situations, including medical malpractice
cases, it is sometimes difficult to know when a cause of action
accrues. The "discovery rule" has been fashioned to alleviate
the hardship that could be caused by a strict application of the
statute of limitations. The seminal case applying the discovery
rule is
Lopez v. Swyer,
supra (
62 N.J. 267), where it was
determined that the statute of limitation does not start to run
"until the injured party discovers, or by an exercise of
reasonable diligence and intelligence should have discovered that
he may have a basis for an actionable claim."
Id. at 272. The
statute will not run where the injured party is unaware that he
or she has been injured, or in cases where the injury is known,
the person does not know that the injury is attributable to
another.
Baird v. American Med. Optics,
155 N.J. 54, 66 (1998);
Tevis v. Tevis,
79 N.J. 422, 431-432 (1979).
Plaintiff's individual claims of negligence, based on the
claimed admission of Dr. Sperling in 1985 that he "wrongfully
prescribed" medication for plaintiff's wife are clearly time
barred.
In the case before us, plaintiff claims that Dr. Sperling
wrongly prescribed birth control medication to his wife from 1972
until 1985. This knowledge must have alerted plaintiff and his
wife to the fact that they may have had a cause of action against
the doctor. Furthermore, reasonable investigation at that time
most likely could have revealed that the drug prescribed, Ovulen
28, was dangerous. If in fact it was, plaintiff has not supplied
the court with any evidence of this aside from his own
allegations.
The grounds for a malpractice action were discovered in
1985; Mrs. Miller died in 1996. Since a malpractice action must
be brought within two years of its accrual,
N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2,
principles of repose would be severely compromised and the
defendant in this case would be prejudiced by permitting the
medical malpractice action to proceed. Therefore, plaintiff's
individual claims are not timely.
At oral argument of this appeal Miller, for the first time,
urged the applicability of the two year statute of limitations
under the wrongful death statute,
N.J.S.A. 2A:31-1
et seq. and
stated that the wrong statute (
N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2) was previously
cited in the briefs.
N.J.S.A. 2A:31-3 states:
Every action brought under this chapter shall
be commenced within 2 years after the death
of the decedent, and not thereafter.
We could disregard this argument because it was not raised
below.
See Nieder v. Royal Indem. Ins. Co.,
62 N.J. 229, 234
(1973). However, because paragraph 11 of the complaint asserted
a potential claim under the wrongful death act,See footnote 66 in the interest
of justice we will consider the issue.
The trial judge did not err by granting summary judgment,
even considering the complaint to have asserted a wrongful death
claim, because even though such a claim did not ripen or "accrue"
until plaintiff's wife died,See footnote 77 see
Duffy v. Ackerhalt,
138 N.J.
Super. 119 (App. Div. 1975),
certif. denied,
70 N.J. 273 (1976),
decedent's failure to bring a personal injury action before the
statute of limitation expired barred the action due to the death
claim's derivative nature.
Knabe v. Hudson Bus Transp. Co,
111 N.J.L. 333 (E. & A. 1933). The discovery rule is grounded in the
concept of equity not only to the injured party, but also equity
to the alleged wrongdoer. In the case on appeal, this notion of
equity as applied in
Duffy would not be advanced by permitting
the malpractice suit to proceed.
Even though an out of time malpractice claim was permitted
when an almost contemporaneous wrongful death action was
considered timely under its statute of limitations in
Duffy v.
Ackerhalt,
supra (
138 N.J. Super. 119), that case is
distinguishable. In
Duffy, the plaintiff filed the two claims on
the same day. The wrongful death claim was considered timely,
but the medical malpractice claim was brought several days beyond
the two year statute of limitations. Aside from potential
application of the discovery rule, under those circumstances we
deemed the defendant not prejudiced by defending the two suits
where both actions arose from the same operative facts; defendant
would have to defend against the wrongful death action based on
the same alleged act of malpractice; death had occurred
relatively recently after the alleged malpractice; the
malpractice suit was filed within a few days after the statute of
limitations had run; and the brief delay in filing was not
intentional.
Id. at 123-124.
Reading the complaint in this case liberally in plaintiff's
favor, it could be considered as asserting one cause of action
for malpractice in paragraph 9, and another cause of action for
wrongful death in paragraph 11. The basis for the malpractice
claim is that had decedent known the purpose of the Ovulen 28
medication she would not have taken it because she and her
husband planned to have children. Thus, the complaint could be
read as asserting that the doctor was negligent in prescribing
the drug for her nerves and not telling her that it was a birth
control pill that would prevent her from having children.
In his presentation to the motion judge, plaintiff described
the situation in 1985 where he first learned that his wife was
taking the pill when Dr. Sperling told them that Ovulen 28 was
not a tranquilizer, but a birth control pill. Hence, giving
plaintiffs the benefit of the inferences, at that point in 1985,
plaintiff and his wife had a cause of action against Dr. Sperling
for keeping her from having children and that is what the
complaint pleads. As such, plaintiff's malpractice claim is time
barred.
II.
Turning now to the wrongful death claim, the precise issue
of whether the expiration of the statute of limitations for an
underlying claim, where no tort action was instituted or resolved
during the decedent's lifetime, bars a wrongful death action, has
not been decided by our Supreme Court, but it was decided by its
predecessor court, the Court of Errors and Appeals.
See Knabe v.
Hudson Bus Transp. Co.,
supra (
111 N.J.L. 333). Thus, we are
bound by
Knabe v. Hudson Bus Transp. Co.,
supra (
111 N.J.L. 333),
because the Court of Errors and Appeals was then the highest
court in this State.
Hutchinson v. Atlantic City Med. Center
Mainland,
314 N.J. Super. 468, 478 (App. Div. 1998);
Jackson v.
Hankinson,
94 N.J. Super. 505, 515 (App. Div. 1967),
aff'd,
51 N.J. 230 (1968). As an intermediate appellate court, it is not
our function to overrule settled law.
Miller v. Estate of Kahn,
140 N.J. Super. 177, 182-183 (App. Div. 1976);
State v. Hill,
139 N.J. Super. 548, 551 (App. Div. 1976).
Knabe recognized that wrongful death actions are wholly
derivative from an underlying personal injury action. 111
N.J.L.
at 333;
Alfone v. Sarno,
87 N.J. 99, 105 (1981). While cases
such as
Lawlor v. Cloverleaf Mem. Park, Inc.,
56 N.J. 326 (1970)
and
Alfone v. Sarno dealt with issues tangential to the essential
premise of the
Knabe decision, those cases do not govern the
situation before us. This court is still bound by
Knabe because
those cases address different issues from that in the present
case and do not clearly undermine the authority of
Knabe.
See
Burrell v. Quaranta,
259 N.J. Super. 243, 252 (App. Div. 1992).
The fundamental rule of
Knabe remains intact as the law today in
cases where no action was brought by the deceased while alive or
where there was no judgment during decedent's lifetime. In our
view,
Knabe presents a sensible rule which has withstood the test
of time.
A reading of
Alfone v. Sarno,
supra (87
N.J. at 105-106),
makes clear that the precise issue before us with respect to the
claim of a decedent being barred by the running of the wrongful
death statute of limitations has not been addressed by our
highest court since
Knabe.See footnote 88
Alfone involved an issue of
preclusion where an injured party had brought a lawsuit during
her lifetime and recovered a monetary judgment. That judgment on
liability was held binding as
res judicata on liability in a
wrongful death action filed three years after the death of the
successful plaintiff.
Alfone only addressed issue preclusion
questions where litigation during the lifetime of the injured
party resulted in judgment for either the plaintiff or the
defendant or a settlement of the claim, and then established
limitations on potential damages in any wrongful death action.
Alfone was narrowly decided on
res judicata and issue preclusion
grounds; there had already been a judgment in favor of the
injured party, thus the issue of liability would not be re
litigated after memories had faded and evidence compromised.
Recovery in the wrongful death action was limited to those
amounts that were not or could not have been recovered in the
original action.
We do not consider that a determination of fault prior to
death should yield the same result as the loss of a claim where a
potential tort claimant allows the statute of limitations to run.
Here, plaintiff knew that he and his wife had a cause of action,
although couched in terms of preventing child birth. However,
even if they did not know the full extent of the claim, they did
not institute any litigation. Hence, usual principles of repose
barred their claim. Plaintiff's non-action in such a situation
(no assertion of a prior claim and resolution thereof) bars the
wrongful death action because the underlying cause of action was
lost by him and the decedent two years after the discovery of the
claim in 1985. That the extent of the injuries may not have been
known in 1985 does not affect the applicability of established
case law.
Knabe v. Hudson Bus Transportation Co.,
supra (
111 N.J.L. 333);
Lawlor v. Cloverleaf Memorial Park, Inc.,
supra (56
N.J. at 343-345) (prior cases characterizing wrongful death
actions as wholly derivative were questioned but not decided);
Coulter v. New Jersey Pulverizing Co.,
11 N.J. Misc. 5 (
Sup. Ct.
(1932)).
Our decision in this case is consistent with the preclusion
ruling in
Alfone because there was not only no prior action for
damages at the time of the decedent's death, but the decedent
would have been barred from bringing a personal injury action at
the time of death by the statute of limitations. Hence, under
these circumstances we conclude that
Knabe v. Hudson,
supra,
applies and the strong public policy of repose represented by the
statute of limitations is satisfied. Indeed,
Coulter v. New
Jersey Pulverizing Co.,
supra (11
N.J. Misc. at 7), succinctly
set forth the rationale for barring next of kin from bringing a
wrongful death action where the decedent would have been barred
by the statute of limitations:
If this were not so, if decedent
lingered for twenty years and made no move,
his representative could then assert a right
of action to recover for an injury forgotten
by everyone but the injured, who had slept on
his rights for twenty years. Such could not
have been the legislative intention.
"The statute cannot be construed to give
the widow a greater right than the husband
would have if living. The plaintiff's
husband extinguished his right of action by
failing to assert it within the two-year
period fixed by the statute. A right of
action can be extinguished as effectively by
the statute of limitations as in any other
way."
Howard v. Bell Telephone Co.,
306 Pa. 518,
160 A. 613, 615.
See also Kelliher v.
New York Central and Hudson River Railroad
Co.,
212 N.Y. 207,
105 N.E. 824, and the very
recent case of
Flynn v. New York, New Haven
and Hartford Railroad Co.,
283 U.S. 53 [
51 S.
Ct. 357,
75 L. Ed. 837].
[11
N.J. Misc. at 7].
In the present case, there is no
res judicata principle at
work. The interests in repose would not be furthered by
entertaining plaintiff's claims. The wrongful death statute
could not have been intended to breath new life into long stale
claims.
See Coulter v. New Jersey Pulverizing Co.,
supra (11
N.J. Misc. at 6-7);
Alfone v. Sarno,
supra (87
N.J. at 130
(Clifford, J. dissenting)).See footnote 99 Similarly,
Lawlor never addressed
the issue this court is confronted with today.
Lawlor merely
held that where a survival action arose after a suit had been
initiated by the decedent while alive, an additional claim of
wrongful death related back to the time the original personal
injury action was commenced. Therefore, neither of these cases
affect the applicability of
Knabe to the case at hand.
In addition, and perhaps more significantly, it is
questionable whether there is sufficient basis, without an expert
report, to support plaintiff's cause of action. In light of our
determination we need not reach defendant's argument that if a
wrongful death action accrued on the date of Ann Miller's death
the affidavit of merit statute (
N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27) would apply.
In summary, the statute of limitations for a wrongful death
action by decedent's representative is two years under
N.J.S.A.
2A:31-3 where no suit was brought during the decedent's lifetime.
Even allowing plaintiff the benefit of the discovery rule, the
time to assert the malpractice claim expired here sometime in
1987. Thus, no right to maintain such a suit vests in the
decedent's representative and a wrongful death action is barred.
Knabe v. Hudson Bus. Transp. Co,
supra (
111 N.J.L. 333).
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1 Judge Braithwaite did not participate in oral argument.
However, the parties consented to his participation in the
decision.
Footnote: 2 2 At oral argument before the motion judge, plaintiff
claimed that the conspiracy included a bank and a pharmacist.
Footnote: 3 3 Her death certificate also listed chronic interstitial
lung disease as another significant condition.
Footnote: 4 4 Out of the 280 prescriptions recorded from 1978 through
1996, 127 were for Anne (including Prozac), from about eight
doctors, 132 were for Cletis, and 21 were for a pet.
Footnote: 5 5 Defendant counters that if the cause of action accrued on
Ann Miller's death in 1996 then the affidavit of merit statute
should apply. Cornblatt v. Barow,
153 N.J. 218 (1998).
Footnote: 6 6 Paragraph 11 alleges in conclusory language: "The said
deviation [by Dr. Sperling in prescribing Ovulen 28] was a
proximate cause of her death as she died of an apparent heart
attack."
Footnote: 7 7 A wrongful death action would have been timely filed if
there had remained a viable claim by the estate because
plaintiff's wife died on March 30, 1996, and the complaint was
filed on March 17, 1998. See N.J.S.A. 2A:31-3.
Footnote: 8 8 The issue was addressed by this court in Silverman v.
Lathrop,
168 N.J. Super. 333 (App. Div. 1979), a companion case
decided when this court considered Alfone v. Sarno,
168 N.J.
Super. 315 (App. Div. 1979), modified and aff'd,
87 N.J. 99
(1981). Although Alfone was considered by the Supreme Court,
there is no subsequent history for Silverman which declined to
follow Knabe and Coulter v. New Jersey Pulverizing Co.,
11 N.J.
Misc. 5 (Sup. Ct. 1932) (noting that statute of limitations are
practical and pragmatic devices designed to preclude litigation
of stale claims and the resulting prejudice to defendant in
having to defend such a suit), preferring instead to rely on
dictum in Lawlor to conclude that "conditioning the cause of
action for death on an extant and viable cause of action for
personal injuries at the time of death is not required by the
statutory language, logic, or credible precedent." Silverman v.
Lathrop, supra (168 N.J. Super. at 342). However, other portions
of Lawlor point to a contrary result. Lawlor, supra, 56 N.J. at
339.
Footnote: 9 9 As noted by Justice Clifford: "It is well to recall
occasionally that 'the figure of justice is conventionally
portrayed as carrying a pair of scales, not a cornucopia.'"
Alfone v. Sarno,
87 N.J. 99, 124 (1981) (Clifford, J. dissenting)
(quoting from Fleming, The Lost Years: A Problem in the
Compilation and Distribution of Damages,
50 Calif. L. Rev. 598,
603 (1972)).