SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
Plaintiff's attorney filed a medical malpractice complaint against defendants alleging negligent treatment
of plaintiff's fractured left heel. Several months before filing suit, plaintiff's attorney retained
a board certified orthopedic surgeon to review plaintiff's records and provide an affidavit,
pursuant to the Affidavit of Merit statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26 to 29, attesting to
the merits of the claim. After receiving a verbal opinion from the surgeon,
plaintiff's attorney filed the complaint on May 31, 2000. On August 17, 2000,
defendants filed and served their answer and demanded, in part, the production of
a medical expert affidavit. Plaintiff's attorney claimed that the answer was incorrectly filed
in his office and that he did not see it until January 2001.
The Affidavit of Merit statute requires service of an affidavit on the defendant
with 120-days of the filing of the answer. Within ten days of the
filing of the answer, plaintiff's attorney received the signed affidavit of merit from
the surgeon, but he inadvertently failed to provide it to defense counsel. Discovery
proceeded. Defense counsel made no further request for the affidavit during the 120-day
period.
Eighteen days after the statutory deadline, plaintiff's attorney was advised by defense counsel
during a telephone conversation that no affidavit had been served. Plaintiff's attorney faxed
the affidavit to defense counsel the same day. Approximately two weeks later, defendants
moved to dismiss the complaint with prejudice for failing to comply with the
Affidavit of Merit statute. The trial court granted the motion and the Appellate
Division affirmed.
HELD : Principles of equity and the essential goals of the Affidavit of Merit
statuteto eliminate frivolous lawsuitsare not advanced by dismissing the complaint in this case
in which the plaintiff possessed an affidavit of merit within the 120-day statutory
period and served the affidavit on defense counsel outside that time frame but
before defense counsel filed the motion to dismiss.
1. Pursuant to the Affidavit of Merit statute, plaintiff must show that the
complaint is meritorious by obtaining an affidavit from an appropriate, licensed expert attesting
to the reasonable probability of professional negligence. The statute further requires that the
plaintiff provide the affidavit to the defendant within sixty days of the filing
of the answer or, for good cause shown, within an additional sixty-day period.
Finally, plaintiff's failure to serve the affidavit within 120 days of the filing
of the answer is considered tantamount to the failure to state a cause
of action, subjecting the complaint to dismissal with prejudice. (Pp. 6 8).
2. The Affidavit of Merit statute has dual purposes. Those purposes are to
weed out frivolous lawsuits early in the litigation while, at the same time,
ensuring that plaintiffs with meritorious claims will have their day in court. The
legislative purpose was not to create a minefield of hyper-technicalities in order to
doom innocent litigants possessing meritorious claims. Therefore, the Court has recognized two equitable
remedies that temper the results of an inflexible application of the statute. A
complaint will not be dismissed if the plaintiff can show that he or
she substantially complied with the statute. Further, a complaint will be dismissed without
prejudice if there are extraordinary circumstances to explain noncompliance. (Pp. 8 9).
3. Plaintiff's counsel did not meet the requirements of substantial compliance, nor did
the misfiling of the answer and failure to calendar the matter constitute extraordinary
circumstances. However, plaintiff's counsel complied with the underlying purpose of the statute by
having an expert verify the meritorious nature of the claim at an early
stage of the case. Defendants do not contend that they suffered prejudice by
the late service of the affidavit. Nor did defendants request the affidavit at
any point between the filing of the answer and the end of the
120-day statutory period. It was not until after the receipt of the affidavit
that defendants filed the motion to dismiss. Under those circumstances, the Court concludes
that defendants should be estopped from claiming entitlement to dismissal as a remedy.
(Pp. 9 12).
4. The Affidavit of Merit statute was intended to flush out insubstantial and
meritless claims that have created a burden on innocent litigants and detracted from
the many legitimate claims that require the resources of the civil justice system.
The statute was not intended to encourage gamesmanship or a slavish adherence to
form over substance. The statute was not intended to reward defendants who wait
for a default before requesting that the plaintiff turn over the affidavit of
merit. In a case where the plaintiff has in hand an affidavit within
the 120-day statutory period and serves the affidavit on defense counsel outside that
time frame but before defense counsel files a motion to dismiss, the defendant
shall not be permitted to file such a motion based on the late
arrival of the affidavit. If defense counsel files a motion to dismiss after
the 120-day deadline and before plaintiff has forwarded the affidavit, the plaintiff should
expect that the complaint will be dismissed with prejudice provided the doctrines of
substantial compliance and extraordinary circumstances do not apply. (Pp. 12 13).
5. To ensure that discovery related issues, such as compliance with the Affidavit
of Merit statute, do not become sideshows to the primary purpose of the
civil justice systemto shepherd legitimate claims expeditiously to trialthe Court proposes that an
accelerated case management conference be held within ninety days of the service of
an answer in all malpractice actions. At the conference, the court will address
all discovery issues, including whether an affidavit of merit has been served on
defendant. If an affidavit has been served, defendant will be required to advise
the court whether he or she has any objections to the adequacy of
the affidavit. If there is any deficiency in the affidavit, plaintiff will have
to the end of the 120-day time period to conform the affidavit to
the statutory requirements. If no affidavit has been served, the court will remind
the parties of the obligation. Early court intervention in the discovery process will
permit the Affidavit of Merit statute to fulfill its true purpose. This proposal
does not restrict the flexibility of trial courts to convene additional case management
conferences to facilitate the discovery process and motion practice. (Pp. 13 15).
The decision of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED.
JUSTICE LONG wrote a separate opinion, concurring in part and dissenting in part,
in which JUSTICE ZAZZALI and JUDGE PRESSLER join, agreeing with the majority's decision
to reinstate the complaint, but disagreeing with the majority's rationale. Justice Long contends
that Cornblatt v. Barow,
153 N.J. 218 (1998), should be modified to limit
a dismissal with prejudice to those cases in which a plaintiff cannot or
will not produce an affidavit of merit, and to permit trial judges a
panoply of discretionary remedies to address procedural deficiencies in complying with the Affidavit
of Merit statute.
JUSTICE ZAZZALI wrote a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part,
joined by JUDGE PRESSLER, expressing reservations about the constitutionality of the Affidavit of
Merit statute.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA and WALLACE join in JUSTICE ALBIN's
opinion. JUSTICE LONG filed a separate opinion, concurring in part and dissenting in
part, in which JUSTICE ZAZZALI and JUDGE PRESSLER, temporarily assigned, join. JUSTICE ZAZZALI
filed a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part in which
JUDGE PRESSLER joins. JUSTICE VERNIERO did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
151 September Term 2001
AGOSTINO FERREIRA and MARGARIDA FERREIRA, h/w,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RANCOCAS ORTHOPEDIC ASSOCIATES and BRUCE W. WULFSBERG, M.D.,
Defendants-Respondents.
Argued March 3, 2003 Decided November 24, 2003
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Mark R. Cuker argued the cause for appellants (Williams Cuker & Berezofsky, attorneys).
Jeremy P. Cooley argued the cause for respondents (Lenox, Socey, Wilgus, Formidoni, Brown,
Giordano & Casey, attorneys).
Abbott S. Brown argued the cause for amicus curiae, Association of Trial Lawyers
of America-New Jersey (Bendit Weinstock, attorneys).
Justice ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Affidavit of Merit statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26 to 29, requires a plaintiff in
a malpractice action to serve on a defendant within 120 days of receipt
of the answer an experts sworn statement attesting that there exists a reasonable
probability that the professionals conduct fell below acceptable standards. The Legislature enacted the
statute with the laudatory purpose of weeding out frivolous lawsuits early in the
process. The statute does not impose overly burdensome obligations. The plaintiff must keep
an eye on the calendar and obtain and serve the experts report within
the statutory timeframe. This seemingly simple scheme has generated a tide of litigation
and a new area of jurisprudence as this Court and our appellate courts
have grappled with the derelictions of plaintiffs counsel, who have filed well-grounded complaints,
but have neglected to file technically correct or timely affidavits. The failure to
deliver a proper affidavit within the statutory time period requires a dismissal of
the complaint with prejudice. Alan J. Cornblatt, P.A. v. Barow,
153 N.J. 218,
242 (1998).
Beginning with Cornblatt, we have fashioned equitable remedies to mitigate the harshness of
a rigid application of the statute that would result in the dismissal of
an otherwise meritorious cause of action. In this case, plaintiffs attorney possessed an
affidavit of merit ten days after the receipt of the answer ¾ well within
the time permitted by the statute to serve the affidavit on opposing counsel.
The validity of the complaint is not at issue. Due to inadvertence, plaintiffs
attorney served the affidavit eighteen days out-of-time, but before defendants moved to dismiss
the complaint for failure to comply with the statutory deadline. We hold that
this case is a suitable candidate for equitable relief.
This case brings to mind the adage that an ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure. Therefore, going forward, we will require case management
conferences in the early stage of malpractice actions to ensure compliance with the
discovery process, including the Affidavit of Merit statute, and to remind the parties
of the sanctions that will be imposed if they do not fulfill their
obligations.
The statute was one of five bills passed as part of a 1995
tort reform package designed to strike[] a fair balance between preserving a persons
right to sue and controlling nuisance suits. Palanque v. Lambert-Woolley,
168 N.J. 398,
404 (2001) (quoting Office of the Governor, News Release 1 (June 29, 1995));
Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at 228.
See footnote 1 The statute imposes a set of procedural
requirements in order for a plaintiff to maintain a professional malpractice action.
Cornblatt,
supra, 153 N.J. at 228-29. First, the plaintiff must show that the complaint
is meritorious by obtaining an affidavit from an appropriate, licensed expert attesting to
the reasonable probability of professional negligence. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27; Palanque, supra, 168 N.J. at
404. Second, the affidavit must be provided to the defendant within sixty days
of the filing of the answer or, for good cause shown, within an
additional sixty-day period. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27; Burns v. Belafsky,
166 N.J. 466, 470-71 (2001).
Third, the plaintiffs failure to serve the affidavit within 120 days of the
filing of the answer is considered tantamount to the failure to state a
cause of action, subjecting the complaint to dismissal with prejudice. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-29; Palanque,
supra, 168 N.J. at 404; Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at 247.
The statute also places certain burdens on the defendant to provide the documents
necessary for the preparation of the affidavit by the plaintiffs expert. In the
absence of compliance with a document request, the plaintiff may provide a sworn
statement, in lieu of the affidavit, certifying that the necessary records were not
made available. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28. The Legislature did not intend to give medical malpractice
defendants the power to destroy a meritorious malpractice action by refusing to provide
the very records the expert would need to prepare the affidavit. Barreiro v.
Morais,
318 N.J. Super. 461, 470 (App. Div. 1999).
Our cases have repeatedly emphasized the dual purpose of the Affidavit of Merit
statute: to weed out frivolous lawsuits early in the litigation while, at the
same time, ensuring that plaintiffs with meritorious claims will have their day in
court. Hubbard v. Reed,
168 N.J. 387, 395 (2001); see Palanque, supra, 168
N.J. at 404 (stating that Legislature intended to curtail frivolous litigation without preventing
access to the courts for meritorious claims); Galik, supra, 167 N.J. at 359
(there is no legislative interest in barring meritorious claims brought in good faith).
The legislative purpose was not to create a minefield of hyper-technicalities in order
to doom innocent litigants possessing meritorious claims. Mayfield v. Community Med. Assocs., P.A.,
335 N.J. Super. 198, 209 (App. Div. 2000).
We have recognized consistent with our understanding of its legislative intent two equitable
remedies that temper the draconian results of an inflexible application of the statute.
A complaint will not be dismissed if the plaintiff can show that he
has substantially complied with the statute. Palanque, supra, 168 N.J. at 405-06; Fink
v. Thompson,
167 N.J. 551, 561-65 (2001); Galik, supra, 167 N.J. at 351-59;
Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at 239-42. Moreover, a complaint will be dismissed without
prejudice if there are extraordinary circumstances to explain noncompliance. Palanque, supra, 168 N.J.
at 404-05; Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at 246-47.
In Cornblatt, supra, we first applied the doctrine of substantial compliance in the
context of the Affidavit of Merit statute. 153 N.J. at 239-42. The doctrine
is invoked so that technical defects will not defeat a valid claim. Id.
at 239; see also Galik, supra, 167 N.J. at 352 (It is a
doctrine based on justice and fairness, designed to avoid technical rejection of legitimate
claims.) The doctrine requires the moving party to show: (1) the lack of
prejudice to the defending party; (2) a series of steps taken to comply
with the statute involved; (3) a general compliance with the purpose of the
statute; (4) a reasonable notice of petitioner's claim; and (5) a reasonable explanation
why there was not strict compliance with the statute. Galik, supra, 167 N.J.
at 353, 347-48 (finding substantial compliance where plaintiff did not file affidavit within
statutory time frame, but plaintiffs counsel, before initiating suit, provided defendants insurance carriers
with two detailed experts reports that established legitimacy of complaint and served as
basis for settlement discussions); Palanque, supra, 168 N.J. at 405 (finding substantial compliance
doctrine not satisfied where plaintiff had experts report in hand before filing suit,
but failed to provide defendant with affidavit of merit or experts report within
120 days after filing of answer); Fink, supra, 167 N.J. at 561-64 (finding
substantial compliance where timely-served affidavit and extensive experts report clearly focused on conduct
of defendant and his relationship to malpractice case, even though both documents failed
to name defendant doctor); Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at 239-242 (finding substantial compliance
where plaintiff served timely certification instead of affidavit). Although we have yet to
define the full scope of extraordinary circumstances as an equitable remedy for failure
to comply with the statute, we do know that attorney inadvertence is not
such a circumstance entitling plaintiff to a remedy of dismissal of a complaint
without prejudice. Palanque, supra, 168 N.J. at 405.
In the present case, plaintiffs counsel was in possession of the affidavit of
merit within ten days of the filing of the answer. Moreover, plaintiffs counsel
had complied with the underlying legislative purpose by having an expert verify the
meritorious nature of the malpractice claims at an early stage of the case.
Defendants do not contend that they suffered prejudice by the eighteen-day late service
of the affidavit. There was no delay in the proceedings or unnecessary expense
incurred by defendants as a result of the affidavits tardy arrival. Defendants did
not request the affidavit at any point between the filing of the answer
and the end of the 120-day statutory period. Significantly, it was not until
after the receipt of the affidavit that defendants filed the motion to dismiss.
Although this case satisfies most of the factors necessary to establish substantial compliance
with the statute, it nevertheless falls short of the mark. As in Palanque,
supra, plaintiffs counsel did not, within the statutory time frame, take steps to
forward the affidavit to opposing counsel. 168 N.J. at 405-06. Moreover, counsels carelessness
in misfiling defendants answer and failing to calendar this matter does not constitute
an extraordinary circumstance. See id. at 405. That, however, does not end our
equitable analysis.
This plaintiff possessed the affidavit of merit almost at the time the clock
began to run and served the affidavit before defendants filed a motion to
dismiss. In that respect, he stands apart from the plaintiffs in Palanque, Fink,
and Galik, who did not serve affidavits that conformed to the statute until
after defendants had filed motions to dismiss. Ordinarily, one would expect the defendant
who claims to be prejudiced by the failure to receive discovery to file
an appropriate motion based on its absence, not on the occasion of its
receipt. We do not fault defendants for attempting to enforce the time requirements
of the Affidavit of Merit statute to their advantage. However, principles of equity
and the essential goal of the statute to eliminate frivolous lawsuits are not
advanced by dismissing the complaint. Plaintiffs malpractice action was verified by an expert
as meritorious within 120 days of the filing of defendants answer and served
on defendants only eighteen days later. Defendants waited until after they received the
affidavit to file the dismissal motion. Under those circumstances, we conclude that defendants
should be estopped from claiming entitlement to dismissal as a remedy.
We do not condone the misfiling of pleadings by plaintiffs counsel or his
failure to use the simple expedient of a calendar as a guard against
inadvertence. The Association of Trial Lawyers of America-New Jersey, as amicus curiae, has
urged this Court to adopt a rule that would require, as a condition
of the filing of a malpractice action, the contemporaneous attachment of an affidavit
of merit to the complaint. That would appear to be a disheartening concession
that not all plaintiffs counsel can be expected to follow the time restrictions
in the Affidavit of Merit statute. We cannot rewrite the statute, eliminating the
time afforded to the diligent attorneys who follow its mandate, to create a
fail-safe system for the few neglectful attorneys who do not.
The Affidavit of Merit statute was intended to flush out insubstantial and meritless
claims that have created a burden on innocent litigants and detracted from the
many legitimate claims that require the resources of our civil justice system. The
statute was not intended to encourage gamesmanship or a slavish adherence to form
over substance. The statute was not intended to reward defendants who wait for
a default before requesting that the plaintiff turn over the affidavit of merit.
The rule we announce in this case will further the fundamental purpose of
the Affidavit of Merit statute. In a case where the plaintiff has in
hand an affidavit within the 120-day statutory period and serves the affidavit on
defense counsel outside that time frame but before defense counsel files a motion
to dismiss, the defendant shall not be permitted to file such a motion
based on the late arrival of the affidavit. If defense counsel files a
motion to dismiss after the 120-day deadline and before plaintiff has forwarded the
affidavit, the plaintiff should expect that the complaint will be dismissed with prejudice
provided the doctrines of substantial compliance and extraordinary circumstances do not apply. That
formulation places strong incentives on both plaintiffs and defense counsel to act diligently.
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RANCOCAS ORTHOPEDIC
ASSOCIATES and BRUCE W.
WULFSBERG, M.D.,
Defendants-Respondents.
Justice LONG, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I have no quarrel with the courts ultimate disposition of this matter. Reinstatement
of the complaint is the obviously correct outcome. My point of departure from
my colleagues is a global one. I am no longer willing to pen
or join in the reasoning of yet another opinion that limns excessively fine
distinctions solely to avoid the injustice that necessarily flows from the holding of
Alan J. Cornblatt, P.A. v. Barow,
153 N.J. 218 (1998), that all deviations
from the Affidavit of Merit statute warrant dismissal with prejudice except for the
narrowly prescribed category of exceptional circumstances. I therefore write separately to express my
view that it is time for Cornblatt to be modified.
When the Legislature enacted the Affidavit of Merit statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26 to -29,
as a tort reform measure, it declared that that initiative was designed to
weed out frivolous lawsuits at an early stage and to allow meritorious cases
to go forward. Galik v. Clara Maass Med. Ctr.,
167 N.J. 341, 350
(2001) (citing Cornblatt, supra,
153 N.J. 242). Obviously underlying that scheme was the
wholly unremarkable notion that, if a plaintiff in a malpractice case cannot obtain
an experts report regarding deviation, his or her claim should not stand. To
relieve the system and individual litigants of the burdens of prosecuting and defending
against such claims, the Legislature set forth within the statute a methodology for
the filing of an affidavit of merit. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27. Plaintiffs failure to provide
an affidavit pursuant to the act is deemed a failure to state a
cause of action. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-29.
In Cornblatt, this Court held that deviation from the Affidavit of Merit statute
should result in a dismissal with prejudice except in extraordinary circumstances. Cornblatt, supra,
153 N.J. at 247 (citing Hartsfield v. Fantini,
149 N.J. 611, 618 (1997).
In line with the legislative intent, Cornblatt was on firm legal ground in
concluding that, if a plaintiff is unable to provide an affidavit of merit
in a malpractice case, a fundamental element necessary to the ultimate rendering of
a judgment (the fact of deviation) is absent. Presumably, that is what led
the Court to state that [t]he violation giving rise to the dismissal goes
to the heart of the cause of action as defined by the Legislature,
Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at 244, and to conclude that dismissal with prejudice
is the proper response. Id. at 245 (citing Printing Mart-Morristown v. Sharp Electronics
Corp.,
116 N.J. 739 (1989)).
However, experience over the past eight years has taught us that there are
two distinct classes of cases arising under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27. The first is the
class that infused Cornblatt. It makes perfect sense that, where a plaintiff is
unable to provide an affidavit at all, the omission should be considered substantive,
resulting in a merits-dismissal with prejudice.
The vastly more common category is entirely different. It does not involve the
inability of a plaintiff to produce an affidavit regarding deviation, but arises out
of procedural slip-ups in filing or service or out of curable technical deficiencies.
Such defects do not go to the heart of the cause of action.
Indeed, because they do not reflect negatively on the merits of a plaintiffs
malpractice claim, dismissing the complaint does nothing to advance the legislative goal of
ridding the system of frivolous cases. On the contrary, it thwarts the stated
aim of allowing meritorious cases to go forward. That was never the intention
of the Legislature when it enacted the Affidavit of Merit statute.
Accordingly, Cornblatts mandatory dismissal with prejudice rule should be limited to those cases
in which a plaintiff cannot or will not produce an affidavit of merit
at all. Con-comitantly, trial judges should have available to them a full panoply
of discretionary remedies for procedural deficiencies in complying with the Affidavit of Merit
statute, including dismissal with or without prejudice and discovery-type sanctions such as reasonable
expenses incurred in obtaining the affidavit along with counsel fees. See R. 4:23-1
et. seq. In each case, the trial judge should assess the facts, including
the willfulness of the violation, the proximity of trial and any prejudice that
would accrue to the party aggrieved by the filing deviation, and apply the
appropriate remedy. The availability of sanctions short of dismissal with prejudice would align
the Affidavit of Merit procedure with R. 4:37-2(a) for the first time since
the statute was enacted. Moreover, it would provide judges with a response that
is proportionate to most procedural violations and also would serve to save for
trial the meritorious cases of injured victims of malpractice. Nothing in the statute
itself precludes such an approach. It is only Cornblatt that stands in the
way.
Modifying Cornblatt will not offend notions of stare decisis. Certain expectations about Affidavit
of Merit litigation, particularly that it would spring from cases in which plaintiffs
could not support their claims of deviation, obviously underpinned Cornblatt and directed its
result. Those expectations have not materialized. In fact, the heartland of Affidavit of
Merit cases involves nothing more than procedural mistakes that are entirely irrelevant to
the legitimacy of the cause of action. That reality not only justifies but
requires a modification of Cornblatt.
Stare decisis operates to control change, not to prevent it. Fox v. Snow,
6 N.J. 12, 23 (1950)(Vanderbilt, J., dissenting). Indeed, as Justice Vanderbilt observed in
Fox, that doctrine does not require us to adhere blindly to rules that
have lost their reason for being. Ibid. The broad mandatory dismissal with prejudice
language of Cornblatt falls into that category. Until it is modified, we will
be required to continue on our course of painstakingly deconstructing the facts in
every single Affidavit of Merit case in order to find some basis on
which to escape Cornblatt and achieve a just result. Stare decisis does not
require that of us.
One final note. The preventive case management scheme the majority has put into
place essentially carves a class of cases out of the template for case
management set forth in R. 4:5. That rule was enacted as part of
the Best Practices initiative and fundamentally altered the way cases are managed in
order to render our system more effective and efficient. Under the majoritys opinion,
not only is the judicial discretion and flexibility that is a hallmark of
R. 4:5 altered, but the very notion that a case-management conference is not
automatic becomes a nullity. Given the ameliorative goals of the Best Practices revisions,
that kind of piecemeal amendment of the new rules seems counter-productive at best.
More importantly, I deem it unlikely that the courts innovation will forestall a
new round of litigation. Rather, I see it as simply moving the field
of battle to a different location. For those reasons, although I concur in
the result, I cannot agree with the Courts rationale.
Justice Zazzali and Judge Pressler join in this opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
151 September Term 2001
AGOSTINO FERREIRA and MARGARIDA FERREIRA, h/w,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RANCOCAS ORTHOPEDIC ASSOCIATES and BRUCE W. WULFSBERG, M.D.,
Defendants-Respondents.
Justice ZAZZALI, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The majority and concurring opinions represent positive efforts to address an intractable problem.
I agree with the result reached by Justice Albin on behalf of the
majority, a result that will salvage yet another meritorious claim from dismissal under
the Affidavit of Merit statute. Although I concur in the majoritys granting of
relief to plaintiff, as to future cases I prefer the approach taken by
Justice Long in her concurring opinion.
I recognize that the Affidavit of Merit statute has important objectives, but I
write separately to express my reservations about its constitutionality. Because the parties have
not briefed nor argued the issue, it would be inappropriate to speak conclusively
on the subject. Nonetheless, the question, which is a profound one, remains unresolved.
I offer these observations.
In Alan J. Cornblatt, P.A. v. Barow,
153 N.J. 218, 248 (1998), this
Court discussed, but did not decide, whether the Affidavit of Merit statute impermissibly
invades our exclusive power to regulate practice and procedure. In dicta, we suggested
that the statute does not violate the doctrine of separation of powers. Ibid.
Underlying that suggestion were two observations. First, we stated that [i]t is within
the Legislatures authority to define a cause of action to include a limitations
period within which the plaintiff must act. Ibid. (citing E.A. Williams Inc. v.
Russo Dev. Corp.,
82 N.J. 160, 164-67 (1980)). Second, we found that the
Legislatures decision to require an affidavit of merit neither conflicted with our rules
applying to malpractice suits nor interfered with the judiciarys role in resolving such
disputes. Ibid. Notwithstanding that dicta, we noted that the constitutional issue did not
generate significant . . . public concern, and, therefore, we found it unnecessary
and inappropriate to deal conclusively with the question given that it had not
been raised properly below. Ibid.
Five years later, and after extensive litigation over strict application of the statute,
one fairly can say that the affidavit-of-merit requirement has engendered significant concerns that
call for a more thorough exploration of the statutes constitutionality. Indeed, numerous courts
have struggled with the statute when its application would bar an apparently meritorious
claim. See, e.g., Burns v. Belafsky,
166 N.J. 466, 478 (2001) (reasoning that
because statute was not intended to bar meritorious claims, lawyers inadvertent failure to
file timely affidavit of merit did not preclude plaintiff from establishing good cause
for sixty-day extension); Mayfield v. Cmty. Med. Assocs.,
335 N.J. Super. 198, 209
(App. Div. 2000) (finding, under circumstances, that it would be wholly counter to
the remedial purpose of the statute to dismiss [an] apparently meritorious action based
on what would be no more than a merely mechanical application of the
dry statutory words).
Whether the struggle encountered by our courts demonstrates that the Legislature has impinged
on powers reserved to the judiciary remains an open question. Because the parties
have not raised the matter, the well-intentioned majority opinion does not address it.
Confined by our decision in Cornblatt, the majority attempts to reduce litigation over
the statute by mandating a case-management conference, a measure that I hope will
succeed on a practical level. However, I agree with Justice Long that the
case-management requirement may become another source of litigation as parties dispute compliance with
the mandate. In any event, we must begin to address the more fundamental
question whether the statute unconstitutionally usurps judicial power.
AGOSTINO FERREIRA and
MARGARIDA FERREIRA, h/w,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RANCOCAS ORTHOPEDIC
ASSOCIATES and BRUCE W.
WULFSBERG, M.D.,
Defendants-Respondents.
DECIDED November 24, 2003
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Albin
CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY J.J., Long and Zazzali
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
Footnote: 1
Justice Zazzalis concurring opinion suggests that the Affidavit of Merit statute is
unconstitutional because it violates the separation of powers. That issue was not raised
before this Court or below by the parties to this case. We do
not consider Justice Zazzalis constitutional analysis because it would be unfair to the
defendant who has never had the opportunity to address the issue. We note
that in
Cornblatt this Court rejected the notion that the Legislature lacked constitutional
authority to enact the Affidavit of merit statute. Cornblatt, supra, 153 N.J. at
248 ([T]he constitutional principle of separation of powers in this context is not
implicated. It is within the Legislatures authority to define a cause of action
to include a limitations period within which the plaintiff must act.)(citation omitted). In
the more than half-dozen cases in which this Court has grappled with the
Affidavit of Merit statute since Cornblatt, no one has questioned, and this Court
has never revisited, the statutes constitutionality.
Footnote: 2
It is noteworthy that an editorial published in the New Jersey Law Journal
after the enactment of the Affidavit of Merit statute characterized the affidavit requirement
as an unmistakable legislative attempt to control practice and procedure in a lawsuit
already before the court. A Litigators Predicament,
142 N.J.L.J. 24 (Dec. 11, 1995).
Observing that [p]redicament is defined as a troublesome, embarrassing or ludicrou