SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2054-98T2
FRANCESCA LOMBARDO,
Appellant,
v.
REVLON, INC.,
Respondent.
Argued: December 14, 1999 - Decided: February 25, 2000
Before Judges Wallace, Jr. and Lesemann
and Bilder.See footnote 11
On appeal from the Department of Labor,
Division of Workers' Compensation.
Edward P. Shamy, Jr., argued the cause for
appellant.
Lester S. Goldblatt argued the cause for
respondent (James A. Hicks, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WALLACE, JR., J.A.D.
This is a workers' compensation appeal by petitioner from the
dismissal of her petition. We reverse.
Petitioner suffered injuries from a compensable accident on
April 14, 1989. She filed a claim petition on December 17, 1990
and an amended claim petition on May 29, 1992, alleging subsequent
additional injuries to her back and shoulders "as a result of the
extreme difficulty she had while walking/limping."
The matter was tried on June 5, 1998 and October 9, 1998. The
evidence at trial included the testimony of petitioner, the medical
reports of five medical experts in lieu of their testimony, and
testimony of an investigator retained by the employer. Plaintiff
testified at the hearing on June 5, 1998, and the medical reports
were submitted at the hearing on October 9, 1998.
The medical examinations of petitioner and the resulting
reports were accomplished between June 1994 and June 1996. All of
the doctors agreed that petitioner was permanently impaired but in
varying percentages.
The trial judge also made observation of the appearance of
petitioner's injuries. He noted the brace petitioner wore on her
left leg was a set of steel rods attached to a plastic appliance,
which fit around the left leg just below the knee and was attached
to a special shoe. He noted that petitioner's left foot was
somewhat atrophied with a significant skin graft on the inner
aspect of the left foot.
Following the submission of petitioner's evidence, the
employer's private investigator, Michael Beukena, testified at the
hearing on October 10, 1990. Beukena performed video surveillance
of petitioner on various occasions. The videoSee footnote 22 taken on December
10, 1997 showed petitioner walking while carrying a large bundle
with no apparent difficulty and no cane. The video taken on
December 11, 1997 showed petitioner carrying toy store merchandise
which she placed in the trunk of her car before driving away.
Later petitioner was shown carrying a basket of groceries after
shopping for about thirty minutes and displayed no apparent
difficulty while walking or loading the groceries in the trunk of
her car. The video taken on January 12, 1998 showed petitioner
leaving the Workers' Compensation court wearing the brace on her
left foot. Later that day, she was videotaped walking normally
without a brace or her cane while visiting a model home with her
husband. The video taken on January 15, 1998 showed petitioner
pushing a shopping cart and lifting bags of groceries in each hand.
She was not wearing the brace and did not use a cane while walking
with no apparent difficulty. The last video taken on February 23,
1998 showed petitioner walking around the block and then picking up
a garbage can and carrying it into her house.
The Workers' Compensation judge rendered his decision on
October 30, 1998. After reciting the facts, the judge stated:
When the Petitioner appeared and testified
before me, she walked with a cane, she
appeared to be depressed to me, as a lay
person. She wore the brace on her left foot,
which she demonstrated to me in chambers. The
Petitioner made a very sympathetic witness,
and the court was impressed with her testimony
giving it some degree of credibility based
upon the admitted severity of the original
injury and the nature of the treatment which
the Petitioner underwent following that
injury. The fact that the Petitioner is in
receipt of Social Security disability benefits
was one additional factor which entered into
the court's feeling with regard to the
credibility to the Petitioner on the date of
her testimony. All of that, however changed
when the Respondent produced videotape on
October 9, 1998 taken by Michael George
Beukena, a professional investigator who
videotaped the Petitioner on December 10,
1997, on December 11, 1997, on January 12,
1998, on January 15, 1998.
....
I have seen people exaggerated, I have seen
video brought in on many occasions, and most
of the time, the video is innocuous; it
neither demonstrates that the petitioner is
able to perform to a degree greater than the
testimony or it shows that the Petitioner is
able to do some of the things that the
testimony said they were not able to do. Most
of the time the video essentially shows
someone who may have testified that they can't
do anything but what they mean is that they
can't do what they used to do, and showing
them doing something which they testified they
can't do can easily be interpreted that way.
But this case goes far beyond that. This case
is totally not understandable by me. This
Petitioner suffered a legitimate compensable
injury in 1989. It was a serious injury at
the time. She received treatment to reduce
the effects of the injuries, but there is no
arguing with the fact that she is left with a
permanent injury in her left foot resulting
from the degloving injury. She is left with
scarification in the upper part of her body as
the donor site of the skin graft that was
placed on her left heel, and she was paid 15
percent of partial total voluntarily by the
Respondent.
I find that this petitioner has attempted to
defraud the Respondent, attempted to defraud
the Workers' Compensation System, and this
Petitioner is subject to the penalties
provided by 34:15-57.4, the newly enacted
anti-fraud in the Workers' Compensation Act.
....
I cannot, for the life of me, understand why
someone who suffers a significant injury who
would otherwise be entitled to legitimate
compensation for that injury and resorts to
this type of conduct. It benefits no one ...
All I can do is judge it, and in this case, I
find that the Petitioner's demonstrated
abilities on the videotape are so in conflict
with her repeated demonstrations of disability
when she is in this building they can only
lead me to the inevitable conclusion that
whatever she is demonstrating while she is
here is intended to convince this Court to
award her compensation to which she is not
entitled.
The judge concluded that petitioner's conduct subjected her to
the provisions of N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4C(1) and forfeited her right
to any additional benefits.
On appeal, petitioner presents the following arguments:
POINT I:
THE VIDEO TAPE EVIDENCE PRODUCED BY RESPONDENT WAS NOT
INCONSISTENT WITH PETITIONER'S TESTIMONY REGARDING HER
INJURIES, DISABILITY AND LIMITATIONS.
POINT II:
PETITIONER'S TESTIMONY WAS NOT FRAUDULENT AND DID NOT
TRIGGER THE FORFEITURE PROVISIONS OF N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4.
Initially, we note our role in reviewing the determinations of
state administrative agencies is limited. We may not substitute
our own factfinding for that of the Judge of Compensation even if
we were inclined to do so. Rather, we must defer to the agency,
provided only that its findings of fact are supported by
substantial credible evidence in the record as a whole and are not
so wide of the mark as to be manifestly mistaken. Brock v. Public
Serv. Elec. & Gas. Co.,
149 N.J. 378, 383 (1997); SSI Medical Serv.
v. State Dept. of Human Serv.,
146 N.J. 614, 620 (1996); Laffey v.
City of Jersey City,
289 N.J. Super. 292, 303 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
146 N.J. 500 (1996); Close v. Kordulak Bros.,
44 N.J. 589,
599 (1965).
We turn now to this appeal. Following oral argument, we
invited the parties to submit supplemental briefs stating their
position on the application of N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4C(1) which became
effective on August 14, 1998. As noted above, petitioner was
injured on April 14, 1989, testified on June 5, 1998, and submitted
medical reports from her evaluations. The employer's video-taped
evidence which challenged the extent of petitioner's disability was
taken between December 1997 and February 1998. Although the
medical reports were submitted into evidence at the hearing in
October of 1998, the evaluations of petitioner and the medical
reports took place about two years prior. It is apparent that all
of the evidence relied upon by the trial judge in finding that
petitioner had violated N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4C(1), occurred prior to
the effective date of the statute in August of 1998. Thus, we must
address whether the statute should be given retroactive effect.
The general rule of statutory construction is that courts
favor prospective application of statutes. Phillips v. Curiale,
128 N.J. 608, 615 (1992); Street v. Universal Maritime,
300 N.J.
Super. 578, 580 (1997); see also Serrano v. Gibson,
304 N.J. Super. 314 (App. Div. 1997) (stating that retroactive applications of
changes in the law are not generally favored); Kendall v. Snedeker,
219 N.J. Super. 283 (App. Div. 1987)(asserting that statutes are to
be applied prospectively). "The purpose behind this rule is to
give people fair notice of the laws that they are expected to
follow; they cannot be expected to obey laws that have not yet been
enacted." Street, supra, 300 N.J. Super. at 580. The presumption
in favor of prospective application of statutes is strongest in
criminal cases due to the constitutional prohibition against ex
post facto application of penal laws that would impose punishment
for an act that was not punishable at the time it was committed or
additional punishment to that then prescribed. Ibid.
Our Supreme Court has articulated three exceptions to the
general rule against retroactive application of a statute.
Curiale, supra, 128 N.J. at 617-18; Gibbons v. Gibbons,
86 N.J. 521
(1991). Retroactive application is appropriate where (1) the
express or implied legislative intent required retroactive
application because it was necessary to make the statute workable
or give it the most sensible interpretation, (2) the statute is
ameliorative or curative, or (3) the parties' expectations warrant
retroactive application. Gibbons, supra, 86 N.J. at 522. "Even if
one of these exceptions applies, a statute should not be given
retroactive application if it would result in 'manifest injustice'
to one of the parties. Serrano, supra, 304 N.J. Super. at 318-19.
N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4 is a criminal statute that carries both
criminal and civil penalties. It provides in part:
a. A person shall be guilty of a crime of
the fourth degree if the person purposely
or knowingly;
(1) Makes, when making a claim for benefits
pursuant to R.S.34:15-1 et seq., a false
or misleading statement, representation
or submission concerning any fact that is
material to that claim for the purpose of
wrongfully obtaining the benefits;
c. (1) If a person purposely or knowingly
makes, when making a claim for benefits
pursuant to R.S.34:15-1 et seq., a false
or misleading statement, representation
or submission concerning any fact which
is material to that claim for the purpose
of obtaining the benefits, the division
may order the immediate termination or
denial of benefits with respect to that
claim and a forfeiture of all rights of
compensation or payments sought with
respect to the claim.
[N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4(a)(1); (c)(1).]
The statute was expressly made effective August 14, 1998.
Thus, the first of the exceptions referred to requiring retroactive
application based on legislative intent, does not apply because the
statute is clearly made effective on a certain date, August 14,
1998.
Under the second exception, the term "ameliorative" refers
only to a criminal penalty, Street, supra, 300 N.J. Super. at 582,
and the term curative refers to new law being given "retroactive
effect if it is designed merely to carry out or explain the intent
of the original statute." Nelson v. Board of Educ. Of Old Bridge,
148 N.J. 358, 370 (1997). Consequently, retroactive application
would not be ameliorative because we are addressing a civil penalty
and it would not be curative because it does not correct an
inadvertent error in the original enactment, since this statute is
the first of its kind.
The third exception requires retroactive application if the
parties' expectations warrant retroactive application. This
exception does not apply because neither plaintiff nor defendant
had any expectation regarding the applicability of the statute when
the plaintiff filed her case in 1990.
Consequently, since none of the requirements for retroactive
application of the statute apply, we conclude it was error to apply
the statute retroactively to the facts of this case.
We reverse and remand.
Footnote: 1 1 Judge Bilder did not participate in oral argument, but has, with the consent of counsel, been added to the panel deciding the matter. Footnote: 2 2The video was not supplied to the court as part of the appendix. The reference to the content of the video is taken from the Workers' Compensation opinion.