NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1100-99T5
JEFFREY WOLFE and ROSANNA
WOLFE, his wife,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
MARC MALBERG, M.D., ST. PETER'S
MEDICAL CENTER, DANEK MEDICAL, INC.
and SOFAMOR DANEK GROUP, INC.,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
NICOLE EINHORN, M.D.,
Defendant.
Submitted, September 27, 2000 - Decided October 27, 2000
Before Judges King, Kleiner and Coburn.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Middlesex County.
Ominsky & Messa, attorneys for appellants
(Joseph L. Messa, Jr., of counsel; Andrew D.
Swain and Laurence M. Kagan, on the brief).
Pepper Hamilton, attorneys for respondents
Sofamor Danek Group, Inc. and Danek Medical
Inc. (David Richman and James M. Beck, of
counsel; Laurie H. Polinsky, on the brief).
Thomas B. Leyhane and Associates, attorneys
for respondent Mark Malberg, M.D. (Mary
Elizabeth Gazi, on the brief).
Amdur, Boyle, Maggs & McGann, attorneys for
respondent St. Peter's Medical Center rely on
the brief of respondent Mark Malberg, M.D.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
COBURN, J.A.D.
In this medical malpractice action, the trial judge concluded
that defendants' ability to engage in discovery was impeded by the
conduct of both plaintiffs' attorney and their expert witness. He
also held plaintiffs' attorney in contempt of court. In two orders
dated October 6, 1999, the judge directed that plaintiffs' attorney
pay $1,000 to the court for violation of a case management order;
$10,800 to the court for improper objections at a deposition;
$5,135.50 to defendants as reimbursement for counsel fees and costs
incurred in participating in the deposition; and $1,000 to the
court for contempt. In addition to those assessments, which total
$17,935.50, the judge ordered that defendants would not be required
to pay plaintiffs' expert's fees for the depositions, barred
plaintiffs' liability expert from testifying, and, since plaintiffs
could not prove their case without expert testimony, granted
summary judgment to all defendants. Plaintiffs appeal.See footnote 11 We
reverse.
I
The trial judge found, while conducting a telephonically
argued motion on July 29, 1999, that during a defense deposition of
plaintiffs' expert witness, plaintiffs' attorney objected on fifty-
four occasions in a manner that the judge concluded flagrantly
violated
R. 4:14-3(c). He did not specify in any instance why he
believed the objection was improper, although from some of his
comments it would appear that in general he believed the objections
were designed to assist the expert in providing answers helpful to
plaintiffs' case. He sanctioned plaintiffs' attorney "$200 for
each of the 54 violations that defense counsel have alleged" for a
total of $10,800. Without referring to any particular provision of
the prior order, he found that plaintiffs' attorney "flagrantly
violated [his] case management order" and he sanctioned plaintiffs'
attorney $1,000. At another point, he said that plaintiffs'
attorney had "violated the spirit of that case management order
with [his] obstructionist tactics" and as far as he was concerned,
"that was an outright violation of the case management order."
The judge also found, again without specificity, that the
depositions were "a farce and that defense counsel do not need to
pay for them." Finally, because of the unspecified violation of
the case management order, he dismissed plaintiffs' case.
During the argument of this motion, a dispute arose among
counsel as to whether defendants had agreed to pay a particular fee
to plaintiffs' expert in excess of that ordered by the judge. The
judge determined that plaintiffs' attorney might have made a
misrepresentation to the court on this issue during the
telephonically argued motion, and, as a result, orally directed
that he show cause on a subsequent date as to why he should not be
held in contempt of court. The judge noted that "under the
circumstances everybody deserves a chance to
testify in front of
[him] so that [he] can see them." (Emphasis added.)
On the subsequent date, September 7, 1999, the judge,
conducting the hearing over plaintiffs' attorney's objection,
elicited representations from counsel on both sides, and then,
without taking any testimony, found that plaintiffs' attorney's
version of what had transpired during his conversations with
opposing counsel was untrue. He proceeded to hold the attorney in
contempt and fine him $1,000 under
R. 1:10-1.
Thereafter, counsel for defendants Sofamor Danek Group, Inc.
and Danek Medical Inc. moved for counsel fees to reimburse them for
the expenses incurred in the deposition of plaintiffs' expert.
Without making any findings of fact, the judge entered an order
requiring plaintiffs' attorney to pay these defendants' costs and
counsel fees totaling $5,135.50.
II
The judge erred in holding the attorney in contempt of court
under
R. 1:10-1.See footnote 22 Assuming for the moment that the attorney made
a misrepresentation during the telephonically argued motion, a
point that even the judge assumed could not then be determined,
that conduct did not obstruct the proceedings. Therefore,
subsection (a) of the rule was not satisfied. Furthermore,
subsection (d) of the rule was not satisfied since immediate
adjudication was not "necessary to permit the proceeding to
continue in an orderly and proper manner[.]" The judge recognized
that testimony would be required to establish whether a
misrepresentation had been made, but in the subsequent hearing he
took no testimony, relying instead on the unsworn representations
of defense counsel. Since testimony was required, the judge would
have had to proceed under
R. 1:10-2, but he followed none of the
procedures called for by that rule. Therefore, the order holding
the attorney in contempt is reversed.
III
We turn to the $1,000 fine for violating the "spirit" of the
case management order and the $10,800 fine for unspecified but
supposedly improper objections during the deposition of the
plaintiffs' expert witness. The judge made these assessments
without reference to any supporting rule or case law.
Although a court has the inherent power in appropriate
circumstances to sanction an attorney,
see, e.g.,
Pontidis v.
Shavelli,
296 N.J. Super. 420, 424 (App. Div. 1997), the particular
sanctions must accord with the law. Generally, financial
sanctions, other than those imposed pursuant to
R. 1:10-1 and 10-2,
are limited to orders requiring reimbursement of the fees and
expenses of a party.
See, e.g.,
R. 1:10-3;
R. 4:10-3;
R. 4:23-
1(c);
R. 4:23-2(b);
Canino v. D.R.C. Co.,
212 N.J. Super. 620 (App.
Div. 1986); and
Ridley v. Dennison,
298 N.J. Super. 373, 380-81
(App. Div. 1997), wherein the court had this to say:
We do not dispute the view that a
monetary sanction imposed pursuant to
R.
1:10-3 is a proper tool to compel compliance
with a court order.
See Franklin Township v.
Quakertown,
274 N.J. Super 47, 55-56,
643 A.2d 34 (App. Div. 1994). We are convinced,
however, from the tenor of the judge's ruling
and order imposing the penalties and
sanctions, which included the assessment of
all counsel and therapy fees, that these
sanctions constituted specific and overt
punishment for what the judge concluded was
defendant's improper conduct over the years in
failing to facilitate the court's past
visitation orders. The court's action in this
regard was so overwhelmingly punitive as to be
improper without the benefit of a proceeding
under
R. 1:10-2 and its safeguards.
Therefore, even if there were a proper factual
basis for the judge's conclusions of
defendant's culpability, the procedure
employed was insufficient to warrant the
action which he took.
[Id. at 381.]
In appropriate circumstances a court may impose court costs
under
R. 1:2-4(a),
Oliviero v. Porter Hayden Co.,
241 N.J. Super. 381, 390-91 (App. Div. 1990),
but this case did not involve any of
the bases for such an assessment referred to by that rule.
Moreover, the judge did not justify the fines imposed by reference
to any imposition on the court's resources, as was the case in
Oliviero. In short, the sanctions of $1,000 and $10,800 were
precisely the kind of specific and overt punishment that
Canino
teaches cannot be imposed without institution of appropriate
proceedings under
R. 1:10-1 or 10-2. Therefore, these sanctions
are reversed.
IV
The $5,135.50 counsel fee award for attendance at the
plaintiffs' expert's deposition, unsupported by any specific
findings of fact, makes no sense when combined with the dismissal
of plaintiffs' case. This type of assessment assumes that because
of misconduct the deposition will have to be taken again. The
award is for the attorney's wasted time and is designed to protect
the other side against unnecessary expenses.
Cf. Oliviero v.
Porter Hayden Co.,
supra, 241
N.J. Super. at 388 (App. Div. 1990).
In the circumstances of this case, the award was purely punitive.
Although we are reversing the order dismissing the case, we are
still confronted with an award of counsel fees unsupported by any
findings of fact. Although fees may be warranted, we cannot tell
whether that is so in light of the judge's failure to make the
necessary findings.
Golden Estates v. Continental Cas. Co.,
317 N.J. Super. 82, 91 (App. Div. 1998). The award of counsel fees is
reversed and remanded for further consideration by the trial judge.
Plaintiffs have not addressed that portion of the order relieving
defendants from paying for the deposition fees of plaintiffs'
expert witness. Therefore, we will not consider it.
See, e.g.,
Matter of Bloomingdale Convalescent Ctr.,
233 N.J. Super. 46, 48
n.1 (App. Div. 1989).
V
Last, we consider the trial judge's decision barring
plaintiffs' expert from testifying at trial and dismissing
plaintiffs' case. The governing principles are set forth in
Abtrax
Pharm., Inc. v. Elkins-Sinn, Inc.,
139 N.J. 499 (1965):
In respect of the ultimate sanction of
dismissal, this Court has struck a balance by
instructing courts to impose that sanction
"only sparingly."
Zaccardi,
supra, 88
N.J. at
253,
440 A.2d 1329;
see Georgis,
supra, 226
N.J. Super. at 250,
543 A.2d 1043. "The
dismissal of a party's cause of action, with
prejudice, is drastic and is generally not to
be invoked except in those cases in which the
order for discovery goes to the very
foundation of the cause of action, or where
the refusal to comply is deliberate and
contumacious."
Lang,
supra, 6
N.J. at 339,
78 A.2d 705 (citations omitted);
see Allegro,
supra, 9
N.J. at 160-61,
87 A.2d 430;
Johnson
v. Mountainside Hosp.,
199 N.J. Super. 114,
119,
488 A.2d 1029 (App. Div. 1985). "Since
dismissal with prejudice is the ultimate
sanction, it will normally be ordered only
when no lesser sanction will suffice to erase
the prejudice suffered by the non-delinquent
party, or when the litigant rather than the
attorney was at fault."
Zaccardi,
supra, 88
N.J. at 253,
440 A.2d 1329 (citations
omitted);
see Johnson,
supra, 199
N.J. Super.
at 119,
488 A.2d 1029. Moreover, the
"imposition of the severe sanction of
dismissal is imposed not only to penalize
those whose conduct warrant it, but to deter
others who [might] be tempted to violate the
rules absent such a deterrent."
Zaccardi v.
Becker,
162 N.J. Super. 329, 332,
392 A.2d 1220 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
79 N.J. 464,
401 A.2d 221 (1978).
The scarcity of cases ordering dismissal
demonstrates that trial courts have heeded our
admonition to impose sparingly the ultimate
sanction of dismissal.
Cf. Aujero,
supra, 110
N.J. at 580,
542 A.2d 465 (stating that
"[j]udges, no less than lawyers, strain to
avoid the ultimate sanction of dismissal of an
affirmative claim or striking of a responsive
pleading" for failure to answer
interrogatories);
Crews,
supra, 141
N.J.
Super. at 96,
357 A.2d 300 (stating that
courts are reluctant "to invoke the sanction
of dismissal where lesser measures [are]
appropriate" for failure to answer
interrogatories). However, a party invites
this extreme sanction by deliberately pursuing
a course that thwarts persistent efforts to
obtain the necessary facts.
[Id. at 514-15.]
Under those guidelines, the dismissal was improper. In the
instant case, there is no respect in which the plaintiffs
themselves wrongfully contributed to the events leading to the
dismissal. The trial judge's criticism, albeit general, was
directed solely at the way the expert answered questions and the
manner in which plaintiffs' attorney conducted himself at the
deposition of the expert. The rules of court include numerous
procedural devices for dealing with problems of that nature short
of dismissal, including the power to require a deponent whose
misconduct caused unnecessary expense in relation to a deposition
to reimburse the other side for counsel fees and costs.
R. 4:23-
1(c). The judge made no specific findings that would have
justified barring plaintiffs' expert from testifying. Therefore,
we reverse that aspect of the order. To the extent that the expert
acted inappropriately, the judge should be able to craft an order
that will govern his behavior at the future deposition. If it
appears at a subsequent date that there are grounds for barring the
expert from testifying, before dismissing the case, the judge
should give plaintiffs a reasonable opportunity to retain another
expert. Similarly, before dismissing plaintiffs' case based on the
conduct of their attorney, the attorney should be afforded another
opportunity to participate in the deposition in accordance with the
standards enunciated by
R. 4:14-3(c). If he is incapable of
conducting himself appropriately, plaintiffs should be given the
opportunity to retain other counsel before the severe sanction of
dismissal is imposed.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
Footnote: 1 1Plaintiffs' attorney did not list himself as an appellant;
however, since the clear import of the notice of appeal was that he
was himself appealing the sanctions imposed on him, we will
consider the appeal as if it had correctly listed him as an
appellant in addition to plaintiffs.
Footnote: 2 21:10-1. Contempt in Presence of Court
A judge conducting a judicial proceeding
may adjudicate contempt summarily without an
order to show cause if:
(a) the conduct has obstructed, or if
continued would obstruct, the proceeding;
(b) the conduct occurred in the actual
presence of the judge, and was actually seen
or heard by the judge;
(c) the character of the conduct or its
continuation after an appropriate warning
unmistakably demonstrates its willfulness;
(d) immediate adjudication is necessary
to permit the proceeding to continue in an
orderly and proper manner; and
(e) the judge has afforded the alleged
contemnor an immediate opportunity to respond.
The order of contempt shall recite the
facts and contain a certification by the judge
that he or she saw or heard the conduct
constituting the contempt and that the
contemnor was willfully contumacious.
Punishment may be determined forthwith or
deferred. Execution of sentence shall be
stayed for five days following imposition and,
if an appeal is taken, during the pendency of
the appeal, provided, however, that the judge
may require bail if reasonably necessary to
assure the contemnor's appearance.
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