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).
McDevitt v. Bill Good Builders (A-123-01)
Argued December 2, 2002 -- Decided March 5, 2003
LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court
This age-discrimination case presents two issues. First, whether the plaintiff failed to demonstrate
a
prima facie case of age discrimination under the four-pronged test of
McDonnell
Douglass Corp. v. Green,
411 U.S. 792, 802,
93 S. Ct. 1817, 1824,
36 L. Ed.2d 668, 677-78 (1973). Second, whether plaintiff presented such direct
evidence of discriminatory purpose as would entitle him, under the principles of
Price
Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
490 U.S. 228, 276,
109 S. Ct. 1775, 1796-97,
104 L. Ed.2d 268, 304-305 (1994) (OConnor, J., concurring), to a shift of
the burden of persuasion, thereby requiring the employer to prove it would have
taken the adverse employment action even without consideration of plaintiffs age.
Plaintiff had been a painter at the Philadelphia Naval yard for thirty years
when he retired in 1990 at age sixty-two. Subsequently, plaintiff went to work
for defendant, a company that specialized in home restoration projects. Defendant terminated plaintiff
effective October 31, 1997, allegedly due to downsizing. In fact, defendant reduced its
overall workforce and subcontracted its painting work to spray painting companies. Plaintiff specialized
in hand painting.
Plaintiff filed suit, basing his claim, in part, on defendants retention of one
foreman/painter, younger than himself. In addition, plaintiff alleged that the companys president, Bill
Good, had on at least one occasion told him that he was getting
too old for this type of work. Moreover, plaintiff recounted a conversation he
had with another employee, Wendy Haddock, who told him that she had asked
Goods secretary, Nancy Cockrell, the reason for plaintiffs termination and that Cockrell responded
by saying that plaintiff was too old. Haddock also informed plaintiff that Good
was in the room when the statement was made and that, although he
did not say anything, he nodded his head in agreement.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiff asserted that he met the
four-prong McDonnell Douglas test and thus had established a prima facie age discrimination
cause of action. In addition, plaintiff argued that he had demonstrated direct evidence
of a discriminatory termination consisting of Goods statement that plaintiff was too old
for the job and Goods nodding assent to Cockrells statement that plaintiff was
terminated because he was too old. Plaintiff contended that under Price Waterhouse, he
was entitled to have his case presented to a jury with the burden
of persuasion shifted to defendant to prove that plaintiff would have been terminated
notwithstanding the impermissible consideration of his age.
Defendant argued that the company did not keep any painters and that plaintiff
was not entitled to a shift of the burden of persuasion under Price
Waterhouse, asserting that Goods head nod did not meet the required standard for
directness of poof and, moreover, that Goods alleged earlier comment was nothing more
than a stray remark.
The trial court granted summary judgment to defendant, determining from the record that
a reasonable jury would find that plaintiff was terminated due to a reduction
in force. The Appellate Division affirmed, concluding that plaintiff had failed to make
a prima facie showing of the fourth prong of McDonnell Douglas. Further, the
Appellate Division concluded that it was highly questionable whether the alleged head nod
would constitute an adoptive admission.
The Supreme Court granted plaintiffs petition for certification.
HELD: Plaintiff failed to establish that defendant retained a sufficiently younger worker in
the same position as himself and, therefore, failed to meet the fourth prong
of the McDonnell Douglas test. If warranted by the attendant circumstances, a nod
of the head can qualify as an affirmative expression of agreement constituting an
adoptive admission under Price Waterhouse, but such a conclusion cannot be reached from
the record, requiring a Rule 104 hearing.
1. Under Price Waterhouse, when a plaintiff produces evidence that an employer placed
substantial reliance on a proscribed discriminatory factor in making its decision to take
an adverse employment action, the burden of persuasion shifts to the employer to
prove that even if it had not considered the proscribed factor, the employment
action would have occurred. The discriminatory basis for the adverse employment action is
best demonstrated by direct evidence. What constitutes direct evidence is a matter of
some dispute, with a number of federal courts taking diverse positions. This Court
recognizes and favors the approach applied by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals
in Fekete v. Aetna, Inc.,
308 F.3d 335, 337 n.2 (3d Cir. 2002):
i.e., a court must consider whether a statement made by a decision maker
associated with the decision making process actually bore on the employment decision at
issue and communicated proscribed animus. In other words, the qualitative nature of the
proofs must determine whether a plaintiff has direct evidence of discrimination. (Pp. 8-11)
2 Statements made by third parties that are adopted by the party, by
word or by conduct, are admissible. N.J.R.E. 803(b)(2). A hearsay statement qualifies as
an adoptive admission if two criteria are satisfied. First, the party to be
charged must be aware of and understand the content of the statement. Second,
it must be clear that the party to be charged with the adoptive
admission unambiguously assented to the statement. If warranted by the attendant circumstances, a
nod of the head can qualify as an affirmative expression of agreement constituting
an adoptive admission. In this case, proof of Goods nodding his head could
constitute an adoptive admission if he heard and understood the alleged statement by
Cockrell about the reason for plaintiffs termination and if the evidence demonstrates that
the nodding was intended to convey agreement with that statement. A hearing should
have been conducted to evaluate that proffer in accordance with the requirement of
N.J.R.E. 104(a). Should the court determine that evidence of Goods head nod is
admissible, it must then decide, based on the evidence adduced at the Rule
104 hearing, whether the adoptive admission, if made, satisfies the Price Waterhouse standard
of direct evidence. (Pp. 11-16)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the matter REMANDED to
the trial court for a Rule 104 hearing consistent with this opinion. .
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES COLEMAN, LONG, VERNIERO, ZAZZALI and ALBIN join in
Justice LaVECCHIAs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
123 September Term 2001
BERNARD McDEVITT, an
individual, and THOMAS
GALANTE, an individual,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
and
HARRY PIERCE, an individual,
and HARRY BROWN, an
individual,
Plaintiffs,
v.
BILL GOOD BUILDERS, INC., a
New Jersey Corporation,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
JOHN DOES
1 THROUGH 10,
INCLUSIVE,
Defendants.
Argued December 2, 2002 Decided March 5, 2003
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Joseph T. Threston, III, argued the cause for appellants (Zabel & Associates, attorneys).
Thomas H. Ehrhardt argued the cause for respondent.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
LaVECCHIA, J.
Plaintiff Bernard McDevitt brought this action against defendant Bill Good Builders, Inc. (employer
or "defendant"), under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA"),
29 U.S.C.A.
§623a(1),
alleging that his termination of employment at age sixty-nine was motivated by his
age rather than by a legitimate reduction in force as the employer asserted.
The Appellate Division, in an unreported opinion, affirmed the trial courts grant of
summary judgment dismissing the complaint, and we granted plaintiffs petition for certification,
172 N.J. 357 (2002), to address the significant evidential issue raised. We agree with
the lower courts that plaintiff failed to demonstrate a prima facie case of
age discrimination under the four-pronged test of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
411 U.S. 792, 802,
93 S. Ct. 1817, 1824,
36 L. Ed.2d 668,
677-78 (1973). The question, rather, is whether, as plaintiff contends, he presented such
direct evidence of discriminatory purpose as would entitle him, under the principles of
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
490 U.S. 228, 276,
109 S. Ct. 1775, 1796-97,
104 L. Ed.2d 268, 304-05 (1994) (OConnor, J., concurring), to a shift
of the burden of persuasion thereby requiring the employer to prove it would
have taken the adverse employment action even without consideration of the proscribed factor.
The asserted direct evidence was the head nodding by the employers president, Bill
Good (Good), who allegedly was present when his secretary, answering an inquiry by
another employee as to why plaintiff was being terminated, said that he was
too old. Plaintiff contends that Goods nodding of his head in response to
his secretarys statement constituted an adoptive admission by a party, admissible pursuant to
N.J.R.E. 803(b)(2), of his discriminatory purpose in terminating the employment. The issues before
us are whether a nod of the head may constitute an adoptive admission
and, if so, whether that adoptive admission, if made, meets the Price Waterhouse
direct-evidence test. Clearly, if both these questions are answered affirmatively, the summary judgment
dismissing the complaint was improvidently granted. The difficulty is that neither question can
be answered on this record. Both require circumstantial resolution in a hearing pursuant
to N.J.R.E. 104. Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment and remand for the
necessary hearing.
I.
The relevant facts are presented in the light most favorable to plaintiff.
Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
142 N.J. 520, 523 (1995).
Plaintiff had been a painter at the Philadelphia Naval Yard for thirty years
when he retired in 1990 at age sixty-two. A year or two later,
he began working as a painter again for defendant employer whose company specialized
in home restoration projects funded by insurance claim proceeds. Plaintiff was terminated effective
October 31, 1997. The reason given was a need to reduce the companys
workforce. At about the time of plaintiffs termination, the company was experiencing a
decline in larger restoration jobs and had begun subcontracting its painting work to
spray painting companies. Plaintiff concedes that he did not have spray-painting experience; his
specialty was hand painting. Prior to plaintiffs termination, the employer had hired a
younger painter, Martin Heimbach, who died of cancer within a few weeks after
plaintiffs termination. No other worker with the job description of painter had been
hired prior to plaintiffs termination and none was hired to replace either plaintiff
or Heimbach. Around the same time, the employer also reduced the number of
its foremen from two to one and the number of its carpenters from
seven to three. According to plaintiff, the one remaining foreman paints as well
as supervises at job sites. Plaintiff bases his
McDonnell Douglas claim of pretextual
firing on the retention of that one foreman who, plaintiff contends, is primarily
a painter. Plaintiff asserts that the foremans other supervisory duties entail nothing more
than those which he himself had performed at job sites.
Plaintiffs suspicions concerning the true reason for his termination resulted from a conversation
he had with another former employee, Wendy Haddock, a few weeks after he
was terminated. Plaintiff received a telephone call from Haddock, a former office assistant
and receptionist for the company, who coincidentally had quit on plaintiffs last day
of employment, October 31, 1997. She informed plaintiff that he had been fired
because Good thought that he was too old for the job. According to
Haddock, on October 30, 1997, while Nancy Cockrell, Goods secretary, was typing plaintiff's
termination letter, Haddock asked her why plaintiff was being fired. Cockrell responded by
saying that it was because plaintiff was too old. Haddock said that Good
was present at the time and she observed him nodding his head in
agreement when she and Cockrell had this exchange although he did not say
anything. Cockrell, on the other hand, does not recall the conversation taking place
or even typing the letter. Good does not recall the conversation either. According
to plaintiff, however, Good made a similar comment to him on at least
one earlier occasion, remarking to plaintiff that he was "getting too old for
this type of work." Good denies that statement also. He consistently has maintained
that the companys shortage of work motivated the reduction in force that included
plaintiffs termination. Nonetheless, in an effort to resolve this matter the company extended
an offer of reemployment to plaintiff eighteen months after he had been terminated.
Plaintiff declined the offer.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiff asserted that he met the
four-prong
McDonnell Douglas test required for a
prima facie age discrimination cause of
action in that he (1) was over age 40, (2) was qualified for
the job as a painter, (3) was laid off by the company, and
(4) Robert Shaw, the remaining foreman, was an unprotected worker retained by the
company. See
McDonnell Douglas,
supra, 411
U.S. at 802, 93
S. Ct. at
1824, 36
L. Ed.
2d at 677-78. Plaintiff also asserted that he had
direct evidence of a discriminatory termination, namely, Goods statement about plaintiff getting too
old for the job and his head nod in apparent agreement with Cockrells
statement that plaintiff was being terminated because of his age. Accordingly, he claimed
that under
Price Waterhouse, he was entitled to have his case presented to
a jury with the burden of persuasion shifted to defendant to prove that
plaintiff would have been terminated notwithstanding the impermissible consideration of his age.
Defendant disputed plaintiffs asserted
prima facie case under
McDonnell Douglas because no
unprotected worker was retained by the company and all painters were terminated, except
for Heimbach, who died within weeks after plaintiffs termination and was not replaced.
Moreover, it contended that Shaw was a foreman and not a painter and
hence he was not an unprotected worker of the same class as plaintiff.
Finally, defendant disputed that plaintiff was entitled to a shift of the burden
of persuasion under
Price Waterhouse, asserting that Goods head nod did not meet
the required standard for directness of proof. Defendant, moreover, discounted Goods alleged earlier
comment as a mere stray remark.
The trial court granted summary judgment to defendant, determining from the record that
a reasonable factfinder would find that plaintiff legitimately was terminated due to a
reduction in force. The Appellate Division affirmed on the basis of plaintiffs failure
to make a
prima facie showing of the fourth prong of
McDonnell Douglas.
In respect of whether plaintiff had presented direct evidence of discrimination under
Price
Waterhouse, the court considered the alleged nodding of the head to have been
equivocal and, moreover, that it was highly questionable whether the head nod would
constitute an adoptive admission.
Plaintiffs petition for certification raises two issues: (1) whether he successfully presented a
prima facie case of age discrimination under
McDonnell Douglas, and (2) whether the
trial court should have considered
Price Waterhouse, addressing the head nod as an
adoptive admission, which, plaintiff contends, would constitute direct evidence of discrimination by the
company. As noted, we agree with the lower courts that plaintiff failed to
establish that the company retained a sufficiently younger worker in the same position
as plaintiff and, therefore, he failed to meet the fourth prong of the
McDonnell Douglas test. Accordingly, we turn to the more substantial issue of the
head nod and its bearing on the
Price Waterhouse direct-evidence standard.
II.
Under
Price Waterhouse, when a plaintiff produces evidence that an employer placed substantial
reliance on a proscribed discriminatory factor in making its decision to take the
adverse employment action, the burden of persuasion shifts to the employer to prove
that even if it had not considered the proscribed factor, the employment action
would have occurred.
Price Waterhouse,
supra, 490
U.S. at 244-45, 109
S. Ct.
at 1787-88, 104
L. Ed.
2d at 284. In the typical employment discrimination
case, an employee strives to adduce direct evidence of the perceived discriminatory animus
that allegedly motivated the employers adverse employment action in order to gain the
considerable benefit of that shift of the burden of proof to the employer.
See
Febres v. Challenger Caribbean Corp.,
214 F.3d 57, 60 (1st Cir. 2000)
(observing in respect of direct evidence that in the average case, the employee
thirsts for access to it, while the employer regards it as anathema). But
to qualify for that benefit, as Justice OConnor explained in her concurring opinion
in
Price Waterhouse,
supra, 490
U.S. at 276, 109
S. Ct. at 1796-97,
104
L. Ed.
2d at 304-05, the discriminatory purpose must be demonstrated by
direct evidence. Although that requirement is now embedded in the discrimination jurisprudence, there
is substantial disagreement as to what it means. Thus while courts agree on
what is
not direct evidence e.g., statements by non-decisionmakers, statements by decisionmakers unrelated
to the contested employment decision, and other stray remarks, there is no consensus
on what is.
Fakete v. Aetna, Inc.,
308 F.3d 335, 337 n.2 (3d
Cir. 2002).
In determining whether an adoptive admission by way of a head nod can
meet the direct-evidence test, we consider first the disparate approaches to direct evidence
taken by the federal courts.
See generally Benjamin C. Mizer, Note,
Toward a
Motivating Factor Test for Individual Disparate Treatment Claims,
100
Mich. L. Rev. 234,
239 (2001) (noting that [t]he circuit courts currently fall into three general schools
of thought with respect to the meaning of direct evidence). Illustratively, the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals has allowed a case to proceed on the basis
of direct evidence where a supervisor merely expressed surprise at the plaintiffs desire
to work until age seventy.
Lightfoot v. Union Carbide Corp.,
110 F.3d 898,
913 (2d Cir. 1997). The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, on the other
hand, has dismissed as insufficiently direct, and overly ambiguous, statements by a supervisor
to the effect that the person she had just fired was an incompetent
n----r.
Shorter v. ACG Holdings, Inc.,
188 F.3d 1204, 1207 (10th Cir. 1999).
Another approach, adopted by the Fourth Circuit, considers the overall strength of the
evidence under the totality of the circumstances rather than focusing exclusively on the
directness of the proffered evidence itself.
Taylor v. Virginia Union Univ.,
193 F.3d 219, 232 (4th Cir. 1999) (en banc),
cert. denied,
528 U.S. 1189,
120 S. Ct. 1243,
146 L. Ed.2d 101 (2000). Under that approach, applied
by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals in
Fakete,
supra, 308
F.3d at
339, a court must consider whether a statement made by a decisionmaker associated
with the decisionmaking process actually bore on the employment decision at issue and
communicated proscribed animus.
We favor the
Fakete approach. And, indeed, we have recognized that the qualitative
nature of the proofs must determine whether a plaintiff has direct evidence of
discrimination. Thus, in
Bergen Commercial Bank v. Sisler,
157 N.J. 188, 208 (1999),
we emphasized the importance of the quality of proofs, which must, if true,
demonstrate not only a hostility toward members of the employees class, but also
a direct causal connection between that hostility and the challenged employment decision. Although
in
Sisler we quoted
Castle v. Sangamo Weston, Inc.,
837 F.2d 1550, 1558
n.13 (11th Cir. 1998), for the proposition that to survive summary judgment the
evidence must provide proof of a fact without inference or presumption, we have
nevertheless also recognized that proofs of sufficient quality could be provided through circumstantial
evidence of conduct or statements by persons involved in the decisionmaking process that
may be viewed as directly reflecting the alleged discriminatory attitude.
Fleming v. Corr.
Healthcare Solutions, Inc.,
164 N.J. 90, 101 (2000) (citation omitted). We apply that
standard here. In doing so, we are required initially to determine whether Goods
head nod is admissible as an adoptive admission and, if so, whether in
the circumstances it meets the direct-evidence test as we have defined it.
III.
On the issue of admissibility,
N.J.R.E. 803(b) provides an exception to the hearsay
rule for an out-of-court admission by a party to litigation. As has been
explained, a party can hardly object that he had no opportunity to cross-examine
himself or that he is unworthy of credence save when speaking under sanction
of oath. 2
McCormick on Evidence § 254 (Strong ed. 1992) (quoting Morgan,
Basic
Problems of Evidence, 265-66 (1963)). Included within this exception is the doctrine of
adoptive admissions that categorizes as party admissions statements made by third parties that
are adopted by the party. Under
N.J.R.E. 803(b)(2), statements whose contents the party
has adopted by word or conduct or in whose truth the party has
manifested belief are admissible. The rule follows the stricture and the substantive content
of its federal counterpart,
Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2). Biunno,
Current N.J. Rules of
Evidence, committee comment on
N.J.R.E. 803(b) (2002) (Biunno). The exception is applicable in
both civil and criminal cases, Biunno, comment 2 on
N.J.R.E. 803(b) (2002), but
it is applied with caution to avoid prejudice and injustice.
Greenberg v. Stanley,
30 N.J. 485, 498 (1959).
A hearsay statement qualifies as an adoptive admission if two criteria are satisfied.
First, the party to be charged must be aware of and understand the
content of the statement allegedly adopted.
State v. Briggs,
279 N.J. Super. 555,
562 (App. Div. 1995) (citing
Greenberg,
supra, 30
N.J. at 497). That is,
it is usually said that the proponent of the evidence must show, not
merely that the party was
present when the remark was made, (and presence
of course implies proximity within a distance sufficient to permit hearing) but also
that the party actually
heard and
understood what was said.
[4 Wigmore on Evidence § 1072 (Chadbourn rev. 1972).]
Second, it must be clear that the party to be charged with the
adoptive admission unambiguously assented to the statement.
State v. Briggs,
279 N.J. Super. 555, 563 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
141 N.J. 99 (1995).
See also State
v. Johnson,
59 N.J. 396, 410 (1971) (explaining that defendants answers to specific
questions are admissible as adoptive admissions when they clearly bespeak adoption by defendant
of questioners factual references to crime); 2
McCormick on Evidence § 261 (Strong ed.
1992); 4
Wigmore on Evidence § 1072 (Chadbourn rev. 1972).
In this case, neither the trial court nor the parties directly addressed the
admissibility of the head nod as an adoptive admission. And, as we have
noted, the Appellate Division regarded the head nod as equivocal, and deemed it
highly questionable that it satisfied the requirements of
N.J.R.E. 803(b)(2). We conclude, however,
that if warranted by the attendant circumstances, a nod of the head can
qualify as an affirmative expression of agreement constituting an adoptive admission.
N.J.R.E. 803(b)(2)
expressly permits an adoptive admission to be established by either conduct or by
words, or both, and our courts have recognized that in a particular context,
nonverbal action may constitute an adoptive admission. Thus, for example, in
State v.
Gorrell,
207 N.J. Super. 142, 151-52 (1996), the Appellate Division held that a
defendants smile in response to being called a butcher after an assault with
a knife could be found to be tantamount to an admission and therefore
admissible as an adoptive admission. Similarly, courts in other jurisdictions have admitted proof
of the specific conduct here, a head nod, as an adoptive admission.
See,
e.g.,
State v. Shoop,
441 N.W.2d 475, 482 (Minn. 1989);
State v. Brummer,
568 N.W.2d 37 (Wis. 1997).
In this case, proof of Goods nodding his head could constitute an adoptive
admission if he heard and understood the alleged statement by Cockrell about the
reason for plaintiffs termination and if the evidence demonstrates that the nodding was
intended to convey agreement with that statement. As the proponent of the adoptive
admission, plaintiff must establish both prerequisites for admissibility to the trial courts satisfaction.
A hearing should have been conducted to evaluate that proffer in accordance with
the requirement of
N.J.R.E. 104(a) that wherever . . . the admissibility of
evidence . . . is subject to a condition, and the fulfillment of
a condition is in issue, that issue is to be determined by the
judge.
See also Greenberg,
supra, 30
N.J. at 498 (stating that proffered adoptive
admission should be admitted only when [the] trial court is satisfied preliminarily that
all conditions for its application have been established by the proponent, or at
least that a reasonable jury could so find);
Gorrell,
supra, 207
N.J. Super.
at 151 (requiring admissibility of adoptive admission to be determined in a Rule
104 hearing); Biunno, comment 2 on
N.J.R.E. 104 (2002) ([t]he admissibility of adoptive
admissions . . . [should be] determined by the judge preliminarily pursuant to
N.J.R.E. 104(a)). Because the admissibility of Goods alleged head nod depends on whether
plaintiff is able to satisfy the criteria detailed above, a hearing pursuant to
N.J.R.E. 104(a) is required. If the trial court then decides that the evidence
may be admitted, it would, of course, be for the factfinder to ascribe
the weight to be given to that evidence.
Should the court determine that evidence of Goods head nod is admissible, there
is yet a second gatekeeping function it must perform before allowing the case
to proceed at trial. It must decide, based on the evidence adduced at
the Rule 104 hearing, whether the adoptive admission, if made, satisfies the
Price
Waterhouse standard of direct evidence because plaintiffs ability to establish a
prima facie
case depends on a shift to defendant of the burden of proof. In
this regard the court should take into account plaintiffs assertions that the adoptive
admission was made by the ultimate decisionmaker himself while executing the adverse employment
action, that it bore directly on the motivation for the decision at issue,
and that it directly communicated proscribed animus as the reason for plaintiffs termination.
In that context, the court also must consider plaintiff's assertion that Good told
him that he was "getting too old for this type of work." We
are satisfied that if these assertions are credited by the court, the adoptive
admission of Goods head nod would then qualify as direct evidence sufficient to
shift the burden of persuasion.
IV.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed and the matter remanded to
the trial court for a Rule 104 hearing consistent with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES COLEMAN, LONG, VERNIERO, ZAZZALI and ALBIN join in
JUSTICE LaVECCHIAs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-123 SEPTEMBER TERM 2001
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
BERNARD McDEVITT, an
Individual, and THOMAS
GALANTE, an individual,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BILL GOOD BUILDERS, INC., a
New Jersey Corporation,
Defendant-Respondent.
DECIDED March 5, 2003
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice LaVECCHIA
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
REVERSE AND REMAND
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE COLEMAN
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE VERNIERO
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
JUSTICE ALBIN
X
TOTALS
7