SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1962-98T2
RAMAPO BRAE CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION, INC.; DIANE
BENNETT; ZACHARY and ANNE
ALLEGRETTI; ILEEN CHANNER;
JOSEPH and LESLIE DE MEO;
DOROTHY NATALE; PAUL and
LUCINE BAUMGART; HERMAT
and ROLA BARKHO; VOJTECH
and JUDY CERNY; FERMIN and
NANCY DIAZ; ALICE BOYD-WILLIAMS;
RAJENDRA and SURYA R. PATEL;
DAVID and NANCY VIOLETTE; JAMES
and DEBRA BURNETTE; HENRY and
SHOW-LING HO; THOMAS and JANET
HAMILL; ROBERT and RHONDA SMITH;
PETER and MARY JANE DURANTE;
HAROLD and TAMMY BRENDEL; SCOTT
and LINDA GOODWIN; RAYMOND and
LAURA MCDONALD; STEVEN and
VERONICA MARINO; CARL and JANICE
ARNOLD; SANDRA BOYD; VICTOR and
KATHLEEN VELASQUEZ; DINESH and
BAHRTI SANGHVI; GLORIA MELENDEZ;
ENRIQUE and ALBA VITERY; GUILLERMO
and MARIA ESCOBAR; JO ANN WARGO;
JOHN and ROSE MARIE ADAMKOVICH;
THOMAS and NANCY VETTER; CHARLES and
DIANNE MC CREADY; STEVEN and
SHARLENE SCHERER; KAMPI and TARA
PRAGDAT; JIRINA MANCIC; and ALBERT
and SARAH YIP,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BERGEN COUNTY HOUSING AUTHORITY;
NORTH AMERICAN HOUSING CORPORATION;
T.R. ARNOLD & ASSOCIATES; E.O.
D'ALESSANDRO, INC., a/k/a E.O.
D'ALESSANDRO GARDEN CENTER; TARQUINI
& ELKIN/SOBOLTA, Architects and
Planners; RESIDENTIAL WARRANTY
CORPORATION; MERCHANTS AND
BUSINESS MEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY;
TOWNSHIP OF MAHWAH,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
HOUSING AUTHORITY OF BERGEN COUNTY,
Defendant-Respondent/Third-
Party Plaintiff,
v.
MERIDIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
Third-Party Defendant-Respondent.
Argued: September 29, 1999 Decided: March 1,
2000
Before Judges Stern, Kestin and Wefing.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Bergen County.
John F. Darcy argued the cause for appellants
(McElroy, Deutsch & Mulvaney, attorneys; Mr.
Darcy of counsel; Kevin P. Harkins, on the
brief).
Terrence J. Corriston argued the cause for
respondent Bergen County Housing Authority
(Breslin & Breslin, attorneys; Mr. Corriston,
on the brief).
Dean Constantine argued the cause for
respondent Tarquini-Elkin/Sobolta Architects
(Morgan, Melhuish, Monaghan, Arvidson, Abrutyn
& Lisowski, attorneys; Mr. Constantine, on the
brief).
Thomas J. Perry argued the cause for
respondents Residential Warranty Corporation
and Merchants and Business Men's Insurance
Company (Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland &
Perretti, attorneys; Shawn L. Kelly, of
counsel; Thomas J. Perry, on the brief).
Frank M. Coscia argued the cause for
respondents North American Housing Corporation
and T.R. Arnold & Associates (Gallo Geffner
Fenster, attoneys; Mr. Coscia, of counsel;
Elizabeth R. Millard, on the brief).
John G. Tinker, Jr. argued the cause for
respondents Meridian Construction Company and
E.O. D'Alessandro (Leary, Bride, Tinker &
Moran, attorneys; Mr. Tinker, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WEFING, J.A.D.
Plaintiffs appeal from two orders granting summary judgment to
all defendants. After a careful review of the entire record and
consideration of all the arguments advanced on appeal, we affirm in
part, reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.
I
Prior to setting forth the legal issues presented, ease of
understanding requires that we identify the parties and their
relationships to the present controversy. We shall identify them
in the order in which they appear in the caption, which does not
necessarily correlate with their involvement with this matter,
either chronologically or substantively.
Plaintiff Ramapo Brae Condominium Association, Inc. (the
Association) is responsible for the management and operation of the
condominium development known as Ramapo Brae in Mahwah, New Jersey.
The individual plaintiffs are unit owners within Ramapo Brae.
Defendant Bergen County Housing Authority, more properly Housing
Authority of Bergen County (the Authority), is a body corporate and
politic. N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-17. The Authority's function is to
provide assistance to those who need it to obtain safe, decent and
affordable housing. In furtherance of that mission, the Authority
developed Ramapo Brae. It is undisputed that the Authority acted
as general contractor for that development.
Defendant North American Housing Corporation (North American)
built the modular units used to construct the portion of the
development at issue here. During the manufacturing process, North
American utilized the services of defendant T.R. Arnold &
Associates (T.R. Arnold) to inspect the units for purposes of
quality control. Defendant E.O. D'Alessandro, Inc. (D'Alessandro)
was hired by the Authority to perform landscaping work at the
development. Defendant Tarquini-Elkin/Sobolta (Elkin/Sobolta) is
a joint venture created for this project; it provided professional
design services to the Authority. Elkin/Sobolta's original design
was based upon stick-built construction. For reasons of cost, the
Authority rejected stick-built construction in favor of modular
construction. Defendant Residential Warranty Corporation
(Residential Warranty) issued a ten-year limited warranty agreement
to the Authority for this development. Defendant Merchants and
Business Men's Insurance Company (Merchants Insurance) issued the
insurance policy which backed Residential's warranty. The project
is within the confines and jurisdiction of defendant Township of
Mahwah (Mahwah). Although the complaint includes Mahwah in the
caption, the body of the complaint does not seek relief against it.
The Authority filed a third-party complaint against Meridian
Construction Company (Meridian).See footnote 11 No other party asserted a claim
for relief against Meridian.
Plaintiffs' complaint as amended contains thirty-one counts;
four of these are directed toward fictitious defendants who were
never identified. We are thus concerned with twenty-seven counts.
Twelve are directed largely to the Authority; they allege breach of
fiduciary duty; breach of the duty of loyalty in serving as both
developer and managing agent of the development; economic duress;
negligent design, manufacture and assemblage; negligent oversight
of repairs; breach of contract; strict liability; breach of
warranty; fraudulent misrepresentations; emotional distress; unjust
enrichment; and a violation of
42 U.S.C. §1983. North American is
individually named in five counts. These allege, in turn,
negligent construction; breach of contract; strict liability;
breach of warranty; and fraudulent misrepresentation. Four counts
name both the Authority and North American; they assert failure to
disclose concealed material defects; consumer fraud; breach of the
duty of good faith and fair dealing; and breach of the covenants of
good faith and quiet enjoyment. Three counts are directed at
Residential Warranty and Merchants Insurance; they allege breach of
warranty, consumer fraud and seek a declaratory judgment of
plaintiffs' rights against both defendants. T.R. Arnold,
Elkin/Sobolta and D'Alessandro are named separately in one count
each; plaintiffs assert negligent inspection against T.R. Arnold,
professional negligence against Elkin/Sobolta and breach of
contract and negligence (in one count) against D'Alessandro.
II
The Authority owned land in Mahwah upon which it erected this
development, which comprises eighty-nine condominium units. The
Authority proposed to rent fifty-four of the units to qualified
tenants and to sell the remaining thirty-five to purchasers who
could meet certain specified financial criteria and would agree to
certain financial restrictions in the event of resale. Those
restrictions, which limited potential purchasers to those who
also met financial criteria set by the Authority and correlated any
increase in price to the Consumer Price Index, were contained both
within the contract of sale and the master deed. Because the
number of individuals interested in purchasing the units exceeded
the number available, the Authority ultimately selected the initial
owners through a lottery.
The master deed provided that the Authority would serve as the
managing agent for the development in its initial stages. By 1991,
when the unit owners had assumed control of the Association's
board, the Authority's contract as managing agent was not renewed.
In 1989, the project was completed and the individual
plaintiffs purchased their units. According to plaintiffs,
problems developed quickly. They have included within their
appendix a series of letters, the earliest of which is dated May
1989, from unit owners to the Authority complaining of defects such
as cracks in the walls, leaks, walls bowing, windows not working.
The Authority made numerous service calls, correcting some but not
all of the alleged defects.
When the problems persisted, the Association commenced this
litigation in 1993. In 1994, the Association obtained an expert's
report that the construction was "of poor quality and not in
keeping with construction industry standards." The report
identified a number of specific problems. According to the report,
because of improper installation of the roof framing, some of the
roofs were said to be in imminent danger of collapse. The report
also noted that the modular units had been improperly anchored to
one another; weight levels and stress were not evenly distributed
among the two-story units.
Before proceeding to analyze the correctness of the trial
court's orders, we must note that our review of this matter has
been hampered by the failure of the parties and the trial court to
identify those claims asserted by individual unit owners as opposed
to those claims asserted by the Association and to identify when
each of those claims arose. All-encompassing assertions and denial
of fault are not conducive to precision in analysis. Neither have
the parties identified those claims which relate to common
elements, and thus may be properly brought by the Association, and
which claims relate to damage to individual units, and thus must be
brought by the unit owners. Siller v. Hartz Mountain Assoc.,
93 N.J. 370, 380-82 (1983).
III
A
One of the fundamental issues to be addressed is whether any
portion of plaintiffs' claims against the Authority are subject to
the Tort Claims Act, N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to 12-3. Housing authorities
have been considered public entities for purposes of the tort
claims statute. Bligen v. Jersey City Hous. Author.,
131 N.J. 124,
131 (1993); English v. Newark Hous. Author.,
138 N.J. Super. 425,
428-29 (App. Div. 1976). The Authority asserts it is entitled to
immunity under various portions of the Act.See footnote 22 Other defendants claim
derivative immunity. Vanchieri v. New Jersey Sports & Exposition
Author.,
104 N.J. 80 (1986).
Analysis of whether the Authority is entitled to assert
defenses under the Tort Claims Act involves consideration whether
the Authority, when it commenced this development and took upon
itself the role of general contractor, lost the public entity
defenses to which it would otherwise unquestionably be entitled.
The question is not without difficulty; there is no clear law and
there are strong countervailing policy considerations on both
sides.
The Authority is a public entity and deals with public funds.
An award of damages to these plaintiffs could well reduce the funds
available to assist other individuals in need of housing
assistance. Further, the Tort Claims Act contains a specific
prohibition against imposing liability upon a public entity upon
theories of strict liability, implied warranty or products
liability. N.J.S.A. 59:9-2b. Such a clear declaration of policy
by the legislature is not to be lightly disregarded.
In addition, we must be concerned about the potential
ramifications of a decision abrogating immunity in such an
instance. The Authority, in an attempt to provide affordable
housing, acted in a manner that went beyond what might be
considered a traditional role of merely renting apartments below
market rates. By offering a portion of these units for sale, it
attempted to provide an asset which would appreciate in value over
time and thus provide an economic benefit to the unit owner that
would presumably reduce the owner's future need for public housing
assistance. Further, by constructing a development in which a
portion of the units would be owner-occupied, it presumably sought
to develop a site in which all would benefit by maintaining and
improving the development. Imposing tort liability upon the
Authority in such an instance could have the result of discouraging
development of innovative and creative techniques to deal with a
critical shortage of affordable housing.
Various courts have taken judicial notice of a shortage in New
Jersey of decent affordable housing. County of Morris v. Riverview
Condominium, Inc.,
304 N.J. 322, 331 (App. Div. 1997); Samaritan
Ctr. v. Englishtown,
294 N.J. Super. 437, 449 (Law Div. 1996). New
Jersey is committed to meeting the state-wide need for decent,
affordable housing. The Hills Dev. Co. v. Township of Bernards,
103 N.J. 1, 21 (1986); Southern Burlington County N.A.A.C.P. v.
Township of Mt. Laurel,
92 N.J. 158 (1983). We should not craft
our decisions in a manner that could impede attempts to alleviate
that shortage.
We are also cognizant of the fact, however, that an individual
who purchased a condominium from a private developer could have
rights these plaintiffs would be denied if we were to conclude the
Authority is entitled to assert public entity defenses. Our
Supreme Court has, in certain instances, been reluctant to deprive
an injured party of a cause of action against a public entity when
the same party could have had a cause of action if the injury had
occurred on private land. Bligen v. Hous. Author., supra,
(defendant Housing Authority not entitled to Tort Claims Act
immunity when resident slipped and fell on snow and ice in the
parking lot).
On balance, we consider that the greater weight of the policy
factors comes down on the side of permitting the Authority to
invoke the protections of the Tort Claims Act. A ruling that the
Authority lost its public entity defenses by undertaking the
development would represent a significant departure from existing
law. Courts should be cautious in sanctioning novel causes of
action against public entities. Ayers v. Jackson Twp.,
106 N.J. 557, 574-75 (1987); King by King v. Brown,
221 N.J. Super. 270,
276-277 (App. Div. 1987). We thus conclude that defendant
Authority is entitled to assert all the defenses available to it
under the Tort Claims Act.See footnote 33
B
It is undisputed that none of the individual plaintiffs ever
filed a notice of claim with the Authority, N.J.S.A. 59:8-3, and
that the Association's late notice of claim, filed pursuant to
leave granted on March 31, 1992, N.J.S.A. 59:8-9, specified that
its claim arose on March 31, 1991. (Plaintiffs have made no
argument on appeal that it was error to limit the Association's
claim in this fashion.) Not only is it impossible to tell from
this record which of the claims relate to the common elements and
which relate to the individual units, it is also impossible for us
to tell from the record which of the Association's claims arose
prior to March 31, 1991 and could be subject to dismissal for
failure to file a notice of claim and which claims arose after that
date.
The individual plaintiffs assert that various letters of
complaint forwarded to the Authority should be construed as notices
of claim under the Tort Claims Act. Even if we were to agree, for
purposes of this opinion, that those letters could constitute a
sufficient notice of claim under N.J.S.A. 59:8-4, plaintiffs'
individual tort claims against the Authority would still be subject
to dismissal because N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 requires that suit be
instituted within two years of accrual of the claim.
Logic requires that the letters upon which plaintiffs rely
could not constitute notices of claim unless the claims had accrued
by the dates of the letters. Here, suit was not instituted until
March 1993. Only three of the individual letters to which
plaintiffs point were written within two years of that date: the
letter of Gloria Melendez dated March 27, 1991; the letter of Nancy
Vetter of July 1991 and the letter of Rajendra Patel of July 1991.
The first bears the handwritten notation that the problems
discussed had been resolved to her satisfaction. The second is
merely a draft of proposed revisions to a written agreement to make
certain repairs. The third refers to a missing piece of wooden
framing and contains the written notation that the matter has been
repaired. These three documents provide no basis to be considered
sufficient notices of claim under N.J.S.A. 59:8-4 for the sixty
four named plaintiffs.
We recognize that there are certain additional letters from
the Association dated within that two-year framework but those
letters we consider clearly insufficient under N.J.S.A. 59:8-4 for
there is no identification of affected units and owners. We are
satisfied the trial court correctly dismissed the tort claims of
the individual plaintiffs against the Authority.
Because, however, of the failure to identify which of the
Association's claims arose prior to March 31, 1991 and which arose
subsequently, we are unable to determine which of the Association's
claims may be considered viable under the notice provisions of the
Tort Claims Act and which are subject to dismissal. Such initial
delineation is the responsibility of the trial court, after having
received appropriate submissions from the parties on the issue.
C
We are satisfied, nonetheless, that certain counts of
plaintiffs' complaint are insufficient as a matter of law under the
Tort Claims Act, without regard to whatever notice may have been
provided to the Authority and without regard to the date the claim
allegedly accrued. We note, for instance, that Count 22 seeks
damages from the Authority for infliction of emotional distress.
There has been no compliance, however, with the threshold
requirements of N.J.S.A. 59:9-2 or Buckley v. Trenton Sav. Fund
Soc'y,
111 N.J. 355, 366 (1988). The trial court correctly granted
summary judgment on that count. Further, having concluded that the
Authority is entitled to defenses available under the Tort Claims
Act, Count 14, which alleges strict liability, and Count 16 to the
extent it asserts implied warranty, were properly dismissed against
the Authority.
D
The same policy considerations that we set forth earlier in
analyzing whether the Authority may invoke the Tort Claims Act in
defense of these claims guides our determination of the question
whether the Authority may be subject to liability under the
Consumer Fraud Act. (N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -48).
There is no reported New Jersey case directly analyzing this
question. In Zorba Contractors, Inc. v. Newark Hous. Author.,
282 N.J. Super. 430, 435 we held that the Newark Housing Authority
could qualify as a consumer for purposes of prosecuting a consumer
fraud claim. Because a public entity may pursue a claim for
consumer fraud does not require that it may be found responsible
for consumer fraud. The underlying policy considerations involved
in the two analyses are vastly different. In Barry v. New Jersey
State Highway Author.,
245 N.J. Super. 302, 311 (Ch. Div. 1990)
Judge Gibson decided that the Highway Authority was not subject to
suit under the consumer fraud statute in connection with its sale
of tokens for use on the Garden State Parkway. In Tuxedo Beach
Club Corp. v. City Fed. Sav. Bank,
749 F. Supp. 635 (D.N.J. 1990)
the District Court concluded that Resolution Trust Corporation
could be sued under the Consumer Fraud Act for the actions of the
failed institution for which it had been appointed receiver but
could not be held liable for punitive damages.
We are satisfied that the Authority is not subject to suit
under the consumer fraud statute for its activities in connection
with this development. We reach this conclusion for several
reasons. We recognize that our Supreme Court has recently
recognized that a public entity can be held liable for punitive
damages under a claim presented pursuant to the Law Against
Discrimination, Cavuoti v. New Jersey Transit,
161 N.J. 107, 132-34
(1999) and a claim presented pursuant to the Conscientious Employee
Protection Act, Abbamont v. Piscataway Bd. of Educ.
138 N.J. 405,
428 (1994). We do not read those decisions to indicate, however,
that public entities can be exposed to the treble damage and
attorneys fee provisions of the consumer fraud statute.
We note, for instance, that consumer fraud actions do not
require a heightened standard of proof as is necessary to obtain
punitive damages under the Law Against Discrimination. Cavuoti,
supra, 161 N.J. at 133. The Consumer Fraud Act is to be applied
broadly in light of the statute's remedial purpose. Lemelledo v.
Beneficial Management Corp. of Am.,
150 N.J. 255, 264 (1997). An
unwitting regulatory violation may be sufficient to trigger strict
liability for consumer fraud. Cox v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
138 N.J. 2. 18-19 (1994). Even actions taken in good faith may subject
the actor to liability for consumer fraud. Gennari v. Weichert Co.
Realtors,
148 N.J. 582, 604 (1997).
In our view, it would be contrary to the expressed policies of
the Tort Claims Act if we were to conclude that the Authority could
be held responsible under the Consumer Fraud Act. We thus find it
unnecessary to consider whether the Association could be considered
a consumer for purposes of the statute. City Check Cashing, Inc.
v. National State Bank,
244 N.J. Super. 304 (App. Div.), certif.
den.
122 N.J. 389 (1990).
Judge Kestin concludes that our determination on this issue is
premature; he expresses the view that "[i]t would be better to let
the case mature and the proofs develop . . . . and let the issues
to flesh out more fully . . ." We respectfully disagree.
Plaintiffs filed their complaint in March 1993. The
Authority's motion for summary judgment was not argued until
February 20, 1998, nearly five years later. Plaintiffs had ample
time to develop their case and have not contended otherwise.
The trial court correctly concluded that the Authority was not
subject to suit for consumer fraud and correctly dismissed count 23
against the Authority.
E.
We have not addressed with specificity all the remaining
counts against the Authority for in large measure there will have
to be an initial division of the Association's claims according to
the date of accrual, as we have already noted. We note, however,
that the fact that we have concluded that the Authority is entitled
to the benefits of the tort claims statute does not mean that we
have concluded that the Authority is wholly immune from suit for
its actions. We have ruled merely that the Authority is entitled
to present its tort claims act defenses to these remaining counts,
not that it is entitled to prevail as a matter of law on those
defenses.
Certain of these remaining counts, however, assert claims that
do not arise under the Tort Claims Act, such as breach of contract,
asserted in count 6. The Authority's public entity defenses are,
of course, immaterial to these counts.
The trial court dismissed the claims for breach of contract
and breach of express warranty in a conclusory fashion. It merely
noted that plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate a breach of the
contract of sale and that the contract did not "contain a specific
warranty as to the quality of construction or level of quality of
workmanship." Such an approach is contrary to the views expressed
in Aronsohn v. Mandara,
98 N.J. 92 (1984). In that case,
plaintiffs sued for damages, alleging that defendants had not
constructed a patio annexed to their home in a workmanlike manner.
In the course of its opinion, the Court said "[W]hen, as in this
case, there is no express contractual provision concerning
workmanship, the law implies a covenant that the contract will be
performed in a reasonably good and workmanlike manner." 98 N.J. at
98. That principle is fully applicable here. The trial court
erred when it dismissed plaintiffs' claim against the Authority for
breach of contract.
In count 28, plaintiffs asserted a claim against the Authority
under
42 U.S.C. §1983. Claims asserted under
42 U.S.C. §1983 are
not subject to the notice of claim provisions of the Tort Claims
Act. Fuchilla v. Layman,
109 N.J. 319, cert. den.
488 U.S. 826,
109 S. Ct. 75,
102 L. Ed.2d 51 (1988). However, we are satisfied
the trial court was clearly correct in granting summary judgment to
the Authority on that count and that the claim does not warrant
extended discussion in a written opinion for it would have no
precedential value. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
There is no doubt that public housing authorities can, in
certain instances, be subject to suit under § 1983. Wright v. City
of Roanoke Redev. and Housing Auth.,
479 U.S. 418,
107 S. Ct. 766,
93 L. Ed.2d 781 (1987). (Tenants entitled to assert a § 1983
action alleging that defendant's surcharge for excess utility
consumption was in violation of federal statutory percentage income
limitation on rent.)
We earlier stated in Morgan v. Union County,
268 N.J. Super. 337 (App. Div. 1993), certif. den.
135 N.J. 468 (1994) that a
governmental body is not liable under
42 U.S.C. §1983 unless the
complained-of conduct represents a governmentally-sanctioned
official policy. 268 N.J. Super. at 313-64. Plaintiffs have
failed to demonstrate what official policy of the Authority would
give rise to a § 1983 claim.
We close this section by noting that it is not immediately
apparent whether certain of plaintiffs' claims can properly be
characterized as tort claims and thus within scope of our holding
that the Authority may assert defenses to them under the Tort
Claims Act. The trial court made no delineation of the particular
remaining counts as to whether it considered them to sound in tort
or otherwise. The Supreme Court outlined the difficulties that may
be involved in such a delineation in Alloway v. General Marine
Industries,
149 N.J. 620, 626-39 (1997). We decline to make an
initial determination on our own. The parties can address the
issue on remand.
IV
We turn now to the claims asserted against North American and
T.R. Arnold. The trial court concluded they were entitled to share
in the Authority's public entity defenses under the principle of
derivative immunity and granted them summary judgment. We are
satisfied that, on the record presented, the trial court erred in
that decision.
Our Supreme Court set forth the principles governing
application of derivative immunity in Vanchieri v. New Jersey
Sports and Exposition Author., supra, when it stated "When a public
entity provides plans and specifications to an independent
contractor, the public contractor will not be held liable for work
performed in accordance with those plans and specifications." 104
N.J. at 86. A party seeking the benefits of derivative immunity
has the burden of demonstrating the affirmative defense. Id. at
87-88.
Here the record is insufficient to demonstrate that these
modular units were manufactured, assembled and erected in
accordance with plans and specifications provided by the Authority.
All the contract documents refer to the modular units simply as
"Jackson III," as if referring to a particular catalogue model and
style. North American's Director of Engineering referred to these
units in his deposition as standard North American units and agreed
they were "off-the-shelf." He also testified that he oversaw the
engineering of the drawings for the project. Further, within the
Addendum to the contract between the Authority and North American
referred to earlier, while the Authority was responsible for site
preparation, North American was responsible for erection of the
units it had manufactured and delivered to the site.
On appeal, North American stresses the Authority "approved"
the design of these modular units. It has not shown, however, that
the units were fabricated and erected in accordance with plans and
specifications developed and prepared by the Authority.
The claims of T.R. Arnold to derivative immunity is similarly
deficient. T.R. Arnold was engaged to inspect these units during
the course of manufacture to assure their proper construction.
There is absolutely no showing that the manner in which T.R. Arnold
performed these inspections was directed and controlled by the
Authority.
Because these defendants are not entitled to derivative
immunity, they may not invoke the notice of claim provisions
against the individual plaintiffs. The individual plaintiffs may
thus continue to press their individual claims against the private
defendants.
We do not address the question whether these two defendants
could be entitled on any other basis to summary judgment on any of
the particular counts in which they were joined because the trial
court did not address that question. It relied entirely on the
principle of derivative immunity.
V
We turn now to the claims plaintiffs have presented against
Residential Warranty and Merchants Insurance. Plaintiffs have
named these defendants in three counts of their complaint; they
allege breach of warranty, seek a declaratory judgment and seek
damages under the Consumer Fraud Act.
When each individual unit owner closed title, he received a
booklet describing the ten year limited warranty covering the unit.
This warranty was required under the New Home Warranty and
Builder's Registration Act, N.J.S.A. 46:3B-1 to -20, and paragraph
26 of the contract of sale. The Authority enrolled these units in
the warranty program administered by defendant Residential Warranty
and insured by defendant Merchants Insurance.
In 1992, Residential Warranty and Merchants Insurance entered
an agreement between themselves, commuting the obligation of
Merchants Insurance to insure these warranties. Residential
Warranty released Merchants Insurance from liability and, in
return, Merchants Insurance issued a premium refund of $123,906 to
Residential Warranty. Residential Warranty continues to
acknowledge its responsibility under the terms of its warranty
agreement.
Plaintiffs point to this commutation agreement and claim it
constituted a breach of warranty and a consumer fraud. We are
satisfied the trial court correctly concluded it was neither.
We reach this decision for several reasons. Plaintiffs have
failed utterly to explain how this commutation agreement, reached
some three years after closing of title, could be considered a
consumer fraud in connection with their purchase of their units.
They did not purchase the warranty and the depositions included in
the record on appeal make clear that the existence of an insurance
backed warranty was immaterial to the decision to purchase.
Plaintiffs have also failed to show that this commutation agreement
has resulted in any loss to them in light of Residential Warranty's
explicit acknowledgment that it remains fully responsible to comply
with the terms of the warranty it issued. We were informed at oral
argument, without objection, that Residential Warranty has yet to
receive a claim under the warranty for the alleged defects in the
common elements. According to the record on appeal, only two of
the unit owners presented a claim to Residential Warranty. There
is no showing they have not been resolved satisfactorily.
We have concluded, perhaps from an excess of caution, that the
trial court should not have dismissed Count 30 of the complaint
which seeks a declaratory judgment. Rather, the court should, at
an appropriate juncture, enter a judgment setting forth the
respective rights and responsibilities of the parties under the
warranty.
VI
We turn finally to the claims asserted against Elkin/Sobolta
and D'Allessandro.
Within their complaint as amended, plaintiffs assert only one
claim specifically against Elkin/Sobolta, for professional
negligence. Count 23 seeks judgment against all defendants for
consumer fraud; Count 22, which claims damages for emotional
distress, is ambiguous as to whether it is directed at
Elkin/Sobolta.
We will assume for purposes of the completeness of this
opinion that plaintiffs' complaint sought to include Elkin/Sobolta
within the scope of these latter two counts as well. We are
satisfied, nonetheless, that Elkin/Sobolta was entitled to summary
judgment on all three claims. As to the claim for damages for
emotional distress, we have already noted plaintiffs' failure to
satisfy the elements of Buckley v. Trenton Sav. Fund Soc'y, supra.
As to the claim for consumer fraud, there was no showing that this
defendant "involved [itself] . . . as a principal or a retained
professional in a real estate marketing venture . . . [and]
permit[ted its] services to be held out as a part of what is being
sold . . . ." Blatterfein v. Larken Assoc.,
323 N.J. Super. 167,
183 (App. Div. 1999). As we noted in that case "[w]here the
question is solely one concerning the quality of those professional
[architectural] services, there may be no adequate basis for
asserting liability [against an architect] under the Consumer Fraud
Act." Ibid. Our detailed review of the record in this matter has
not pointed us to anything which would indicate an expansion of
those views is warranted here.
Plaintiffs' claim against Elkin/Sobolta for professional
negligence is not easily quantified. It is undisputed that this
project was not built in accordance with the design originally
prepared and formulated by Elkin/Sobolta. Clearly, it can have no
professional liability for a deficiency in plans it did not
prepare.
That the Authority turned to modular construction did not end
the involvement of Elkin/Sobolta with this project, however. For
an initial period of time, Elkin/Sobolta performed certain
inspection services at the site for the Authority before the
Authority would make payment for work performed. Eventually,
Elkin/Sobolta told the Authority it could no longer continue to
perform this function. From that point on, Elkin/Sobolta merely
performed a ministerial function of approving requisitions for
payment after being assured by the Authority that the particular
work had been performed. It is impossible to tell from this record
when this shift in function occurred or if the nature of the work
that had been performed up to that time was such that Elkin/Sobolta
should have discovered and alerted the Authority to the presence of
defective work.
We have concluded that the principles enunciated in Brill v.
Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
142 N.J. 520 (1995) required that this
defendant's motion for summary judgment on the claim for
professional negligence be denied, at least at this juncture of the
case.
The remaining claim is that against D'Alessandro which
provided landscaping services in connection with the construction
of this development. It is directly named as a defendant only in
Count 29, which alleges both breach of contract and negligence.
D'Alessandro argued below it was entitled to summary judgment on
the basis of derivative immunity and the trial court agreed.
Within their brief, plaintiffs' sole reference to D'Alessandro
is contained in one conclusory sentence, in which they state "the
trial court ignored the facts and misapplied the law" when it ruled
in D'Alessandro's favor on the basis of derivative immunity.
Plaintiffs having failed to set forth any legal argument to
support their claim of error, we consider the issue waived.
McGarry v. Saint Anthony of Padua,
307 N.J. Super. 525, 537 (App.
Div. 1998); Bolyard v. Berman,
274 N.J. Super. 565, 582 n.6 (App.
Div.), certif. den.
138 N.J. 272 (1994). To the extent
D'Allessandro is included with Counts 22 and 23, the doctrine of
waiver equally obtains.
VII
For the reasons we have expressed, the orders under review are
affirmed in part and reversed in part. The matter is remanded to
the trial court for further proceedings.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1962-98T2
RAMAPO BRAE CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION, INC.; DIANE
BENNETT; ZACHARY and ANNE
ALLEGRETTI; ILEEN CHANNER;
JOSEPH and LESLIE DE MEO;
DOROTHY NATALE; PAUL and
LUCINE BAUMGART; HERMAT
and ROLA BARKHO; VOJTECH
and JUDY CERNY; FERMIN and
NANCY DIAZ; ALICE BOYD-WILLIAMS;
RAJENDRA and SURYA R. PATEL;
DAVID and NANCY VIOLETTE; JAMES
and DEBRA BURNETTE; HENRY and
SHOW-LING HO; THOMAS and JANET
HAMILL; ROBERT and RHONDA SMITH;
PETER and MARY JANE DURANTE;
HAROLD and TAMMY BRENDEL; SCOTT
and LINDA GOODWIN; RAYMOND and
LAURA MCDONALD; STEVEN and
VERONICA MARINO; CARL and JANICE
ARNOLD; SANDRA BOYD; VICTOR and
KATHLEEN VELASQUEZ; DINESH and
BAHRTI SANGHVI; GLORIA MELENDEZ;
ENRIQUE and ALBA VITERY; GUILLERMO
and MARIA ESCOBAR; JO ANN WARGO;
JOHN and ROSE MARIE ADAMKOVICH;
THOMAS and NANCY VETTER; CHARLES and
DIANNE MC CREADY; STEVEN and
SHARLENE SCHERER; KAMPI and TARA
PRAGDAT; JIRINA MANCIC; and ALBERT
and SARAH YIP,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BERGEN COUNTY HOUSING AUTHORITY;
NORTH AMERICAN HOUSING CORPORATION;
T.R. ARNOLD & ASSOCIATES; E.O.
D'ALESSANDRO, INC., a/k/a E.O.
D'ALESSANDRO GARDEN CENTER; TARQUINI
& ELKIN/SOBOLTA, Architects and
Planners; RESIDENTIAL WARRANTY
CORPORATION; MERCHANTS AND
BUSINESS MEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY;
TOWNSHIP OF MAHWAH,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
HOUSING AUTHORITY OF BERGEN COUNTY,
Defendant-Respondent/Third-
Party Plaintiff,
v.
MERIDIAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
Third-Party Defendant-Respondent.
KESTIN, J.A.D., concurring and dissenting.
I write separately to note my respectful disagreement with my
colleagues' disposition of a single issue in this complex matter,
but I would be remiss if I failed to express my admiration for
Judge Wefing's opinion which, with estimable clarity, organizes,
digests and analyzes a host of vaguely contoured issues. The one
exception aside, I subscribe to the rationales articulated and the
results reached.
My point of difference is with the holding in part III.D,
that, as a matter of law on account of public policy
considerations, the Authority should be immune from suit under the
Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -91 (the Act), because it is
a governmental entity. I recognize that we would be breaking new
ground to hold the Authority subject to the Act, but we should not
shrink from doing so to the extent required to promote the policies
and the canons of liberal construction which govern the application
of "one of the strongest consumer protection laws in the nation."
Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
138 N.J. 2, 15 (1994) (quoting
Governor's Press Release for Assembly Bill No. 2402, at 1 (Apr. 19,
1971)).
We should avoid deciding issues in a vacuum. Plaintiffs have
made a prima facie showing, sufficient to survive the motion for
summary judgment, that the Authority violated Consumer Fraud Act
standards. It would be better to let the case mature and the
proofs develop so that we could have a fuller understanding, if
indeed plaintiffs meet their ultimate burden of proof, of just how
those standards were transgressed and to what extent. We would
then have a more concrete basis than we presently have for
determining whether and how to balance the competing policies at
play. See, e.g., Salomon v. Eli Lilly and Co.,
98 N.J. 58 (1984);
Jackson v. Muhlenberg Hospital,
53 N.J. 138, 142 (1969) ("The issue
is a very important one involving highly significant policy
considerations and obviously should not be decided on the wholly
inadequate record before us."). It might well be that the consumer
fraud violations were so egregious or so extensive as to require a
holding limited in scope that this public entity is liable under
the Act because of the special circumstances developed, while
recognizing that as a general matter public entities, even when
engaged in pursuits that are normally conducted by private parties,
might not be subject to the treble damages and counsel fee remedies
which characterize the Act.
In short, I lack any confidence that we have functioned justly
by barring, at this juncture, the individual plaintiffs from
claiming consumer fraud protection with regard to the purchase of
their homes. I cannot understand how we can say as a threshold
matter that the public policies limiting the liability of
governmental entities necessarily trump the equally imperative
public policies that undergird the Consumer Fraud Act. I would
reverse the trial court's holding on that ground as well as the
others disallowed by my colleagues, and permit the issue to flesh
out more fully before it is adjudicated.
Footnote: 1 1 The Authority's third-party complaint named a number of additional entities as third-party defendants. The record does not disclose whether the Authority served any of them or if they ever entered an appearances in this matter. Footnote: 2 2 The Authority, in its brief on appeal, cites the statute of limitations (N.J.S.A. 59:8-8) and notice provisions (N.J.S.A. 59:8-3) of the Tort Claims Act, the statutory ban to implied warranty and strict liability claims (N.J.S.A. 59:9-2(b)) and immunity for discretionary activities (N.J.S.A. 59:2-3). Evidently recognizing that the condominium portion of the development, having been sold to private individuals, is not public property it does not refer to plan and design immunity under N.J.S.A. 59:4-6. Leibig v. Somerville Senior Citizens Hous., Inc., 326 N.J. Super. 102 (App. Div. 1999). Footnote: 3 3 In reviewing the record on appeal, we have reviewed the terms of the contract between the Authority and North American. The contract contains an Addendum, article Ten of which sets forth the representations of the Authority. Under section (f), the Authority represented "it is subject to suit and may not claim sovereign immunity as a governmental or quasi-governmental agency or for any other reason." No party has addressed the significance of that clause in the context of this suit. We conclude from this silence that the parties viewed this language, describing the relationship between the Authority and North American, as having no bearing on claims asserted by strangers to that contract. We express no views on the impact, if any, of that language on the cross-claims asserted by the Authority and North American.