SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1052-98T3
SHAWN AIKENS and ROSEANNE AIKENS,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
KEVIN SCHMIDT,
Defendant-Respondent.
___________________________________
Submitted: March 1, 2000 - Decided: March 30, 2000
Before Judges Stern, Kestin and Wefing.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Civil Part, Sussex County.
John V. McDermott, Jr., attorney for appellants.
Tarleton & Winkler, attorneys for respondent
(Mark Winkler, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KESTIN, J.A.D.
Plaintiffs appeal from the trial court's order entered during
a jury trial at the close of plaintiffs' case, granting defendant's
motion to dismiss the complaint on entire controversy grounds. We
reverse and remand for a new trial.
We are obliged, as the trial court was, to view the operative
facts of the matter, to the extent they are in dispute, in the
light most favorable to plaintiffs, the respondents on the motion
to dismiss. Dolson v. Anastasia,
55 N.J. 2, 5 (1969).
The controversy between the parties traces back to April 1992,
when defendant, Kevin Schmidt, retained plaintiff Shawn Aikens to
paint a model home which Schmidt's corporation had built. The
painting was completed in July 1992 and Aikens was paid $2500, one
dollar per square foot, as had been agreed. The parties then
agreed that Aikens would paint a second model home for the same
price. That job was completed in late September or early October.
No payments were made on account of the latter project, nor did
Schmidt indicate any dissatisfaction with the work. Aikens sent
Schmidt repeated bills for his work and made a number of telephone
calls seeking payment.
On April 20, 1993, Aikens was painting another house in the
area and saw Schmidt's truck arrive at a model home nearby. Aikens
walked over and demanded payment of his unpaid bill. Schmidt
refused. The parties' versions of what transpired during the
exchange differed greatly; however, there appears to be no question
that their conversation was marked by anger on both sides.
According to Aikens, after Schmidt displayed disdain for Aikens's
demands and refused payment without giving any reason based on the
quality of the work performed, Aikens said he would sue for the
amount due, and he returned to the work he was doing on the
neighboring home. According to Schmidt, Aikens made threats and
engaged in other conduct that motivated Schmidt to report their
confrontation to the police.
A short time later that day, while he continued to paint the
neighboring home, Aikens received a series of three visits from
Vernon Township police officers who had questions concerning his
conduct in the conversation with Schmidt. About three months
later, Aikens was summoned to the Newton barracks of the New Jersey
State Police. Upon arriving, he was searched, taken into custody,
and held in a cell for more than two hours, during which time he
was fingerprinted and photographed. He was charged with disorderly
persons simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1a(1)), petty disorderly
persons criminal trespass (N.J.S.A. 2C:18-3), disorderly persons
theft (N.J.S.A. 2C:20-3; see also N.J.S.A. 2C:20-2b(3)), and
terroristic threat, a third degree crime (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-3a), all
allegedly committed on April 20, l993.
After considerable back-and-forth communication between
attorneys for the parties over the matters in dispute, the charges
were eventually tried in the Vernon Township Municipal Court on May
24, 1994. Aikens was found not guilty as to all. He asserts that
all of the charges except for theft were dismissed on motion at the
close of the State's case, and that the theft charge was dismissed
after all the proofs were heard.
Two days after the acquittal, on May 26, 1994, Aikens filed a
four-count "complaint on contract" in the Special Civil Part of the
Law Division against Schmidt and his corporation alleging an
agreement for the painting of two homes, and a balance due of $2500
plus interest, costs and attorneys fees. That case was settled on
September 16, 1994, with the payment of $2500.
The instant suit was filed on August 25, 1995. Aikens sought
damages against Schmidt and his corporationSee footnote 1* for false arrest,
malicious prosecution, and intentional infliction of emotional
distress. Plaintiff Roseanne Aikens sued per quod. Issue was
joined with the filing of the answer on December 4, 1995. The
answer denied liability as to the first two counts of the
complaint, false arrest and malicious prosecution, but did not
specifically address the emotional distress or per quod claims. It
recited seven separate defenses, none of which invoked the entire
controversy doctrine.
The first mention of the entire controversy doctrine during
the pendency of the case occurred in trial at the close of
plaintiffs' proofs when defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on
that basis. The gravamen of the argument, supported by a
memorandum of law that had been submitted, was that plaintiffs were
required to have prosecuted their tort claims at the same time as
Aikens pursued his contract claim; and that, having failed to do
so, they were precluded from suing in tort at a later time.
Plaintiffs argued, inter alia, as they do on appeal, that because
defendant had not pled the entire controversy doctrine as an
affirmative defense he was barred from arguing its application at
the time of trial. Plaintiffs emphasize in their argument on
appeal that there had been ample pre-trial opportunities in status
conferences and motion practice for defendant to raise the issue
well in advance of trial.
After considering the parties' arguments and evaluating the
issues, the trial court granted defendant's motion and dismissed
the case on entire controversy grounds. Beginning her oral opinion
with references to a seminal case, Cogdell v. Hospital Center at
Orange,
116 N.J. 7 (1989), and to Cafferata v. Peyser,
251 N.J.
Super. 256 (App. Div. 1991), the trial judge noted that the entire
controversy doctrine was "designed to achieve economy in litigation
by avoiding the waste, inefficiency, delay and expense of piecemeal
and fragment[ed] litigation," and referred to "its equitable nature
and concept ... that's predicated on judicial fairness," stating
that "it will be invoked in that spirit." The judge distinguished
Cafferata on its facts and determined, accordingly, that its
rationale for excluding the application of the entire controversy
doctrine did not apply to the instant matter.
The judge then went on to discuss Fees v. Trow,
105 N.J. 330
(1987), and Williams v. Bell Telephone Lab., Inc.,
132 N.J. 109
(1993), the reasoning of which plaintiffs had invoked. Plaintiffs
argued that those cases, dealing with affirmative defenses which
were deemed waived because they had not previously been pled or
otherwise raised in a timely fashion, required a denial of
defendant's motion to dismiss. The judge distinguished Fees and
Williams as well, on the grounds that both involved statute of
limitations defenses, expressly listed in R. 4:5-4 as among those
"facts constituting an avoidance or affirmative defenses" which
must be "specifically and separately" set forth in a responsive
pleading. It was further noted that the defenses in those cases
had not been raised at the trial level at all, but rather for the
first time on appeal. The trial judge regarded the entire
controversy issues in this case as being in a different category
and consequently granted defendant's motion to dismiss Aikens's
direct tort claim. She then dealt separately with Mrs. Aikens's
per quod claim, dismissing it also because of its derivative
nature.
In the light of established standards governing the
application of the entire controversy doctrine, we hold that the
trial judge erred in disallowing plaintiffs' argument that
defendant had waived that defense. As we held in Kopin v. Orange
Products, Inc.,
297 N.J. Super. 353 (App. Div. 1997):
The entire controversy doctrine is an affirmative
defense. See Brown v. Brown,
208 N.J. Super. 372, 384,
506 A.2d 29 (App. Div. 1986). R. 4:5-4 provides in part
that "[a] responsive pleading shall set forth
specifically and separately a statement of facts
constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense. . . ."
"[A]n affirmative defense is waived if not pleaded or
otherwise timely raised." Brown v. Brown, supra, 208
N.J. Super. at 384,
506 A.2d 29 (citing R. 4:6-7). In
addition, a party's conduct can estop him/her from
relying on an affirmative defense. Ibid.
Defendant did not raise the entire controversy
doctrine defense in its answer to plaintiff's amended
complaint. Nor did defendant raise or argue the doctrine
in its primary and reply briefs filed in support of the
summary judgment motion. In fact, in its opinion
granting summary judgment, the trial court noted that the
entire controversy doctrine was only "briefly alluded
to[.]" Defendant defended this case for over three years
without raising or even mentioning the doctrine. Cf.
Brown v. Brown, supra, 208 N.J. Super. at 383,
506 A.2d 29 (noting that the defendant, who was barred from
invoking the entire controversy doctrine, vigorously
defended case for two-and-a-half years before raising the
defense). Consequently, defendant waived the entire
controversy defense.
[Id. at 375-76.]
See also Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment 2 on R. 4:30A
(2000).
The procedural facts of this case militate even more
compellingly than those in Kopin against application of the
doctrine. There, the defendant raised the entire controversy issue
for the first time on argument of a motion for summary judgment
some three years after suit had been commenced and long after the
defendant had filed its answer to the plaintiff's amended
complaint. Here, that defense was not raised at all in the
pretrial stages of the case__despite ample opportunity on various
occasions__and was proposed for the first time at trial after
plaintiffs had rested their case. Such a delay does nothing to
advance the doctrine's fundamental policy of promoting "[j]udicial
economy and efficiency -- the avoidance of waste and delay,"
DiTrolio v. Antiles,
142 N.J. 253, 277 (1995) (quoting Cogdell,
supra, 116 N.J. at 23); indeed, it frustrates that policy. Both
the court and plaintiffs were lulled into focusing on factual and
legal development of the controversy for an extended period of time
into trial, and to devoting precious resources to those efforts,
rather than dealing with a potentially dispositive threshold issue
which, if determined to have merit, would have resolved the matter
much earlier, as contemplated by the doctrine and the rules
embodying it.
Moreover, it is of no consequence that R. 4:5-4 requiring
affirmative defenses to be specifically pled does not expressly
list the entire controversy doctrine among the defenses mentioned.
The absence of specific reference to the doctrine from the itemized
defenses does not relegate it to an inferior or separate status in
this connection. By the very terms of R. 4:5-4, using the
introductory "such as", it is clear that the defenses mentioned
were not intended to be an exhaustive listing, but rather to
provide examples. See Bragdon v. Abbott,
524 U.S. 624, 639,
118 S.
Ct. 2196, 2205,
141 L. Ed.2d 540, 558 (1998) (recognizing that the
use of the introductory phrase "such as" denotes a list that is
illustrative, not exhaustive).
Having determined that invocation of the entire controversy
doctrine for the first time at trial was, simply, too late, we need
not address the issue of the doctrine's effect upon Mrs. Aikens's
per quod claim in the context of the fact that the prior action was
on contract, in respect of which the per quod claim would not lie.
Nor need we confront the questions of whether, how and when the
entire controversy doctrine may be raised or applied sua sponte by
a trial court in the cause of "[j]udicial economy and efficiency -
the avoidance of waste and delay." Cogdell, supra, 116 N.J. at 23.
It is clear in this case that even sua sponte application of the
entire controversy doctrine at the close of plaintiffs' proofs
would have been improper.
Reversed and remanded.
Footnote: 1 * The claims against the corporation were settled prior to trial and are not implicated in this appeal.