THE DIOCESE OF METUCHEN,
Plaintiff,
v.
PRISCO & EDWARDS, AIA, a
Professional Association and THE
PRISCO GROUP, a Professional
Organization,
Defendants,
and
PRISCO & EDWARDS, AIA, a
Professional Corporation and
THE PRISCO GROUP, a
Professional Corporation,
Third-Party Plaintiffs-
Respondents,
v.
REMINGTON & VERNICK ENGINEERS,
Third-Party Defendant-
Appellant,
and
EPIC INCORPORATED, EPIC GROUP,
INC., EPIC MANAGEMENT, INC.,
EPIC CONSTRUCTION, EPIC
INTERIORS, MAXIMUM AIR
CONDITIONING & HEATING CORP.,
E.R. BARRETT, INC., PREMIER
STEEL CONTRACTORS, INC., TOTAL
PIPE, ALLIED SHEET METAL,
ADRIANA ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS,
RAVEL ENGINEERING COMPANY, JQ
LANDSCAPING, FINISHING TOUCH
ASBESTOS ABATEMENT CORPORATION,
AHERA CONSULTANTS, NORTH JERSEY
MAXIMUM MECHANICAL COMPANY,
CRISDEL GROUP, INC.,
Third-Party Defendants.
Argued October 4, 2004 - Decided January 25, 2005
Before Judges A. A. Rodríguez, Cuff and Hoens.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex County,
Docket Number L-10-03.
Ellis I. Medoway argued the cause for Third-Party Defendant-Appellant Remington & Vernick Engineers
(Archer & Greiner, attorneys; Mr. Medoway and William L. Ryan, on the brief).
Meredith Kaplan Stoma argued the cause for Third-Party Plaintiffs, Prisco & Edwards, AIA
and the Prisco Group (Morgan, Melhuish, Monaghan, Arvidson, Abrutyn & Lisowski, attorneys; Ms.
Kaplan Stoma, of counsel; Edward P. Drummond, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
HOENS, J.A.D.
By leave granted,
See footnote 1
third-party defendant Remington & Vernick Engineers (Remington) appeals from the
October 3, 2003 order of the Law Division concluding that defendants-third-party plaintiffs Prisco
& Edwards, AIA, and Prisco Group (collectively Prisco) are not required to serve
an Affidavit of Merit. We affirm.
The facts that are germane to this novel issue are as follows. In
1998, plaintiff, the Diocese of Metuchen, decided to convert a former high school
into a corporate business center where it intended to centralize its consolidated business
functions. The Diocese invited several design and architectural firms to submit proposals, following
which it selected Prisco for the project. The Diocese then entered into a
contract pursuant to which Prisco performed architectural and other services
See footnote 2
relating to the
design and construction activities to be undertaken at the site. The Diocese later
separately contracted with Epic Construction to serve as the general contractor for the
project.
Thereafter, Remington submitted to Prisco its proposal for work it would perform on
the project. That proposal described its work as mechanical, plumbing, electrical and structural
engineering services, together with other design support services. On September 27, 1999, Prisco
and Remington executed a standard AIA form agreement that incorporated Remington's proposal, including
its description of the professional services it would perform.
In 2002, the Diocese filed its complaint, which named only Prisco & Edwards,
AIA, and the Prisco Group
See footnote 3
as defendants. According to that complaint, the HVAC
system in the building and the parking area drainage around the building were
improperly designed, the Diocese was overcharged for portions of the work, the project
was delayed by inadequate responses to requests for information and submittals, the completion
of the project was hampered by design errors and various aspects of the
plumbing system were faulty. In reviewing the complaint filed by the Diocese, Prisco
concluded that some of the allegations relating to the actual construction of the
project should have been directed to the general contractor or to subcontractors engaged
by the general contractor, and were not due to any fault on Prisco's
part. In addition, although Prisco, the architect, had designed the project and had
prepared the plans and specifications, it believed that some of the claimed design
inadequacies were really claims relating to the work of Remington, its consulting engineer.
Prisco concluded that the claims by the Diocese relating to the engineering aspects
of the project raised issues that fell within the scope of Remington's work.
Because the claims being made by the Diocese, therefore, rested on actions of
other entities, Prisco filed its third-party complaint. Prisco named as third-party defendants its
engineering consultant Remington, along with the general contractor Epic, and a variety of
subcontractors with whom Prisco had no direct contracts, but which had worked on
the project through agreements with the general contractor. Substantively, Prisco's pleading included a
general denial that Prisco was liable to the Diocese and asserted that the
fault, if any, giving rise to the Diocese's claimed damages lies with the
third-party defendants. Specifically, the third-party complaint asserted, in a single count, that the
third-party defendants are liable to Prisco pursuant to the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Act,
N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-1 to -5, and based on theories of comparative negligence, see N.J.S.A.
2A:15-5.1 to -5.4, and contractual and common law indemnification.
Significant to the issues on appeal are the allegations of the third-party complaint
respecting professional negligence. In relevant part, Prisco denied the allegations in the complaint
relating to claims of professional negligence in the design of the project. Although
its third-party complaint did not specifically assert that the professional negligence, if any,
was Remington's and not Prisco's, its general references to negligence of Remington include,
of necessity, the claim that the professional negligence, if any, was Remington's. After
Remington filed its answer to the third-party complaint, Prisco moved for an order
declaring that it was not required to serve an Affidavit of Merit on
Remington. For reasons expressed at length in an oral opinion, the trial court
agreed. This interlocutory appeal followed.
These facts present us with the question that we explicitly left open in
Burt v. West Jersey Health Systems,
339 N.J. Super. 296 (App. Div. 2001),
namely, whether a defendant that raises claims sounding in professional negligence against a
new party by way of a third-party complaint must file an Affidavit of
Merit. Id. at 305 n.2. We address this novel question at some length.
The Affidavit of Merit statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27, provides in pertinent part:
In any action for damages for personal injuries, wrongful death or property damage
resulting from an alleged act of malpractice or negligence by a licensed person
in his profession or occupation, the plaintiff shall, within 60 days following the
date of filing of the answer to the complaint by the defendant, provide
each defendant with an affidavit of an appropriate licensed person that there exists
a reasonable probability that the care, skill or knowledge exercised or exhibited in
the treatment, practice or work that is the subject of the complaint, fell
outside acceptable professional or occupational standards or treatment practices.
[N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27.]
The statute further defines "licensed persons" to include, among others, architects and engineers.
N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26(b), -26(e).
In Burt, we began by first reviewing the nature and purpose of the
Comparative Negligence Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.4, and the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Act,
N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-1 to -5. In short, we noted that the two statutes are
designed to promote the ultimate purpose of achieving shared responsibility as among joint
tortfeasors and to avoid the harsh results otherwise imposed by common law rules
preventing allocation of fault among joint tortfeasors. See Burt, supra, 339 N.J. Super.
at 303 (citing Holloway v. State,
125 N.J. 386, 401 (1991); Sattelberger v.
Telep,
14 N.J. 353, 367-68 (1954); Arcell v. Ashland Chem. Co.,
152 N.J.
Super. 471, 485 (Law Div. 1977); Markey v. Skog,
129 N.J. Super. 192,
199 (Law Div. 1974)).
We sought in Burt to harmonize these principles with the goal that the
Legislature intended when it enacted the Affidavit of Merit statute. We referred to
the seminal decision respecting the Affidavit of Merit statute, which described it as
being "part of 'a package of five tort reform bills intended to "bring
common sense and equity to the State's civil litigation system."'" Id. at 304
(quoting Cornblatt v. Barow,
153 N.J. 218, 228 (1998)(citing Office of the Governor,
News Release 1 (June 29, 1995)).
In applying the principles derived from these several statutes, we concluded in Burt
that their essential goals were "to ameliorate the harshness of the common-law contributory
negligence bar to recovery, and [to] permit a plaintiff to recover even though
he or she may be negligent to some degree, yet, at the same
time, provide that ordinarily each tortfeasor will respond in damages according to its
own adjudicated percentage of fault." Ibid. That analysis led us to conclude that
the statutory right of one defendant to pursue contribution as against another defendant
could not be extinguished by the failure of one defendant to serve an
Affidavit of Merit as against another. Id. at 304-05. In so holding, we
specifically declined to extend the reach of the Affidavit of Merit statute to
cross-claimants. Id. at 305.
More recently, we determined that a counterclaim that sounds in professional negligence, however,
is subject to the Affidavit of Merit statute. Manganaro Consulting Eng'rs Inc. v.
Carneys Point Township Sewerage Auth.,
344 N.J. Super. 343, 347-48 (App. Div. 2001).
We there distinguished between professional negligence which is raised purely as an affirmative
defense, namely, that the plaintiff's malpractice precludes that plaintiff from recovering on its
complaint for payment for its services, see Saffer v. Willoughby,
143 N.J. 256,
272 (1996), and professional negligence raised in the context of a counterclaim asserting
an affirmative claim for damages. See Manganaro, supra, 344 N.J. Super. at 347-48.
The distinction is an important one, for it makes plain the difference between
a claim that must be asserted and proven in an effort to secure
an award of damages and one which does not. And it makes equally
plain the distinction between claims raising professional negligence that must be supported by
an Affidavit of Merit and those that do not.
Most recently, our Supreme Court, in addressing the applicability of the Affidavit of
Merit statute, has noted that we must analyze the true nature of the
particular claim being asserted in the pleading and consider whether the Legislature intended
that it be one to which the statute applies. See Couri v. Gardner,
173 N.J. 328, 333-34 (2002). There, the Court addressed the role of the
Affidavit of Merit statute as it applies to claims denominated as breach of
contract suits, cautioning that the analysis cannot be based solely on the "label
placed on the action[s]." Id. at 340. Rather, the applicability of the Affidavit
of Merit statute to any claim relates to the nature of the proofs
required by a party in order to prevail on its claim. Ibid.
With these principles in mind, we turn to the question raised in this
appeal. Certainly, the true nature of the claim being asserted in this matter
is not hard to divine. Indeed, the claim of Prisco as against Remington,
while couched in terms of professional negligence, is entirely derivative of the claim
made against Prisco by the Diocese. For its part, Prisco denies both that
any of its work fell below the applicable standards of professional care and
that any of its acts was the cause of the complaints raised by
the Diocese. As an aspect of its defense, it necessarily asserts that none
of the work performed by its professional consultants, including Remington, its consulting engineer,
was negligent either.
Notwithstanding those assertions, however, it is plain from the face of the initial
complaint that some of the alleged defects and deficiencies identified by the Diocese,
if proven, implicate the adequacy of the work performed by the engineers rather
than by the architects. That being the case, Prisco's third-party pleading, as against
Remington, asserts a true claim for contribution and for allocation of fault as
among joint tortfeasors rather than an independent claim of professional negligence. It is
therefore analytically more like the positions of the parties in Burt than in
Manganaro or Couri. In Burt, we recognized that a defendant is not required
to file an Affidavit of Merit when it raises a cross-claim against a
co-defendant even if both of the defendants are professionals and even if the
claims of the plaintiff against that co-defendant have been dismissed. See Burt, supra,
339 N.J. Super. at 305. Thus, the claim for allocation of fault survived
the dismissal of the plaintiff's claim without service of the Affidavit of Merit.
Even though the result of that analysis was that the remaining defendant would,
of necessity, bear the burden of proving the professional negligence of its former
co-defendant, it was permitted to do so without complying with the Affidavit of
Merit statute.
To be sure, a part of our analysis there rested on the fact
that the plaintiff had named all of the potentially culpable parties as defendants.
In that circumstance, each defendant could rely on the plaintiff to file the
required Affidavit of Merit. Ibid. Moreover, a part of our analysis there rested
on the fact that the language of the statute itself refers to plaintiffs
and not to cross-claimants. Ibid. Those apparent distinctions, however, do not require a
contrary result here. Neither factor, properly analyzed, supports Remington's assertion that Prisco should
be required to serve an Affidavit of Merit.
To begin with, the adequacy or deficiency of the particular Affidavit of Merit
served by the Diocese cannot logically be the basis for a principled analysis
of the statutory requirement. Second, however, as in Couri, where we are reminded
to look beyond the label used in the pleading to the substance of
the matter, we decline here to conclude that Prisco must serve the Affidavit
of Merit merely because the word "plaintiff" appears as part of its party
designation.
We conclude that the third-party complaint filed here, like the cross-claim in Burt,
seeks only to direct the claims made by the plaintiff from the only
named defendant to the party at fault rather than, as in Manganaro, to
raise a new affirmative claim. In this context, the fact that the Diocese
did not name the engineers as direct defendants is of no moment, particularly
given the fact that its contract was with Prisco and it is entitled
to assert all of its claims concerning the acts or omissions of Prisco
or its consultants against Prisco as the party with whom it contracted.
Similarly, the fact that the Diocese served an Affidavit of Merit referring only
to architectural malpractice is irrelevant to the larger question of whether the claims,
if proven, are more properly the fault of Remington. Prisco merely seeks to
pass plaintiff's claims through to Remington in the event that plaintiff is able
to demonstrate professional negligence relating to engineering services performed by Remington. It does
not assert any new or affirmative claim at all. We therefore conclude that
where a defendant subject to the Affidavit of Merit statute asserts a third-party
claim in the nature of contribution or joint tortfeasor liability as against another
professional also subject to the statute, no Affidavit of Merit is required.
We reach this result not only based on our analysis of the meaning
of the statute and the nature of the particular claims, but for a
far more practical reason as well. We are aware that the third-party defendant
has asserted that, contrary to the statute, it will be required to defend
claims that have not been specifically reviewed and found to have merit by
a like professional. In construction litigation, however, it is often the case that
a plaintiff project owner selects as its defendant the party with whom it
directly contracted for design services even if the performance of those services implicates
more than one professional discipline. In that context to require the architect, which
vigorously rejects any suggestion that it or any of its design consultants engaged
in malpractice, to affirmatively articulate professional malpractice claims against its consultant would prove
to be unworkable and unwise.
Nor, for that matter, would requiring Prisco to serve an Affidavit of Merit
against its consulting engineer further any purpose of the statute. The claims against
Remington in reality rise or fall on the strength of plaintiff's proofs. While
it might be argued that the Diocese, having served merely an architectural Affidavit
of Merit, should be barred from asserting that which is truly an engineering
claim, we decline to hold that the named defendant, while asserting that neither
it nor its consultants were negligent, should be required to make a better
case against the professional consultants it adds to the litigation as third parties
than plaintiff did for itself.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1
We originally denied Remington's motion for leave to appeal and for summary
disposition in our order dated January 8, 2004. Following our denial of that
motion, the Supreme Court granted Remington's application for leave to appeal in its
March 9, 2004, order which remanded this matter to us for our consideration
on the merits.
Footnote: 2
The contract between the Diocese and Prisco was not included in the record
on appeal, but the specific provisions of that contract are not important to
our analysis of the issues presented on appeal.
Footnote: 3
Although the Diocese named the two Prisco entities separately as defendants, its
complaint apparently did not distinguish between these entities in any way significant to
the issue raised in this appeal.