Court Opinion

ID: 4533476
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-05-12 14:08:12.000192+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:32:51.723903
License: Public Domain

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. 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
Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

       New Jersey Transit Corporation v. Sandra Sanchez (A-68-18) (082292)

Argued September 24, 2019 -- Decided May 12, 2020

PER CURIAM

       New Jersey Transit Corporation (New Jersey Transit) sought to recover workers’
compensation benefits paid to an employee, David Mercogliano, who sustained injuries
in a work-related motor vehicle accident. It sued the individuals allegedly at fault in the
accident, defendants Sandra Sanchez and Chad Smith, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-40, a
provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act that authorizes employers and workers’
compensation carriers that have paid workers’ compensation benefits to injured
employees to assert subrogation claims. The Court considers whether that subrogation
action was barred by the Auto Insurance Cost Recovery Act (AICRA).

        Mercogliano was acting in the course of his employment when the New Jersey
Transit vehicle he was driving was struck from the rear by a vehicle driven by defendant
Sanchez and owned by defendant Smith. At the time of his accident, Mercogliano was
insured under a standard automobile policy, under which he was entitled to personal
injury protection (PIP) and other benefits. New Jersey Transit’s workers’ compensation
carrier paid Mercogliano workers’ compensation benefits. Mercogliano neither sought
nor received PIP benefits under his automobile insurance policy in connection with his
accident.

       New Jersey Transit filed a complaint seeking to “recoup workers’ compensation
benefits pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f).” Defendants pled as an affirmative defense
that New Jersey’s no-fault insurance statutory scheme barred New Jersey Transit’s
subrogation claim and moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted defendants’
motion, ruling that New Jersey Transit could not assert a claim based on economic loss.
It noted that N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k) defines economic loss for purposes of AICRA to mean
“uncompensated loss of income or property, or other uncompensated expenses, including,
but not limited to, medical expenses.” In the trial court’s view, because New Jersey
Transit’s workers’ compensation carrier paid benefits for all of Mercogliano’s medical
expenses and lost income, he had no “uncompensated loss of income or property,” and
thus sustained no economic loss for purposes of AICRA. The trial court relied on
Continental Insurance Co. v. McClelland, 288 N.J. Super. 185 (App. Div. 1996), and
policy considerations in reaching its decision.

                                             1
       The Appellate Division reversed that judgment. 457 N.J. Super. 98, 113 (App.
Div. 2018). The Appellate Division agreed with New Jersey Transit that its subrogation
action arose entirely from “economic loss comprised of medical expenses and wage loss,
not noneconomic loss.” Id. at 112. However, it rejected the trial court’s view that an
employer’s or workers’ compensation carrier’s subrogation claim based on benefits paid
for economic loss contravenes AICRA’s legislative intent. Id. at 107-12. The Appellate
Division noted that in the Workers’ Compensation Act, the Legislature imposed on an
employer the obligation to pay workers’ compensation benefits for an accident arising
from an injured workers’ employment, and that N.J.S.A. 34:15-40 “gives the workers’
compensation carrier an absolute right to seek reimbursement from the tortfeasor for the
benefits it has paid to the injured employee.” Id. at 107.

        The Appellate Division acknowledged that N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6’s collateral source
rule places the primary burden on the employer’s workers’ compensation carrier to
compensate an employee injured in the course of employment, in the event that only
workers’ compensation benefits and PIP benefits are available sources of reimbursement.
Id. at 110-11. It noted, however, that “where both workers’ compensation benefits and
the proceeds of a tort action have been recovered, the tort recovery is primary” under
N.J.S.A. 34:15-40. Id. at 111. The Appellate Division therefore concluded that the
collateral source rule posed no obstacle to New Jersey Transit’s claim. Id. at 111, 113.

       The Appellate Division viewed Continental to have been rejected by subsequent
Appellate Division jurisprudence, and declined to follow it. Id. at 109-10. The court
instead invoked Lambert v. Travelers Indemnity Co. of America, 447 N.J. Super. 61, 67,
75 (App. Div. 2016), which identified the Workers’ Compensation Act -- not AICRA --
as the governing law for subrogation claims based on workers’ compensation benefits
paid to workers injured in motor vehicle accidents in the course of their employment. Id.
at 111-12. The Appellate Division therefore reversed and remanded the matter for the
entry of partial summary judgment in favor of New Jersey Transit. Id. at 113.

      The Court granted defendants’ petition for certification. 237 N.J. 317 (2019).

HELD: The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed by an equally divided Court.

JUSTICE PATTERSON, CONCURRING, joined by CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER
and JUSTICES FERNANDEZ-VINA, notes that the Workers’ Compensation Act
provides employers or carriers with a mechanism through which to recover benefits paid
when the injuries that necessitated those benefits were caused by a third party, N.J.S.A.
34:15-40, which limits the employer’s or carrier’s right of recovery to the same “action
that the injured employee . . . would have had against the third person,” in accordance
with traditional principles of subrogation. Justice Patterson next traces the history of
AICRA and observes that, under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6, when an employee injured in a work-
related accident is entitled to benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act, that statute

                                            2
-- not AICRA -- provides his or her primary source of recovery for medical expenses and
lost wages. Justice Patterson stresses that, when it enacted AICRA, the Legislature did
not amend the Workers’ Compensation Act to eliminate or circumscribe the statutory
right of subrogation in cases involving injuries to employees in motor vehicle accidents.
Justice Patterson reviews relevant case law and notes that Continental was not followed
in later Appellate Division decisions. Noting that the trial court will have the discretion
upon remand to expand the record and resolve any factual dispute about whether all
payments were economic loss, Justice Patterson confines analysis to workers’
compensation subrogation based on payments made for economic loss. Justice Patterson
explains that, to the trial court, the act that gave rise to New Jersey Transit’s subrogation
claim -- its payment of benefits to Mercogliano under N.J.S.A. 34:15-15 and N.J.S.A.
34:15-12(a), (c) -- simultaneously defeated that claim, because it left Mercogliano with
no “uncompensated” loss. Justice Patterson discerns no evidence that the Legislature
intended to bar a workers’ compensation subrogation claim by virtue of the very benefits
that created that claim in the first place and instead concludes, like the Appellate
Division, that Mercogliano suffered an economic loss in the form of medical expenses
and lost wages, and that New Jersey Transit paid him benefits for that economic loss.
Finally, Justice Patterson explains why Lambert and two other Appellate Division cases
are more persuasive than Continental as applied to this case.

JUSTICE ALBIN, DISSENTING, joined by JUSTICES LaVECCHIA and
SOLOMON, expresses the view that, when a driver is involved in a work-related
automobile accident and his economic costs are recoverable under either his private
automobile insurance carrier’s personal injury protection (PIP) policy or under his
employer’s workers’ compensation scheme, New Jersey’s no-fault automobile insurance
system makes the workers’ compensation carrier primarily responsible for reimbursing
those costs. When an injured driver’s economic losses are “collectible” under his PIP
policy but paid by his employer’s workers’ compensation carrier, Justice Albin explains,
the no-fault system prohibits a workers’ compensation subrogation action against the
tortfeasor or the tortfeasor’s automobile liability insurance carrier. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6,
-12. In Justice Albin’s view, allowing the workers’ compensation carrier here to sue the
tortfeasors or their automobile insurance carrier in a subrogation action permits the very
outcome the Legislature intended to foreclose through adoption of no-fault insurance --
more litigation and greater financial burdens on the automobile insurance system.

       The members of the Court being equally divided, the judgment of the Appellate
Division is AFFIRMED.

JUSTICE PATTERSON filed a concurrence, in which CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and
JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA join. JUSTICE ALBIN filed a dissent, in which
JUSTICES LaVECCHIA and SOLOMON join. JUSTICE TIMPONE did not
participate.

                                              3
       SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
             A-68 September Term 2018
                       082292

          New Jersey Transit Corporation,
            a/s/o David Mercogliano,

                Plaintiff-Respondent,

                          v.

          Sandra Sanchez and Chad Smith,

               Defendants-Appellants.

       On certification to the Superior Court,
   Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
        457 N.J. Super. 98 (App. Div. 2018).

      Argued                       Decided
 September 24, 2019              May 12, 2020

John V. Mallon argued the cause for appellants (Chasan
Lamparello Mallon & Cappuzzo, attorneys; John V.
Mallon, of counsel and on the briefs, and Ryan J.
Gaffney, on the briefs).

Shawn C. Huber argued the cause for respondent (Brown
& Connery, attorneys; Shawn C. Huber, on the brief).

Richard J. Albuquerque argued the cause for amicus
curiae New Jersey Association for Justice (D’Arcy
Johnson Day, attorneys; Richard J. Albuquerque and
Dominic R. DePamphilis, on the brief).

                          1
                                 PER CURIAM

      The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed by an equally

divided Court.

                     JUSTICE PATTERSON, concurring.

      This appeal arises from an action brought by plaintiff New Jersey

Transit Corporation (New Jersey Transit) pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-40, a

provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act that authorizes employers and

workers’ compensation carriers that have paid workers’ compensation benefits

to injured employees to assert subrogation claims. New Jersey Transit sought

to recover workers’ compensation benefits paid to an employee, David

Mercogliano, who sustained injuries in a work-related motor vehicle accident.

It sued the individuals allegedly at fault in the accident, defendants Sandra

Sanchez and Chad Smith.

      Defendants argued that New Jersey Transit’s subrogation action was

barred by the Auto Insurance Cost Reduction Act (AICRA), N.J.S.A. 39:6A-

1.1 to -35. Defendants asserted that because Mercogliano had elected the

limitation-on-lawsuit option permitted by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a), and sustained

no permanent injury, AICRA barred New Jersey Transit’s claim.

                                        2
        The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants and

denied New Jersey Transit’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment. It

barred New Jersey Transit’s subrogation action on the grounds that

Mercogliano sustained no economic loss as defined in AICRA and that New

Jersey Transit’s subrogation claim would subvert AICRA’s goals.

        The Appellate Division agreed with New Jersey Transit that the workers’

compensation benefits paid to Mercogliano related only to economic loss. N.J.

Transit Corp. v. Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super. 98, 112 (App. Div. 2018). It

concluded that New Jersey Transit’s subrogation action did not implicate the

limitation-on-lawsuit threshold imposed by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a). Ibid. The

Appellate Division held that because Mercogliano’s economic loss was

covered by his workers’ compensation benefits -- not by personal injury

protection (PIP) benefits under his automobile insurance policy -- New Jersey

Transit’s subrogation action did not run afoul of AICRA. Id. at 113. It

reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded for further proceedings.

Ibid.

        We concur with the Appellate Division’s determination. We view New

Jersey Transit’s subrogation action to comport with the objectives and terms of

the Workers’ Compensation Act. We find no evidence that when the

Legislature enacted AICRA, it intended to bar employers and insurers that

                                       3
have paid workers’ compensation benefits for economic loss from seeking

reimbursement from third-party tortfeasors in cases such as this, in which the

employee’s losses were covered by workers’ compensation benefits and he

neither sought nor received PIP benefits. We do not view New Jersey

Transit’s subrogation action -- limited to workers’ compensation benefits paid

for economic losses -- to contravene AICRA’s provisions or to undermine its

goals.

                                         I.

                                         A.

         The accident that gave rise to this action occurred on December 2, 2014

in Cliffside Park. Mercogliano, acting in the course of his employment, was

driving a vehicle owned by New Jersey Transit when his car was struck from

the rear by a vehicle driven by defendant Sanchez and owned by defendant

Smith. Mercogliano sustained injury to his “right upper extremity.” His

treating physician later diagnosed him with “cervical strain and strain of the

right trapezius.” Mercogliano was treated for his injuries and was medically

cleared to return to work without restriction approximately two months after

the accident.

         At the time of his accident, Mercogliano was insured under a standard

automobile policy issued by New Jersey Manufacturers Insurance Company.

                                         4
Under that policy, Mercogliano was entitled to up to $250,000 in PIP benefits

and $400 weekly income continuation benefits. Because he had elected the

limitation-on-lawsuit option under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a), Mercogliano was

subject to that provision’s threshold. It is undisputed that Mercogliano

sustained no injury that would vault the limitation-on-lawsuit threshold.

      New Jersey Transit’s workers’ compensation carrier paid Mercogliano

$33,625.70 in workers’ compensation benefits, consisting of $6694.04 in

medical benefits, $3982.40 in temporary indemnity benefits, and $22,949.26 in

“permanent indemnity benefits” characterized by New Jersey Transit as

relating to “lost wages.” The record does not identify the specific losses for

which those benefits were paid.

      With his losses covered by workers’ compensation benefits, Mercogliano

neither sought nor received PIP benefits under his personal automobile

insurance policy in connection with his accident.

                                       B.

                                       1.

      In its capacity as Mercogliano’s employer and subrogee, New Jersey

Transit filed a complaint seeking to “recoup workers’ compensation benefits

pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f).” New Jersey Transit alleged that

Mercogliano’s injuries resulted from the negligence of Sanchez in the

                                        5
accident. It also asserted a vicarious liability claim against Smith as Sanchez’s

employer and the owner of the vehicle Sanchez was driving when the accident

occurred. Defendants pled as an affirmative defense that New Jersey’s no-

fault insurance statutory scheme barred New Jersey Transit’s subrogation

claim.

      Pursuant to Rule 4:46-2, defendants moved for summary judgment

dismissing New Jersey Transit’s complaint. They claimed that New Jersey

Transit could not assert a subrogation claim because AICRA prevented

Mercogliano from pursuing a third-party action against defendants, given his

election of the limitation-on-lawsuit option in his personal insurance policy.

      New Jersey Transit cross-moved for partial summary judgment. It

sought a declaration that defendants’ affirmative defense based on the

limitation-on-lawsuit threshold would not bar the subrogation claim. New

Jersey Transit conceded that it could bring no subrogation claim based on

noneconomic losses in light of Mercogliano’s inability to vault N.J.S.A.

39:6A-8(a)’s limitation-on-lawsuit threshold. It argued, however, that because

its subrogation claim was based entirely on workers’ compensation benefits

paid for economic losses, and Mercogliano received no PIP benefits, the

Workers’ Compensation Act -- not AICRA -- governed the action.

                                        6
      The trial court ruled that New Jersey Transit could not assert a claim

based on economic loss. It noted that N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k) defines economic

loss for purposes of AICRA to mean “uncompensated loss of income or

property, or other uncompensated expenses, including, but not limited to,

medical expenses.” In the trial court’s view, Mercogliano could not have sued

defendants for economic loss. The court concluded that because New Jersey

Transit’s workers’ compensation carrier paid benefits for all of Mercogliano’s

medical expenses and lost income, he had no “uncompensated loss of income

or property,” and thus sustained no economic loss for purposes of AICRA.

Relying on Continental Insurance Co. v. McClelland, 288 N.J. Super. 185

(App. Div. 1996), the trial court ruled that New Jersey Transit was barred from

asserting a claim against defendants for the benefits that it had paid.

      The trial court expressed concern about a scenario distinct from the case

before it, in which an automobile insurer pays PIP benefits to an injured

worker, the employer or workers’ compensation carrier reimburses the

automobile insurer, and the employer or workers’ compensation carrier then

pursues a subrogation claim under N.J.S.A. 34:15-40. In the trial court’s view,

such a result would undermine the legislative policies expressed in AICRA.

The trial court also cautioned that if New Jersey Transit prevailed, employers

and workers’ compensation carriers might seek to recover in subrogation

                                        7
actions against defendants shielded from direct claims by statutes such as the

Tort Claims Act, N.J.S.A. 59:8-1 to 12-3, or the Charitable Immunity Act,

N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 to -11.

      Accordingly, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary

judgment and denied New Jersey Transit’s cross-motion for partial summary

judgment.

                                       2.

      New Jersey Transit appealed the trial court’s judgment. In a thoughtful

opinion by Judge Geiger, the Appellate Division reversed that judgment.

Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super. at 113.

      The Appellate Division agreed with New Jersey Transit that its

subrogation action arose entirely from “economic loss comprised of medical

expenses and wage loss, not noneconomic loss.” Id. at 112. However, it

rejected the trial court’s view that an employer or workers’ compensation

carrier’s subrogation claim based on benefits paid for economic loss

contravenes AICRA’s legislative intent. Id. at 107-12. The Appellate

Division noted that in the Workers’ Compensation Act, the Legislature

imposed on an employer the obligation to pay workers’ compensation benefits

for an accident arising from an injured workers’ employment, and that

N.J.S.A. 34:15-40 “gives the workers’ compensation carrier an absolute right

                                       8
to seek reimbursement from the tortfeasor for the benefits it has paid to the

injured employee.” Id. at 107.

      The Appellate Division acknowledged that N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6’s collateral

source rule places the primary burden on the employer’s workers’

compensation carrier to compensate an employee injured in the course of

employment, in the event that only workers’ compensation benefits and PIP

benefits are available sources of reimbursement. Id. at 110-11. It noted,

however, that “where both workers’ compensation benefits and the proceeds of

a tort action have been recovered, the tort recovery is primary” under N.J.S.A.

34:15-40. Id. at 111 (quoting Lefkin v. Venturini, 229 N.J. Super. 1, 8-9 (App.

Div. 1988)). The Appellate Division therefore concluded that the collateral

source rule posed no obstacle to New Jersey Transit’s claim. Id. at 111, 113.

      The Appellate Division viewed the decision in Continental, on which the

trial court relied, to have been rejected by subsequent Appellate Division

jurisprudence, and declined to follow it. Id. at 109-10. The court instead

invoked Lambert v. Travelers Indemnity Co. of America, in which the

Appellate Division had identified the Workers’ Compensation Act -- not

AICRA -- as the governing law for subrogation claims based on workers’

compensation benefits paid to workers injured in motor vehicle accidents in

                                        9
the course of their employment. Id. at 111-12 (citing Lambert, 447 N.J. Super.

61, 67, 75 (App. Div. 2016)).

       The Appellate Division therefore reversed and remanded the matter for

the entry of partial summary judgment in favor of New Jersey Transit. Id. at

113.

                                       3.

       We granted defendants’ petition for certification. 237 N.J. 317 (2019).

We also granted the motion of the New Jersey Association for Justice (NJAJ)

to appear as amicus curiae.

                                       II.

                                       A.

       Defendants assert that as a procedural matter, the Appellate Division

should not have considered New Jersey Transit’s cross-motion for partial

summary judgment, which was not the focus of the parties’ briefing before the

court. Defendants also suggest that one of the three categories of workers’

compensation benefits awarded to Mercogliano -- the partial permanent

disability benefits that he received -- included compensation for pain and

suffering and thus, at least in part, constituted benefits paid for noneconomic

loss. As to economic loss, defendants argue that the Legislature intended the

limitation-on-lawsuit threshold imposed by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a) to provide a

                                       10
third-party tortfeasor with a defense against a workers’ compensation carrier’s

subrogation action. Defendants contend that the Appellate Division’s decision

raises the specter of an increase in the volume of claims and undermines the

Legislature’s cost-saving goals.

                                       B.

      New Jersey Transit represents that its subrogation claim is entirely

premised on economic loss because the benefits paid to Mercogliano

compensated him for medical expenses and lost wages. New Jersey Transit

contends that the Appellate Division’s decision furthers the Legislature’s

intent, in the Workers’ Compensation Act, to promote subrogation. It states

that its subrogation claim does not interfere with the cost-saving legislative

goals of AICRA, given that its action and any comparable cases will involve

uncomplicated claims for liquidated damages that can be resolved quickly and

efficiently.

                                       C.

      Amicus curiae NJAJ states that the subrogation claim asserted by an

employer or its workers’ compensation carrier against a third-party tortfeasor

is a rare category of claim. It primarily addresses a question that was not

raised by any party and is not relevant to this appeal: whether an individual

plaintiff should be allowed to pursue a direct claim for medical expenses and

                                       11
lost wages against a tortfeasor, despite that plaintiff’s inability to meet the

limitation-on-lawsuit threshold under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a). NJAJ urges the

Court to authorize individual plaintiffs to bring such claims.

                                        III.

                                        A.

      We review de novo the trial court’s summary judgment determinations

and apply the same standard that court used in deciding the motions. Woytas

v. Greenwood Tree Experts, Inc., 237 N.J. 501, 511 (2019).

      Familiar principles of statutory interpretation guide our review. We

strive to “divine and effectuate the Legislature’s intent.” Perez v. Zagami,

LLC, 218 N.J. 202, 209 (2014) (quoting State v. Buckley, 216 N.J. 249, 263

(2013)); accord DiProspero v. Penn, 183 N.J. 477, 492 (2005). To that end, we

look to the statute’s plain language as “the best indicator” of the Legislature’s

intent, giving its words “their ordinary meaning and significance.” In re

Registrant H.D., ___ N.J. ___, ___ (2020) (slip op. at 7) (first quoting State v.

Frye, 217 N.J. 566, 575 (2014); then quoting State v. Fuqua, 234 N.J. 583, 591

(2018)). When statutory construction involves the interplay of multiple

statutes, we seek to harmonize them to further the Legislature’s intent. Jones

v. Morey’s Pier, Inc., 230 N.J. 142, 164 (2017). We also assume that the

                                        12
Legislature is “aware of judicial construction of its enactments.” Maeker v.

Ross, 219 N.J. 565, 575 (2014) (quoting DiProspero, 183 N.J. at 494).

      To apply those principles to the issue at hand, we review key provisions ,

first of the Workers’ Compensation Act, upon which New Jersey Transit’s

subrogation claim is premised, and, second, of AICRA, which defendants

contend provides a defense to that claim. We then consider case law in which

those two statutory schemes have been harmonized.

                                       B.

      “For more than a century, the Workers’ Compensation Act has provided

employees injured in the workplace ‘medical treatment and limited

compensation “without regard to the negligence of the employer.”’” Vitale v.

Schering-Plough Corp., 231 N.J. 234, 250 (2017) (quoting Estate of Kotsovska

ex rel. Kotsovska v. Liebman, 221 N.J. 568, 584 (2015)). The Act “reflects ‘a

historic trade-off whereby employees relinquish[] their right to pursue

common-law remedies in exchange for automatic entitlement to certain, but

reduced, benefits whenever they suffer[] injuries by accident arising out of and

in the course of employment.’” Caraballo v. City of Jersey City Police Dep’t,

237 N.J. 255, 264 (2019) (alterations in original) (quoting Stancil v. ACE

USA, 211 N.J. 276, 285 (2012)).

                                      13
      “The remedial objective of the Workers’ Compensation Act is ‘to make

benefits readily and broadly available to injured workers through a non -

complicated process.’” Vitale, 231 N.J. at 250 (quoting Tlumac v. High

Bridge Stone, 187 N.J. 567, 573 (2006)). The Act is liberally construed “in

order that its beneficent purposes may be accomplished.” Kotsovska, 221 N.J.

at 584 (quoting Cruz v. Cent. Jersey Landscaping, Inc., 195 N.J. 33, 42

(2008)).

      The Workers’ Compensation Act identifies distinct categories of benefits

available to qualified employees injured in the course of their employment;

benefits in three such categories were paid to Mercogliano and are therefore

relevant to this appeal.

      First, subject to limitations set forth in the statute, an employer or

workers’ compensation carrier may “furnish to the injured worker such

medical, surgical and other treatment, and hospital service as shall be

necessary to cure and relieve the worker of the effects of the injury and to

restore the functions of the injured member or organ where such restoration is

possible.” N.J.S.A. 34:15-15.

      Second, an employer or workers’ compensation carrier may pay

temporary disability payments, calculated as a percentage of the employee’s

                                        14
weekly wage and “paid during the period of [the employee’s] disability, not

however, beyond 400 weeks.” N.J.S.A. 34:15-12(a).

      Third, an employer or workers’ compensation carrier may pay partial

permanent benefits, “[f]or disability partial in character and permanent in

quality,” based on a percentage of the employee’s weekly wage, with the

period of payment determined by the nature of the disability. N.J.S.A. 34:15-

12(c).1 Partial permanent disability is defined as a “permanent impairment . . .

based upon demonstrable objective medical evidence, which restricts the

function of the body or of its members or organs.” N.J.S.A. 34:15-36. Minor

injuries and diseases, such as sprains, scars, lacerations, and contusions “which

do not constitute significant permanent disfigurement” do not qualify as partial

permanent disability. Ibid.

      The Workers’ Compensation Act thus details categories of claims for

which employees may seek recovery from their employers or their employers’

workers’ compensation carriers; it simultaneously provides those employers or

carriers with a mechanism through which to recover benefits paid when the

injuries that necessitated those benefits were caused by a third party.

1
  No benefits in a fourth category, benefits “[f]or disability total in character
and permanent in quality” pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-12(b), were paid to
Mercogliano, and that provision is irrelevant here.
                                       15
      When it enacted N.J.S.A. 34:15-40, the Legislature “sought . . . to

regulate ‘the rights and responsibilities of the several parties concerned in

compensation payments where, in the course of his employment, injury or

death comes to a workman as the result of the fault of a third party.’” Vitale,

231 N.J. at 251 (quoting U.S. Cas. Co. v. Hercules Powder Co., 4 N.J. 157,

165 (1950)). A core component of the Legislature’s statutory scheme

balancing the parties’ competing interests is the right of subrogation,

recognized as “a device of equity to compel the ultimate discharge of an

obligation by the one who in good conscience ought to pay it.” Standard

Accident Ins. Co. v. Pellecchia, 15 N.J. 162, 171 (1954). “The underpinning

of subrogation is its derivative nature. The insurer obtains only the right of the

insured against the tortfeasor subject to defenses of the wrongdoer against the

insured.” Aetna Ins. Co. v. Gilchrist Bros., Inc., 85 N.J. 550, 560-61 (1981).

      The employer’s subrogation right is set forth in N.J.S.A. 34:15-40,

which authorizes employers and workers’ compensation carriers to seek

reimbursement from third-party tortfeasors or their insurance carriers in one of

two ways. First, if the employee recovers directly against the tortfeasor or the

tortfeasor’s carrier, the employer or its workers’ compensation carrier may

assert a lien against the employee’s recovery, N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(b); “for every

dollar of the employee’s recovery from the third party, the carrier’s lien under

                                        16
[N.J.S.A. 34:15-40] entitles it to reimbursement of one dollar (less legal cost)

of workers’ compensation benefits.” Frazier v. N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Co., 142 N.J.

590, 597-98 (1995).

      Second, the employer or its carrier may seek to recover directly from the

third party tortfeasor or that party’s insurance carrier. If, as in this case, the

employee does not settle with the third-party tortfeasor and declines to pursue

a claim against that tortfeasor “within 1 year of the accident,” the employer or

workers’ compensation carrier, after serving “a written demand on the injured

employee or his dependents,” may pursue a claim against the third party: The

employer or its worker’s compensation carrier

             can either effect a settlement with the third person or
             his insurance carrier or institute proceedings against the
             third person for the recovery of damages for the injuries
             and loss sustained by such injured employee or his
             dependents and any settlement made with the third
             person or his insurance carrier or proceedings had and
             taken by such employer or his insurance carrier against
             such third person, and such right of action shall be only
             for such right of action that the injured employee or his
             dependents would have had against the third person,
             and shall constitute a bar to any further claim or action
             by the injured employee or his dependents against the
             third person.

             [N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f).]

                                         17
      The statute thus limits the employer’s or carrier’s right of recovery to the

same “action that the injured employee . . . would have had against the third

person,” in accordance with traditional principles of subrogation. Ibid. It

simultaneously provides that if, by settlement or judgment, the employer or

workers’ compensation carrier recovers from the third-party tortfeasor or his or

her insurance carrier an amount “in excess of the employer’s obligation to the

employee or his dependents and the expense of suit, such excess shall be paid

to the employee or his dependents.” Ibid. N.J.S.A. 34:15-40 operates “[t]o

overcome the inequity of double recovery,” which could occur if an injured

employee were permitted to keep both workers’ compensation benefits and

damages from a third-party tortfeasor. Frazier, 142 N.J. at 596-97. By

authorizing actions against third-party tortfeasors, N.J.S.A. 34:15-40

“promot[es] the equitable balancing of competing interests that the statutory

scheme is designed to achieve.” Vitale, 231 N.J. at 252. Because it provides

the employer or workers’ compensation carrier a right to reimbursement,

N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f) serves the legislative goal “to make benefits readily and

broadly available to injured workers through a non-complicated process.”

Tlumac, 187 N.J. at 573.

                                       18
                                       C.

      We next consider the Legislature’s intent when it created New Jersey’s

no-fault insurance scheme in AICRA’s predecessor statute, the No-Fault Law,

and when it reformed that scheme by enacting AICRA.

      The No-Fault Law was enacted in 1972. L. 1972, c. 70. It “required

insurance companies to provide insureds unlimited medical expense benefits

without regard to fault” while “limit[ing] the right to sue for pain and suffering

[and] requiring parties to have over $200 in medical expenses before they

would have standing for a negligence suit.” Haines v. Taft, 237 N.J. 271, 284

(2019) (citing N.J.S.A. 39:6A-4 (1973); N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8 (1973)), superseded

by statute, L. 2019, cc. 244, 245.

      The statute’s mandated PIP benefits and related provisions were

intended to ensure “‘prompt compensation for all [of a driver’s] economic

losses’ and to ‘ease the burden placed upon [New Jersey] courts by the present

system.’” Id. at 284 (alterations in original) (quoting Governor’s Signing

Statement to A. 667 (June 20, 1972)). As described by leading commentators

on New Jersey automobile insurance law, “the PIP law mandates speedy first -

party payment of a range of benefits, including medical expenses, lost wages,

essential services, survivor benefits and funeral expenses to certain classes of

                                       19
persons injured in automobile accidents without any consideration of fault at

all.” Craig & Pomeroy, N.J. Auto Ins. Law § 4:1 (2020).

      From its inception, the No-Fault Law made clear that the burden to

provide benefits to employees injured in work-related automobile accidents

remained on the workers’ compensation system. L. 1972, c. 70, § 6. The

original No-Fault Law’s collateral source rule stated that PIP benefits under

“section 4” of the statute would be “payable as loss accrues upon written

notice of such loss and without regard to collateral sources.” Ibid. However,

that provision identified workers’ compensation benefits for employees injured

in accidents in the course of their employment as an exception to that rule,

providing that “benefits, collectible under workmen’s compensation insurance

. . . shall be deducted from” the employee’s PIP benefits. Ibid.

      The Legislature’s intent to allocate the burden for such benefits to

employers and their workers’ compensation carriers was underscored by a

1983 amendment to the statute’s collateral source provision. L. 1983, c. 362,

§ 9. That provision authorized a PIP insurer to assert a claim for

reimbursement of PIP benefits paid to an injured employee who was entitled to

seek workers’ compensation benefits but failed to do so. Ibid.

      In 1998, the Legislature enacted AICRA, L. 1998, c. 21, § 1, describing

it as “comprehensive legislation designed to preserve the no-fault system,

                                       20
while at the same time reducing unnecessary costs which drive [automobile

insurance] premiums higher,” N.J.S.A. 39:6A-1.1(b). AICRA “adhered to the

recognized ‘philosophical basis of the no-fault system . . . a trade-off of . . .

providing medical benefits in return for a limitation on the right to sue for non -

serious injuries.’” Haines, 237 N.J. at 287 (ellipses in original) (quoting

N.J.S.A. 39:6A-1.1(b) (1998)).

      New Jersey’s automobile liability insurance laws require that owners of

motor vehicles registered or principally garaged in New Jersey maintain

“minimum amounts of standard, basic, or special liability insurance coverage

for bodily injury, death, and property damage caused by their vehicles.”

Caviglia v. Royal Tours of Am., 178 N.J. 460, 466 (2004) (citing N.J.S.A.

39:6B-1). Every policy must “contain [PIP] benefits for the payment of

benefits without regard to negligence, liability or fault of any kind” for the

named insured and members of his or her family residing in his or her

household who sustain bodily injury in an accident. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-4.

      If a named insured elects the limitation-on-lawsuit option, certain third-

party tortfeasors are exempted “from tort liability for noneconomic loss”

unless the insured “sustained a bodily injury which results in death;

dismemberment; significant disfigurement or significant scarring; displaced

fractures; loss of a fetus; or a permanent injury within a reasonable degree of

                                         21
medical probability, other than scarring or disfigurement.” N.J.S.A. 39:6A -

8(a). To recover for noneconomic loss, an insured must therefore “vault” the

limitation-on-lawsuit threshold by “establish[ing] that ‘as a result of bodily

injury, arising out of the . . . operation . . . or use of’ an automobile, she has

‘sustained a bodily injury which results in’ one of the enumerated categories of

serious injury, including ‘a permanent injury within a reasonable degree of

medical probability.’” Davidson v. Slater, 189 N.J. 166, 186 (2007) (quoting

N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a)); DiProspero, 183 N.J. at 488; Caviglia, 178 N.J. at 470

n.4.

       As used in N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a), the term “noneconomic loss” is defined

as “pain, suffering and inconvenience.” N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(i). Economic loss,

in contrast, is defined as “uncompensated loss of income or property, or other

uncompensated expenses, including, but not limited to, medical expenses .”

N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k).

       In AICRA, the Legislature retained the No-Fault Act’s provision

precluding the admission of evidence of PIP benefits “collectible or paid”

under an insured’s automobile insurance policy:

             Except as may be required in an action brought
             pursuant to [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-9.1], evidence of the
             amounts collectible or paid under a standard
             automobile insurance policy pursuant to [N.J.S.A.
             39:6A-4 and -10], amounts collectible or paid for

                                         22
            medical expense benefits under a basic automobile
            insurance policy pursuant to [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1], and
            amounts collectible or paid for benefits under a special
            automobile insurance policy pursuant to [N.J.S.A.
            39:6A-3.3] to an injured person, including the amounts
            of any deductibles, copayments or exclusions,
            including exclusions pursuant to [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-4.3],
            otherwise compensated is inadmissible in a civil action
            for recovery of damages for bodily injury by such
            injured person.

            [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12.]

      That section was intended to ensure that an “injured person who was the

beneficiary of the PIP payments could not and should not recover from the

tortfeasor the medical, hospital and other losses for which he had already been

reimbursed.” Cirelli v. Ohio Cas. Ins. Co., 72 N.J. 380, 387 (1977). The

Legislature intended the provision to further ancillary goals of “easing court

congestion and lowering automobile insurance costs.” Bardis v. First Trenton

Ins. Co., 199 N.J. 265, 279 (2009).

      AICRA’s collateral source rule retains, among other exceptions, the No-

Fault Act’s exception for workers’ compensation benefits. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6

provides in part:

            The benefits provided in [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-4 and -10],
            the medical expense benefits provided in [N.J.S.A.
            39:6A-3.1] and the benefits provided in [N.J.S.A.
            39:6A-3.3] shall be payable as loss accrues, upon
            written notice of such loss and without regard to

                                       23
            collateral sources, except that benefits, collectible
            under workers’ compensation insurance, . . . shall be
            deducted from the benefits collectible under [N.J.S.A.
            39:6A-4 and -10], the medical expense benefits
            provided in [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1] and the benefits
            provided in [N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.3].

      The collateral source rule imposes the primary obligation to pay both

benefits covered by workers’ compensation and PIP benefits “on the employer

rather than the PIP insurer and reflects a legislative policy determination that

losses resulting from work-related automobile accidents should be borne by

the ‘ultimate consumers of the goods and services in whose production they

are incurred’ as opposed to ‘the automobile-owning public’ in general.”

Portnoff v. N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Co., 392 N.J. Super. 377, 383 (App. Div. 2007)

(quoting Lefkin, 229 N.J. Super. at 12).

      Thus, the Legislature made clear that when an employee injured in a

work-related accident is entitled to benefits under the Workers’ Compensation

Act, that statute -- not AICRA -- provides his or her primary source of

recovery for medical expenses and lost wages. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6. It

envisioned that the employer or its workers’ compensation carrier will pay

medical and disability benefits to the injured employee, and that the employee

will neither seek nor receive PIP benefits under his automobile policy, thus

                                       24
obviating the need for his or her automobile insurer to pay those benefits.

Ibid.

        Significantly, when it enacted AICRA, the Legislature did not amend the

Workers’ Compensation Act to eliminate or circumscribe the statutory right of

subrogation in cases involving injuries to employees in motor vehicle

accidents. N.J.S.A. 34:15-40. It left that provision intact.

                                        D.

        In a series of decisions over three decades, the Appellate Division has

addressed challenges based on provisions of AICRA or the No-Fault Law to an

employer’s or workers’ compensation carrier’s right of subrogation under

N.J.S.A. 34:15-40.

        The first such decision was Lefkin, decided prior to AICRA’s enactment.

There, an employee injured in a work-related automobile accident received

workers’ compensation benefits, and his employer asserted a lien on any third-

party recovery that he received. Lefkin, 229 N.J. Super. at 6-7. The employee

sued his automobile insurer, seeking PIP benefits, as well as the drivers

allegedly at fault in his accident, who settled with him. Id. at 5.

        After the accident, the employee “instituted a workers’ compensation

action against his alleged employer.” Id. at 5-6. The employee argued that his

settlement with the third-party tortfeasor should not be construed to include

                                        25
payment for the medical expenses covered by workers’ compensation, because

N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12 would bar evidence of “amounts collectible or paid” under

PIP coverage in a third-party action. Id. at 8-9. He argued that “the PIP

carrier, not he, should pay the medical expense portion of the compensation

lien.” Id. at 8.

        The Appellate Division rejected that argument. Id. at 9. It held that

when workers’ compensation benefits are collected by an employee, PIP

benefits “are neither collectible nor paid,” and N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12’s bar on

evidence of “amounts collectible or paid” under PIP coverage does not apply.

Ibid. The court accordingly ruled that an injured employee who receives

workers’ compensation benefits for medical expenses and then settles with the

tortfeasor subject to a workers’ compensation lien is not entitled to be

reimbursed by his PIP insurer for the amount subject to that lien. Ibid.

        Noting the Legislature’s intent to ensure that an injured employee is

reimbursed -- but reimbursed only once -- for his medical expenses, the court

held:

              In the circumstances here, three potential sources of
              reimbursement of his medical expenses were available
              to plaintiff: workers’ compensation benefits, PIP
              benefits, and recovery from the tortfeasor. It is,
              moreover, clear that the overall legislative intention is
              ultimately to assure a plaintiff-insured-worker such
              reimbursement, but only by way of a single recovery.

                                         26
            Where only two potential payment sources are
            implicated, the controlling statute plainly dictates
            which of the two is primary. Thus, where both workers’
            compensation benefits and proceeds of a tort action
            have been recovered, the tort recovery is primary. This
            accords with the purpose of N.J.S.A. 34:15-40, which
            is to implement the employer’s right to subrogation
            against the tortfeasor responsible for its payment
            obligation to its employee. Where only workers’
            compensation benefits and PIP benefits are available,
            the primary burden is placed on workers’ compensation
            as a matter of legislative policy by way of the collateral
            source rule of N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6. And when only PIP
            benefits and tortfeasor liability are involved, the
            primary burden is placed as a matter of policy on the
            PIP carrier by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12.

            [Id. at 8-9 (citations omitted).]

      The Appellate Division thus underscored in Lefkin that absent a third-

party recovery, the primary source of reimbursement for medical benefits for

an employee injured in a motor vehicle accident in the course of the

employment is workers’ compensation. Ibid. It held, however, that if a third-

party recovery is available, the provider of the workers’ compensation benefits

has the right to assert its lien on the third-party recovery under N.J.S.A. 34:15-

40 without contravening the No-Fault Act. Ibid.

      Two years before the Legislature enacted AICRA, the Appellate

Division decided Continental, the decision on which the trial court most

heavily relied in this case. 288 N.J. Super. 185. In Continental, an employee

                                        27
who had elected the limitation-on-lawsuit threshold in his personal automobile

policy was injured in a work-related automobile accident and was paid

workers’ compensation benefits for medical expenses. Id. at 187-88. His

employer’s workers’ compensation carrier sued the alleged tortfeasor pursuant

to N.J.S.A. 34:15-40, seeking reimbursement of the workers’ compensation

benefits paid, and the tortfeasor raised the No-Fault Act’s limitation-on-

lawsuit threshold as a defense to the third-party action. Id. at 188-89. The

trial court granted the workers’ compensation carrier’s motion for partial

summary judgment striking the tortfeasor’s defense based on the limitation-on-

lawsuit threshold that was in effect under the No-Fault Law prior to AICRA.

Id. at 188.

      Reversing the trial court’s grant of partial summary judgment, the

Appellate Division acknowledged that the No-Fault Act “does not limit ‘the

right of recovery, against the tortfeasor, of uncompensated economic loss

sustained by the injured party.’” Id. at 190 (quoting N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12). It

noted, however, that had the employee been injured in an accident unrelated to

work, his sole source of benefits for medical and income continuation would

have been the PIP provisions of his automobile insurance policy, and that

under those circumstances, the employee would be precluded from pursuing a

third-party claim for those losses. Ibid. The Appellate Division reasoned that

                                       28
the “[d]efendant’s liability is not affected by the fortuitous circumstance that

[the] plaintiff was entitled to workers’ compensation benefits.” Ibid.

      The Appellate Division held in Continental that the injured employee

was “clearly entitled to receive PIP benefits for his economic loss” and that

“[w]hether he received them is immaterial” to the analysis. Ibid. Observing

that the workers’ compensation carrier’s rights “rise no higher than the

employee’s rights to which it is subrogated,” the court barred the subrogation

claim for medical expenses. Ibid. It remanded the matter to the trial court to

determine whether the employee had an uncompensated income loss, which

might give rise to a subrogation claim. Id. at 191; see also Patterson v.

Adventure Trails, 364 N.J. Super. 444, 447-49 (Law Div. 2003) (applying

Continental and AICRA to bar a workers’ compensation carrier’s subrogation

claim against a third-party tortfeasor for medical benefits paid to an injured

worker).

      Two post-AICRA Appellate Division decisions addressed that statute’s

interplay with workers’ compensation subrogation under N.J.S.A. 34:15 -40.

      In Talmadge v. Burn, an employee injured in a work-related accident

received medical, wage, and indemnity benefits from her employer’s workers’

compensation carrier. 446 N.J. Super. 413, 416 (App. Div. 2016). After the

employee settled her claim with the third-party tortfeasor, the workers’

                                        29
compensation insurer asserted a lien against her recovery. Ibid. Noting that as

a no-fault insured she was barred from recovering medical benefits from

another no-fault insured, the employee argued that the rights of the workers’

compensation carrier were limited to the rights that she could have asserted,

and that accordingly the carrier could not seek reimbursement of the benefits

that it had paid to her. Id. at 417.

      The Appellate Division rejected that “syllogism” as an “inaccurate

statement of the law.” Ibid. The court considered AICRA’s collateral source

rule, N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6, to express the Legislature’s intent that workers’

compensation -- not PIP benefits -- assume “the primary burden” when “only

workers’ compensation and PIP benefits are available” to the injured

employee. Id. at 418 (citing Lefkin, 229 N.J. Super. at 7). The court reasoned

that when workers’ compensation benefits are paid, N.J.S.A. 34:15-40’s right

of subrogation is essential to avoid a double recovery by the employee. Ibid.

(citing Frazier, 142 N.J. at 597-98). It therefore enforced the workers’

compensation lien. Id. at 419.

      In Lambert, the Appellate Division considered workers’ compensation

carriers’ appeals of trial court orders partially extinguishing liens for medical

benefits that had been imposed on injured employees’ recovery against

tortfeasors. 447 N.J. Super. at 66-70. The Appellate Division reversed those

                                        30
orders, holding that when it enacted AICRA, the Legislature “did not displace

the workers’ compensation system.” Id. at 74. Instead, the court noted,

N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6’s collateral source rule requires that benefits collectible

under workers’ compensation insurance “‘shall be deducted’” from PIP

benefits collectible under enumerated provisions of AICRA, thus “shift[ing]

the burden of providing insurance from the automobile insurance system to the

workers’ compensation system.” Ibid. (quoting N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6).

Accordingly, the Appellate Division enforced the workers’ compensation liens.

Id. at 77.

      The Appellate Division’s decision in Continental was not cited in either

Talmadge or Lambert. The Appellate Division panels in both cases, however,

declined to follow the Continental panel’s reasoning that because an individual

injured in an accident unrelated to work could have recovered medical

expenses under his automobile insurance policy, and would be barred by the

No-Fault Act from pursuing the tortfeasor for damages based on those two

categories of loss, the workers’ compensation carrier could not assert a

subrogation claim based on those benefits. See Lambert, 447 N.J. Super. at

74-77 (enforcing workers’ compensation lien for medical benefits); Talmadge,

446 N.J. Super. at 417-19 (same). Both courts relied instead on the principle

stated in Lefkin: when workers’ compensation benefits are paid to an injured

                                       31
employee for economic loss, as the collateral source rule set forth in N.J.S.A.

39:6A-6 envisions, and the PIP carrier is relieved from the obligation to pay

those benefits, AICRA poses no obstacle to a subrogation claim under N.J.S.A.

34:15-40. Ibid.

                                      IV.

      Against that backdrop, we review the Appellate Division’s decision

reversing the trial court’s grant of defendants’ motion for summary judgment

and its denial of New Jersey Transit’s motion for partial summary judgment.

Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super. at 113.

                                       A.

      We briefly comment on two procedural issues. First, we reject

defendants’ argument that the Appellate Division improperly considered the

trial court’s denial of New Jersey Transit’s motion for partial summary

judgment as well as the trial court’s grant of defendants’ summary judgment

motions. New Jersey Transit clearly appealed the trial court’s rulings on both

cross-motions for summary judgment to the Appellate Division. Moreover,

New Jersey Transit asserted before the Appellate Division the argument that it

had made before the trial court in its motion for partial summary judgment:

that N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a)’s limitation-on-lawsuit threshold should not bar its

subrogation claim. The Appellate Division did not err when it reviewed the

                                       32
trial court’s denial of New Jersey Transit’s motion for partial summary

judgment.

      Second, we acknowledge defendants’ contention that there is an

unresolved dispute as to the nature of the partial permanent disability benefits

paid to Mercogliano pursuant to N.J.S.A. 34:15-12(c). Notwithstanding New

Jersey Transit’s representation that it paid workers’ compensation benefits to

Mercogliano only for economic loss consisting of medical expenses and lost

wages, defendants claim that some or all of the partial permanent disability

benefits paid to Mercogliano actually compensated him for pain and suffering

due to his accident, thus implicating N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a)’s limitation-on-

lawsuit threshold.

      The trial court viewed the workers’ compensation benefits at issue to

compensate Mercogliano only for his economic loss in the form of medical

expenses and lost wages. The Appellate Division agreed; it expressly assumed

that this appeal implicates only benefits for economic loss. Sanchez, 457 N.J.

Super. at 112 (noting that New Jersey Transit “seeks to recover benefits to

Mercogliano for economic loss comprised of medical expenses and wage loss ,

not noneconomic loss”). The record on appeal reveals no details about the

partial permanent disability benefits that would contravene the trial court’s and

                                       33
Appellate Division’s conclusion that those benefits exclusively related to

economic loss.

      Should the trial court deem it appropriate, it has the discretion to expand

the record on remand and resolve any factual dispute about the partial

permanent disability payments made in this case. As did the Appellate

Division, we confine our analysis to workers’ compensation subrogation based

on payments made for economic loss.

                                        B.

      We concur with the Appellate Division that the Workers’ Compensation

Act reflects the Legislature’s clear intent to allow employers and carriers that

have paid workers’ compensation benefits to assert subrogation rights against

third-party tortfeasors. Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super. at 107; see also N.J.S.A.

34:15-40(b), (c), (f); Vitale, 231 N.J. at 252-55 (discussing legislative policies

reflected in Workers’ Compensation Act); Frazier, 142 N.J. at 596-98 (same);

Danesi v. Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co., 189 N.J. Super. 160, 165 (App. Div. 1983)

(same). The Legislature’s objective is clear: protected by their statutory

subrogation rights, employers and workers’ compensation carriers will

promptly pay benefits for medical expenses and other economic loss to

employees injured in the course of their employment. See N.J.S.A. 34:15-

40(b), (c), (f); Vitale, 231 N.J. at 252-55 (discussing legislative policies

                                        34
reflected in Workers’ Compensation Act); Frazier, 142 N.J. at 596-98 (same).

The subrogation claim ensures that the employee will not be awarded a double

recovery in workers’ compensation and then in a third-party claim. Frazier,

142 N.J. at 597; Marano v. Schob, 455 N.J. Super. 283, 290 (App. Div. 2018).

Consistent with those objectives, the Legislature limits the subrogation right

only by the principle that the employer’s or carrier’s right to reimbursement

“shall be only for such right of action that the injured employee or his

dependents would have had against the third person.” N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f).

      With a few words of statutory text, the Legislature could have excluded

from the Workers’ Compensation Act subrogation claims based on the

payment of benefits to an employee injured in a work-related motor vehicle

accident, and treated such an accident, for purposes of AICRA, as it treats any

other. It could have expressed its intent that AICRA alone governs benefits to

individuals injured in motor vehicle accidents, even accidents that arise in the

course of employment.

      The Legislature has declined to take such a step. It created no

exceptions to N.J.S.A. 34:15-40’s subrogation right, either before the

enactment of AICRA or in that statute’s wake, for employees eligible for PIP

benefits who are injured in work-related automobile accidents such as the

accident at issue here. See N.J.S.A. 34:15-40. As the Appellate Division

                                       35
observed in Lambert, “had the Legislature intended to effectuate such a major

change, it would have used express language in the statute and discussed that

incorporation in AICRA’s legislative history.” 447 N.J. Super. at 75.

       In the absence of direct evidence of legislative intent, the trial court

relied on the description of economic loss in AICRA’s definitional provision,

N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k). The court reasoned that once New Jersey Transit had

paid Mercogliano’s medical expenses and awarded him disability benefits,

there was no longer an “economic loss” at issue, and thus no basis for a

subrogation claim. To the trial court, the act that gave rise to New Jersey

Transit’s subrogation claim -- its payment of benefits to Mercogliano under

N.J.S.A. 34:15-15 and N.J.S.A. 34:15-12(a), (c) -- simultaneously defeated

that claim, because it left Mercogliano with no “uncompensated” loss.

       We respectfully disagree with the trial court. We discern no evidence

that the Legislature intended to bar a workers’ compensation subrogation claim

by virtue of the very benefits that created that claim in the first place. As did

the Appellate Division, we conclude that Mercogliano suffered an economic

loss in the form of medical expenses and lost wages, and that New Jersey

Transit paid him benefits for that economic loss. Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super. at

112.

                                         36
      As they did before the trial court and Appellate Division, defendants rely

primarily on the Appellate Division’s decision in Continental. They argue that

because Mercogliano would have been eligible to receive PIP benefits had he

not qualified for workers’ compensation benefits, AICRA bars New Jersey

Transit’s claim for reimbursement of the benefits it paid for that loss. We

disagree.

      The Appellate Division’s decision does not contravene N.J.S.A. 39:6A-

12. In most settings, that statute bars the admission in a third-party action of

losses “collectible or paid” by PIP benefits under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3.1, -3.3, -4,

-4.3, or -10. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12. Reimbursed for his medical expenses and

lost wages by virtue of his workers’ compensation benefits, Mercogliano was

not entitled to -- and did not receive -- PIP benefits. Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super.

at 113. As the Appellate Division noted in Lefkin, when workers’

compensation benefits are available to an injured employee, “PIP benefits in

that situation are neither collectible nor paid,” and accordingly N.J.S.A.

39:6A-12 has no bearing on the analysis. 229 N.J. Super. at 9. We are

unpersuaded by the reasoning set forth in the Continental decision as applied

to the circumstances here, and agree that the Continental decision is “contrary

to the purposes underlying the Workers’ Compensation Act.” Craig &

Pomeroy, § 12:3.

                                        37
      Moreover, N.J.S.A. 34:15-40 does not contravene AICRA’s collateral

source rule. In AICRA, the Legislature made clear its goal to provide prompt

benefits to employees injured in work-related automobile accidents, with the

ultimate responsibility to pay medical expenses imposed on the employer or its

workers’ compensation carrier. The statute’s collateral source rule provides

that workers’ compensation benefits “shall be deducted from the [PIP] benefits

collectible” under one of four enumerated provisions of AICRA. N.J.S.A.

39:6A-6. As the Appellate Division noted in Lambert, “[w]hen a worker

suffers a work-related injury in a motor vehicle accident, workers’

compensation coverage is the primary source of insurance under the collateral

source rule.” 447 N.J. Super. at 73 (citing N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6). The employer’s

or workers’ compensation carrier’s payment of workers’ compensation

benefits “relieves the PIP carrier from the obligation of making payments for

expenses incurred by the insured which are covered by workers’ compensation

benefits.” Lefkin, 229 N.J. Super. at 7.

      The result intended by the Legislature is precisely what occurred here.

Mercogliano was paid workers’ compensation benefits for his medical

expenses, temporary disability payments, and partial permanent disability

payments. He never sought or received PIP benefits from his automobile

insurer, and his accident imposed no burden on that insurer. The Legislature’s

                                       38
objective in enacting the Workers’ Compensation Act -- and N.J.S.A. 39:6A-

6’s collateral source rule -- was achieved in the setting of this appeal. New

Jersey Transit’s subrogation claim is entirely consonant with AICRA’s

collateral source rule.

      In short, we concur with the Appellate Division in this appeal that the

Lefkin, Talmadge, and Lambert decisions properly reconciled the two statutory

schemes at issue here. See Sanchez, 457 N.J. Super. at 109-13. Like those

courts, we find in AICRA no evidence that the Legislature intended to bar

subrogation claims in settings such as this.2

                                       C.

      Our dissenting colleagues devote much of their argument to an

exploration of the Legislature’s objective to reduce automobile insurance

premiums when it enacted AICRA. Post at ___ (slip op. at 1-2; 5-7; 10-11).

We agree with the dissent that the Legislature’s cost-saving goal in AICRA is

laudable and clear. That goal, however, does not resolve the question of

2
  We do not address the argument of amicus curiae NJAJ regarding potential
claims by individual plaintiffs, as distinct from subrogation claims asserted by
employers and workers’ compensation carriers that are governed by the
Workers’ Compensation Act. That argument was not raised by any party. See
Dugan v. TGI Friday’s, Inc., 231 N.J. 24, 70 n.15 (2017) (declining to reach an
issue raised by amici but not by any party); Bethlehem Twp. Bd. of Educ. v.
Bethlehem Twp. Educ. Ass’n., 91 N.J. 38, 48-49 (1982) (“[A]n amicus curiae
must accept the case before the court as presented by the parties and cannot
raise issues not raised by the parties.”).
                                         39
statutory interpretation raised by this appeal: whether one or more provisions

of AICRA should be construed to bar New Jersey Transit’s subrogation claim.

      Our dissenting colleagues adopt the trial court’s view that because New

Jersey Transit paid Mercogliano’s medical expenses and lost wages in the form

of workers’ compensation payments, there is no “economic loss” within the

meaning of N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k), and therefore no subrogation claim for such

an economic loss. Post at ___ (slip. op. at 3-4). If our dissenting colleagues

were correct that by virtue of N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k), there was no economic loss

in this case, then the dissent’s contentions regarding the impact of N.J.S.A.

39:6A-6 and -12 on a subrogation action based on an injured employee’s

economic loss, post at ___ (slip op. at 1-2, 6, 8, 10-11), would be irrelevant.

      In any event, for the reasons explained, see supra pp. 34-36, we view the

trial court’s and dissent’s application of N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k)’s definitional

language to be incorrect. We view Mercogliano’s medical payments and lost

wages to constitute economic loss and consider New Jersey Transit’s payment

of workers’ compensation benefits for medical expenses and lost wages to

derive from that loss.

      Our dissenting colleagues embrace the holding of Continental, 288 N.J.

Super. at 190. Post at ___ (slip op. at 3-4). Our colleagues evidently share

the Continental panel’s view that economic losses paid entirely through

                                       40
workers’ compensation benefits nonetheless constitute “amounts collectible or

paid” by PIP benefits inadmissible in a third-party action under N.J.S.A.

39:6A-12. We disagree. Here, Mercogliano was never “paid” PIP benefits.

Moreover, in the wake of New Jersey Transit’s award of workers’

compensation benefits for Mercogliano’s loss, his economic losses were not

“collectible” through his PIP carrier. See Lefkin, 229 N.J. Super. at 9 (“PIP

benefits are not available to an insured if workers’ compensation benefits are

also available to him.”). As noted, see supra pp. 36-38, we do not view

Continental to be persuasive as applied to this case, and instead consider

Lambert, 447 N.J. Super. 61, Talmadge, 446 N.J. Super. 413, and Lefkin, 229

N.J. Super. 1 -- unaddressed by the dissent -- to provide the more compelling

analysis.

      Finally, our dissenting colleagues enumerate three hypothetical

scenarios; in each, Mercogliano would receive PIP benefits instead of the

workers’ compensation benefits that he was actually awarded. Post at ___

(slip op. at 9). Our dissenting colleagues argue that in each of their alternative

fact patterns, N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6 or N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12 would bar a workers’

compensation subrogation claim, and that those statutes should also bar the

claim at issue here. Id. at 9-10.

                                        41
      We respectfully note that our task is not to address alternative fact

patterns distinct from the one that is before us. According to the undisputed

record, Mercogliano did not seek PIP benefits. He did not receive PIP

benefits. New Jersey Transit did not seek reimbursement from Mercogliano’s

PIP carrier, let alone prevail in such an effort. Instead, it paid the benefits as

N.J.S.A. 34:15-12(a), (c) and -15 require, and sought reimbursement only from

the third-party tortfeasor. See Lefkin, 229 N.J. Super. at 9 (noting that “where

both workers’ compensation and proceeds of a tort action have been recovered,

the tort recovery is primary.”). In the actual setting of this case, PIP benefits

were never implicated. Alternative scenarios distinct from this case should be

left for another day.

                                         D.

      We acknowledge defendants’ contention that workers’ compensation

subrogation claims arising from work-related motor vehicle accidents may

increase the volume of claims, thus exacerbating the burden on the no-fault

automobile insurance system as a whole. We also note New Jersey Transit’s

response that any such claims would be simple and easily resolved. The

Legislature has the authority to address any such concerns by amending the

Workers’ Compensation Act, AICRA, or both statutory schemes.

                                         42
      JUSTICE PATTERSON filed a concurrence, in which CHIEF JUSTICE
RABNER and JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA join. JUSTICE ALBIN filed a
dissent, in which JUSTICES LaVECCHIA and SOLOMON join. JUSTICE
TIMPONE did not participate.

                                  43
         New Jersey Transit Corporation, a/s/o David Mercogliano,

                             Plaintiff-Respondent,

                                       v.

                      Sandra Sanchez and Chad Smith,

                           Defendants-Appellants.

                         JUSTICE ALBIN, dissenting.

      The conclusion reached by my concurring colleagues will ultimately

lead to increased automobile insurance premiums and increased litigation over

economic damages incurred in work-related automobile accidents -- an

outcome in conflict with a series of legislative enactments aimed at making

automobile insurance more affordable in this State. The simple question in

this case is whether the economic costs of the injuries suffered by a driver in a

work-related automobile accident are to be borne by the workers’

compensation insurance system or the automobile insurance system. The

Legislature has answered that question.

      When a driver is involved in a work-related automobile accident and his

economic costs are recoverable under either his private automobile insurance

carrier’s personal injury protection (PIP) policy or under his employer’s

workers’ compensation scheme, New Jersey’s no-fault automobile insurance

                                        1
system makes the workers’ compensation carrier primarily responsible for

reimbursing those costs. When an injured driver’s economic losses are

“collectible” under his PIP policy but paid by his employer’s workers’

compensation carrier, the no-fault system prohibits a workers’ compensation

subrogation action against the tortfeasor or the tortfeasor’s automobile liability

insurance carrier. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6, -12. Despite the clear language and

intent of the no-fault system, the concurring opinion allows the workers’

compensation carrier here to sue the tortfeasors or their automobile insurance

carrier in a subrogation action, thus permitting the very outcome the

Legislature intended to foreclose -- more litigation and greater financial

burdens on our automobile insurance system.

      The misreading of the applicable statutory schemes compels me to

dissent from my concurring colleagues.

                                        I.

      New Jersey Transit Corporation (New Jersey Transit) employee David

Mercogliano was driving one of his employer’s vehicles when he was rear-

ended by a vehicle driven by defendant Sandra Sanchez, owned by defendant

Chad Smith, and insured by Allstate Insurance Corporation (Allstate). As a

result of his injuries, Mercogliano incurred economic damages of

approximately $7000 in medical expenses and $27,000 in lost wages -- costs

                                        2
recoverable both under his PIP policy and under his employer’s workers’

compensation policy.1 Under its workers’ compensation policy, New Jersey

Transit paid Mercogliano’s economic damages and then, in a subrogation

action, sued defendants. Because Allstate insured defendant Smith’s vehicle,

Allstate was responsible for the defense and indemnification of any liability

lawsuit as set forth in the insurance policy.

      Judge Polifroni dismissed New Jersey Transit’s subrogation action on

summary judgment on the ground that New Jersey Transit had no greater rights

than those held by Mercogliano. Mercogliano could not sue the tortfeasors (or

their automobile insurance carrier) because he did not suffer an

uncompensated loss under the no-fault system. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-2(k), -12.

Under the Workers’ Compensation Act, N.J.S.A. 34:15-1 to -146, New Jersey

Transit could not undertake a cause of action that Mercogliano had no right to

pursue against the tortfeasors. See N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f). Judge Polifroni

understood that to rule otherwise would allow workers’ compensation carriers

not only to introduce claims into the court system that the Legislature meant to

1
   The policy limits of Mercogliano’s PIP coverage were $250,000 in medical
expenses and $41,600 in lost wages. Mercogliano had selected the limitation-
on-lawsuit threshold in his policy that barred him from suing for pain-and-
suffering (noneconomic) damages in the absence of a permanent injury.
Mercogliano did not allege that he vaulted that threshold. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-
8.

                                         3
exclude, but also to shift costs allocated to the workers’ compensation system

to the automobile insurance system, in contravention of the no-fault scheme.

      Judge Polifroni followed the well-reasoned decision in Continental

Insurance Co. v. McClelland, 288 N.J. Super. 185 (App. Div. 1996). There,

the Appellate Division, addressing an issue similar to the one before us,

pointed out that “[t]he compensation carrier’s rights rise no higher than the

employee’s rights to which it is subrogated. [The employee] was clearly

entitled to receive PIP benefits for his economic loss. Whether he received

them is immaterial.” Id. at 190. Thus, in Continental, the workers’

compensation carrier could not sue the tortfeasor (or the automobile insurance

liability carrier) because of “the fortuitous circumstance that [the injured

employee] was entitled to workers’ compensation benefits.” Ibid.

      The Appellate Division panel that reversed Judge Polifroni permits a

new class of claims against automobile insurers, previously barred by

Continental, that will inevitably lead to increased insurance premiums -- an

outcome clearly not intended by the Legislature. See DiProspero v. Penn, 183

N.J. 477, 485 (2005) (“This State’s more than thirty-year history with no fault

insurance has been marked by legislative efforts to control the rising cost of

automobile insurance . . . .”); see also Haines v. Taft, 237 N.J. 271, 284-87

(2019), superseded by statute, L. 2019, cc. 244, 245; Caviglia v. Royal Tours

                                        4
of Am., 178 N.J. 460, 467 (2004). Because of the three-three split on this

Court -- three members to affirm and three members to reverse -- that mistaken

Appellate Division decision will stand. See Gallena v. Scott, 1 N.J. 430, 432

(1949).

      A brief review of the history of New Jersey’s no-fault system lays bare

the misguided path the concurrence has taken.

                                       II.

      Beginning in 1972, with the enactment of the New Jersey Automobile

Reparation Reform Act (No Fault Act), L. 1972, c. 70, the Legislature passed a

series of laws, all aimed at controlling the ever-rising cost of automobile

insurance. See DiProspero, 183 N.J. at 485. A major feature of the No Fault

Act was PIP -- a form of first-party self-insurance that automatically covers an

injured driver’s economic losses, such as medical expenses and lost wages,

regardless of fault. See ibid.; L. 1972, c. 70, § 4. In exchange for the swift

payment of economic losses paid by the PIP carrier, the No Fault Act

prohibited the injured driver from bringing a claim for economic losses

“collectible or paid” under PIP, thus eliminating costly litigation. 2 See L.

1972, c. 70, § 12; Caviglia, 178 N.J. at 467.

2
  The No Fault Act also required all drivers to carry liability insurance. L.
1972, c. 70, § 3.

                                        5
      Since its inception, and in its present iteration, our no-fault law makes

the workers’ compensation system the primary source of reimbursement for

economic damages suffered by a driver injured in a work-related automobile

accident. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6; L. 1972, c. 70, § 6. When the economic losses

incurred by a driver injured in the course of his employment are covered by

both his employer’s workers’ compensation carrier and his PIP policy, the

workers’ compensation carrier is responsible for the costs. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6.

Consistent with the overall goal of the no-fault insurance system, this rule

-- known as the collateral source rule -- was intended to lower automobile

insurance premiums by making the workers’ compensation system responsible

for the economic losses of the injured employee.

      Over decades, the Legislature made a number of alterations to the no-

fault system to further its original purpose of keeping insurance premiums

affordable. See Haines, 237 N.J. at 284-87; DiProspero, 183 N.J. at 485-86;

Caviglia, 178 N.J. at 467. Important to our analysis is the 1984 New Jersey

Automobile Insurance Freedom of Choice and Cost Containment Act (Cost

Containment Act), L. 1983, c. 362.

      With the Cost Containment Act, the Legislature again sought to achieve

“reductions in premiums for New Jersey motorists.” Statement of Governor

Thomas H. Kean to A. 3981 (Oct. 4, 1983). The Cost Containment Act

                                        6
expanded the collateral source rule by providing that when a driver’s PIP

policy pays for his economic losses that are also covered under the workers’

compensation system, the automobile carrier may seek reimbursement from

the workers’ compensation carrier. L. 1983, c. 362, § 9. By that expansion of

the collateral source rule, the Legislature made clear again its intent to shift

losses from automobile insurers to workers’ compensation carriers with the

goal of reducing automobile insurance premiums.

      The 1998 Automobile Insurance Cost Reduction Act (AICRA), N.J.S.A.

39:6A-1.1 to -35, was the Legislature’s most recent concerted effort to address

“[t]he high cost of automobile insurance in New Jersey” that forced many

lower income residents “to drop or lapse their coverage in violation of the

State’s mandatory motor vehicle insurance laws.” See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-1.1.

Although the details of AICRA are not relevant to our discussion, our present

no-fault system still requires all drivers to carry liability insurance and PIP.

See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-3, -4.3 Significantly, an injured driver whose economic

losses are “collectible or paid” under his PIP policy cannot sue the tortfeasor

(or his automobile liability carrier) for those losses; instead, the injured driver

can seek only “uncompensated” economic losses. N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12.

3
  In very limited circumstances, some individuals on government assistance
may opt for special insurance that does not require liability coverage. N.J.S.A.
39:6A-3.3.

                                         7
      The Workers’ Compensation Act, passed in 1911 -- over sixty years

before the No Fault Act -- requires employers to cover their employees’

medical expenses and lost wages for work-related accidents. See N.J.S.A.

34:15-7, -12, -15; L. 1911, c. 95. The Workers’ Compensation Act allows

employers to sue third-party tortfeasors who injure their employees on the job

as subrogees of their employees, but “only for such right of action that the

injured employee or his dependents would have had against the third person.”

N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f).

      Harmonizing the no-fault automobile insurance system with the

Workers’ Compensation Act, the economic losses suffered by a driver injured

in a work-related accident are still “collectible” under PIP, even if covered by

workers’ compensation. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12. The injured driver,

moreover, cannot sue unless he has an “uncompensated” economic loss. See

ibid. An injured driver who has been made whole by a workers’ compensation

carrier that covers his economic damages does not have an “uncompensated”

loss. See ibid. Because the injured driver would not have a cause of action

against the tortfeasor under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12, the workers’ compensation

carrier does not have a right of subrogation against the tortfeasor or his

automobile insurance carrier. See N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(f). A workers’

compensation subrogation action that shifts the cost to the automobile

                                        8
insurance system undermines the very goal of decades of no-fault automobile

insurance law.

      All three of the following outcomes are compelled by a common-sense

reading of the legislation undergirding the no-fault system, which is aimed at

eliminating economic damage lawsuits recoverable under PIP:

            (1)   had Mercogliano recovered his medical
                  expenses and lost wages through PIP, his
                  insurance company could not have sued
                  defendants (or their automobile insurance
                  carrier) in a subrogation action, see N.J.S.A.
                  39:6A-12;

            (2)   had Mercogliano not sought reimbursement of
                  his economic damages through his PIP policy or
                  through the workers’ compensation system, he
                  could not have sued defendants because those
                  damages were “collectible” under his PIP
                  policy, see N.J.S.A. 39:6A-12; and

            (3)   had Mercogliano received payment of his
                  economic damages through his PIP policy, his
                  PIP carrier would have been entitled to
                  reimbursement from New Jersey Transit because
                  Mercogliano’s injuries were work-related, see
                  N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6.

      If those outcomes are compelled -- if Mercogliano and his PIP carrier

cannot sue defendants’ automobile liability insurance carrier for compensated

economic losses, and if Mercogliano and his PIP carrier can both seek the

payment of economic losses from the workers’ compensation carrier -- it

makes no sense that the legislative scheme would allow the workers’

                                       9
compensation carrier to seek reimbursement from defendants’ automobile

insurance carrier.

      The legislative policy underlying the no-fault system is to reduce the

burdens placed on our automobile insurance system that have made insurance

premiums unaffordable to many New Jersey residents. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-

1.1. The subrogation action that my concurring colleagues allow defeats “a

legislative policy determination that losses resulting from work -related

automobile accidents should be borne by the ‘ultimate consumers of the goods

and services in whose production they are incurred’ as opposed to ‘the

automobile-owning public’ in general.” See Portnoff v. N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Co.,

392 N.J. Super. 377, 383 (App. Div. 2007) (quoting Lefkin v. Venturini, 229

N.J. Super. 1, 12 (App. Div. 1988)).

      Indeed, the reason that the workers’ compensation system is given

primary responsibility for covering economic damages for work-related

vehicular accidents is to relieve the financial pressure on the automobile

insurance system.

                                       III.

      The relentless logic of the No Fault Act and successor enactments

forbids a workers’ compensation carrier from seeking reimbursement in a

subrogation action, therefore reducing costly litigation and lowering

                                        10
automobile insurance premiums. Because Mercogliano was injured in the

course of his employment, New Jersey Transit covered his economic losses.

That result fulfilled the purpose of the no-fault system’s collateral source rule,

shifting the losses from the automobile insurance industry to workers’

compensation. See N.J.S.A. 39:6A-6. Permitting New Jersey Transit to sue

defendants and their automobile insurance carrier for the economic losses, as

the concurrence does, shifts the costs right back to the automobile insurance

system. I therefore respectfully dissent.

      Our task is to give life to the Legislature’s policy choices. If the

concurrence has misconstrued the interplay between the no-fault system and

the Workers’ Compensation Act, as I believe it has, the Legislature has the

power to correct the misinterpretation of its enactments.

                                        11