Court Opinion

ID: 4433956
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-08-28 14:07:04.395651+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:53:02.926065
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                                APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
        This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
     internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited . R. 1:36-3.

                                                          SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                          APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                          DOCKET NO. A-1229-16T2

MARK J. RAGNACCI and
AURELIA RAGNACCI,
husband and wife,

           Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

MEDHAT GHABA,

     Defendant-Respondent.
____________________________

                    Argued October 24, 2018 – Decided August 28, 2019

                    Before Judges Nugent and Mawla.

                    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                    Division, Mercer County, Docket No. L-1339-14.

                    Kenneth William Thayer argued the cause for
                    appellants (Gaylord Popp LLC, attorneys; Kenneth
                    William Thayer, on the brief).

                    Lori A. Kaniper argued the cause for respondent
                    (Sponder & Sellitti, attorneys; Lori A. Kaniper, on the
                    brief).

PER CURIAM
      Plaintiff, Mark J. Ragnacci, appeals from an order that dismissed his

personal injury action after a jury returned a verdict of no cause of action.1 The

jury found plaintiff had not suffered a permanent injury as defined in the

limitation on lawsuit option ("verbal threshold"), N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a). Plaintiff

contends the trial court committed reversible error by allowing defense counsel

to cross-examine plaintiff's medical expert about the percent of partial total

disability to the neck and back the expert had once opined plaintiff had sustained

in a workers' compensation accident. We conclude that, if error, the admission

of the testimony was harmless. Accordingly, we affirm.

      Defendant Medhat Ghaba stipulated to liability for causing the November

2012 rear-end collision in which plaintiff was injured. Plaintiff conceded he

was subject to the verbal threshold. During trial, the parties mostly disputed the

cause and extent of the injuries to plaintiff's neck or cervical spine, left shoulder,

and lower back or lumbar spine. Plaintiff claimed his injuries were caused by

the accident and were permanent, that is, they "ha[d] not healed to function

normally and [would] not heal to function normally with further medical

treatment." N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8(a). Defendant claimed he was exempt from

1
  Because plaintiff Aurelia Ragnacci's per quod claim is derivative, and because
the sole issue on appeal involves Mark J. Ragnacci only, we refer to him in his
opinion as "plaintiff."
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                                          2
liability for noneconomic loss because plaintiff suffered no permanent injuries

in the accident.

        To prove he suffered a permanent injury, plaintiff described the impact

caused by the collision—"pretty good"—and presented evidence about the

moderate damage to the two vehicles. He drove to his home after the accident

and had his wife take him to a hospital emergency room. There, he complained

of neck and shoulder pain.        Hospital personnel took x-rays, prescribed

medication, and discharged him.

        Approximately a week later, plaintiff came under the care of Dr. Barry

Douglass Fass, a board-certified physiatrist, a specialist in physical medicine

and rehabilitation. The doctor and the medical personnel in his office treated

plaintiff for the impairment and pain in his neck, shoulders, middle-back and

lower back. Plaintiff was also experiencing tingling through his left leg. He

remained under Dr. Fass's care from November 29, 2012 through October 8,

2013.

        Plaintiff's treatment included chiropractic manipulation, electrical

stimulation, hot compresses, and physical therapy.       Two months into his

treatment, on December 26, 2012, plaintiff underwent magnetic resonance

imaging (MRI) of his cervical and lumbar spine. As the result of deficits the

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MRIs revealed, plaintiff's treatment changed to invasive modalities, including

what plaintiff described as injections of Novocain into his neck and lower back,

and an injection into his spinal column under general anesthesia. He also had

electromyography (EMG), which showed pain was "radiating" or going down

into both his legs "but more into the left leg." Dr. Fass referred him for a

consultation with a surgeon.

      According to plaintiff, his treatment with Dr. Fass ended in October 2013

"[b]ecause they couldn't do any more for me." Although the treatment ended,

plaintiff's pain and impairment continued. He described for the jury his ongoing

pain and discomfort, as well as the continuing impairment that affected his

ability to sleep, perform routine daily activities, play with his child, and have a

normal relationship with his wife.      His wife testified and corroborated his

testimony.   During plaintiff's testimony, he explained that the injuries he

suffered to his neck and lower back in a 2007 work accident were not really

causing him discomfort before the 2012 automobile accident.

       The three doctors who testified described the function of intervertebral

discs. One analogized a disc to the "tired analogy [of] a jelly doughnut or tire."

A disc has "an outer lining or an outer skin [like] a jelly doughnut. The inside

is a gelatinous material called the nucleus that's made up of various . . .

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components that allow shock absorption movement and provides some

stability." Bulges and herniations describe the contour of the disk. A bulge

could be analogized to the flattening of a tire, whereas a herniation, which is

more focused, could be analogized to a protruding bubble in a tire.

      Another doctor explained that in a normal disc the spinal cord is in the

middle surrounded by fluid, which acts as a lubricant and allows sliding and

bending forward and backward. If a disc herniates, there is a tear in the rim that

holds it. By definition, a disc bulge has no focality and is three millimeters or

less, whereas herniations are three millimeters or more and have a "focal hook."

      Plaintiff presented the testimony of a board certified radiologist who

interpreted the December 2012 MRIs.         She said the cervical MRI showed

herniated cervical discs at C2-3 and C5-6. The herniations appeared to be

"newer" because they showed no signs of degeneration, which occurs over time

after a disc herniates. The lumbar MRI showed both bulging and a herniation at

the L4-5 disc. The herniation was seven millimeters and compressed the spinal

cord. The MRI also revealed a disc herniation at L5-S1 with impingement of

the "S-1 root." According to the radiologist, the impingement of the nerve root

by the L4-5 disc was not a degenerative condition.         The herniations were

permanent, abnormal conditions.

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                                        5
      Dr. Fass, plaintiff's treating physician, recounted plaintiff's course of

treatment, reviewed the diagnostic studies, including an EMG of plaintiff's legs

that revealed "acute nerve damage in the lower part of both legs which correlated

with the nerve that was injured from the disc," and explained his final diagnosis

and prognosis. When he discharged plaintiff, the doctor's diagnosis included

"bilateral L5-S1 radiculopathy," that is, damage to a "low back nerve that goes

into his leg." His final diagnosis also included cervical, thoracic, and left

shoulder strain; disc herniations at C2-3, C5-6, L4-5, and L5-S1; and disc

bulging at L4-5.

      Dr. Fass opined that plaintiff had sustained permanent injuries to his neck

and lower back caused by the accident. According to the doctor, plaintiff's

injuries were structural and were not going to heal to plaintiff's pre-injury state.

Consequently, "[plaintiff] would continue to experience discomfort and

limitations of his activities into the future."

      Plaintiff's counsel asked Dr. Fass about the injuries plaintiff had suffered

in the previous work accident. The doctor explained that plaintiff's primary

injury in the work accident was to his ulnar nerve. The nerve damage was not

affected or exacerbated as a result of the automobile accident. Concerning the

neck and back injuries plaintiff sustained in the work accident, Dr. Fass said that

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                                          6
when he first saw plaintiff following the automobile accident, plaintiff "noted

that his neck and back pain had improved and he was performing normal daily

activities up until the time of the [automobile] accident."

      Dr. Fass explained that plaintiff did not have radiating pain or numbness

into his legs following the work accident; those symptoms developed after the

motor vehicle accident. The doctor added, "the disc abnormalities by MRI were

significantly worse following the 2012 motor vehicle accident including the

herniation pressing the nerve at . . . L5-S1 causing that, to me, in my opinion

. . . the numbness . . . in his legs was never present prior to the motor vehicle

accident."

      The court had ruled during argument on a pretrial motion in limine that

defendant could cross-examine the doctor about plaintiff's prior workers'

compensation accident. Dr. Fass had written a report for plaintiff in which he

opined as to the percent of partial permanent disability plaintiff had suffered to

his cervical and lumbar spine in the work accident, and the court had ruled the

doctor could be cross-examined about that.         Based on its analysis under

N.J.R.E.403, the court concluded such evidence had probative value that was

not substantially outweighed by countervailing factors such as undue prejudice

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                                        7
or confusion of issues. In addition, the court determined the differences could

be adequately explained to the jury.

      Apparently anticipating such cross-examination, plaintiff's counsel

prefaced a question to Dr. Fass with this remark: "I assume on cross[-]

examination you're going to be asked some questions on those prior evaluations

you did for the purposes of workers' compensation." Counsel then questioned

the doctor extensively about the subject.

      Plaintiff's counsel asked the doctor to explain the difference between a

workers' compensation evaluation on one hand, and rendering an opinion as a

treating physician in a vehicular negligence case on the other. During his

explanation, the doctor noted about workers' compensation claims, "New Jersey

State has its own standard of different—hundreds of different injuries and each

one of them has some type of percentage of total body part." The doctor noted

that was why in workers' compensation he was required to opine on "a

percentage of injury of a specific body part[.]" The doctor also explained the

differences in the definitions of permanent disability for workers' compensation

and permanent injury in vehicular accident cases. The doctor said the two areas

of law provided "separate classification[s] and . . . separate regulations and laws

regarding . . . what's considered work comp and what's considered through a

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                                        8
motor vehicle. So the verbiage is different." He added that he was not asked to

come up with percentages for motor vehicle accidents; percentages are required

in workers' compensation claims. The doctor told the jury, "it's basically just a

different type of, you know, procedural and verbiage and language for different

accidents. It could be the same part of the body but . . . you have to come [up]

with a different form depending on . . . which type of accident it was."

      The doctor concluded that the automobile accident "was an aggravation

of neck and back injuries with worsening disc abnormalities. The nerve damage

to the legs was never present so that's a . . . brand new injury."

      Defense counsel did not ask on cross-examination about the percent of

partial permanent disability Doctor Fass had opined plaintiff suffered to his

cervical and lumbar spine in the workers' compensation accident. Following

cross-examination and redirect examination, defense counsel brought out on re-

cross-examination that the doctor had found "permanency" as a result of the

workers' compensation accident. This is the exchange:

            [Defense Counsel]: And in fact you indicate a
            percentage of permanent partial disability for purposes
            of workers' comp but that's what you say in your
            examination and your narrative report of 2010, correct?

            [Doctor]:    I do. Yes.

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                                         9
            [Defense counsel]: And in fact you specifically say in
            your last report, November 30, 2010, [fifty-five
            percent] permanent partial disability of the cervical
            spine, correct?

            [Doctor]:   Yes.

            [Defense Counsel]:         Fifty-five percent permanent
            partial disability of the left upper extremity, correct?

            [Doctor]:   Yes.

            [Defense Counsel]: And [fifty] percent permanent
            partial disability of the lumbar spine, correct?

            [Doctor]:    Yes.

      Plaintiff's counsel asked follow-up questions on further redirect

examination. Specifically, he asked the doctor how percentages required under

workers' compensation law differed from an opinion of permanency in an

automobile accident case. The doctor essentially reiterated the answers he had

originally given during direct examination.

      Dr. Alan Sarokhan, a board certified orthopedic surgeon, testified for the

defense. He examined plaintiff at the request of defendant, and he reviewed

plaintiff's medical records, including the MRI studies. He noted plaintiff had

sustained injuries to his neck and back in a work accident in 2007, and medical

records documented continuing pain or impairment from those injuries through

                                                                        A-1229-16T2
                                      10
2010 or 2011. The doctor pointed out that plaintiff underwent permanency

evaluations for his workers' compensation claim.

      Dr. Sarokhan reviewed MRI studies of plaintiff's neck and back that were

completed in 2007—following the workers' compensation accident—and

compared them to the December 2012 MRI studies. He explained what a doctor

would expect to see on an MRI study following traumatic injury to the spine and

said he found no evidence of trauma on the 2015 MRI studies.

      On the other hand, the doctor testified the 2007 studies showed significant

degenerative changes in plaintiff's cervical and lumbar spine. He described the

degenerative process, explained how over years degeneration could result in

spinal disc herniations and bulging, and concluded the deficits seen on the

December 2012 MRIs were caused by a normal degenerative process in

plaintiff's spine that was evident five years earlier following the 2007 work

accident. The doctor also told the jury that radiculopathy is not an injury, but

rather "simply an electrical diagnosis." The doctor said "the overwhelming

majority of radiculopathy can be resolved[.]" The doctor thus concluded, more

likely than not, plaintiff's "radiculopathy" was not permanent.

      In its charge, the court instructed the jury about the workers' compensation

accident:

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                                      11
                   You have heard testimony and argument
             regarding the plaintiff's claim in workers' compensation
             court. Please understand that the term permanency as
             used in the workers' compensation court case has
             different legal standards than the term permanent injury
             used in this case and as provided to you in these
             instructions. The permanency evidence from the
             workers' compensation case may be considered by you,
             along with all of the other evidence in this case in
             evaluating whether or not plaintiff sustained a
             permanent injury that was [proximately] caused by the
             November 23, 2012 accident. Once again, you're
             instructed that the legal standard you must follow to
             determine whether plaintiff sustained a permanent
             injury is the legal standard contained in this jury
             instruction.

      The jury returned its verdict by answering "No" to the following question:

"Has the plaintiff Mark Ragnacci proven by a preponderance of the evidence

that he sustained a permanent injury that was proximately caused by the

November 23, 2012 accident?" This appeal followed.

      On appeal, plaintiff argues, "the testimony as to prior findings of partial

permanent disability predicated upon estimates of percentages of partial

permanency, which came to light on questioning on re-cross and not cross, was

misleading to the jury and caused confusion and undue prejudice in violation of

N.J.R.E. 403." Plaintiff contends the workers' compensation percentages of

disability had no bearing on the verbal threshold issue the parties were litigating

at trial.   Plaintiff further contends the admission of this testimony was

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                                       12
exacerbated by the court's inadequate instruction to the jury, which did not

explain "the meaning and the significance of the estimates of partial permanent

disability presented to the jury during the charge phase of the trial."

      Our trial courts are vested with broad discretion in determining whether

proffered evidence is relevant, and if so, whether it should be excluded under

N.J.R.E. 403 because its probative value is substantially outweighed by the risk

of undue prejudice, confusion of issues, misleading the jury, or other

considerations. Wymbs v. Twp. of Wayne, 163 N.J. 523, 537 (2000). For that

reason, we review such decisions for abuse of discretion. Estate of Hanges v.

Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 202 N.J. 369, 383-84 (2010). A party may

demonstrate such an abuse of discretion by establishing the trial court's ruling

resulted in "manifest error or injustice," Hisenaj v. Kuhner, 194 N.J. 6, 20 (2008)

(quoting State v. Torres, 183 N.J. 554, 572 (2005)); or by demonstrating "there

has been a clear error of judgment." State v. Brown, 170 N.J. 138, 147 (2001)

(quoting State v. Marrero, 148 N.J. 469, 484 (1997)).

      Here, plaintiff has demonstrated neither manifest error, injustice, nor a

clear error of judgment. The percent of partial permanent disability plaintiff

suffered to his neck and back in the work accident arguably had probative value.

Plaintiff's expert testified that the injuries plaintiff sustained in the automobile

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                                        13
accident aggravated and exacerbated the cervical and lumbar injuries plaintiff

had sustained in the work accident. The percentages could have aided the jury

by providing a more concrete understanding of the extent of the aggravation.

      That said, the testimony potentially opened the door to plaintiff eliciting

testimony from Doctor Fass concerning the percentage of partial permanent

disability plaintiff was left with in his neck and back following the automobile

accident.    That would have led to an undue distraction: arguments about

percentage of injuries relevant to the precise compensation a petitioner is

entitled to as the result of a workers' compensation accident, but having little to

do with the compensation a plaintiff is entitled to in a negligence action, and

little if anything to do with the verbal threshold's definition of a permanent

injury.     The better course would have been to bar questions about percentages

of partial permanent disability and confine questioning to the doctor's opinion

that plaintiff had previously suffered permanent injuries.

      Regardless, even if admission of the testimony was error, it was harmless.

R. 2:10-2. Plaintiff's treating physician provided a lucid explanation of the

differences of the deficits in plaintiff's cervical and lumbar spine based on

comparison of the MRI studies following the work accident with those following

the vehicular accident. The defense expert gave an equally lucid explanation of

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                                       14
the differences, but attributed them to a degenerative process, rather than the

automobile accident.

      In addition, plaintiff's treating physician provided the jury with a clear

explanation of the difference in terminology and criteria between workers'

compensation cases and verbal threshold cases. Not only did plaintiff's treating

physician clearly explain the differences, but the trial court adequately

instructed the jury on how it could consider testimony about the percentages of

partial permanent disability that plaintiff's treating physician had given in the

workers' compensation case.

      In short, it was clear from the expert testimony and the court's instruction

to the jury that the central issue in the case was whether the injuries evidenced

by the spinal disc deficits displayed on the post-vehicular accident MRI films

were caused by trauma from the automobile accident or resulted from a

degenerative process. Considering all of the evidence presented to the jury, the

arguments of counsel, and the trial court's instruction, it cannot be reasonably

concluded that the brief testimony of plaintiff's physician about disability

percentages, on re-cross examination, was of such a nature as to have been

clearly capable of producing an unjust result. R. 2:10-2.

      Affirmed.

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                                      15