Court Opinion

ID: 9931076
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-08 15:07:00.093883+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:16:13.927633
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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     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-0572-22

JOHN VALDEZ,

          Plaintiff-Respondent/
          Cross-Appellant,

v.

GEORGE MITILENES and
HORSEHILL PROPERTIES,
LLC,

          Defendants-Appellants/
          Cross-Respondents.

                   Submitted January 29, 2024 – Decided February 8, 2024

                   Before Judges Sabatino and Vinci.

                   On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                   Division, Morris County, Docket No. L-0584-19.

                   Donnelly Minter & Kelly, LLC, attorneys for
                   appellants/cross-respondents (Patrick B. Minter, of
                   counsel; Thomas J. Coffey, III, and Alison L. Moody,
                   on the briefs).
            The Harrell Law Firm, LLC, attorneys for
            respondent/cross-appellant (Kenneth McCall Harrell
            and Leigh Ann Raffauf, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

      This personal injury case arose from an accident in New York City on

June 18, 2018, in which a pickup truck owned by defendant Horsehill Properties,

LLC, and driven by defendant George Mitilenes collided with a car owned and

driven by plaintiff John Valdez. Plaintiff sustained neck and back injuries as a

result of the collision. He had cervical and lumbar injections, culminating with

lumbar fusion surgery in May 2019.

      The case was tried before a jury in May 2022 during the COVID-19

pandemic. The jury found defendant 80% at fault for the accident and plaintiff

20% comparatively negligent. Those liability findings have not been appealed.

      As for damages, the jury awarded plaintiff $20,000 in pain and suffering,

$80,000 in past lost wages, and $230,000 for unpaid medical expenses above his

$50,000 Personal Injury Protection ("PIP") coverage.       These figures were

molded by the court and reduced by 20% to take into account plaintiff's

comparative fault. The net award, as molded, was $263,966.63. The court also

awarded $14,183.23 in prejudgment interest.

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                                        I.

      Defendants solely raise issues on appeal contesting the award of damages.

In particular, defendants appeal the trial court's decisions allowing plaintiff to

present to the jury a lost wage claim and evidence of unpaid medical bills.

      Plaintiff cross-appeals, solely with respect to the trial court's

undercalculation of prejudgment interest.       Defendants agree prejudgment

interest was calculated incorrectly.

      For the reasons that follow, we affirm the damages awarded by the jury

and therefore deny defendants' appeal. However, as to plaintiff's unopposed

cross-appeal, we remand to the trial court to correct its calculation of

prejudgment interest.

                                       A.

      We first consider defendants' challenge to the award of lost wages. This

is the pertinent background.

      Before the accident, plaintiff did general maintenance work at an

apartment complex. He testified that he could no longer perform those tasks

after the accident because, in his words, it was "heavy duty work."

      To substantiate his injuries, plaintiff presented expert testimony from his

treating orthopedic surgeon. The surgeon first saw plaintiff in October 2018, at

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which time plaintiff presented with neck and back pain extending into his hips

and legs. The surgeon reexamined plaintiff in March 2019, and noted plaintiff's

symptoms had worsened. According to the surgeon, plaintiff's responses to a

low back pain questionnaire rated him 100% disabled. Eventually, the surgeon

performed the aforementioned fusion procedure in May 2019. Plaintiff reported

that the surgery improved his condition. The surgeon opined that plaintiff's

condition was causally related to the motor vehicle accident, and that the

medical treatment provided to him was necessary and appropriate.

      Defendants' orthopedic expert examined plaintiff in June 2020, about a

year after his surgery. Based on that examination and a review of the pertinent

records, the defense expert opined that plaintiff exhibited a normal range of

cervical motion, but a diminished lumbar range of motion that would be

expected from a lumbar fusion. The examination was otherwise normal.

      Defendants maintain plaintiff did not present sufficient evidence to

establish his claim of lost wages. They stress that his medical expert did not

specify in his testimony that plaintiff was unable to work after the accident.

Defendants consequently moved to dismiss the lost wage claim at the end of

plaintiff's case in chief. The trial court denied that midtrial motion, without

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prejudice. Defendants renewed the motion at the end of the trial, and the court

reserved its decision.

        After the jury verdict was returned, the court heard further argument on

the lost wages issue. Following that argument, the court denied defendants'

motion. With respect to plaintiff's inability to work, the court noted that plaintiff

had presented evidence of his limited post-accident range of motion of his arm,

neck, and shoulder.

        The court also noted that the jury had specifically inquired during their

deliberations about the dates on which the parties' medical experts had examined

plaintiff, which was indicative of their attentiveness to the timing of plaintiff's

recovery. In fact, as plaintiff's brief points out, the jury's $80,000 lost wages

award is roughly consistent with a determination that plaintiff was able to

resume work by the time he was examined by the defense orthopedist in June

2020.

        On appeal, defendants repeat their contention that plaintiff's wage claim

lacked sufficient evidential support. We reject that contention. To be sure, a

personal injury plaintiff seeking recovery of lost wages has the burden of

showing by a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff was unable to work

as the result of injuries caused by the subject accident. Caldwell v. Haynes, 136

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N.J. 422, 436 (1994); see also Model Jury Charges (Civil), 8.11C, "Loss of

Earnings" (Jul. 2010).

      Plaintiff presented adequate credible evidence here to satisfy that burden,

including but not limited to his own testimony recounting his post-accident

limitations and the nature of his work as a maintenance employee, his treating

surgeon's findings of his condition and the consequences of his treatment, his

100% rating on the disability questionnaire, and the corroborating medical

records moved into evidence.

      Although plaintiff's doctor did not specifically state in his testimony that

plaintiff was unable to perform his job duties after the accident, the jury could

have reasonably inferred that physical condition from the evidence as a whole.

Indeed, the jury reasonably cut off the lost wages as of the time when defendants'

expert determined he had recovered most of his physical capabilities. The wage

calculations themselves for the three years in question (2018, 2019 and part of

2020) were amply supported by unopposed testimony from plaintiff's expert

accountant.

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                                          B.

         Defendants further argue the trial court erred in allowing plaintiff to be

reimbursed for unpaid medical expenses. This issue was also the subject of

midtrial and post-trial motions by defendants, which the trial court denied.

         It is undisputed that, under the terms of his automobile insurance policy

and applicable New York law, plaintiff's PIP coverage was capped at $50,000.

Once plaintiff's medical bills exhausted that cap, he was eligible to have the jury

award him the reasonable amount of unpaid bills over that threshold.

         Plaintiff retained an expert in medical billing to evaluate the charges for

the medical services he had been provided. The expert reviewed the bills as they

existed prior to trial. She rendered a report that was served on the defense on

January 12, 2021, approximately two weeks after the discovery period ended,

along with a certification under Rule 4:17-7. Her report opined that plaintiff

had incurred medical bills totaling $296,778.58, based on usual and customary

rates.

         Despite the fact that the billing expert's report was served slightly out of

time, defendants did not move to strike it before trial. The trial took place over

a year later in May 2022.

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        After the trial started, plaintiff's billing expert updated her opinions and

calculations based on the results of recent PIP arbitrations involving plaintiff's

medical providers. Her updated report was served on defendants before she

testified. In her testimony, the expert explained her calculations and why she

concluded that plaintiff's medical bills substantially exceeded the $50,000 PIP

cap.

        We discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court's decision to allow

plaintiff's medical billing expert to present her opinions and calculations to the

jury.   See Ehrlich v. Sorokin, 451 N.J. Super. 119, 128 (App. Div. 2017)

(reiterating the well-settled principle that trial court rulings on the admissibility

of evidence are generally reviewed on appeal by an abuse-of-discretion

standard). The expert presented a sound basis for her analysis of the bills.

        In addition, we decline defendants' urging that we vacate the unpaid

medical expense award as a sanction for plaintiff serving the report and the

updated report outside of the discovery period. As we noted, defendants did not

lodge a timely objection to the late report when it was served, and took no action

for more than a year thereafter until the time of trial. The trial court did not

misapply its wide discretion over discovery-related matters in declining to

impose sanctions on plaintiff, in the circumstances presented. Pomerantz Paper

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                                          8
Corp. v. New Cmty. Corp., 207 N.J. 344, 371 (2011) (recognizing the civil trial

court's wide discretion over discovery-related matters).

      Moreover, as plaintiff's brief points out, the collateral source rule codified

at N.J.S.A. 2A:15-97 precludes a double recovery of medical expenses. The

record contains no evidence that plaintiff's medical providers accepted their

portions of the PIP cap, as determined in arbitration, as payment in full. We

conclude the award of unpaid medical expenses was proper and should be

sustained. Perreira v. Rediger, 169 N.J. 399, 409 (2001).

                                        II.

      As noted above, plaintiff's cross-appeal asserts that the final judgment

miscalculated prejudgment interest by omitting the two percent enhancement

prescribed by Rule 4:42-11(a)(iii). Defendant does not dispute this omission,

nor the need to remand for recalculation of the interest award. Accordingly, we

grant the unopposed relief sought in the cross-appeal.

      Affirmed in part, remanded in part as to the prejudgment interest

calculation. We do not retain jurisdiction.

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