Thomas Demarco v. Sean Robert Stoddard, D.P.m(073949) , 223 N.J. 363 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. 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 Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Thomas DeMarco v. Sean Robert Stoddard, D.P.M. (A-104-13) (073949)
    Argued April 27, 2015 -- Decided December 1, 2015
    CUFF, P.J.A.D. (temporarily assigned), writing for a majority of the Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether the Rhode Island Medical Malpractice Joint Underwriting
    Association (RIJUA) must defend and indemnify a podiatrist in a medical malpractice action pending in New Jersey
    following rescission of the podiatrist’s malpractice liability policy.
    Defendant Sean Robert Stoddard, D.P.M. practiced podiatry at a clinic with offices in Toms River and
    Lakewood. In 2007, he applied to the RIJUA for medical malpractice liability insurance. Among other
    representations, the application indicated that at least fifty-one percent of Dr. Stoddard’s practice was generated in
    Rhode Island; that answer was false. Dr. Stoddard submitted renewal applications from 2008 through 2011, each of
    which stated that at least fifty-one percent of Dr. Stoddard’s practice was generated in Rhode Island.
    Dr. Stoddard performed three surgeries on plaintiff Thomas DeMarco, a New Jersey resident. The third
    surgery occurred in September 2010. In October 2011, DeMarco and his wife filed a medical malpractice complaint
    in New Jersey alleging that Dr. Stoddard negligently performed the September 2010 surgery. Dr. Stoddard
    forwarded the complaint to the RIJUA, which responded with a reservation of rights letter stating that the RIJUA
    only provides coverage for physicians who maintain fifty-one percent of their “professional time and efforts” in
    Rhode Island, and that the RIJUA was “in the process of securing facts concerning whether [Dr. Stoddard] . . . met
    the fifty-one percent (51%) requirement for the provision of insurance coverage from the [RI]JUA.”
    In January 2012, the RIJUA filed declaratory judgment action in Rhode Island, naming both Dr. Stoddard
    and the DeMarcos as defendants. The RIJUA sought a declaration that Dr. Stoddard misrepresented material
    information in his insurance applications and a judgment permitting rescission of the policy. In March 2012, the
    DeMarcos named the RIJUA as a defendant in their medical malpractice action, and sought a declaratory judgment
    that the RIJUA was required to defend Dr. Stoddard and indemnify him up to $1 million. In May 2012, the Rhode
    Island court entered a default judgment against Dr. Stoddard, declaring his 2010-2011 renewal policy void and
    holding that the RIJUA had no duty to defend or indemnify him for the DeMarcos’ claims. Thereafter, the RIJUA
    and the DeMarcos filed cross-motions for summary judgment in the New Jersey malpractice case. The court
    determined that New Jersey law should apply, and held that the Rhode Island judgment could not be enforced in the
    New Jersey action because it was entered without jurisdiction over the DeMarcos. The trial court went on to grant
    the DeMarcos’ motion for summary judgment and deny the RIJUA’s motion.
    The Appellate Division granted the RIJUA’s motion for leave to appeal, and affirmed the trial court order
    in a published opinion. 
    434 N.J. Super. 352
    (App. Div. 2014). The panel determined that New Jersey law should
    apply and concluded that innocent third parties should be protected for a claim arising before rescission. 
    Id. at 380.
    Comparing medical malpractice liability insurance to the protection afforded to innocent third parties when a motor
    vehicle liability insurance policy has been rescinded, the panel concluded that the RIJUA owed a duty to indemnify
    Dr. Stoddard up to $1 million -- the amount of medical malpractice liability insurance that a physician licensed to
    practice medicine and performing medical services in this State is required to maintain.
    The Court granted RIJUA’s motion for leave to appeal. 
    218 N.J. 270
    (2014).
    HELD: The RIJUA owed neither a duty to defend nor a duty to indemnify its insured, who had misrepresented the
    proportion of his practice generated in Rhode Island, which was a fact that formed the basis for his eligibility for
    insurance through the RIJUA.
    1
    1. In New Jersey, malpractice insurance is mandatory for physicians and podiatrists. The mandated minimum
    amount of coverage is $1 million per occurrence and $3 million per policy year. There is scant case law interpreting
    the statutes and regulations requiring medical malpractice liability insurance. However, in Jarrell v. Kaul, ___ N.J.
    ___, ___ (2015) (slip op. at 2), the Court reviewed the medical malpractice liability insurance scheme in the context
    of a complaint against a physician who did not have the statutorily mandated coverage. There, only one issue
    implicated the consequences to a patient with a pending negligence claim when a policy is rescinded. The Court
    opined that the statute requiring a physician to obtain and maintain medical malpractice liability insurance does not
    give rise to a direct cause of action by an injured patient to enforce that requirement. (pp. 14-16)
    2. In the context of compulsory legal malpractice insurance, there is a well-developed body of law holding that a
    malpractice insurance policy may be declared void from its inception due to a misrepresentation of material fact in
    an application for insurance. Upon rescission, the insurer owes no duty to defend or indemnify a firm or defalcating
    attorney for any complaints pending or claims that accrued at the time of rescission. An attorney will not have
    access to insurance coverage to respond to claims from injured third parties, clients, or title companies, if the policy
    has been rescinded due to the attorney’s misrepresentations of material fact in the policy application. See Liberty
    Surplus Ins. Corp. v. Nowell Amoroso, P.A., 
    189 N.J. 436
    , 446-49 (2007); First American Title Insurance Co. v.
    Lawson, 
    177 N.J. 125
    , 192 (2003). The Court discerns no basis to treat other professionals required to maintain
    professional liability insurance, including physicians and podiatrists, in a different manner. All professional liability
    insurance serves the same purpose -- to defend when claims are filed against a professional and to serve as a source
    of funds to compensate injured patients or clients. Reformation of a medical malpractice liability policy to conform
    to statutorily mandated minimum amounts suggests that fraudulent conduct is condoned, and runs counter to Jarrell,
    where the Court denied a direct action for compensation by a patient against an uninsured physician. (pp. 16-20)
    3. In reaching this determination, the Court concludes that the compulsory automobile insurance model has no
    relevance to the remedial response to a fraudulently obtained policy of professional liability insurance and the effect
    of rescission on innocent third parties. In contrast to the web of interrelated provisions attending the no-fault
    automobile liability model, the Legislature has not constructed a matrix of alternate remedies for other types of
    liability insurance, including compulsory professional liability insurance. Nor has the Legislature created an
    expectation that insurance coverage will be available to redress an injury even in the face of a fraudulently obtained
    policy. Furthermore, the vast differences in the amount of liability insurance that a driver and a physician must
    carry, and the fact that some physicians procure professional liability insurance through a joint underwriting
    association, counsel against utilizing the compulsory automobile liability insurance model to devise a remedy for an
    injured patient whose physician is uninsured by virtue of a rescission. The Court, thus, concludes that the Appellate
    Division’s reliance on the compulsory automobile liability insurance model was misplaced. (pp. 20-24)
    4. Finally, the Court addresses the panel’s determination that a conflict of laws arose from the difference in the
    manner in which New Jersey and Rhode Island address compulsory medical malpractice insurance. The Court finds
    that on the critical inquiry in this appeal -- whether a rescinded policy of medical malpractice liability insurance
    provides any coverage to the insured for claims that arose prior to rescission -- both New Jersey and Rhode Island
    courts would rescind a policy ab initio, in which case the insured is without insurance coverage to respond to a claim
    by a third party. To the extent that each state requires a podiatrist to maintain medical malpractice liability
    insurance, the Court discerns no difference in the laws that amounts to a conflict of laws. (pp. 24-27)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED.
    ALBIN, J., DISSENTING, joined by CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER, agrees with the majority’s conclusion
    that New Jersey law applies to the DeMarsos’ lawsuit, but disagrees that under this State’s law, the medical-
    malpractice carrier can retroactively cancel insurance to deny an innocent patient coverage for a physician’s
    professional negligence. Justice Albin expresses the view that New Jersey’s compulsory medical malpractice
    insurance law exists to ensure that patients can secure financial compensation in the event of a doctor’s professional
    negligence. He would require the insurer to provide coverage up to $500,000 to DeMarco and his wife.
    JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, and SOLOMON join in JUDGE
    CUFF’s opinion. JUSTICE ALBIN filed a separate, dissenting opinion in which CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER
    joins.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-104 September Term 2013
    073949
    THOMAS DEMARCO and CYNTHIA
    DEMARCO,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    SEAN ROBERT STODDARD, D.P.M.,
    Individually and t/a CENTER
    FOR ADVANCED FOOT & ANKLE
    CARE, INC.,
    Defendant,
    and
    MEDICAL MALPRACTICE JOINT
    UNDERWRITING ASSOCIATION OF
    RHODE ISLAND,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Argued April 27, 2015 – Decided December 1, 2015
    On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
    Division, whose opinion is reported at 
    434 N.J. Super. 352
    (App. Div. 2014).
    Todd J. Leon argued the cause for appellant
    (Hill Wallack, attorneys; Mr. Leon and
    Gerard H. Hanson, on the briefs).
    Michael D. Schottland   argued the cause for
    respondents (Lomurro,   Davison, Eastman &
    Munoz, attorneys; Mr.   Schottland, Christina
    Vassiliou Harvey, and   Michael J. Fasano, on
    the briefs).
    Hugh P. Francis argued the cause for amici
    curiae (Francis & Berry, attorneys for
    Property Casualty Insurers Association of
    1
    America and Insurance Council of New Jersey;
    Brown Moskowitz & Kallen, attorneys for New
    Jersey Civil Justice Institute; Fox
    Rothschild, attorneys for New Jersey
    Physicians United Reciprocal Exchange; Mr.
    Francis, Joanna Huc, Shalom D. Stone,
    Jeffrey M. Pollock and Abbey True Harris, on
    the briefs).
    E. Drew Britcher argued the cause for amicus
    curiae New Jersey Association for Justice
    (Britcher, Leone & Roth, attorneys; Mr.
    Britcher and Jessica E. Choper, on the
    brief).
    JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) delivered the opinion of
    the Court.
    In this appeal, we consider whether the Rhode Island
    Medical Malpractice Joint Underwriting Association (RIJUA) must
    defend and indemnify a podiatrist in a medical malpractice
    action pending in New Jersey following rescission of the
    podiatrist’s medical malpractice liability policy.    The policy
    had been rescinded due to material misrepresentations concerning
    the state in which the insured podiatrist maintained his primary
    practice.    The trial court and the Appellate Division, applying
    New Jersey law, held that in a medical malpractice action
    pending in this State, the insurer had the duty to defend and
    indemnify the insured podiatrist up to $1 million, the amount of
    professional liability insurance physicians and podiatrists are
    required to maintain in this State.
    2
    We granted leave to appeal, and now reverse.     The critical
    inquiry in this case is whether a rescinded policy of medical
    malpractice liability insurance provides any coverage to the
    insured for claims that arose prior to rescission.   Although the
    Appellate Division correctly determined that New Jersey law
    applies, we conclude that the Appellate Division erred when it
    referred to the compulsory automobile liability model as the
    guidepost for fashioning a remedy for third-party claimants
    whose claims arose prior to rescission.   The appellate panel
    further erred by reforming the rescinded policy to require the
    insurer to defend and indemnify its insured up to the mandatory
    minimum amount of coverage required in this State.
    We conclude that resolution of the question of what, if
    any, coverage is available to an insured to respond to third-
    party claims following rescission of a policy is governed by the
    rule announced in First American Title Insurance Co. v. Lawson,
    
    177 N.J. 125
    (2003), and its progeny.   Applying that rule, the
    RIJUA owed neither a duty to defend nor a duty to indemnify its
    insured, who had misrepresented the proportion of his practice
    generated in Rhode Island, which was a fact that formed the
    basis for his eligibility for insurance through the RIJUA.      We
    therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division.
    I.
    3
    Plaintiff Thomas DeMarco, a New Jersey resident, sought
    treatment for chronic plantar fasciitis from defendant Sean
    Robert Stoddard, D.P.M.   Dr. Stoddard practiced podiatry at the
    Center for Advanced Foot & Ankle Care, Inc., which had offices
    in Toms River and Lakewood.   Dr. Stoddard diagnosed DeMarco with
    a split peroneal tendon and performed three surgical procedures
    on DeMarco between 2004 and January 2011.     The third surgery,
    which forms the basis of DeMarco’s complaint, occurred in
    September 2010.
    In 2007, Dr. Stoddard applied to the RIJUA for medical
    malpractice liability insurance.     He submitted his application
    through Linda O’Neill, an agent located in Rhode Island.     The
    application listed Dr. Stoddard’s office at a Rhode Island
    address, but the office phone number had a New Jersey area code.
    The application also provided that Dr. Stoddard was “currently
    applying” for affiliation with a Rhode Island hospital.    The
    “Licensure” section of the application asked whether at least
    fifty-one percent of the applicant’s practice was generated in
    Rhode Island.   The application had “Yes” checked off, but that
    answer was false.   The application then stated, partly in bold
    letters:   “IF YOUR ANSWER IS NO, DO NOT CONTINUE.    You are not
    eligible for coverage under the Rhode Island MMJUA.”     The agent
    claims that Dr. Stoddard provided all of the information
    required in his initial application.
    4
    Through the same Rhode Island agent, Dr. Stoddard submitted
    renewal applications each year from 2008 through 2011.      Each of
    the renewal forms stated that at least fifty-one percent of Dr.
    Stoddard’s practice was generated in Rhode Island.     In addition,
    the renewal application for the 2010-2011 coverage year -- when
    Dr. Stoddard performed the surgery that forms the basis of
    DeMarco’s malpractice claim -- listed an office address in
    Lakewood.
    In January 2011, Dr. Stoddard told DeMarco that he was
    moving to California.     DeMarco’s condition worsened, and he
    sought treatment from an orthopedic surgeon.     The surgeon
    performed two additional surgeries on DeMarco.
    In October 2011, DeMarco and his wife, Cynthia DeMarco (the
    DeMarcos) filed a medical malpractice complaint in New Jersey
    against Dr. Stoddard and the Center for Advanced Foot & Ankle
    Care, Inc., alleging that Dr. Stoddard negligently performed the
    September 2010 surgery.    Dr. Stoddard forwarded the DeMarcos’
    complaint to the RIJUA, which responded with a reservation of
    rights letter.   The letter indicated that the RIJUA only
    provides coverage for physicians who maintain fifty-one percent
    of their “professional time and efforts” in Rhode Island and
    that the RIJUA was “in the process of securing facts concerning
    whether [Dr. Stoddard] . . . met the fifty-one percent (51%)
    5
    requirement for the provision of insurance coverage from the
    [RI]JUA.”
    Less than a week later, Dr. Stoddard wrote a letter to the
    attorney representing the DeMarcos, advising that he “has no
    malpractice coverage in regards to [their] claim.”       Dr. Stoddard
    also stated that he tried to build his practice in Rhode Island
    but failed and that an agent told him he could enroll with the
    RIJUA even though the bulk of his practice was in New Jersey.
    Additionally, Dr. Stoddard stated that he had no assets, his new
    practice -- a professional corporation in California -- was
    struggling, he was in the midst of a divorce, he had defaulted
    on his student loans, and he had “a significant amount of debt.”
    Dr. Stoddard conceded that he could not prove that he satisfied
    the RIJUA’s fifty-one percent requirement, and stated that “it
    would be a waste of time to pursue this claim against me based
    on these facts.”
    II.
    In January 2012, the RIJUA filed a complaint for a
    declaratory judgment in Rhode Island, naming both Dr. Stoddard
    and the DeMarcos as defendants.       The RIJUA sought a judgment
    declaring that Dr. Stoddard misrepresented material information
    in his four applications to the RIJUA.       It also sought a
    judgment permitting rescission of the policy.       In February 2012,
    the DeMarcos’ attorney sent a letter to the RIJUA’s general
    6
    counsel, indicating that he did not believe his clients were
    subject to personal jurisdiction in Rhode Island.
    In March 2012, the DeMarcos amended their medical
    malpractice complaint.   They added the RIJUA as a defendant and
    sought a declaratory judgment that the RIJUA was required to
    defend Dr. Stoddard and indemnify him up to $1 million in the
    event that the DeMarcos were awarded damages for their claims
    against Dr. Stoddard.
    In May 2012, the Rhode Island court entered a default
    judgment against Dr. Stoddard, declaring his renewal policy from
    2010 to 2011 void and holding that the RIJUA had no duty to
    defend or indemnify Dr. Stoddard for the DeMarcos’ claims.
    Thereafter, the RIJUA and the DeMarcos filed cross-motions
    for summary judgment in the New Jersey malpractice case.     The
    motions addressed whether the RIJUA was required to defend and
    indemnify Dr. Stoddard and the effect of the default judgment in
    Rhode Island against Dr. Stoddard.    The trial court applied a
    choice of law analysis and determined that New Jersey law should
    apply.   The court held that the Rhode Island judgment was not
    entitled to full faith and credit and could not be enforced in
    the New Jersey action because it was entered without
    jurisdiction over the DeMarcos.   Finally, the trial court denied
    the RIJUA’s motion for summary judgment and granted the
    DeMarcos’ motion, concluding that the DeMarcos were entitled to
    7
    summary judgment “because compulsory insurance cannot be voided
    as to an innocent third party.”       The court also awarded the
    DeMarcos attorneys’ fees for successfully litigating the RIJUA’s
    disclaimer of coverage.
    The Appellate Division granted the RIJUA’s motion for leave
    to appeal.   In a published opinion, DeMarco v. Stoddard, 
    434 N.J. Super. 352
    (App. Div. 2014), the Appellate Division
    affirmed the trial court order.
    The Appellate Division determined that “[t]he precise
    question before us is whether a medical malpractice insurance
    carrier may rescind a policy so that the carrier has no duty to
    indemnify the insured doctor for injuries suffered by an
    innocent third party who made a malpractice claim before the
    policy was rescinded.”    
    Id. at 367.
       The panel predicted that
    this State would permit rescission of a compulsory medical
    malpractice liability insurance policy due to misrepresentations
    of material facts in the policy application but would protect an
    innocent third party, such as a patient whose claim arose prior
    to rescission, up to the minimum amount of required coverage.
    
    Ibid. The panel also
    determined that Rhode Island might protect
    innocent third parties.   
    Ibid. In addition, the
    panel concluded that “[a]nalogous case law
    of both states suggests that both would restrict the rescission
    remedy . . . in order to provide some protection to innocent
    8
    third parties for whose benefit compulsory insurance laws were
    enacted.”    
    Ibid. In reaching this
    conclusion, the panel
    compared medical malpractice liability insurance to the
    protection afforded to innocent third parties when a motor
    vehicle liability insurance policy has been rescinded.        
    Id. at 368-73.
        The Appellate Division determined, however, that Rhode
    Island had “not directly compelled coverage in any specific
    amount,” while New Jersey requires $1 million of coverage,
    necessitating a choice-of-law analysis.     
    Id. at 373-74.
       The
    Appellate Division determined that New Jersey law should apply
    and concluded that innocent third parties should be protected
    for a claim arising before rescission.     
    Id. at 380.
      Applying
    that rule to plaintiffs, the panel concluded that the RIJUA owed
    a duty to indemnify Dr. Stoddard up to $1 million, the amount of
    medical malpractice liability insurance that a physician
    licensed to practice medicine and performing medical services in
    this State is required to maintain, even though the record
    demonstrated that Dr. Stoddard provided materially false
    information to the RIJUA in his applications for insurance
    coverage.    
    Ibid. We granted the
    RIJUA’s motion for leave to appeal.        
    218 N.J. 270
    (2014).     We also granted motions to appear as amicus
    curiae by five entities:     New Jersey Civil Justice Institute
    (NJCJI), New Jersey Physicians United Reciprocal Exchange
    9
    (NJPURE), Property Casualty Insurers Association of America
    (Property Casualty Insurers), Insurance Council of New Jersey
    (Insurance Council), and New Jersey Association for Justice
    (NJAJ).
    III.
    A.
    The RIJUA raises three points of error in the Appellate
    Division’s decision.   First, it argues that Rhode Island law
    should apply to the coverage dispute.   Although the RIJUA agrees
    that Rhode Island and New Jersey law conflict, it disputes that
    a conflict of law analysis results in the application of New
    Jersey law.   In particular, the RIJUA argues that the Appellate
    Division erroneously viewed the coverage dispute as a first-
    party claim by the DeMarcos against the RIJUA.   Instead, the
    RIJUA submits that the dispute consisted of a third-party claim
    by the DeMarcos, which addressed whether the RIJUA must defend
    and indemnify Dr. Stoddard in response to their claims.
    Accordingly, the RIJUA maintains that the Appellate Division
    focused on the DeMarcos’ interests when it should have focused
    on the interests of the parties to the insurance contract -- the
    RIJUA and Dr. Stoddard.   The RIJUA thus argues that
    consideration of those interests would have led to the proper
    conclusion that Rhode Island law applies.
    10
    Second, the RIJUA argues that the reformation remedy
    fashioned by the Appellate Division was inequitable under New
    Jersey law.   Citing the dissent in Citizens United Reciprocal
    Exchange v. Perez (CURE), 
    432 N.J. Super. 526
    , 538 (App. Div.
    2013), rev’d, 
    223 N.J. 143
    (2015), the RIJUA asserts that while
    courts must protect innocent third parties, they must also
    provide some relief to the defrauded insurance provider.     Under
    the Appellate Division judgment, even though the policy is void
    due to Dr. Stoddard’s misrepresentations, the RIJUA is made
    liable for the same amount of coverage -- $1 million -- as it
    would if the policy was valid.   In other words, the RIJUA argues
    that the Appellate Division’s decision is inequitable because it
    failed to provide any relief whatsoever to the RIJUA.     It also
    states that such a result fails to provide any disincentive for
    an applicant to lie to an insurance provider.
    The RIJUA also contends that “mandatory [professional]
    malpractice coverage can and will be voided, in full and ab
    initio, as a result of fraud in the application by an insured.”
    In particular, the RIJUA relies on 
    Lawson, supra
    , 
    177 N.J. 125
    .
    Last, the RIJUA argues that attorneys’ fees were improperly
    awarded to the DeMarcos under Rule 4:42-9(a) because its
    position was not a “groundless disclaimer” of coverage.
    B.
    11
    The DeMarcos argue that this case does not present a
    significant conflict of law issue because both New Jersey and
    Rhode Island have laws requiring compulsory medical malpractice
    insurance and both states protect innocent third parties seeking
    to recover under a statutorily mandated insurance policy.
    Nevertheless, the DeMarcos assert that the Appellate Division
    resolved the conflict of law question correctly by ruling that
    New Jersey law applied.
    Additionally, the DeMarcos assert that the Appellate
    Division decision was fair and equitable.   Plaintiffs contend
    that the RIJUA was in a better position to detect Dr. Stoddard’s
    misrepresentations and reject his renewal applications.
    Accordingly, they contend it would not be equitable to force the
    DeMarcos to bear the loss.
    The DeMarcos also assert that the Appellate Division’s
    determination is consistent with New Jersey law.   They contend
    that it is universally recognized that an insurer cannot escape
    liability to a third party even if the insured procured coverage
    through fraud or misrepresentation.   The DeMarcos distinguish
    Lawson on the grounds that the insured party here is a private
    citizen, as opposed to an insurance company.   Moreover, the
    misrepresentation in Lawson related to a presently existing
    claim against the law firm, whereas the misrepresentation in
    this case related to the likelihood of potential future claims
    12
    arising outside of Rhode Island.     They assert that the RIJUA
    knew that Dr. Stoddard could potentially face a claim outside of
    Rhode Island, as the policy only required fifty-one percent of
    the practice to be in Rhode Island.     Therefore, the RIJUA
    knowingly assumed the risk that it might become involved in
    litigation in New Jersey.   In contrast, the DeMarcos contend
    that the misrepresentation in Lawson induced an agreement by
    concealing a risk unknown to the insurer.
    Finally, the DeMarcos assert that the trial court properly
    awarded attorneys’ fees.
    C.
    Amici NJCJI, NJPURE, Property Casualty Insurers, and
    Insurance Council urge reversal of the Appellate Division
    judgment.   Each argues that the appellate panel misperceived the
    breadth of the rule protecting innocent third parties following
    rescission of an insurance policy.    Each notes that compulsory
    automobile insurance policies occupy a unique place in the law
    of this State, and each emphasizes that well-established
    authority addressing compulsory professional liability insurance
    coverage permits rescission of a fraudulently induced policy
    with no protection to innocent third parties, such as clients or
    patients.
    Amicus NJPURE also asserts that the appellate panel opinion
    “incentivizes applicants to commit fraud.”     Amici Property
    13
    Casualty Insurers and Insurance Council urge that the rule
    announced by the Appellate Division will hinder proper
    underwriting and diminish the availability of professional
    liability insurance coverage.
    Amicus NJAJ urges affirmance of the Appellate Division
    judgment.    It contends that the opinion upholds the public
    policy of this State to protect the rights of innocent third
    parties when an insurer seeks to void ab initio a policy of
    insurance.
    IV.
    A.
    In New Jersey, the Legislature first instituted mandatory
    malpractice insurance for physicians and podiatrists in 1998.
    L. 1997, c. 365, § 1 (physicians); L. 1997, c. 365, § 2
    (podiatrists).   N.J.S.A. 45:5-5.3, which codified L. 1997, c.
    365, § 2, mandates that podiatrists must obtain and maintain
    malpractice liability insurance, or if coverage is unavailable,
    a letter of credit for at least the minimum amount prescribed by
    the Board of Medical Examiners (BME).1    The BME promulgated a
    regulation setting the minimum amount of malpractice insurance
    for physicians and podiatrists at $1 million per occurrence and
    $3 million per policy year.     N.J.A.C. 13:35-6.18.
    1 The minimum amount required for the letter of credit is
    $500,000. N.J.A.C. 13:35-6.18(b).
    14
    In 2004, the Legislature amended L. 1997, c. 365, § 1.
    N.J.S.A. 45:9-19.17; L. 2004, c. 17, § 25.   The 2004 amendment
    codified the 1999 regulation and set the minimum amount of
    malpractice insurance for physicians at $1 million per
    occurrence and $3 million per policy year.   L. 2004, c. 17, §
    25.   Notably, the 2004 statutory amendment addressed only
    physicians.   Nevertheless, the 1999 regulation applies to both
    physicians and podiatrists, and sets the floor for both at $1
    million per occurrence and $3 million per policy year.    N.J.A.C.
    13:35-6.18.   In addition, N.J.S.A. 45:9-19.17 requires
    physicians to maintain an insurance policy specifically “by a
    carrier authorized to write medical malpractice liability
    insurance policies in this State,” but N.J.S.A. 45:5-5.3 does
    not include a similar requirement for podiatrists.
    There is scant case law interpreting the statutes and
    regulations requiring physicians and podiatrists to obtain and
    maintain medical malpractice liability insurance.    In Jarrell v.
    Kaul, ___ N.J. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op. at 2), the Court
    reviewed the compulsory medical malpractice liability insurance
    scheme adopted by the Legislature in the context of a multi-
    count complaint filed by a patient injured by a physician who
    did not have the statutorily mandated medical malpractice
    liability coverage.   Only one of the issues before the Court in
    Jarrell implicated the consequences to a patient with a pending
    15
    negligence claim when a policy is rescinded.    
    Ibid. The Court opined
    that the statute requiring a physician practicing
    medicine in this State to obtain and maintain medical
    malpractice liability insurance does not give rise to a direct
    cause of action by an injured patient to enforce that
    requirement.   Id. at ___ (slip op. at 21).    The only other case
    addressing the consequences to an injured third party due to the
    absence of medical malpractice liability insurance is the
    opinion under review.
    In the context of compulsory legal malpractice insurance,2
    however, there is a well-developed body of law holding that a
    legal malpractice insurance policy may be declared void from its
    inception due to a misrepresentation of material fact by the
    insured in an application for insurance.    Liberty Surplus Ins.
    Corp. v. Nowell Amoroso, P.A., 
    189 N.J. 436
    , 446-49 (2007);
    
    Lawson, supra
    , 177 N.J. at 129.    Upon rescission, the insurer
    owes no duty to defend or indemnify the law firm or any
    2 In 1997, the Court adopted rules that require firms organized
    to practice law as professional corporations pursuant to The
    Professional Service Corporation Act, N.J.S.A. 14A:17-1 to -18,
    as limited liability companies pursuant to the New Jersey
    Limited Liability Company Act, N.J.S.A. 14A:2B-1 to -70 (now
    repealed), or as limited liability partnerships pursuant to the
    Uniform Partnership Act, N.J.S.A. 42:1A-1 to -56, to obtain and
    maintain professional liability insurance. R. 1:21-1A(a)(3), –
    1B(a)(4), and -1C(a)(3). Rhode Island has a similar
    requirement, although the minimum mandatory amount of coverage
    is different from that in New Jersey. R.I. Gen. Laws § 7-5.1-8.
    16
    defalcating attorney of the firm for any complaints pending or
    claims that accrued at the time of rescission.      
    Lawson, supra
    ,
    177 N.J. at 129.
    In Lawson, one of three members of a law firm applied for
    professional liability insurance for the firm and its members.
    
    Id. at 131.
      At the time, the member had been engaged in a
    scheme in which he improperly transferred funds between client
    accounts and the firm business account to meet the firm’s
    financial obligations.    
    Id. at 130-31.
       A second member of the
    firm had previously discovered the scheme but took no action to
    cease the practice.   
    Ibid. In the insurance
    application, the
    member who initiated the scheme falsely stated that he knew of
    no “acts, errors or omissions in professional services that may
    reasonably be expected to be the basis of a professional
    liability claim,” and warranted that all information in the
    application was accurate.     
    Id. at 131.
      At about the same time,
    the Office of Attorney Ethics (OAE), acting on three grievances
    filed against the firm, notified the firm that it would conduct
    an audit.   
    Id. at 132.
      The attorney who had filed the original
    application later provided a new warranty as to the accuracy of
    the information in the application.     Ibid.3
    3
    Soon thereafter, the OAE sought and obtained the temporary
    suspension of the member who had discovered but did not curtail
    the scheme. 
    Id. at 132.
                                      17
    As a result of numerous improper transfers, title insurers
    that paid claims to various individuals represented by the firm
    sought recovery against the firm and its members, who in turn
    sought coverage from their professional liability insurer.      
    Id. at 132-33.
      The insurer obtained a declaratory judgment allowing
    it to rescind coverage in respect to the two defalcating members
    but not the third member or the firm.    
    Id. at 134.
      In reviewing
    this judgment,4 this Court held that the insurer had “the clear
    right to rescind [a defalcating attorney’s] coverage in the face
    of his blatant and direct misrepresentations.”    
    Id. at 140.
      The
    Court expressly rejected the contention of the title insurers --
    injured third parties -- that the remedy for such
    misrepresentations should only be prospective rescission of the
    policy.   
    Ibid. In doing so,
    the Court recognized that two of
    the firm’s three attorneys would be without insurance coverage
    to respond to malpractice claims filed against them by injured
    clients and the title insurer.    
    Id. at 143.
      The Court reasoned
    that the harsh result was warranted because “[p]ermitting the .
    . . coverage to survive [the member’s] defalcations would, in
    essence, condone . . . fraudulent conduct.”     
    Id. at 141.
    Later, in Liberty Surplus 
    Insurance, supra
    , this Court
    upheld the entry of summary judgment in favor of the insurer in
    4 On appeal, the Appellate Division held that the coverage was
    void as to all three members and the firm. 
    Id. at 134.
                                     18
    a declaratory judgment action seeking rescission ab initio of a
    legal malpractice liability insurance policy due to
    misrepresentations of material fact in the policy 
    application. 189 N.J. at 450
    .    The firm therefore faced the legal malpractice
    claim filed by the injured client without coverage.    Ibid.; see
    also Liebling v. Garden State Indem., 
    337 N.J. Super. 447
    , 450-
    51 (App. Div.) (affirming summary judgment rescinding legal
    malpractice policy and denying coverage for professional
    negligence action filed and served on firm before application
    for and issuance of policy), certif. denied, 
    169 N.J. 606
    (2001).
    Thus, it is well established in this State that an attorney
    will not have access to insurance coverage to respond to claims
    from injured third parties, clients, or title companies, if the
    professional liability insurance policy has been rescinded due
    to the attorney’s misrepresentations of material fact in the
    policy application.    We discern no basis to treat other
    professionals required to obtain and maintain professional
    liability insurance, including physicians and podiatrists, in a
    different manner.
    Rather, the same reasons that permit rescission of a legal
    malpractice insurance policy pertain to medical malpractice
    liability insurance.    A policy will be issued following an
    analysis of the risk to be assumed.    A misrepresentation of a
    19
    material fact in an application undermines the risk assessment
    and ultimately the decision to provide coverage by an insurer.
    Moreover, all forms of professional liability insurance serve
    the same purpose -- to defend when claims are filed against a
    professional and to serve as a source of funds to compensate
    injured patients or clients.   Permitting reformation of a
    medical malpractice liability policy to conform to statutorily
    mandated minimum amounts also suggests that fraudulent conduct
    is condoned.   Finally, reformation runs counter to our recent
    decision in Jarrell, which denied a direct action for
    compensation by an injured patient against an uninsured
    physician.   
    Jarrell, supra
    , ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 43).
    B.
    In reaching this determination, we also conclude that the
    compulsory automobile insurance model has no relevance to the
    remedial response to a fraudulently obtained policy of
    professional liability insurance and the effect of rescission on
    innocent third parties.
    Recently, in 
    CURE, supra
    , we explained that the long-
    established and comprehensive no-fault automobile insurance
    system, which is “designed to ensure that persons injured in
    motor vehicle accidents are compensated promptly for their
    injuries and financial losses,” centers on compulsory automobile
    liability 
    insurance. 223 N.J. at 152
    (internal quotations
    20
    omitted).   In order to preserve the benefits of that insurance,
    N.J.S.A. 39:6-48(a) provides that an automobile liability policy
    may not be “cancelled or annulled . . . after the insured has
    become responsible for the loss or damage” to an innocent third
    party.    Thus, a fraudulently obtained policy of insurance is
    subject to rescission by the insurer, but an innocent third
    party injured by the insured before discovery of the fraud may
    look to the liability coverage in place at the time of injury up
    to the minimum mandatory insurance required by law.    Palisades
    Safety & Ins. Ass’n v. Bastien, 
    175 N.J. 144
    , 148-49 (2003);
    Marotta v. N.J. Auto. Full Ins. Underwriting Ass’n, 280 N.J.
    Super. 525, 530 (App. Div. 1995), aff’d o.b., 
    144 N.J. 325
    (1996).
    Our no-fault automobile liability system provides further
    protection to insureds.    For example, any person required to
    obtain automobile liability insurance acquires uninsured and
    underinsured motorist coverage.    N.J.S.A. 17:28-1.1(b).   Such
    coverage ameliorates the financial harm that may arise if a
    driver has no or insufficient coverage.    In addition, an injured
    person may be able to obtain a financial recovery through the
    New Jersey Property-Liability Insurance Guaranty Association
    (PLIGA) for losses inflicted by financially irresponsible or
    21
    unknown owners or operators of motor vehicles.5    N.J.S.A. 39:6-61
    to -91.   An injured, insured motorist may also obtain prompt
    medical treatment through the personal injury protection (PIP)
    benefits of an individual automobile liability insurance policy.
    N.J.S.A. 39:6A-4.   An injured person with no recourse to any
    insurance coverage may obtain damages for noneconomic loss,
    property damage, and PIP benefits through PLIGA.     N.J.S.A. 39:6-
    61 to -90.1.
    The web of interrelated provisions attending the no-fault
    automobile liability model, including the compulsory automobile
    liability provisions, may minimize the number and amount of the
    claims of injured third parties.     Moreover, the compulsory
    automobile liability insurance model has created an expectation
    among those operating motor vehicles that every individual who
    may be in an accident will be insured.     By contrast, the
    Legislature has not constructed a similar matrix of alternate
    remedies for any other type of liability insurance, including
    compulsory professional liability insurance, or created an
    expectation that insurance coverage will be available to redress
    an injury even in the face of a fraudulently obtained policy.
    5 Prior to 2003, such recovery was obtained through the
    Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund (UCJF). See N.J.S.A. 39:6-
    64(c). In 2003, the Legislature abolished the UCJF and
    transferred its claims to PLIGA, which was already administering
    other types of claims in this State. L. 2003, c. 89, §§ 1, 2,
    7.
    22
    Furthermore, the vast differences in the amount of
    liability insurance that a driver and a physician must carry
    counsels against utilizing the compulsory automobile liability
    insurance model to devise a remedy for an injured patient whose
    physician is uninsured by virtue of a rescission.       The
    compulsory automobile liability insurance model also does not
    account for the fact that some physicians may have to procure
    professional liability insurance through a joint underwriting
    association due to market forces in the place where they
    practice.   Such associations function essentially as mandatory
    assigned risk pools in order to permit physicians to obtain
    medical malpractice insurance and to provide essential medical
    services to patients.    In order to maintain affordable rates,
    some associations have amassed operating losses.       See Patricia
    M. Danzon, Medical Malpractice:    Theory, Evidence, and Public
    Policy 93, 112 (1985).   Indeed, unlike many other states’ joint
    underwriting associations, the RIJUA remains in effect despite
    operating losses over the years.       See Med. Malpractice Joint
    Underwriting Ass’n v. Paradis, 
    756 F. Supp. 669
    , 671 (D.R.I.
    1991).
    For those reasons, we conclude that the Appellate
    Division’s reference to and reliance on the compulsory
    automobile liability insurance model was misplaced.      Its
    reliance on that model also ignored this State’s longstanding
    23
    rule that an insured professional cannot expect insurance
    coverage to respond to third-party claims when the professional
    liability insurance has been rescinded due to misrepresentations
    of material fact in the application.
    V.
    Finally, we address the purported conflict of laws
    identified by the Appellate Division.    The panel declared a
    difference in the manner in which each state addressed
    compulsory medical malpractice insurance and determined that the
    difference constituted a conflict of laws.    We conclude that
    such a determination was unfounded.     As we have explained,
    resolution of the issue presented in this appeal begins and ends
    with the judicial response to a misrepresentation of material
    fact on an application for professional liability insurance.     In
    this State, a court may rescind a policy ab initio, in which
    case the insured is without insurance coverage to respond to a
    claim by a third party.   Based on our research, it appears that
    Rhode Island courts would do the same.
    Our research has identified no case in Rhode Island that
    has addressed the issue presented in this appeal other than the
    judgment entered in the declaratory judgment action commenced by
    the RIJUA against Dr. Stoddard.    There, due to his ineligibility
    for coverage through the RIJUA, the trial court rescinded the
    policy ab initio and declared that the RIJUA owed no obligation
    24
    to defend or indemnify Dr. Stoddard in the DeMarco action
    pending in New Jersey.   This outcome is entirely consistent with
    well-established law in Rhode Island holding that an insurance
    policy is subject to rescission if the insurer was induced to
    insure an applicant based on a false representation of fact in
    the application.   Evora v. Henry, 
    559 A.2d 1038
    , 1040 (R.I.
    1989) (rescinding fire insurance policy); The Guardian Life Ins.
    Co. of Am. v. Tillinghast, 
    512 A.2d 855
    , 859 (R.I. 1986)
    (rescinding disability insurance policy).   This rule applies
    broadly to a wide variety of insurance policies other than
    compulsory motor vehicle liability insurance.   See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co. v. IDC Props., Inc., 
    547 F.3d 15
    , 20-23 (1st Cir. 2008) (applying Rhode Island law to permit
    rescission of title insurance policy); Commercial Union Ins. Co.
    v. Pesante, 
    459 F.3d 34
    , 38 (1st Cir. 2006) (applying Rhode
    Island law to permit rescission of marine insurance policy); see
    also R.I. Gen. Laws § 27-18-16 (“The falsity of any statement in
    the application for [accident and sickness insurance policies]
    may not bar the right to recovery under the policy unless the
    false statement materially affected either the acceptance of the
    risk or the hazard assumed by the insurer.” (emphasis added)).
    Focusing as we have on the broader universe of insurance
    policies issued to protect an insured from a variety of risks,
    including professional liability claims, we discern that New
    25
    Jersey and Rhode Island permit rescission of an insurance policy
    when that policy has been issued based on misrepresentations of
    material fact.   In each situation, other than the compulsory
    motor vehicle liability insurance model in each state, a third
    party who has asserted a claim or whose claim accrued prior to
    rescission receives no benefit from the rescinded policy.     In
    short, although we cannot determine with certainty that the laws
    of each state are in harmony on this issue, we are also in no
    position to declare that a conflict exists between the laws of
    New Jersey and Rhode Island on this issue.
    Finally, to the extent that each state requires a
    podiatrist to maintain medical malpractice liability insurance,
    we discern no difference in the laws of each state that amounts
    to a conflict of laws.   To be sure, Rhode Island adopted a
    statute that established minimum levels of coverage lower than
    those required in New Jersey.   Compare R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-14.1-
    2 (setting minimum amounts of $100,000 per claim and $300,000
    per policy year), with N.J.S.A. 45:5-5.3 and N.J.S.A. 45:9-19.17
    (requiring minimum amounts of $1 million per claim and $3
    million per policy year).   Furthermore, the executive agency
    tasked with adopting regulations to implement the Rhode Island
    statute did not do so until Fall 2013.   See 02-030-021 R.I. Code
    R. § 5 (requiring minimum amounts of $1 million per claim and $3
    million per policy year).   Indeed, the mandatory nature of such
    26
    insurance remained an open question as late as 2013.     See
    Peloquin v. Haven Health Ctr. of Greenville, L.L.C., 
    61 A.3d 419
    , 429-30 (R.I. 2013).
    A conflict of laws however does not arise unless there is a
    substantive difference between or among the potentially
    applicable laws.     Cornett v. Johnson & Johnson, 
    211 N.J. 362
    ,
    374 (2012); P.V. ex rel. T.V. v. Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. 132
    , 143
    (2008).    A substantive difference between the law of one state
    and another exists when the difference is offensive or repugnant
    to the public policy of this State.     
    Cornett, supra
    , 211 N.J. at
    377.    Here, the difference cannot be considered substantive.
    Both states have declared that physicians and podiatrists are
    required to obtain and maintain medical malpractice liability
    insurance.     Moreover, Dr. Stoddard had a policy of medical
    malpractice liability insurance in place at all relevant times,
    rendering any differences in the states’ insurance coverage
    requirements irrelevant.    Rather, the issue presented in this
    case is whether an insurance policy is subject to rescission
    based on a false representation of fact in the insurance
    application.    With respect to that core issue, both states agree
    that rescission is the appropriate remedy.
    VI.
    In summary, it is well established in this State that a
    professional who has made a misrepresentation of material fact
    27
    in an application for professional liability insurance can
    expect that the policy may be rescinded on application of the
    insurer.     A professional in that position can also expect that
    claims that arose prior to discovery of the misrepresentation
    will be excluded from coverage.     In other words, once the policy
    has been rescinded, the professional responds to any claims from
    injured third parties without coverage.
    Here, the policy of professional liability issued to Dr.
    Stoddard was rescinded due to misrepresentations concerning the
    extent of his practice in Rhode Island.     Those
    misrepresentations went to his eligibility of insurance through
    the RIJUA.    As a result of the RIJUA’s rescission of the policy,
    Dr. Stoddard stood without coverage to respond to the DeMarcos’
    claim.     We have not identified any sound reason to treat medical
    professionals any differently than other similarly situated
    professionals.    We cannot identify a sound reason to permit
    reformation of a rescinded professional liability policy to the
    statutory minimum of $1 million.6
    We therefore hold that the Appellate Division erred when it
    resorted to the compulsory automobile liability insurance model
    6 We also reject the suggestion that whether the RIJUA actually
    and reasonably relied on Dr. Stoddard’s misrepresentation of the
    location of his practice is an unresolved issue of fact. Dr.
    Stoddard had notice of and every opportunity to contest the
    declarative judgment action. He chose not to do so and a final
    judgment has been entered granting full relief to the RIJUA.
    28
    rather than the existing rule governing professional liability
    insurance to fashion a remedy for injured third parties affected
    by rescission of the medical care provider’s insurance.   Having
    obtained a judgment rescinding the medical malpractice liability
    policy, the RIJUA owed no duty to defend Dr. Stoddard or to
    indemnify him in the medical malpractice action pending against
    Dr. Stoddard in this State.
    VII.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
    JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, and SOLOMON
    join in JUDGE CUFF’s opinion. JUSTICE ALBIN filed a separate,
    dissenting opinion in which CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER joins.
    29
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-104 September Term 2013
    073949
    THOMAS DEMARCO and CYNTHIA
    DEMARCO,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    SEAN ROBERT STODDARD, D.P.M.,
    Individually and t/a CENTER
    FOR ADVANCED FOOT & ANKLE
    CARE, INC.,
    Defendant,
    and
    MEDICAL MALPRACTICE JOINT
    UNDERWRITING ASSOCIATION OF
    RHODE ISLAND,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    JUSTICE ALBIN, dissenting.
    All physicians and podiatrists who practice medicine in New
    Jersey are required to maintain at least $1,000,000 in medical
    malpractice insurance or a $500,000 letter of credit.    N.J.S.A.
    45:9-19.17(a); N.J.S.A. 45:5-5.3; N.J.A.C. 13:35-6.18.    The
    purpose of this compulsory insurance law is to ensure that
    patients can secure financial compensation in the event of a
    doctor’s professional negligence.    Every patient has a right to
    presume that his physician is in compliance with the law.
    In this case, defendant Dr. Sean Stoddard, a podiatrist,
    1
    misrepresented to his medical malpractice insurer -- the Medical
    Malpractice Joint Underwriting Association of Rhode Island
    (RIJUA) -- that the majority of his podiatry practice was in
    Rhode Island, rather than New Jersey.     During the period the
    RIJUA insured him, Dr. Stoddard performed foot surgery on
    plaintiff Thomas DeMarco (DeMarco).     In a medical-malpractice
    action, DeMarco sought damages from Dr. Stoddard for worsening
    his medical condition.   In addition, DeMarco’s wife filed a
    loss-of-consortium claim.   After the DeMarcos filed their
    lawsuit, the RIJUA cancelled Dr. Stoddard’s malpractice
    insurance.   The RIJUA claims that its insurance contract with
    Dr. Stoddard should not only be rescinded, but also that the
    rescission should be backdated, thus denying the DeMarcos the
    protection of the insurance coverage that was in effect at the
    time of the allegedly botched surgery.
    I agree with the majority’s conclusion that New Jersey law
    applies to the DeMarcos’ lawsuit.     I disagree that under this
    State’s law, the medical-malpractice carrier in this case can
    retroactively cancel malpractice insurance to deny an innocent
    patient coverage for a physician’s professional negligence.       The
    approach taken by the majority is at complete odds with our
    State’s public policy, which finds expression in our compulsory
    medical malpractice insurance law.     The aim of the law is to
    provide financial protection to every patient in this State.
    2
    The RIJUA was in the best position to ferret out any
    misrepresentation made by Dr. Stoddard when he applied and
    reapplied for malpractice insurance coverage.    The innocent
    patient was in no position to do so.
    I would require the insurer to provide coverage up to
    $500,000 to DeMarco and his wife.    After all, DeMarco underwent
    surgery with Dr. Stoddard when he was lawfully insured -- that
    is, before the carrier backdated the rescission.    At the time of
    DeMarco’s surgery, the RIJUA, in effect, represented to the
    world that it was insuring Dr. Stoddard against claims of
    negligence.   The public had the right to rely on that
    representation.   By requiring coverage, the equities of all
    parties are balanced, and the patient receives the benefit of
    the financial security intended by the law.
    Because the majority has taken the path that leaves the
    innocent patient without compensation for his injuries and
    rewards the insurance company for its lack of due diligence, I
    respectfully dissent.
    I.
    In this case, Dr. Stoddard purchased medical malpractice
    insurance from the RIJUA.   In his application, he misrepresented
    the primary location of his practice.    From 2007 until 2011, Dr.
    Stoddard represented to the RIJUA that at least fifty-one
    percent of his podiatry practice was generated in Rhode Island -
    3
    - a prerequisite to receiving the RIJUA’s insurance coverage.
    Dr. Stoddard’s Rhode Island practice, however, never met the
    RIJUA’s fifty-one percent requirement.
    In each of his insurance applications from 2007 through
    2010, Dr. Stoddard indicated that his office was located in
    Rhode Island, although he did list his telephone and fax numbers
    as having a 732 New Jersey area code, which should have signaled
    that he had a New Jersey office.     In Dr. Stoddard’s renewal
    application for March 2010 to March 2011, he gave 1195 Highway
    70, #12, Lakewood, New Jersey as the address for his office.
    Once again, he provided a New Jersey telephone number.    The
    RIJUA was on notice that Dr. Stoddard had a New Jersey practice
    when he performed surgery on DeMarco in September 2010.
    Only after October 2011, when the DeMarcos filed a medical
    malpractice lawsuit alleging that Dr. Stoddard negligently
    performed surgery, did the RIJUA rescind its insurance policy on
    the basis that the majority of Dr. Stoddard’s podiatry practice
    was not situated in Rhode Island, as represented in his
    malpractice-insurance applications.    The RIJUA returned Dr.
    Stoddard’s premium payments for the period from March 2010 to
    January 2011, but kept the premiums paid from 2007 through
    February 2010.   Dr. Stoddard informed DeMarco that he had no
    assets.   DeMarco and his wife then amended their complaint
    seeking the payment of damages from the RIJUA on the malpractice
    4
    claim.
    Both the trial court and the Appellate Division in a well-
    reasoned opinion, DeMarco v. Stoddard, 
    434 N.J. Super. 352
    (App.
    Div. 2014), held that the RIJUA was required to provide coverage
    of $1,000,000 should Dr. Stoddard be found liable on the
    malpractice claim.
    II.
    A.
    All physicians and podiatrists who practice medicine in New
    Jersey are required to maintain medical malpractice liability
    insurance.   N.J.S.A. 45:9-19.17(a); N.J.S.A. 45:5-5.3.
    According to N.J.S.A. 45:9-19.17(a),
    [a] physician who maintains a professional
    medical practice in this State and has
    responsibility for patient care is required to
    be covered by medical malpractice liability
    insurance issued by a carrier authorized to
    write medical malpractice liability insurance
    policies in this State, in the sum of
    $1,000,000 per occurrence and $3,000,000 per
    policy year and unless renewal coverage
    includes the premium retroactive date, the
    policy shall provide for extended reporting
    endorsement coverage for claims made policies,
    also known as “tail coverage,” or, if such
    liability coverage is not available, by a
    letter of credit for at least $500,000.
    The requirement that physicians and podiatrists maintain
    $1,000,000 in coverage per occurrence or $500,000 by a letter of
    credit is “to ensure the citizens of the State that they will
    have some recourse for adequate compensation in the event that a
    5
    physician or podiatrist is found responsible for acts of
    malpractice.”   Assembly Health Comm., Statement to S. 267 (Sept.
    19, 1996).   The clear intent of the legislation is to provide
    financial protection to patients who suffer preventable injuries
    at the hands of their doctors.
    The question in this case is whether a medical-malpractice
    insurer may avoid paying damages to an innocent patient when the
    rescission of the physician’s insurance policy is backdated,
    thus denying the patient the benefit of the coverage in effect
    at the time the malpractice occurred.
    B.
    “[A] material factual misrepresentation made in an
    application for insurance may justify rescission if the insurer
    relied upon it to determine whether or not to issue the policy.”
    Remsden v. Dependable Ins. Co., 
    71 N.J. 587
    , 589 (1976); see
    also Rutgers Cas. Ins. Co. v. LaCroix, 
    194 N.J. 515
    , 527-28
    (2008); Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Manzo, 
    122 N.J. 104
    , 111
    (1991); N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Weiss, 
    133 N.J. Eq. 375
    , 379-80
    (1943).   Rescission of the contract prevents an insured from
    directly benefitting from his misrepresentation.   Bonnco Petrol,
    Inc. v. Epstein, 
    115 N.J. 599
    , 612 (1989).
    But different interests are in play when a scheme of
    compulsory insurance is intended to protect innocent members of
    the public, such as in our compulsory insurance laws for
    6
    automobiles, limited liability partnerships, and the practice of
    medicine.    In such cases, our jurisprudence draws a distinction
    between the party who procures an insurance policy through
    misrepresentations and the innocent party who plays no role in a
    fraud on the insurer and is a victim falling within the coverage
    protections of the insurance policy.    
    LaCroix, supra
    , 194 N.J.
    at 530-32; see also Fisher v. N.J. Auto. Full Ins. Underwriting
    Ass’n, 
    224 N.J. Super. 552
    , 557 (App. Div. 1988) (“The insurance
    carrier’s liability to its [in]sured who may be guilty of some
    act or conduct which renders a policy void ab initio is
    therefore distinct from its liability to an injured third
    person.”).    Thus, “an insurer cannot, on the ground of fraud or
    misrepresentations relating to the inception of the policy,
    retrospectively avoid coverage under a compulsory or financial
    responsibility insurance law so as to escape liability to a
    third party.”   
    Fisher, supra
    , 224 N.J. Super. at 558 (quoting 7
    Am. Jur. 2d Automobile Insurance § 37 (1980)); see also
    Palisades Safety & Ins. Ass’n v. Bastien, 
    175 N.J. 144
    , 149
    (2003) (noting that insurance company cannot “escape[] liability
    in respect of innocent, third-party members of the public whose
    protection is a paramount concern”).    An example of those
    equitable principles is found in our automobile insurance law.
    In New Jersey, all motor vehicle owners must maintain
    liability insurance coverage.    N.J.S.A. 39:6B-1(a).   Moreover,
    7
    “once its insured has become responsible for damages to third-
    party judgment creditors, an insurer is precluded from
    retroactively ‘cancelling’ or ‘annulling’ an automobile
    liability policy based upon prior misrepresentations or fraud of
    its insured.”   N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Co. v. Varjabedian, 391 N.J.
    Super. 253, 256 (App. Div.) (quoting N.J.S.A. 39:6-48(a)),
    certif. denied, 
    192 N.J. 295
    (2007).     The principle that an
    insurance company cannot void a policy to the detriment of an
    innocent third party has been upheld in cases involving
    compulsory insurance laws intended for the protection of the
    public.
    In 
    LaCroix, supra
    , we determined that the insured’s
    eighteen-year-old daughter could not be barred from receiving
    “personal-injury-protection (PIP) benefits under her father’s
    automobile insurance policy because, unbeknownst to her, her
    father had not identified her as a household resident in his
    insurance 
    application.” 194 N.J. at 518-19
    .    The father was
    required to purchase PIP coverage under N.J.S.A. 39:6A-4.3.
    
    Lacroix, supra
    , 194 N.J. at 532.     We held that “the equitable
    remedy of rescission properly was molded to require payment of
    the statutorily required minimum level of PIP benefits to” the
    daughter who suffered injuries in an automobile accident.        
    Id. at 519.
      We did so because the daughter was “innocent of the
    deceit perpetrated by her father” and because “we have never
    8
    turned a deaf ear to the equities when plainly innocent parties
    cry out for relief.”   
    Id. at 530-31.
    C.
    No controlling precedent supports the position the majority
    takes today, reversing both the trial court and the Appellate
    Division and leaving the innocent patient remediless.     The
    majority reaches the inequitable, not the inevitable, outcome.
    First, the comparison of physicians and podiatrists to
    lawyers in general is not apt because lawyers are not presently
    subject to a comprehensive legislative or judicial scheme
    mandating the purchase of malpractice insurance.     Lawyers are
    required to purchase malpractice insurance only if they organize
    as professional corporations or limited liability partnerships.
    R. 1:21-1A(a)(3), -1B(a)(4), -1C(a)(3).
    Second, none of the legal-malpractice cases cited by the
    majority bear any resemblance to the facts before us.     Liberty
    Surplus Insurance Corp. v. Nowell Amoroso, P.A., 
    189 N.J. 436
    ,
    439-41 (2007), merely stands for the proposition that a law firm
    forfeited coverage in a malpractice case under a claims-made
    policy by misrepresenting in the insurance application that it
    was unaware of a potential claim at the time the application was
    completed.   Liberty Surplus deals with the denial of a claim,
    not the rescission of an insurance policy.   
    Ibid. In Liebling v.
    Garden State Indemnity, 
    337 N.J. Super. 447
    ,
    9
    450-51 (App. Div.), certif. denied 
    169 N.J. 606
    (2001), an
    attorney did not disclose in an application for a claims-made
    malpractice insurance policy that a potential malpractice
    lawsuit was looming.   The attorney knew that he would likely be
    sued for failing to file a civil action within the statute of
    limitations.   
    Id. at 464-65.
      The Appellate Division concluded
    that the attorney “could not have honestly believed that he was
    secure from a claim, and, therefore, [the insurance carrier] was
    justified in denying coverage.”    Liberty 
    Surplus, supra
    , 189
    N.J. at 449 (citing 
    Liebling, supra
    , 337 N.J. Super. at 464-65).
    Last, First American Title Insurance Co. v. Lawson, 
    177 N.J. 125
    (2003), engaged in a finely nuanced balancing of
    equities in reviewing whether an insurance carrier was required
    to provide coverage to three attorneys of a law firm organized
    as a limited liability partnership.    Two of the attorneys, one
    of whom was unauthorized to practice law in New Jersey, were
    engaged in a “‘kiting’ scheme whereby monies from one client
    trust account would be transferred to pay the obligations of
    another client.”   
    Id. at 130
    (quoting First Am. Title Ins. Co.
    v. Lawson, 
    351 N.J. Super. 407
    , 414 (App. Div. 2002)).    This
    Court affirmed the forfeiture of coverage for those two
    malefactors, one of whom applied for the firm’s claims-made
    professional liability insurance policy with full knowledge of
    their wrongdoing, 
    id. at 129
    -- wrongdoing that violated the
    10
    Rules of Professional Conduct.1
    However, the Court took a different approach with respect
    to the innocent law partner.    We held that the innocent attorney
    could not be stripped of insurance coverage because, unbeknownst
    to him, the managing partner and another partner committed
    fraudulent acts and secured malpractice insurance through
    misrepresentations.    
    Id. at 129-31.
      We noted that our Rule of
    Court requiring a limited liability partnership to maintain
    professional liability insurance, R. 1:21-1C(a)(3), “helps to
    limit the public’s exposure to uninsured risks arising from the
    receipt of legal services in this State.”     
    Lawson, supra
    , 177
    N.J. at 139.    We explained that the innocent partner “had every
    reason to expect that his exposure to liability would be
    circumscribed in accordance with the Uniform Partnership Law,”
    which “shield[s] partners from incurring liability arising
    solely from the wrongful acts of fellow partners.”     
    Id. at 136,
    142.    Additionally, we noted that denying coverage to the
    innocent law partner “could leave members of the public, whom
    [the innocent partner] had represented throughout that period,
    unprotected even though the insured himself committed no fraud.”
    
    Id. at 143.
    1 Victims of such illegal schemes are financially protected up to
    an amount fixed by the New Jersey Lawyers’ Fund for Client
    Protection. R. 1:28.
    11
    Thus, in Lawson, this Court protected the innocent attorney
    from a backdated rescission of an insurance policy because he
    was unaware of his partner’s misrepresentations in securing the
    insurance coverage.    Lawson is a study in how to balance
    equities.   It is not a mandate to deny insurance coverage to the
    innocent patient who suffered medical malpractice in this case.
    III.
    Here, in viewing the totality of the circumstances, equity
    weighs in favor of upholding the RIJUA’s obligation to cover the
    claim of DeMarco and his wife.    The omitted information in Dr.
    Stoddard’s application and reapplication pertained only to the
    geography of his practice, not to his ability to perform his
    professional duties.   The issue is not whether the RIJUA has a
    right to rescind Dr. Stoddard’s insurance, but whether it has
    the right to backdate the rescission at the expense of the
    innocent patient.
    In balancing the equities, we should place great emphasis
    on the fact that the RIJUA was in the best position to uncover
    any inaccuracies in Dr. Stoddard’s insurance applications.     By
    September 2010, when the alleged malpractice occurred, Dr.
    Stoddard’s practice in New Jersey was open and notorious.    In
    his insurance renewal application filed earlier that year, Dr.
    Stoddard listed an address in Lakewood, New Jersey as the
    location of his podiatry practice.
    12
    Had the RIJUA exercised even a minimal degree of due
    diligence, it would have discovered that Dr. Stoddard’s practice
    was not primarily located in Rhode Island.    Only when the RIJUA
    had to pay out on a potential claim -- not when it was accepting
    premiums -- did it make a reasonable inquiry.    Other
    jurisdictions, as a matter of sound public policy, require an
    insurance company to exercise due care in reviewing an insurance
    application at the time it is submitted.     See, e.g., Olivio v.
    Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. of Washington D.C., 
    362 N.Y.S.2d 873
    , 880
    (App. Div. 1975) (requiring insurer to pay third-party victim
    full policy amount -- as opposed to minimum compulsory amount --
    when insurer negligently delayed investigation of fraudulent
    application until after suit was filed); State Farm Mut. Auto.
    Ins. Co. v. Wood, 
    483 P.2d 892
    , 893 (Utah 1971) (“An
    insurer cannot neglect its duty to make a reasonable
    investigation of insurability or postpone that investigation
    until after it learns of a probable claim and still retain its
    [premiums.]”).   Dr. Stoddard’s renewal application contained the
    location and telephone number of his New Jersey practice.    That
    was a sufficient red flag to prompt an inquiry by the RIJUA if
    it did not want to continue collecting Dr. Stoddard’s premiums.
    Like the innocent parties in LaCroix and Lawson, DeMarco
    was entirely unaware of any misrepresentation made by Dr.
    Stoddard to the RIJUA and had no ability to discover it.
    13
    Instead, the patient had the reasonable expectation that his
    podiatrist was in compliance with the statutory requirement to
    maintain medical malpractice insurance.    He also had the right
    to rely on the fact that, at the time of his surgery, the RIJUA
    was Dr. Stoddard’s malpractice carrier.
    To require the DeMarcos to bear the entire cost of damages
    resulting from Dr. Stoddard’s alleged malpractice is
    inconsistent with principles of equity.    The RIJUA in this case
    has reaped a windfall -- it pocketed three years of premiums,
    backdated a rescission, and is not required to expend a single
    dollar of collected premiums to compensate the innocent patient
    and his wife victimized by Dr. Stoddard’s alleged medical
    malpractice.   That is hardly an equitable result, nor is it in
    keeping with New Jersey’s public policy.
    That public policy is clearly expressed in our law that
    mandates insurance coverage for innocent victims of medical
    malpractice, in circumstances such as we have here.    The RIJUA
    should be required to pay up to the minimum amount of insurance
    that a patient expects a doctor to maintain -- the $500,000
    necessary for a letter of credit.
    In reversing the trial court and Appellate Division, the
    majority has decided on an approach that leaves an innocent
    patient without a source of compensation for damages suffered by
    the malpractice of his insolvent doctor.
    14
    Because that approach is contrary to public policy, I
    respectfully dissent.
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.    A-104                                    SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON APPEAL FROM              Appellate Division, Superior Court
    THOMAS DEMARCO and CYNTHIA
    DEMARCO,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    SEAN ROBERT STODDARD, D.P.M.,
    Individually and t/a CENTER FOR ADVANCED
    FOOT & ANKLE CARE, INC.,
    Defendant,
    and
    MEDICAL MALPRACTICE JOINT
    UNDERWRITING ASSOCIATION OF RHODE
    ISLAND,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    DECIDED                December 1, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                        PRESIDING
    OPINION BY           Judge Cuff (temporarily assigned)
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINION BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY           Justice Albin
    CHECKLIST                            REVERSE             DISSENT
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                                           X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                        X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                                                  X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                        X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                   X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                          X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                         X
    TOTALS                                   5                     2