R.K. and A.K. v. D.L., Jr. , 434 N.J. Super. 113 ( 2014 )


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  •                    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2338-12T1
    R.K. and A.K.,1
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                January 13, 2014
    v.                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
    D.L., JR.,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    _______________________________________
    Argued December 11, 2013 – Decided January 13, 2014
    Before Judges Fuentes, Fasciale and Haas.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Bergen County,
    Docket No. FD-02-387-13.
    Martin J. Arbus argued the cause for appellants
    (Arbus, Maybruch & Goode, LLC, attorneys;
    Mr. Arbus and Matthew R. Goode, on the briefs).
    Amy F. Gjelsvik argued the cause for respondent
    (Daggett, Kraemer & Gjelsvik, attorneys;
    Ms. Gjelsvik, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FUENTES, P.J.A.D.
    1
    To protect the identity of the twelve-year-old child, the court
    has chosen to use initials for the parties.
    Plaintiffs R.K. and A.K. are the maternal grandparents of
    twelve-year-old Olga.2           Plaintiffs filed a verified complaint in
    the   Family        Part    seeking       visitation           rights        with      their
    granddaughter       pursuant     to     our       State's   grandparent       visitation
    statute, N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1.
    After joinder of issue, but before the parties engaged in
    any discovery, the child's father, defendant D.L., Jr., filed a
    motion to dismiss the complaint under Rule 4:6-2(e), for failure
    to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.                             The court
    granted defendant's motion and dismissed plaintiffs' cause of
    action without conducting an evidentiary hearing or affording
    counsel     for    either    side       the       opportunity      to    present        oral
    argument.      The court based its decision to dismiss this case on
    plaintiffs'       failure   to      provide       expert    testimony.         The     court
    thereafter        denied    plaintiffs'            motion    for     reconsideration,
    although on that occasion it afforded counsel the opportunity to
    present oral argument on the matter.
    Plaintiffs now appeal arguing the Family Part erred when it
    dismissed their complaint before they had the opportunity to
    engage    in   discovery       or     present       evidence    in      an   evidentiary
    hearing.       Plaintiffs        also    argue        the   court       misapplied        the
    2
    We have fictionalized the names of the children for ease of
    reference.
    2                                     A-2338-12T1
    standard applicable for deciding a motion brought under Rule
    4:6-2 because the allegation raised in their complaint, together
    with    the    certifications            submitted      in    response        to     defendant's
    motion to dismiss, were sufficient to establish a prima facie
    cause    of    action       under     N.J.S.A.        9:2-7.1,       and     raised     material
    questions          of     fact    that     can       only    be     resolved         through    an
    evidentiary hearing.
    We agree with plaintiffs' arguments and reverse.                                The facts
    alleged       by        plaintiffs    in    their       complaint          and     supplemental
    certifications established a prima facie case for relief under
    N.J.S.A.       9:2-7.1.              Moreover,         because         the    court      decided
    defendant's         Rule     4:6-2(e)      motion      after      it    considered       factual
    allegations made by the parties in certifications outside the
    pleadings,         it     was    required    to       apply    the      standard       governing
    summary judgment motions in Rule 4:46-2(c).                                  Roa v. Roa, 
    200 N.J. 555
    , 562 (2010).                The court erred in granting defendant's
    motion to dismiss because the record shows the parties have
    clear disagreements concerning the nature and significance of
    key events in their lives.                  Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of
    Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 540 (1995); R. 4:46-2(c).                               Most importantly,
    the     parties'          disagreements      are        rooted       in      their     seemingly
    irreconcilable            perceptions       of    how       these      tragic      events      have
    affected Olga's emotional wellbeing.
    3                                      A-2338-12T1
    Given       the    complexity    and    magnitude    of    the   tragic    facts
    alleged here, the court also erred by dismissing plaintiffs'
    complaint       without   affording      them   the    opportunity     to   conduct
    discovery in order to gather sufficient evidence to overcome
    defendant's       presumptively         valid    objection      to     grandparent
    visitation as Olga's father.               Once discovery is completed, the
    court may then entertain the filing of dispositive motions, if
    warranted by the evidence.              If motion practice proves to be an
    unsuitable means for resolving this dispute, the court must then
    conduct     a    plenary      hearing      to   assess   the     credibility       of
    witnesses' testimony, after they have been subjected to rigorous
    cross-examination.
    Finally, the court also erred in concluding plaintiffs were
    required to present expert testimony to meet their burden of
    proof in this case.           Grandparents can meet their burden of proof
    that regular contact with their grandchild is necessary to avoid
    harm to the child without presenting expert testimony.                        As our
    Supreme   Court       noted   in   Moriarty     v.   Bradt,   
    177 N.J. 84
    ,   117
    (2003), cert. denied, 
    540 U.S. 1177
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 1408
    , 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 78
     (2004), "[t]he grandparents' evidence can be expert or
    factual."       It was also unfair for the trial court to base its
    decision to dismiss plaintiffs' case based                    in large part on
    their failure to produce expert testimony, while the case was at
    4                                A-2338-12T1
    its most embryonic phase and after denying them the opportunity
    to engage in discovery.
    We gather the following facts from the pleadings and the
    certifications submitted by the parties in support of and in
    opposition to plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration.
    I
    UNDERLYING FACTS
    Defendant was twenty-five years old at the time he met
    plaintiffs'      twenty-one-year-old           daughter    K.K.     Defendant       was
    introduced to K.K. by her brother, who was also defendant's
    roommate at the time.           The couple lived together for a period of
    time   before    they    eventually      married      in   2000.    They      had   two
    children, Olga born in 2001 and Charles born in 2004.
    Plaintiffs acknowledge that their daughter was addicted to
    pain medication at the time she married defendant.                       Plaintiffs
    also claim, however, that defendant knew of her addiction before
    the    wedding   and    agreed    to    help    her   overcome     it.     K.K.     was
    originally prescribed this medication to alleviate the pain she
    suffered    as   a     result    of    being    seriously     injured    in     a   car
    accident years earlier.           Plaintiffs' younger son was killed in
    this same accident.         He was a passenger in the car driven by
    K.K.
    5                                   A-2338-12T1
    According to defendant, K.K.'s drug abuse issues predated
    the   automobile     accident.      In   his    certification      submitted     in
    support     of     his    motion   to    dismiss     plaintiffs'     complaint,
    defendant averred that in the course of his divorce he "learned
    for the first time that [K.K.] started experimenting with drugs
    at age 13."       Defendant believes the car accident served only to
    exacerbate       K.K.'s   preexisting    drug   abuse   problem     because     she
    abused pain medication as a misguided effort "to self-medicate
    against    her    emotions    related    to    the   guilt   and   loss   of    her
    brother."
    The marriage between defendant and K.K. lasted only four
    and one-half years.          The couple separated in 2004; the court
    entered a final judgment of divorce in August 2006.                  Ostensibly
    driven by his concern over K.K.'s addiction, defendant fought
    hard to obtain physical custody of the children pendente lite.
    However,    in    August   2005,   the   matrimonial     court     awarded     K.K.
    physical custody of the children, although both parents were
    given joint legal custody.
    Based on the record before us, it seems clear defendant
    still resents plaintiffs for the role they played in the court's
    custody decision.          In defendant's view, the matrimonial judge
    was heavily, if not unduly influenced by plaintiffs' assurances
    that they would be available to help their daughter with the
    6                                A-2338-12T1
    care    and   supervision     of    the   children   because     she   and    the
    children would reside with plaintiffs in their house in Howell.
    As a result, commencing in August 2005, plaintiffs shared
    their    home    with     their    daughter    and   grandchildren.          This
    arrangement continued for six years, until plaintiffs relocated
    to Florida in April 2011.             From plaintiffs' perspective, the
    time they spent with their granddaughter, during the formative
    years of this child's life, enabled them to forge a strong,
    close, and loving relationship with her.                  Defendant sees this
    arrangement very differently.             In his view, plaintiffs merely
    meddled in his family's affairs, undermined his parental role
    and authority over his two children, and most importantly, in
    retrospect, left his infant son in the hands of a drug-addicted,
    emotionally unstable woman who proved to be utterly incapable of
    keeping him safe.
    The animosity between defendant and plaintiffs engendered
    by the court's custody decision reached a critical point on
    November 14, 2005, the day eighteen-month-old Charles tragically
    drowned in a koi pond located in the backyard of plaintiffs'
    house    in     Howell.      Plaintiffs       described    the   circumstances
    surrounding their grandson's death in paragraphs 25 and 26 of
    their verified complaint:
    [E]veryone was at home and asleep after
    spending the entire night in the emergency
    7                            A-2338-12T1
    room due to a medical issue suffered by
    [plaintiff R.K.] during the course of the
    evening.[3] The parties awoke in the morning
    with the screams of [K.K.] that she could
    not find [Charles]. It was later determined
    that [Charles] had apparently slipped out of
    the house into the backyard and had fallen
    into a fish pond and drowned. The fish pond
    was only one foot deep.      The matter was
    thereafter investigated by both the Monmouth
    County Prosecutor's Office and Howell Police
    Department and both determined this was a
    "tragic accident."   Everyone was devastated
    by the loss of [Charles].
    Following the death of [Charles], defendant
    served [K.K.] with papers for sole custody
    of [Olga].    The same judge that made the
    original decision regarding physical custody,
    again gave primary custody of [Olga] to
    [K.K.] in early December of 2006.
    Despite     evidence    indicating    otherwise,   defendant     still
    holds plaintiffs in large part responsible for Charles' death.
    The   following     passage    from   his   certification   captures    the
    essence and depth of defendant's feelings in this regard.
    I am a reasonable man and understand in life
    accidents happen but my son's death was more
    than avoidable had the Plaintiffs simply
    fulfilled the responsibility they begged
    for.     The   police  report   states  that
    [Charles] had drowned and was under water
    for approximately 20 minutes.     To me that
    3
    Defendant claimed in his certification to the trial court that
    the medical emergency suffered by R.K. that night was caused by
    a chronic alcohol abuse problem.     Plaintiff A.K. denied this
    allegation   in  her   response  certification  in   support  of
    plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration. She claimed her husband
    suffered an acute case of acid reflux, which initially mimics
    the symptoms of cardiac arrest.
    8                          A-2338-12T1
    means [Charles]    was out of the house
    navigated the stairs, wandered the yard for
    an undocumented amount of time until he
    happened upon the unfenced koi pond and fell
    in.    Being only 18-months old, [Charles]
    required constant supervision, as do all
    toddlers.   Knowing that [K.K.] was battling
    her drug addiction and my concern for the
    children's safety, the [Ks] promised the
    Courts to supervise her parenting time.
    Where were the [Ks] while [Charles] was
    escaping the house, wandering the yard,
    drowning in the pond and lifeless for
    another 20 minutes?[4]
    Following Charles' death, defendant filed a wrongful death
    action against plaintiffs alleging negligent supervision as the
    ground for liability.        According to A.K., she and her husband
    agreed to settle the case because their home insurance carrier
    assured them that: (1) the settlement did not constitute an
    admission   of   liability    on     their   part:   and   (2)     half   of    the
    settlement proceeds would be paid to their daughter as Charles'
    mother.
    Simultaneous      with   the     wrongful     death    action,    defendant
    filed an emergent application before the Family Part to obtain
    physical    custody   of     Olga,     alleging      his   son's     death      was
    indicative of K.K.'s unfitness to parent Olga or be responsible
    4
    Plaintiffs denied defendant's allegations concerning the
    circumstances that led to Charles' death.    Specifically, A.K.
    submitted a rebuttal certification before the trial court in
    which she averred that Charles was only "missing a total of 10-
    11 minutes."
    9                                  A-2338-12T1
    for her welfare and safety.             Defendant also claimed plaintiffs
    failed to honor the assurances they made to the                          matrimonial
    court that induced the judge to award physical custody of the
    children to their daughter.             Despite this tragic event and the
    serious     nature   of   defendant's            allegations,      the   Family     Part
    denied defendant's motion for a change in physical custody and
    continued plaintiffs' involvement in Olga's life.
    It appears the court's decision to deny defendant custody
    of   Olga   following     the    death       of     his    son    continues    to    vex
    defendant and invoke in him a strong emotional reaction.                            Once
    again we cite to defendant's certification:
    For reasons unbeknownst to me, my emergent
    request for custody of [Olga] was rejected
    and the Judge simply stated he didn't want
    to place blame for [Charles'] death at that
    time. I simply wanted my right as a father
    to protect my daughter from any further harm
    and prevent her from suffering the same fate
    as her brother. (Emphasis added).
    We pause to note that the record before the Family Part, and
    later   provided     to   us    in    this       appeal,   does    not   contain     any
    evidential     support     for       holding       plaintiffs      responsible       for
    Charles'    tragic   death.          Yet,    eight    years      after   the   child's
    death, defendant continues to blame plaintiffs for this tragic
    accident.
    Plaintiffs decided to relocate to Florida in November 2009,
    but permitted K.K. to remain living with Olga in their home in
    10                                 A-2338-12T1
    Howell.      As    represented         in    paragraph       28    of    their      verified
    complaint, plaintiffs kept in daily telephone contact with their
    daughter and granddaughter.              They also returned to New Jersey in
    2010 to spend the Christmas holiday with their entire family,
    which     included      their    two     other    sons       and     their     wives      and
    children, including five of Olga's maternal cousins.                           Plaintiffs
    returned to Florida on December 31, 2010, and continued to call
    Olga and K.K. on a daily basis.
    A reasonable person can view the events recounted thus far
    as constituting more than a lifetime worth of suffering for both
    sides of this family dispute.                However, another great and tragic
    loss    awaited    in   2011.       As      revealed    in    paragraph        29    of   the
    verified    complaint,      in   early       February    2011,          K.K.   called     her
    mother and told her, in an alarmed fashion, that "she felt a pop
    in her chest."          Although A.K. advised her daughter to see a
    doctor or go to a clinic, she never did.                          Plaintiffs described
    what    followed     this   event      on    paragraph       30    of    their      verified
    complaint.
    On March 7, 2011, [A.K.] received a call
    from [Olga] that she had come home from
    school and found her mother unconscious in
    the bedroom. [A.K.] told [Olga] to stay on
    the phone and [A.K.] called Howell Police.
    She also called their eldest son, [R.K.],
    who lived in Marlboro, New Jersey to drive
    over to be with [Olga].    The ambulance and
    police arrived at the home and [A.K.] spoke
    to a female officer to tell her that her son
    11                                     A-2338-12T1
    was   on   the  way   to   be  with  [Olga].
    Plaintiffs were advised that [K.K.] was
    breathing but unconscious and they needed to
    take [Olga] to the police station unless
    their son could get there before the
    ambulance left. Plaintiffs' son [R.K.], did
    arrive in time and [Olga] was released to
    his   home   in  Marlboro.     That  evening
    [defendant] went to [R.K.'s] home and picked
    [Olga] up from the home.
    K.K. was diagnosed with "a heart valve problem."               She was
    admitted to two separate hospitals for a period of four weeks.
    Her mother A.K.      kept in constant telephone contact with her
    daughter in New Jersey until she flew from Florida on March 10,
    2011.      According to plaintiffs, defendant only allowed Olga to
    call her mother on the phone two times during her month-long
    stay at Robert Wood Johnson Medical Center in New Brunswick.                He
    did not allow Olga to visit her mother during the entire four-
    week period of her hospitalization.
    K.K. had heart surgery at Robert Wood Johnson sometime in
    the last week of March 2011.          Although she seemed to be doing
    well approximately a week after her surgery, K.K. died at six
    o'clock in the morning on April 2, 2011.                Her brother      R.K.
    notified defendant, who, according to plaintiffs, responded via
    a   text   message   "stating   he   was   simply   leaving   the   issue   of
    [Olga's] attendance at the funeral to [Olga] and that he was not
    going to sway her either way."             Defendant allegedly followed
    12                             A-2338-12T1
    this   initial   text   message     with    a   second     text   stating   the
    following:
    [Olga] and I will be coming for the private
    viewing.    I want her to be encouraged to
    only stay a short time. She will not leave
    my sight.    I don't want her to know any
    details other than her mom's heart was sick
    and the doctors did everything they could
    and lastly, I don't want any discussion
    about how she is to call to talk to you in
    the future as that is what you and I will
    discuss in the days ahead. If she asks simply
    say, we will talk and text soon, you and I
    will work those details out later. . . .
    Despite the curtness of this message, plaintiffs claimed
    that when defendant appeared at the funeral "everyone hugged and
    plaintiffs told [defendant] they still loved him and he was like
    a son to them during the marriage."                According to plaintiffs,
    Olga ran and hugged her grandmother as soon as she came out of
    the car at the funeral and never left her grandmother's side "as
    they went to see her mother."         A.K. also claimed that when Olga
    asked her father when she could see her maternal grandparents,
    he told her "that would get sorted out very soon and I'll call
    your grandmother to discuss all of that."
    Plaintiffs   allege   that   the    first    time   Olga   called    them
    after the funeral was on May 6, 2011.                 The child spoke with
    plaintiffs   for    approximately    twenty     minutes     while   defendant
    listened on the extension line.            According to plaintiffs, the
    conversation ended when defendant "promised that he would do
    13                               A-2338-12T1
    everything     to   maintain    the   relationship         between    [Olga]      and
    plaintiffs."
    Plaintiffs spoke on the phone to Olga again on May 12,
    2011, but only for a few minutes.              The child allegedly told her
    grandmother that her father "was in the bathroom and she would
    have to hang up if he comes out."              The next call occurred seven
    days later on May 19, 2011.             Defendant again listened on the
    extension line as Olga asked her grandmother when she was coming
    to visit her.       The child played the flute for her grandparents
    over    the   phone,   spoke    about    her    cat    who   then     lived     with
    plaintiffs in Florida, and she mentioned making new friends in
    school.
    Defendant permitted Olga to call plaintiffs nine times over
    the next thirteen months.        Plaintiffs alleged they did not speak
    to their granddaughter in June, August, September, and October
    2011.     The last call the child made was on January 30, 2012.
    Plaintiffs     attempted   to    call    Olga    on    a   daily     basis     using
    defendant's    landline    to   no    avail.      Plaintiffs         also   suspect
    defendant had taken Olga's cell phone.                Plaintiffs' attempts to
    reach the child via email were also fruitless.                     Their several
    emails to defendant asking to discuss the situation in an effort
    to reach a mutually agreeable protocol for contacting Olga were
    unanswered.     Plaintiffs thus claimed they "exhausted all efforts
    14                                  A-2338-12T1
    to   amicably   resolve   this   matter     directly   with    the   defendant
    without the cost of litigation."
    Defendant sees matters completely differently.                 He views
    the time plaintiffs spent with Olga before her mother's untimely
    death as a negative and abusive experience to his daughter's
    emotional and physical wellbeing.           The following paragraphs from
    defendant's     certification    to   the   trial   court     illustrate    the
    magnitude of the discord:
    25. The danger and abuse that [Olga] had to
    endure over the past few years took its toll
    on every facet of her life, having a
    negative impact on her health, safety, and
    well-being. [sic].   She was physically and
    emotionally suffering on a daily basis. The
    Plaintiffs knowingly watched [Olga's] home
    life    with    her    mother    drastically
    deteriorate.   The Plaintiffs were the only
    ones who knew the true condition of [Olga's]
    mother's home and A.K. later admitted to me
    on the telephone that she feared for
    [Olga's] safety but she still did nothing to
    protect [Olga]. As I continued to fight for
    [Olga's] safety through the Courts, through
    her school, and DYFS,[5] the Plaintiffs
    5
    "DYFS" stands for Division of Youth and Family Services, now
    known as the Division of Child Protection and Permanency.
    Plaintiffs strongly dispute any implication that DYFS ever
    investigated their late daughter based on any allegations or
    suspicions of abuse or neglect of her children.    As previously
    noted,   plaintiffs   averred    law   enforcement   authorities
    investigated the cause of Charles' death and found no evidence
    to conclude it was nothing more than a tragic accident.
    Evidence relating to plaintiffs' activities during the time Olga
    resided with them needs to be gathered through the process of
    discovery. We anticipate that this discovery will also include
    evidence showing what concrete action, if any, defendant took to
    (continued)
    15                              A-2338-12T1
    continue to watch [Olga's] life deteriorate
    to the point where she was wearing dirty
    clothes, at times had no food, barely slept,
    and had fallen so far behind in school that
    her promotion from the fourth grade was
    questionable.
    . . . .
    27. Ultimately, after years of fighting for
    [Olga's] safety, it took her mom's death to
    bring to light all of the horrors in
    [Olga's] life that the Plaintiffs were
    knowingly covering up while they continued
    to enable their daughter's drug addiction.
    28. The time [Olga] has spent with the
    Plaintiffs was clearly not the sunshine and
    roses they describe in their Complaint.
    Their relationship with [Olga] following the
    death of her mother has continued to be
    detrimental   to    her.    Plaintiffs  have
    constantly placed a great amount of pressure
    on [Olga] to do things.   She is told words
    like "you must call me or I'll get upset"
    and until the last 18 months she had felt
    the unnecessary pressure to the point she
    would break down in tears.        During one
    conversation with [A.K.], [Olga] was even
    told that she should have called her mom in
    the hospital. That caused [Olga's] grieving
    process to backslide and caused several
    sleepless nights and an extra trip to the
    grief counselors.[6]
    (continued)
    rescue his children from the deplorable and abusive conditions
    he described in his certification.
    6
    In lieu of subjecting the child to additional and possibly even
    unnecessary psychological scrutiny, plaintiffs suggested the
    trial court order defendant to permit Olga's grief counselor to
    opine if preventing her from having any contact with her
    maternal grandparents was harmful to her psychological and
    emotional wellbeing.    Defendant objected to this approach and
    (continued)
    16                        A-2338-12T1
    II
    PROCEDURAL ANOMALIES
    Before       we   address     the   substantive    basis      of   the   trial
    court's ruling, we will review in some detail the procedural
    journey plaintiffs' complaint traveled before it was dismissed
    on defendant's Rule 4:6-2 motion.             Through this review, we have
    identified   a    number     of   systemic    anomalies    that   inadvertently
    inhibited plaintiffs' ability to present their case in a manner
    likely to produce a sustainable adjudicative outcome.
    As     required    by    Rule     2:6-2(a)(3),    plaintiffs'      appellate
    brief   contained      a    section     describing   the   case's      procedural
    history.    As part of this history, plaintiffs noted that
    [o]n   or  about   July   13,   2012,   [they]
    attempted   to    file   a    Complaint    for
    Grandparent Visitation with the Superior
    Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division,,
    Family Part . . .    [which] was rejected by
    the Court because a form complaint was
    required.          Thereafter,      Plaintiffs
    resubmitted the required Verified Complaint
    form, however, Plaintiffs also attached the
    more detailed Complaint setting forth the
    factual allegations.      The Complaint was
    filed on August 7, 2012.
    (continued)
    refused to release any information or records from her
    therapist.    The trial judge ultimately denied plaintiffs'
    application despite making the lack of expert testimony a
    critical part of his decision to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint
    without the benefit of an evidentiary hearing.
    17                              A-2338-12T1
    The Family Part's decision to return plaintiffs' attorney-
    drafted complaint, and demand that their counsel submit instead
    a "check the box" form pleading, was precipitated by systemic
    changes in the way cases that fall under the umbrella category
    of "non-dissolution" are processed by the Family Part.                                  This sea
    change in the processing of non-dissolution cases at the trial
    level   came       about      as   the        organic    byproduct      of    Supreme       Court
    committees         comprised        of     family       law    attorneys,         Family      Part
    judges,      and    dedicated           and    concerned      members        of   the    general
    public.      Despite their best efforts and inclusive approach, it
    appears grandparent visitation cases do not fit squarely into
    the revisions that were ultimately adopted to better service the
    large   majority         of   cases       denoted       as    "non-dissolution"          or    "FD
    Docket" cases.
    On    September        2,        2011,    Judge       Glenn     A.    Grant,       Acting
    Administrative Director of the Courts, issued Directive 08-11 to
    supplement         and    revise         the     procedures       for    processing           non-
    dissolution         matters        in     the     Family       Part.7         The    revisions
    implemented by Directive 08-11 were approved by the Judicial
    7
    Directive 08-11 is available to the public on the judiciary's
    website. www.judiciary.state.nj.us/directive/2011/dir_08_11.pdf.
    (last visited December 17, 2013).    Furthermore, administrative
    directives have the force of law. S.M. v. K.M, ____ N.J. Super.
    _____, _____ (App. Div. 2013) (slip op at n. 2) (citing State v.
    Morales, 
    390 N.J. Super. 470
    , 472 (App. Div. 2007)).
    18                                     A-2338-12T1
    Council8, as originally recommended by the Conferences of Family
    Part Presiding Judges and Family Division Managers.
    Directive 08-11 provides a state-wide uniform system for
    processing cases falling under the general purview of the "non-
    dissolution docket," also known as the "FD Docket."                   As Judge
    Grant explained in his memorandum to Assignment Judges, Family
    Part Presiding Judges, Trial Court Administrators, and Family
    Division Managers:
    The Non-Dissolution docket provides relief
    to never married parents seeking custody,
    parenting time, paternity, child support and
    medical support. It also serves couples
    seeking certain reliefs, such as financial
    support without dissolution of their union.
    Additionally,   the   Non-Dissolution  docket
    includes    non-parent    relatives   seeking
    custody, child support and/or visitation
    regarding minor children. Self-represented
    litigants comprise the majority of those
    filing   in   the   Non-Dissolution   docket.
    (Emphasis added).
    Of     particular     importance    here,   Directive    08-11    requires
    Family    Division    intake   staff    to   process   all   non-dissolution
    cases    "as    summary   actions,   with    additional   discovery    at    the
    discretion of the judge."            It also requires litigants in non-
    8
    The Judicial Council is the governing body of the judiciary.
    Chaired by and ultimately answerable to the Chief Justice, the
    Council consists of the Assignment Judges from all of the
    vicinages, the Presiding Judge for Administration of the
    Appellate Division, the Administrative Director of the Courts,
    and the Chairs of the Conferences of Presiding Judges for the
    Civil, Criminal, Family, and General Equity Divisions.
    19                              A-2338-12T1
    dissolution       matters    to    file     their      initial    complaint        using
    standardized      complaint       forms     approved     by    the     Administrative
    Office of the Courts, and incorporated as an appendix item to
    Directive 08-11.        The directive did not expressly distinguish
    between the litigant who files pro se and one who is represented
    by counsel, nor did it provide any dispensation or exemption to
    cases such as this one, where the pleading was prepared and
    filed by an attorney.         As Judge Grant noted in his memorandum to
    the vicinages, the revisions were predicated on the reality that
    "[s]elf-represented         litigants     comprise       the    majority     of    those
    filing in the Non-Dissolution docket."
    Even      a    cursory     review       of     the   standardized           Verified
    Complaint     form    required      by    Directive       08-11       reveals     it   is
    intended to apply primarily to cases involving disputes between
    unmarried     individuals         seeking      child     support,       court-ordered
    custody, and/or parenting time.9                 The revisions are intended to
    provide   these      self-represented          litigants       with    a   consistent,
    9
    Although less likely, married individuals may also use the
    standardized Verified Complaint form to file an FD docket action
    to obtain spousal and child support, and even court-ordered
    parenting time.   The traditional FM matrimonial action is only
    required when the parties seek dissolution of the marriage as
    the principal form of relief.        In the FM docketed case,
    equitable distribution, spousal and child support, custody, and
    parenting   time  are   collateral  issues   arising  from   the
    dissolution of the marriage.
    20                                    A-2338-12T1
    statewide means of accessing the Family Part.                   As better stated
    by Judge Grant:
    Efficient    methods    for    processing   Non-
    Dissolution    cases    are   crucial   to   the
    operation   of    the   court    and  to   court
    customers seeking relief under this docket
    type.     Having      standardized     statewide
    practices enables all court customers to
    have a clear and consistent understanding
    and a defined process for the resolution of
    disputes that fall under this docket type.
    The only reference to grandparent visitation actions in the
    model Verified Complaint is found on page two, under a checkbox
    with the subheading: "Establish or Modify Visitation Rights."
    This   subheading      is   further     divided      into   three     subcategories
    described    as    "Parenting    time;       Grandparent      Time;    and    Sibling
    Time."      Each of these subcategories is accompanied by its own
    checkbox.         After the litigant checks the appropriate box, the
    form provides three lines for the presumably pro se litigant to
    elaborate on the reasons for the relief requested.                           The last
    page   of   the    model    complaint    is   left    blank    for    the    putative
    plaintiff     to    provide    any     "additional      information."            Here,
    plaintiffs' counsel attached a copy of his initially rejected
    complaint,     which       consisted    of    fifty     individually         numbered
    paragraphs describing in great detail the factual basis for the
    relief requested.
    21                                   A-2338-12T1
    The    next   critical    part   of     the    revisions     reflected        in
    Directive 08-11 concerns how the Family Part should process or
    manage    non-dissolution    cases    once        the    complaint        has   been
    accepted for filing.        As a general proposition, the directive
    reaffirms that all non-dissolution cases should be processed as
    summary   actions.     Although      this    classification          is    arguably
    mandated by Rule 5:4-4, the directive reemphasizes this aspect
    of how this case-type should be managed by Family Part judges.
    Rule 5:4-4(a) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
    Family Part summary actions shall include
    all non-dissolution initial complaints as
    well as applications for post-dispositional
    relief, applications for post-dispositional
    relief under the Prevention of Domestic
    Violence   Act,   and    all   kinship    legal
    guardianship actions.        Applications for
    post-dispositional    relief   shall    replace
    motion practice in Family Part summary
    actions.   The court in its discretion, or
    upon application of either party, may expand
    discovery,   enter    an    appropriate    case
    management order, or conduct a plenary
    hearing on any matter. (Emphasis added.)
    Syllogistically,     since    grandparent           visitation    complaints
    under N.J.S.A. 9:2-7 are docketed as FD non-dissolution actions,
    and since under the expansive language of Rule 5:4-4 "summary
    actions shall include all non-dissolution initial complaints,"
    by force of logic grandparent visitation suits must be treated
    as summary actions.      (Emphasis added).              Traditionally, summary
    22                                    A-2338-12T1
    actions are expedited proceedings governed by Rule 4:67-1. The
    summary nature of the action is intended
    to   accomplish  the   salutary   purpose   of
    swiftly and effectively disposing of matters
    which lend themselves to summary treatment
    while at the same time giving the defendant
    an opportunity to be heard at the time
    plaintiff makes his application on the
    question    of  whether    or   not    summary
    disposition is appropriate.
    [Washington Commons, LLC v. City of Jersey
    City, 
    416 N.J. Super. 555
    , 564 (App. Div.
    2010), certif. denied, 
    205 N.J. 318
     (2011),
    (quoting   Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J.
    Court   Rules,   comment  1  on   R.  4:67-1
    (2014)).]
    Summary actions in the Family Part are ordinarily tried
    without the benefits of discovery.      R. 5:5-1.    However, even in
    summary actions, the trial court has the discretion to authorize
    discovery for good cause shown, Depos v. Depos, 
    307 N.J. Super. 396
    , 400 (Ch. Div. 1997); see also R. 5:5-1(d), or to protect a
    party's due process rights, H.E.S. v. J.C.S., 
    175 N.J. 309
    , 324
    (2003).   Finally, and particularly relevant here, Rule 5:4-4(a)
    expressly empowers the trial court with the discretion to order
    discovery on the court's motion, or "upon application of either
    party, . . .    expand discovery, [or] enter an appropriate case
    management order, or conduct a plenary hearing on any matter."
    Against    this   regulatory   backdrop,   we   now   hold   that     a
    complaint seeking grandparent visitation as the principal form
    23                            A-2338-12T1
    of relief should not be automatically treated by the Family Part
    as    a    summary     action    requiring      expedited    resolution,         merely
    because it bears an FD docket number.                As this case illustrates,
    such       a   default     approach   can       be   inconsistent        with      sound
    principles of judicial case management, and potentially inhibit
    the grandparents' due process rights to prosecute their case in
    a manner likely to produce a sustainable adjudicative outcome.
    As a matter of sound principles of judicial case management
    and    consistent        with   rudimentary      notions    of    due    process,        a
    verified complaint prepared by an attorney, seeking grandparent
    visitation as the only form of relief, should not be rejected by
    the Family Part as facially deficient for filing, merely because
    it     was     not   presented    using     a   standardized      form     complaint
    intended to be used primarily by pro se litigants as a means of
    facilitating their access to the court.                    Stated differently, a
    litigant should not be penalized for retaining an experienced
    family law attorney to present their case to the court in the
    form of a professionally drafted pleading.
    As a matter of basic respect to the legal profession, we
    must operate under the presumption that a complaint prepared by
    an attorney contains a far more comprehensive presentation of
    the    facts     and   legal     principles     involved     in   a     case    than     a
    standardized form document crafted to identify, in a generic
    24                                    A-2338-12T1
    fashion, the nature of the family action at issue by having a
    pro se litigant put a checkmark in or write a line across the
    box next to the subcategory "grandparent visitation."                                 At the
    very least, an attorney-drafted pleading should be treated no
    differently than one prepared by a pro se litigant.
    Unfortunately,     what    occurred        here       demonstrates       that,     at
    least at the time and in the vicinage this case was filed,
    attorney-prepared complaints were routinely rejected as a matter
    of   policy.      Compounding      this      problem,        a    complaint     prepared,
    filed, and signed by an attorney, who listed the address of his
    law office as the place where all communications from the court
    should    be    sent,   was   rejected       by   the    Family      Part      through    an
    automated      form-letter      sent    directly        to       plaintiffs'     home     in
    Florida.
    The     form-letter      informed       plaintiffs          that     "[e]ffective
    September 1, 2011 the Administrative Office of the Courts issued
    a    Directive    which   promulgates        the    revised         filing     and     post-
    dispositional      procedures     for     the     Non-Dissolution           (FD)      Docket
    type."    (Emphasis     added).        The     letter    continued        by    apprising
    plaintiffs       that   their     "Non-Dissolution               Complaint/Application
    (FD)     and/or    Non-Dissolution           Motion/Modification               (FD)     with
    supporting papers have been received but have not been filed
    with the Family Division for the reasons(s) identified below."
    25                                       A-2338-12T1
    The      form-letter       then    lists       six    unnumbered       checkboxes
    identifying categories or grounds for rejection of plaintiffs'
    attorney-drafted pleading.            Here, three boxes were checked with
    an "X."     The first directed plaintiffs (not their attorney) to
    "resubmit your Application and/or Modification on the revised
    forms."    It directed plaintiffs to "retrieve" the forms from the
    New Jersey Judiciary website; the second checked box informed
    plaintiffs       that    they     "had      not      included       the        completed
    Confidential Litigant Information Sheet," which apparently was
    attached to the letter; and the third box apprised plaintiffs
    that "Effective September 1, 2011," the vicinage Family Court
    would no longer accept motions in FD actions.
    The     form-letter      concluded        by   notifying       plaintiffs       that
    "[i]n accordance with R. 1:5-6(c) if the corrected paperwork
    and/or documents are submitted to the court within ten 10 days
    after the date of this notice, original filing date will be
    preserved."       In this case, the filing date was July 17, 2012.
    This approach is inappropriate on several levels.                          First, a
    default robotic rejection of complaints filed in the Family Part
    carries    an    unacceptably     high     risk    of    producing       the    type   of
    insensitive,       arbitrary     outcome      that      occurred    in    this     case.
    Second, the document used convoluted, needlessly bureaucratic
    language        that    served    only      to       undermine      the        "customer
    26                                     A-2338-12T1
    friendly/greater     access   to   the     court"   policy   that    was   the
    foundation for the revisions to Directive 08-11.             This can only
    frustrate the litigant who receives this letter and increase the
    level of alienation and distrust litigants feel about our court
    system.    This "tail wagging the dog" outcome cannot stand.
    From the perspective of the bar, this approach displays a
    disrespect for the work-product of professionally trained and
    highly    experienced   family     law    attorneys.     A   professionally
    prepared complaint is likely to identify with particularity the
    salient factual and legal issues of the case, enabling the judge
    to triage each case based on their level of complexity, and
    distinguish those cases that need active case management from
    those who may benefit from early judicial intervention.                    This
    process is also far more likely to lead to possible amicable
    settlements.     A   policy   that       automatically   rejects    attorney-
    drafted pleadings ironically makes sound judicial management of
    these kinds of cases harder.
    In Moriarty, the Court upheld the constitutionality of our
    State's grandparent visitation law based on the principle that
    "interference with parental autonomy will be tolerated only to
    avoid harm to the health or welfare of a child."                    Moriarty,
    supra, 
    177 N.J. at 115
    .       In reaching this conclusion, the Court
    specifically rejected the best interest of the child standard as
    27                              A-2338-12T1
    a basis to overcome the objections to grandparent visitation by
    a fit custodial parent.     
    Id. at 116
    .
    Writing for the Court in Moriarty, Justice Long emphasized
    that a dispute between a fit custodial
    parent and the child's grandparent is not a
    contest between equals.
    . . . .
    Thus, in every case in which visitation is
    denied, the grandparents bear the burden of
    establishing by a preponderance of the
    evidence that visitation is necessary to
    avoid harm to the child. The grandparents'
    evidence can be expert or factual. For
    example, they may rely on the death of a
    parent or the breakup of the child's home
    through divorce or separation.      In fact,
    many of the fifty grandparent visitation
    statutes    specifically    recognize    the
    potential for harm when a parent has died or
    a family breakup has occurred and visitation
    is denied.   In addition, the termination of
    a long-standing relationship between the
    grandparents and the child, with expert
    testimony assessing the effect of those
    circumstances, could form the basis for a
    finding of harm. . . . The possibilities are
    as   varied    as  the   factual   scenarios
    presented.
    [Id.    at 116-117.    (Emphasis added).]
    Plaintiffs' cause of action is predicated on tracking the
    Court's analysis in Moriarty and thereafter establishing: (1)
    the existence of a close and prolonged relationship between Olga
    and   plaintiffs   during   the   child's   formative   years;   (2)   the
    animosity and hostility harbored by defendant against plaintiffs
    28                           A-2338-12T1
    in   connection        with   Charles'          death;       (3)   the    death     of    Olga's
    mother       quickly     followed         by     the        restriction      and     ultimate
    termination      by     defendant         of     all     contact         between    Olga       and
    plaintiffs; and (4) the emotional and psychological harm to Olga
    if defendant is permitted to deny the child all contact from her
    mother's side of the family, especially plaintiffs.
    Defendant stated in his certification to the trial court
    that    he    considers       the       prospect       of     plaintiffs      remaining         in
    contact with Olga to be not only against his daughter's best
    interest, but highly dangerous to her psychological wellbeing.
    The only way for plaintiffs to rebut defendant's presumptively
    valid    objections,         is    to   provide        factual     testimonial        evidence
    describing their past interactions with the child.                                 Plaintiffs
    may also decide to present expert testimony as well, especially
    as it relates to how the child's ability to cope with the death
    of   her     mother    may    be    undermined          by    defendant's      decision          to
    exclude plaintiffs from her life.
    Although Justice Long in Moriarty referred to "the death of
    a parent or the breakup of the child's home through divorce or
    separation"      as      scenarios         in     which       prohibiting          grandparent
    visitation may be harmful to a child, we reject the notion that
    these      abstract     references        can     be     reduced     to     self-contained,
    watertight categories of harm, made available to a would be
    29                                       A-2338-12T1
    plaintiff      merely    by   placing   a    checkmark       in    a   standardized
    Verified Complaint form.           The dynamics of human interactions are
    too   complex,    the    court's    parens    patriae       responsibilities       too
    great,    plaintiffs'         statutory      rights     too        precious,       and
    defendant's constitutional rights as a parent too important, to
    reduce   the     trial   judge's     function   to    performing        a    prosaic,
    perfunctory exercise.
    Thus, as previously noted, notwithstanding its FD docket
    designation as a non-dissolution case, when a litigant brings an
    action seeking grandparent visitation under N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1,
    either   using    the    standardized       complaint       form   approved     under
    Directive 08-11 or through an attorney-prepared pleading, the
    vicinage Family Part Division Manager shall designate the matter
    as a contested case after joinder of issue and refer the case
    for   individualized      case     management    by     a    Family     Part    judge
    selected by the vicinage Presiding Judge of Family.                         The judge
    shall review the pleadings and determine whether active case
    management is needed.
    In furtherance of this case-sensitive approach, we suggest
    the judge meet with the parties and counsel, if available, as
    soon as practical after joinder of issue, to determine, on the
    record: (1) the nature of the harm to the child alleged by
    plaintiff; (2) the possibility of settlement through mediation
    30                                   A-2338-12T1
    or as otherwise provided in Rule 5:5-5; (3) whether pendente
    lite relief is warranted; (4) the extent to which any of the
    facts related to the statutory factors identified in N.J.S.A.
    9:2-7.1(b)(1) through (8) can be stipulated by the parties; (5)
    whether discovery is necessary, and if so, the extent and scope
    of   the    discovery,   as   permitted    by     Rule    5:5-1(a),    written
    interrogatories, production of documents, Rule 4:18-1, request
    for admissions, and consent to release documents not within the
    possession of the party -- discovery may be completed within the
    time allotted in Rule 5:5-1(e), or as otherwise ordered by the
    court; (6) whether expert testimony will be required, and if so,
    the time for submission of the expert's report and curriculum
    vitae, the time for submission of defendant's rebuttal report if
    any, and whether deposition of the expert(s) will be required or
    permitted; (7) a protocol for the filing of motions, including
    motions to compel discovery, motions seeking protective orders
    to exclude or limit evidence based on an assertion of privilege,
    or because the release of the information would adversely affect
    the child's best interest, or unduly infringe upon the privacy
    rights of the custodial parent; and (8) a tentative date for the
    filing     of   dispositive   motions    and/or    a     plenary   hearing   if
    necessary to adjudicate plaintiff's complaint and resolve any
    material facts in dispute.
    31                                A-2338-12T1
    This    list    is    by    no    means       exhaustive      of    the    myriad   of
    potential case management issues that may arise in any given
    case.      The    need    and    degree      of    judicial      supervision      is   left
    entirely to the discretion of the trial judge.                           As a practical
    matter, the court may direct plaintiff's counsel to prepare a
    draft     case    management      order       for       the   court's     review.        If
    plaintiff is appearing pro se, the court, or in the court's
    discretion, defense counsel, if available, shall prepare a case
    management       order    that    reflects        the    outcome    of    the    matters,
    issues,     and    decisions       discussed         and      decided     at    the    case
    management conference.
    Although we are satisfied that the burden of proof imposed
    on   plaintiffs      in    grandparent            visitation      cases    makes       these
    matters ill-suited for traditional summary action designation,
    the trial court should nevertheless manage these cases with a
    sense of urgency and be especially mindful that the nature of
    litigation is per se extremely stressful as well as economically
    disruptive.       Family-related disputes are even more stressful and
    emotionally       debilitating        than    other      types    of    civil    disputes
    because they often touch the very core of our most intimate
    experiences, force us to confront our most difficult moments,
    and require us to reveal the most private details of our lives.
    As this case shows, grandparent visitation disputes also compel
    32                                   A-2338-12T1
    those involved to relive painful memories, with the hope that
    those of us entrusted with the awesome power to decide their
    fate and the fate of their beloved and vulnerable children will
    do     so   fairly,     expeditiously,         compassionately,         and    most
    importantly, according to law.
    III
    TRIAL COURT'S RULING
    The first communication plaintiffs received from the court
    after joinder of issue was a notice, again sent directly to
    plaintiffs at their residence in Florida, summoning them to a
    "visitation rights hearing."            The generic nature of the notice
    identified plaintiffs' cause of action as a "Parenting Time/
    Visitation Rights Counsel Fees" complaint.                  The notice directed
    plaintiffs to appear before the trial judge on September 26,
    2012 at 9:30 a.m. and bring "a copy of this notice" with them.
    Despite their counsel's prior appearance in the case, plaintiffs
    were   also   told    that   they     "may    bring   an    attorney    with   you,
    although the attorney is not required."
    Plaintiffs' counsel wrote a letter to the judge named in
    the notice requesting an adjournment of the September 26, 2012
    hearing     because    the     date     conflicted         with   his   religious
    observance.     Counsel also requested that the court make the
    rescheduled hearing date "firm," because plaintiffs resided in
    33                                A-2338-12T1
    Florida and it would be a hardship for them to travel to New
    Jersey only to discover that the hearing had been adjourned at
    the last minute.
    By letter dated September 13, 2012, the trial judge granted
    plaintiffs'     counsel    adjournment       request,      rescheduling        the
    hearing to October 10, 2012, at 1:30 p.m.10                     The court also
    directed that defendant file "an Answer or any other form of
    responsive pleading by September 24, 2012.                All parties should
    submit a pretrial memorandum to the court by October 1, 2012.                     A
    copy of the pretrial memorandum is to be served on all other
    parties in the case."
    As    documented     in   a    certification     plaintiffs'        counsel
    submitted to the trial court in support of plaintiffs' motion
    for reconsideration, and as counsel emphasized to us at oral
    argument   in   this   appeal,     upon    receipt   of   the    trial   court's
    letter, he called the judge directly
    asking what the purpose of the pre-trial
    memorandum was and what type of hearing was
    going to be conducted on October 10, 2012.
    Counsel was again advised that the matter
    would proceed to a hearing on that date and
    once again advised that Plaintiffs could
    either appear in person or their testimony
    would be taken over the phone.   At no time
    was it indicated, by anyone from the court,
    that this initial scheduled matter was a
    10
    In a notice dated September 14, 2012, the Family Division
    Manager confirmed that the hearing had been rescheduled.
    34                                 A-2338-12T1
    pre-trial conference         or    a    case    management
    conference.[11]
    As directed by the trial court, defendant filed his answer
    to plaintiffs' complaint through counsel on September 24, 2012.
    On that same day defendant also filed a motion to dismiss under
    Rule 4:6-2, sought an award of counsel fees, and despite the
    fact that this was not a probate matter, requested an accounting
    of the Estate of K.K.             Plaintiffs' counsel filed responding
    certifications and a legal memorandum.
    The parties and their respective attorneys appeared before
    the   court   on    October    10,    2012.        According          to   plaintiffs'
    counsel, this was the first time the trial judge advised the
    parties that the matter was scheduled as "a Case Management
    Conference."         Neither   party      filed      the        pretrial     memoranda
    required    under    Rule   4:25-1.      According         to    the   certification
    submitted     by    plaintiffs'      counsel   as    part        of    the   appellate
    record,
    the parties discussed resolution of the
    matter which did not appear possible.       I
    also asked that the court order that the
    granddaughter    be  examined   by a    court
    appointed     psychologist    so   that     a
    determination could be made as to the impact
    11
    In his certification to the trial court, plaintiffs' counsel
    acknowledged that the trial judge's clerk told him when he
    telephoned the court that he should file "a pre-trial memo
    pursuant to R. 4:25."     Rule 4:25-1 sets out the procedures
    governing pretrial conferences in the Civil Division.
    35                                    A-2338-12T1
    of terminating all visitation and contact
    with the grandparents who helped raise her.
    Defendant objected and the court indicated
    it would not order that, at this time.
    Because the court did not have the papers to
    rule on the Motion [to dismiss filed by
    defendant] it was suggested that we schedule
    the matter for a hearing date and the
    parties agreed on the date of November 14,
    2012.   The court further indicated it would
    rule on the papers on the Motion and than
    [sic] we would have a hearing.       In that
    conversation I asked the court if an expert
    was needed, since the expert would not have
    met or spoken to [Olga.]    Also, the expert
    would not have any records to review.    The
    response was that if was a decision I would
    have to make prior to the hearing.
    When we left that conference it was rather
    clear to me that the court was simply going
    to review and deny the Motion and that the
    parties would appear in court on November
    14, 2012.    Instead, the court entered its
    Order dated October 17, 2012 granting the
    Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs' Complaint and
    supported that decision by a two page
    Opinion that was attached to the Order.
    By   letter     dated   October     17,   2012,    the   trial      judge
    transmitted   his   order   and   memorandum    of    opinion   dismissing
    plaintiffs' complaint based on defendant's Rule 4:6-2 motion.
    Despite the numerous and extensive material issues of fact in
    dispute we have described at length here, the trial judge began
    his analysis by finding that "[t]he facts are not in dispute."
    The judge appears to have based this conclusion by focusing on
    three specific events: (1) the death of the child's mother in
    36                                A-2338-12T1
    April 2011; (2) the lack of personal contact between the child
    and plaintiffs since the mother's funeral; and (3) defendant's
    decision to prohibit telephone contacts between the child and
    plaintiffs commencing in January 2012.
    After citing the standard for relief established by our
    Supreme   Court    in   Moriarty     and    noting   the   holdings   in   three
    published     opinions       from    this    court    that   have     addressed
    grandparent visitation actions arising from a variety of factual
    settings, the motion judge found that "plaintiffs' pleadings and
    proofs    establish     no    more    than    a   general,    unsubstantiated
    allegation of harm."          Based on a truncated recitation of the
    material facts, and noting plaintiffs' failure to produce expert
    testimony to substantiate or bolster their claims of harm to
    Olga, the motion judge believed himself "obligated to dismiss
    the Complaint filed by the plaintiffs."               The court also denied
    plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration.
    IV
    SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS
    Because the trial court dismissed plaintiffs' complaint as
    a matter of law, our review of the court's decision is de novo.
    Smerling v. Harrah's Entm't Inc., 
    389 N.J. Super. 181
    , 186 (App.
    Div. 2006).       Furthermore, "[a] trial court's interpretation of
    the law and the legal consequences that flow from established
    37                              A-2338-12T1
    facts are not entitled to any special deference."                       Manalapan
    Realty,   L.P.   v.    Tp.   Comm.   of     Manalapan,     
    140 N.J. 366
    ,   378
    (1995).
    Since at least 2000, every state in the Union has given
    grandparents     the   statutory     right    to    have   contact   with   their
    grandchildren.     Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 73-74 n. 1 
    120 S. Ct. 2054
    , 2064 n. 1 
    147 L. Ed. 2d 49
    , 61 n. 1 (2000).                       Our
    own Supreme Court has acknowledged that the importance of the
    grandparent-grandchild        relationship         has   been    "confirmed"    by
    psychiatrists and social scientists that have studied the field.
    The     emotional      attachments      between
    grandparents and grandchildren have been
    described as unique in that the relationship
    is   exempt    from    the    psycho-emotional
    intensity and responsibility that exists in
    parent/child    relationships.     The    love,
    nurturance,      and      acceptance      which
    grandchildren     have     found     in     the
    grandparent/grandchild relationship confers
    a natural form of social immunity on
    children that they cannot get from any other
    person or institution.
    [Moriarty, supra, 
    177 N.J. at 97
     (internal
    citations and quotation marks omitted).]
    The Legislature in our State has codified the rights of
    grandparents to have contacts with their grandchildren under the
    following provisions:
    38                                A-2338-12T1
    a. A grandparent or any sibling of a child
    residing in this State may make application
    before the Superior Court, in accordance
    with the Rules of Court, for an order for
    visitation. It shall be the burden of the
    applicant to prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the granting of visitation is
    in the best interests of the child.
    b.   In   making  a  determination  on   an
    application filed pursuant to this section,
    the court shall consider the following
    factors:
    (1) The relationship between the child and
    the applicant;
    (2) The relationship between each of the
    child's parents or the person with whom the
    child is residing and the applicant;
    (3) The time which has elapsed since the
    child last had contact with the applicant;
    (4) The     effect that such visitation will
    have on    the relationship between the child
    and the    child's parents or the person with
    whom the   child is residing;
    (5)   If   the  parents   are  divorced   or
    separated, the time sharing arrangement
    which exists between the parents with regard
    to the child;
    (6) The good faith of       the   applicant   in
    filing the application;
    (7) Any history of physical, emotional or
    sexual abuse or neglect by the applicant;
    and
    (8) Any other factor relevant to the best
    interests of the child.
    c. With regard to any application made
    pursuant to this section, it shall be prima
    39                           A-2338-12T1
    facie evidence that visitation is in the
    child's best interest if the applicant had,
    in the past, been a full-time caretaker for
    the child.
    [N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1.12]
    Last amended in 1993, the factors outlined in N.J.S.A. 9:2-
    7.1(b) were intended to provide a mechanism for resolving the
    tension between a parent's constitutional right to autonomy over
    his   or    her   child   and   the   State's    implicit     public       policy    of
    fostering      and   encouraging      contacts    between     grandparents          and
    their grandchildren.        In re Adoption of a Child by W.P. & M.P.,
    
    163 N.J. 158
    , 165-66 (2000).                 To accomplish this Legislative
    goal, when grandparents file a complaint seeking contacts with
    their      grandchildren   under      the    statute,   the   trial    court     must
    conduct       a   fact-sensitive        inquiry     addressing         the      seven
    particularized       factors    in    N.J.S.A.   9:2-7.1(b)(1)        to    -(7),    as
    12
    On September 27, 2012, General Assembly Bill A3297 was
    introduced to repeal N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1.    A3297 was referred to
    the General Assembly Judiciary Committee, which did not take any
    action on this Bill before the end of the legislative session.
    On June 20, 2013, the State Senate passed S2975, a Bill to
    codify the Supreme Court's holding in Moriarty, 
    supra,
     
    177 N.J. at 117
    , and establish a series of statutory factors for the
    trial court to consider in determining whether grandparent
    visitation is in the best interest of the child.       S2975 was
    formally received by the General Assembly on June 20, 2013, and
    referred to the General Assembly Judiciary Committee for
    consideration as General Assembly Bill A2945.    On November 25,
    2013, the General Assembly Judiciary Committee reported out
    A2945 as amended and recommended its passage.        The General
    Assembly did not vote on A2945 before the end of this
    legislative session.
    40                               A-2338-12T1
    well as the "any other factor" failsafe category in N.J.S.A.
    9:2-7.1(b)(8).   Moriarty, supra, 
    177 N.J. at 100
    .
    In going about this analysis, the trial judge must keep in
    mind Justice Long's admonition in Moriarty:
    Because the Grandparent Visitation Statute
    is an incursion on a fundamental right (the
    right to parental autonomy), under [Watkins
    v. Nelson, 
    163 N.J. 235
     (2000)], it is
    subject to strict scrutiny and must be
    narrowly tailored to advance a compelling
    state interest. Our prior jurisprudence
    establishes clearly that the only state
    interest warranting the invocation of the
    State's   parens   patriae  jurisdiction   to
    overcome the presumption in favor of a
    parent's decision and to force grandparent
    visitation over the wishes of a fit parent
    is the avoidance of harm to the child. When
    no harm threatens a child's welfare, the
    State   lacks    a  sufficiently   compelling
    justification for the infringement on the
    fundamental right of parents to raise their
    children as they see fit.      However, when
    harm is proved and the presumption in favor
    of a fit parent's decision making is
    overcome, the court must decide the issue of
    an appropriate visitation schedule based on
    the child's best interests.
    [Id. at 114-115.   (Emphasis added).]
    Thus, the trial judge must first conduct a fact-sensitive
    analysis applying the statutory factors in N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1, to
    determine whether the grandparents have presented a prima facie
    case warranting the relief requested.    Once a prima facie case
    has been established, the court must then determine whether the
    grandparents have proven, by a preponderance of the evidence,
    41                       A-2338-12T1
    that visitation is necessary to avoid harm to the child.                   Id. at
    117.      Although noted earlier, it is worth emphasizing that the
    grandparents can meet this burden by presenting either factual
    or expert testimony.          Ibid.      In determining the question of
    harm, the court "may rely on the death of a parent or the
    breakup    of   the   child's   home    through      divorce    or    separation."
    Ibid.
    With this analytical paradigm in mind, we turn to the trial
    court's decision in this case.           We are compelled to reverse the
    trial court's decision because it did not apply the statutory
    factors    in   N.J.S.A.     9:2-7.1,   nor    conduct    the    fact-sensitive
    analysis mandated by the Court in Moriarty.                   As the procedural
    history shows, plaintiffs' cause of action fell prey from its
    inception to a systemic approach that placed the case on the
    conveyor-belt of "pro se non-dissolution summary actions."                      Once
    so designated, the system inexorably channeled the case to the
    designated judge, who likewise summarily disposed of the case
    despite plaintiffs' counsel's best efforts to convince the court
    of the need to conduct the kind of fact-sensitive analysis the
    Supreme Court mandated in Moriarty.
    In the interest of clarity, we will briefly discuss and
    distinguish the cases relied on by the trial court.                    In Daniels
    v.   Daniels,   
    381 N.J. Super. 286
    ,   288    (App.    Div.    2005),   the
    42                                A-2338-12T1
    grandmother sought visitation under N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1, alleging
    she    had   a     strong       and    loving     relationship     with     her       minor
    grandchildren.          In sharp contrast to the key facts confronted by
    the trial court here, the trial court in Daniels granted the
    defendants'        motion       to    dismiss     because   the    parents       of    the
    children     "were      an     'intact    family'    and    were   united    in       their
    opposition to letting the grandmother have visitation with their
    children."       
    Ibid.
    In affirming the trial court, we rejected the plaintiff's
    attack on the trial court's holding as constituting a per se bar
    of     all   grandparent         visitation       actions    involving      an     intact
    family.       We       upheld    the     trial    court's   decision      because      the
    plaintiff        did     not     allege     facts     showing      that     denial      of
    grandparent visitation would harm the children.                     
    Id. at 292-293
    .
    With respect to the need for discovery, we emphasized that in
    both the trial court and at the appellate level the plaintiff
    failed "to specify any concrete harm the children are suffering,
    or will suffer, by virtue of the lack of visitation."                             
    Id. at 293
    .
    Here again the salient facts are far different.                        Olga not
    only had a long and close relationship with her grandparents
    during her formative years, but she actually resided with her
    grandparents for an extensive period of time after her parents
    43                                  A-2338-12T1
    divorced and after the tragic death of her younger sibling.
    Olga's association with her grandparents came to an abrupt end
    as     a    result    of     her     mother's      death,        a     traumatic      event
    specifically used by the Court in Moriarty as an example to
    illustrate        where    the    relief    requested       by       plaintiffs    may    be
    warranted.
    Rente v. Rente, 
    390 N.J. Super. 487
     (App. Div. 2007), was
    another case cited by the trial court here in support of its
    decision to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint without a hearing or
    discovery.         Once again, the facts are inapposite to the ruling
    made by the court.           The defendant in Rente was the mother of a
    four-year-old boy who had obtained a final restraining order
    (FRO)      against     her       husband,    the       boy's     father,     under       the
    Prevention of Domestic Violence Act.                      Id. at 490.         Under the
    terms of the FRO, the defendant/mother had sole physical custody
    of the child and the father was granted supervised parenting
    time       "on     alternative       weekends,         monitored        by    plaintiffs
    [/paternal grandparents.]"             Ibid.
    The       plaintiff       brought    an     action        seeking     grandparent
    visitation with the boy.               Her only claim for such relief was
    based on the paternal grandmother's claim that she had babysat
    her        two-year-old          grandson        "on     occasions"          when        the
    defendant/mother was unable to care for him due to work schedule
    44                                     A-2338-12T1
    or illness.          The paternal grandmother estimated this occurred
    approximately        twenty-five     times     the    previous         year,   and    about
    four times in the year she filed the complaint for visitation.
    Id. at 491.
    On these facts, the Family Part conducted a trial in which
    the grandmother testified describing the activities she engaged
    in with the boy during the times she was babysitting him.                              The
    grandfather’s only claim for visitation was the fact that the
    boy   was      his   grandson.      Ibid.          The    defendant       disputed      the
    grandmother's          testimony    concerning           the     frequency       of    the
    babysitting sessions.            It was undisputed that the plaintiffs had
    not     seen     their     two-year-old      grandson          since     the   defendant
    obtained the FRO against the boy's father.                     Ibid.
    Despite the lack of any evidence showing the child would be
    harmed if the plaintiffs were precluded from having any contacts
    with him, the trial court granted the relief requested for a
    period of one month.             The court's decision was based, in large
    part, on the defendant's decision to consent to the visitation.
    Id. at 492.            We noted, however, that the defendant objected to
    the scope of the visitation schedule ordered by the trial court.
    Ibid.       During the time this temporary visitation schedule was
    in    place,     the     court   appointed     a     psychologist        to    perform    a
    psychological evaluation.           Ibid.
    45                                     A-2338-12T1
    At    the    conclusion    of     the    one-month    temporary       visitation
    period,     the    psychologist    recommended       that    the    court    continue
    grandparent visitation.            The psychologist found "both natural
    parents have significant adjustment problems that impair their
    parenting ability[.]"           Ibid.         In his opinion, the grandparents
    represented the only stable influence in the child's life at
    time.       Overruling the defendant's objection, the trial court
    admitted the psychologist's report into evidence and granted the
    plaintiffs unsupervised visitation on alternate weekends.                          Ibid.
    After reviewing the relevant legal principles established
    by   the    Court   in     Moriarty,     we    reversed,    holding       that     "[t]he
    grandmother's       testimony     of     babysitting       for    her     two-year-old
    grandson on occasion failed to establish even a prima facie case
    of the requisite harm under Moriarty to rebut the presumption in
    favor      of   parental    decision-making        that     would       necessitate       a
    psychological evaluation and hearing."               Id.     at 494.
    We    also    concluded     the    trial    court     committed       reversible
    error      by     admitting     the      psychologist's          report     over       the
    defendant's objection, without offering her an opportunity to
    obtain her own expert, providing her with a copy of the report
    to review prior to the hearing, and giving her a reasonable
    opportunity to depose the psychologist or making him subject to
    cross-examination, in violation of Rule 5:3-3.                      Id. at 495.         We
    46                                     A-2338-12T1
    also    found    the     information       in    the   expert's     report     was
    insufficient to establish a prima facie case of harm to the
    child under Moriarty.          Ibid.       The psychologist's analysis was
    essentially a net opinion not based on any meaningful contacts
    with the parties, and applied a "best interest of the child"
    standard instead of the relevant "harm to the child" standard
    under Moriarty.        Ibid.
    Thus, Rente reinforces our holding here that, depending on
    the    circumstances      of    the      case,   discovery    in     grandparent
    visitation cases is not only permissible under Moriarty, but
    indispensable in reaching a sustainable outcome.                   Rente is thus
    not only procedurally distinguishable from this case, it also
    reinforces the need for discovery given the circumstances of the
    controversy before the court.
    Mizrahi v. Cannon, 
    375 N.J. Super. 221
     (App. Div. 2005),
    was the last case relied on by the trial court to support its
    decision to dismiss plaintiffs' complaint without a hearing.                    As
    was    the    case     with    Daniels     and    Rente,    Mizrahi     is    both
    procedurally distinguishable and factually inapplicable to the
    issues we confront here.                The plaintiffs in Mizrahi were the
    paternal     grandparents      of   a   seven-year-old     girl   who   had   been
    residing with her maternal great-aunt after the death of the
    child's mother.        
    Id. at 223
    .        The child's father was estranged
    47                             A-2338-12T1
    from    her   based       on    his    serious        emotional,        psychological,        and
    substance abuse problems.                 
    Ibid.
             In fact, the child was three
    months    old      when    her    father     physically            assaulted      her    mother,
    causing      her   to     obtain      a   domestic          violence      restraining       order
    against him.        
    Ibid.
    The record showed that despite this abuse, the plaintiffs
    remained      loyal       to   their      son.         In    addition      to    the    conflict
    created by this loyalty, there were also tensions about the
    child's religion because the mother was a devout Catholic and
    the plaintiffs/paternal grandparents were Jewish.                                 
    Id. at 224
    .
    The child was only two-years-old when her mother was diagnosed
    with Stage III cervical cancer.                        
    Ibid.
             The defendants were
    given legal and physical custody of the child when her mother
    died three years later.               
    Id. at 225
    .
    The    plaintiffs         testified        at    trial      in     support      of   their
    complaint       seeking         visitation.             According         to     the    paternal
    grandmother, she saw the child three times the year before her
    mother died.         There was no testimony that the child showed any
    reaction to her grandmother's visits.                             
    Ibid.
             The defendants
    testified that the child was reluctant to see the plaintiffs.
    
    Id. at 226
    .             She was fearful and anxious after the visits.
    
    Ibid.
             After       the    third      visit,          the   defendants       decided      to
    terminate the visitations in the child's best interest.                                 
    Ibid.
    48                                     A-2338-12T1
    The   defendants   adopted    the      child     three   years    after   her
    mother's     death.       The    trial     court      granted   the     plaintiffs'
    request      for   visitation.      We    reversed,       noting   that     despite
    acknowledging the standard articulated by the Court in Moriarty,
    the trial court applied a "best interest of the child" standard
    in awarding visitation rights to the plaintiffs.                      
    Id. at 232
    .
    We noted the absence of any
    evidence during the trial that [the child]
    would experience guilt or inadequacy if
    visitation did not occur. Nor was there any
    evidence that she could experience confusion
    over the fact that she saw her maternal
    grandmother . . ., but not [the plaintiffs].
    There was no evidence that as [the child]
    grew older, she would not be able to learn
    about Jewish heritage and tradition. There
    was no evidence that [the child] will
    experience a void in her life if she does
    not visit with [the plaintiffs] or that, as
    she got older, she would experience feelings
    of rejection.    Nor was there any evidence
    that [the child] would suffer economically;
    there was no showing that [the defendants]
    are unable to meet [the child's] needs.
    [Id. at 234.]
    Here, the trial court misapplied the central thesis of our
    holding in Mizrahi by dismissing plaintiffs' complaint at the
    early stages of the litigation process.                 Grandparents seeking to
    overcome a presumptively valid parental objection to visitation
    must    be    afforded    the    opportunity       to    gather    the     evidence
    necessary to meet this burden of proof.                    The grandparents in
    49                                A-2338-12T1
    Mizrahi were given that opportunity by the trial court.                                       In
    short, the trial court here failed to appreciate the procedural
    and     factual      characteristics         of       Mizrahi,     and    as       a       result
    incorrectly       denied       plaintiffs       the   opportunity        to   establish         a
    basis for the relief requested.
    With this analysis as a backdrop, we return to Moriarty for
    guidance.       Distilled to its essence, the Court in Moriarty held
    that:    (1)    in     every    case    in   which     visitation        is   denied,        the
    grandparents bear the burden of establishing by a preponderance
    of the evidence that visitation is necessary to avoid harm to
    the    child;     (2)    most    of    the   grandparents         visitation           statutes
    adopted     throughout          the    country        specifically        recognize          the
    potential for harm when a parent has died or a family breakup
    has occurred and visitation is denied; (3) although harm can be
    established       by     either       factual     testimony       from    a    witness        or
    opinion    testimony       by     an    expert,       the   termination       of       a    long-
    standing relationship between the grandparents and the child,
    with     expert         testimony        assessing          the   effect        of         those
    circumstances, could form the basis for a finding of harm; and
    (4) if the trial court finds the grandparents have established
    the potential for harm by a preponderance of the evidence, the
    presumption in favor of parental decision making will be deemed
    overcome.       Moriarty, supra, 
    177 N.J. at 117
    .
    50                                        A-2338-12T1
    Once the presumption in favor of the parent is overcome,
    the parent is required to offer the grandparents a reasonable
    visitation schedule.        
    Ibid.
          If the grandparents accept the
    visitation schedule offered by the parent, the trial court will
    enter an order memorializing the agreement, thus reducing it to
    an enforceable judgment.          
    Ibid.
         If the grandparents are not
    satisfied with the proposed visitation schedule, the trial court
    must assess the reasonableness of the proposal and thereafter
    approve   a   schedule   that     it   finds      is   in    the   child's    best
    interest, based on the application of the statutory factors in
    N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1.    
    Id. at 117-118
    .
    V
    CONCLUSION
    We will now apply the legal principles we have discussed to
    the facts of this case.         As a starting point, pursuant to both
    the court’s parens patriae responsibility and the discretionary
    authority conferred to it in Rule 5:4-4(a), it is clear to us
    that this case falls within the class of complex litigation that
    requires the trial court to conduct a case management conference
    through   which   counsel   can     alert   the    court     of    the   discovery
    necessary to present the matter for trial.                  The case management
    order derived from this conference should therefore describe the
    nature and scope of discovery the court has authorized and set
    51                                 A-2338-12T1
    reasonably         attainable       deadlines           for       responding         to
    interrogatories,       producing      documents,    deposing       witnesses,       and
    submitting expert reports, if any.                Any discovery must reflect
    and ensure a proper balance between plaintiffs' right to gather
    evidence in support of their application, defendant's right to
    parental autonomy, and the child's welfare, including her right
    to privacy.
    As previously noted, the common law did not recognize the
    right of grandparents to interact with their grandchildren over
    the objections of a fit parent.              Plaintiffs' cause of action is
    therefore entirely grounded on the statutory factors adopted by
    the Legislature in N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1.                We are thus particularly
    troubled by the trial court's failure to address the factors in
    N.J.S.A. 9:2-7.1(b)(1) to -(8).              On remand, the court's ultimate
    decision must reflect a fact-sensitive analysis addressing all
    of   the    relevant      statutory    factors      in     N.J.S.A.     9:2-7.1(b).
    Moriarty, supra, 
    177 N.J. at 100
    .
    However,      each    case   brings     to   the    court    its   own   set    of
    unique challenges.          Here, how the parties interact with each
    other and with Olga remains profoundly influenced by events that
    preceded the death of the child's mother.                        Specifically, the
    record     shows    defendant     harbors     a    great      resentment      against
    plaintiffs stemming from the role they played in convincing the
    52                                    A-2338-12T1
    matrimonial       judge      to    award        K.K.    physical      custody      of     the
    children.       Furthermore, as the wrongful death action he brought
    against plaintiffs shows, defendant holds plaintiffs responsible
    for the untimely death of his son Charles.                          Thus on remand, in
    deciding       whether     the    denial       of    grandparent      visitation        would
    cause    harm    to    Olga,      the    trial      court    must   determine      to   what
    extent defendant's resentment against plaintiffs prejudices his
    parental judgment in this case, and how such an emotionally
    driven    bias     may     negatively          affect      Olga's    psychological        and
    emotional wellbeing.
    Given Olga's age, the court should also consider whether to
    conduct an in camera interview as a means of ascertaining how
    this turmoil has affected her thus far, and how the continued
    enforcement       of       this     father-driven            estrangement     from        her
    grandparents       may     affect       her    in    the    future.      Either      as    an
    alternative       to   a    direct       interview      by    the    judge,   or     as    an
    additional means of protecting the child's best interest, the
    court should also consider appointing a guardian ad litem (GAL)
    pursuant to Rule 5:8B.                  Because plaintiffs bear the burden of
    rebutting       defendant's        presumptively           valid    objections     as     the
    father    of    this     child,     it    is     entirely     appropriate     that      they
    should be held responsible to pay the GAL's fees under Rule
    5:8B(d) as part of the cost of the proceedings.                               See In re
    53                                  A-2338-12T1
    Adoption of a Child by J.D.S. II, 
    353 N.J. Super. 378
    , 403-04,
    (App. Div. 2002), certif. denied, 
    175 N.J. 432
     (2003).
    We    conclude       our      analysis        by     noting       the      remarkable
    similarities       between    the       allegations        raised       by    plaintiffs       in
    this case and the prevailing factual account in Moriarty.                                      As
    the Supreme Court's recitation of the Family Part's findings
    indicates,        the   children        in   Moriarty       had     a    "very     extensive
    relationship       with     their       grandparents,"       spending          "years     where
    they were seeing the grandparents every other weekend."                                  Id. at
    118.        The     Court     in     Moriarty        also       emphasized        that        the
    relationship        between        the       children       and     the        mother        "was
    significant in a different way because their mother had recently
    died."      Id. at 119.
    It    is    undisputed        that     Olga      shared      a        household       with
    plaintiffs for a number of years.                          According to plaintiffs,
    their relationship with Olga continued to be a close one even
    after they relocated to Florida.                     Olga's relationship with her
    maternal     grandparents         was    also      significantly        affected        by   her
    mother's     untimely       death.        The      Court   in     Moriarty       approvingly
    quoted and adopted the trial court's "most critical findings,"
    that because of the mother's death, "it is extremely important
    that the children continue a bond with their mother's side of
    the family."        Id. at 121.
    54                                    A-2338-12T1
    Although the trial court in Moriarty had the benefit of
    expert testimony to support this finding, it was error for the
    trial court here to use plaintiffs' failure to present expert
    opinion in this regard as a basis to dismiss their complaint.
    First,    the    trial   court    made     its    decision       here   based   on
    defendant's Rule 4:6-2 motion, as supplemented by conflicting
    certifications submitted by both sides of this dispute.                         The
    court    was    therefore   obligated      to    apply    the     standards     for
    deciding a motion for summary judgment under Rule 4:46-2(c).
    Under this standard of review, the court was obligated to draw
    reasonable inferences from the evidence viewed in the light most
    favorable to plaintiffs.         Brill, 
    supra,
     
    142 N.J. at 540
    .
    As     expressly     authorized        by    the     Court    in    Moriarty,
    plaintiffs were entitled to present their case without expert
    testimony.      Id. at 117.      Even if the trial court concluded that
    expert testimony was required here, given the procedural infancy
    of the case, basic fairness demands that plaintiffs be given the
    opportunity to retain such an expert.              In short, the dismissal
    of plaintiffs' cause of action under these circumstances was
    factually unwarranted and legally untenable.
    Reversed and remanded.          We do not retain jurisdiction.
    55                                 A-2338-12T1