LIBERTY INSURANCE CORP. VS. TECHDAN, LLC (L-1664-12, SOMERSET COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3510-18
    A-3524-18
    LIBERTY INSURANCE CORP.
    and LM INSURANCE GROUP,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    TECHDAN, LLC, EXTERIOR
    ERECTING SERVICES, INC.,
    DANIEL FISHER, ROBERT
    DUNLAP, and CAROL JUNZ,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ___________________________
    Argued March 3, 2021 – Decided July 21, 2021
    Before Judges Alvarez, Sumners, and Geiger.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Somerset County, Docket No.
    L-1664-12.
    Justin T. Loughry argued the cause for appellant Carol
    Junz (Loughry and Lindsay, LLC, attorneys; Justin T.
    Loughry, on the briefs).
    John P. Morris argued the cause for appellants
    Techdan, LLC, Exterior Erecting Services, Inc.,
    Daniel Fisher, and Robert Dunlap.
    Anthony J. Golowski, II, argued the cause for
    respondents (Goldberg Segalla, LLP, attorneys;
    Anthony J. Golowski, II, and H. Lockwood Miller, III,
    on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    This insurance fraud complaint was filed by plaintiffs Liberty Insurance
    Corp. and LM Insurance Corp., under the New Jersey Insurance Fraud
    Prevention Act (IFPA), N.J.S.A. 17:33A-1 to -30. A jury awarded plaintiffs
    $756,990 in compensatory damages against defendants Techdan LLC and
    Exterior Erecting Services, Inc., and punitive damages against defendant
    Robert Dunlap in the amount of $200,000, against defendant Carol Junz in the
    amount of $45,000, and against defendant Daniel Fisher 1 in the amount of
    $10,000. After dismissing the jury, the judge held all defendants jointly and
    severally liable for 100% of the compensatory damages, trebling the sum as to
    Techdan, Exterior, Dunlap, and Junz, as called for by IFPA, thus increasing
    the award to $2,270,970. The judge also vacated the punitive damages award
    against Dunlap, Fisher, and Junz, but assessed $756,990 against Fisher,
    1
    We refer to Techdan, Exterior, Dunlap, and Fisher as the Techdan
    defendants.
    A-3510-18
    2
    because, although the jury did not find Fisher liable for IFPA violations, he
    was held jointly and severally liable on other counts. Pursuant to the statute,
    the judge also trebled attorneys' fees against all defendants but Fisher, for a
    total of $2,768,018.01. Defendants appeal, and we consolidate the matters for
    decision. We now vacate the judgment, remanding for a new trial.
    I.
    On September 26, 2012, Dunlap, on Techdan's behalf, entered a guilty
    plea to second-degree theft by deception, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-4, with the Office of
    the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor (OIFP). Techdan had also been indicted on a
    charge of fourth-degree workers' compensation fraud, N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4.
    The charges arose from the company's under-reporting of employee wages in
    order to obtain lower workers' compensation insurance premiums. The plea
    agreement called for Techdan and Dunlap to pay restitution to plaintiffs
    totaling $75,000.
    Plaintiffs' nine-count civil complaint alleged workers' compensation
    premium fraud, N.J.S.A. 34:15-57.4 (count one); violations of IFPA (count
    two); common-law fraud (count three); breach of contract against Techdan and
    Exterior related to the calculation of insurance premiums (count four);
    quantum meruit claims against Techdan and Exterior (count five); civil aiding
    A-3510-18
    3
    and abetting against Fisher, Dunlap, and Junz 2 (count six); that Techdan's
    limited liability veil should be pierced, as should the corporate veil of Exterior
    (count seven); that company officers and directors should be held personally
    liable (count eight); and charging civil conspiracy against Fisher and Dunlap
    (count nine). The parties engaged in extensive motion practice—we describe
    only those applications that are relevant to our decision.
    On July 7, 2017, the court partially granted plaintiffs' motions for
    summary judgment.      The judge found the Techdan defendants made false
    statements to obtain workers' compensation insurance at more favorable rates,
    were liable for compensatory damages for their violation of IFPA, and were
    jointly and severally liable for premiums for workers' compensation insurance
    (in a minimum of at least $75,000).        The judge also found Techdan and
    Exterior jointly and severally liable for breach of contract in the amount of
    $75,000.
    Pre-trial, the judge reserved for the jury's determination whether
    plaintiffs had proven a pattern of fraud under IFPA, and whether compensatory
    damages, if liable, should be assessed, reserving to the court calculation of
    2
    Junz was added to this count by plaintiff's amended complaint filed February
    28, 2017.
    A-3510-18
    4
    counsel fees. The judge also said the jury would be advised of the ultimate
    outcome of their decision, such as trebling of damages and an award of
    counsel fees. However, no ultimate outcome charge was given.
    Prior to instructing the jury, the court conducted a charge conference.
    All parties submitted proposed charges.
    The jury rendered its verdict on December 20, 2018, after ten days of
    trial during which Junz, Dunlap, and Fisher testified on their own behalf. The
    jury found plaintiffs established workers' compensation fraud, insurance fraud,
    and a pattern of insurance fraud under IFPA against Techdan, Exterior,
    Dunlap, and Junz (but not Fisher); common-law fraud against all defendants;
    aiding and abetting against Dunlap, Fisher, and Junz; and civil conspiracy
    against Dunlap and Junz (but not Fisher). The jury further found plaintiffs
    established a basis for piercing the corporate veil and imposing director's
    liability against Dunlap (but not Fisher).
    The jury also found Techdan and Exterior liable for damages in excess
    of $75,000, and awarded additional compensatory damages payable by
    Techdan in the amount of $454,660, and against Exterior in the amount of
    $227,330, but none against Dunlap, Fisher, or Junz. The jury awarded punitiv e
    A-3510-18
    5
    damages of $200,000 against Dunlap, $10,000 against Fisher, and $45,000
    against Junz.
    After the jury's verdict, and after entertaining oral argument from
    counsel regarding the form of final judgment, on February 1, 2019, the court
    held that all five defendants were jointly and severally liable for 100% of the
    $756,990 in compensatory damages. The judge premised his reasoning on the
    jury's finding that all five defendants were liable for common-law fraud.
    Acknowledging that the decision would cause the individual defendants to be
    responsible for the compensatory damages awarded against Techdan and
    Exterior, and partially against Dunlap under the consent order, the judge
    nonetheless considered joint and several liability for the full amount
    appropriate because the jury's verdicts against all five defendants signified a
    scheme to defraud plaintiffs. Further, the court justified imposing the full
    compensatory amount against defendants because under IFPA, Dunlap and
    Junz were jointly and severally liable with Techdan and Exterior for
    compensatory damages. The liability finding that Techdan, Exterior, Dunlap,
    and Junz committed workers' compensation fraud, insurance fraud, and
    engaged in a pattern of insurance fraud, established that they were each
    responsible, jointly and severally, for 100% of the compensatory damages;
    A-3510-18
    6
    Dunlap and Junz were personally liable for the full amount of the
    compensatory damages due to their civil conspiracy liability; and Dunlap was
    personally liable for the full amount of the compensatory damages based on
    director liability and the jury's decision to pierce the corporate veil.
    While Dunlap, Fisher, and Junz were each liable for the full amount of
    compensatory damages because the jury held them liable for aiding and
    abetting, the court declined to impose IFPA liability upon Fisher in deference
    to the jury's conclusions he neither violated the statute nor engaged in a pattern
    of insurance fraud. The court further relied upon the language of the jury
    instructions to justify joint and several liability among the three individual
    defendants and two business defendants for compensatory damages. Finally,
    plaintiffs alleged the substance of the counts required joint and several liability
    among defendants.
    Defendants moved for reconsideration pursuant to Rule 4:49-2 or,
    alternatively, a new trial pursuant to Rule 4:49-1. The Techdan defendants did
    not take issue with the jury's verdict or their factual findings, rather, they
    claimed the court substituted its own view of the evidence for that of the jury,
    deviating from the jury's intent when rendering final judgment. They argued
    the jury was unaware of the ramifications of joint and several liability, and that
    A-3510-18
    7
    since the jury awarded zero compensatory damages against the individual
    defendants, the court's entry of final judgment deviated from that intent by
    holding all defendants jointly and severally liable for the verdict.
    Additionally, Junz argued that the jury did not intend to impose upon her any
    portion of the $756,990 compensatory damage award, rather, that it was
    awarded against Techdan and Exterior only.
    The court opined that the ultimate outcome charge, which would have
    informed the jury more specifically of the consequences of their decision, is
    required when a jury apportions fault between a plaintiff and one or more
    tortfeasors, reasoning that defendants' reliance on Blazovic v. Andrich, 
    124 N.J. 90
    , 92-93 (1991), was mistaken because that case involved apportionment
    of fault among "a plaintiff, a negligent co-defendant, and several settling co-
    defendants."   Here, plaintiffs were not at fault; they were victims of
    defendants' illegal and tortious conduct. The judge reminded counsel that he
    was not requested to provide an ultimate outcome charge.        He denied the
    motions.
    II.
    Techdan and Exterior are subcontractors who install exterior walls in
    commercial buildings. Exterior is a New Jersey corporation that since at least
    A-3510-18
    8
    1994 worked along the East Coast of the United States. Techdan is a New
    Jersey limited liability company.        Beginning in 2004, Techdan provided
    services, like Exterior, in multiple states.
    Plaintiffs identified Dunlap as an officer and majority shareholder of
    Techdan, a claim that he denied at trial, and an officer and shareholder of
    Exterior.   Fisher was identified by plaintiffs as a member, manager, and
    president of Techdan as well as the majority owner of Exterior. He denied any
    ownership interest in either company, although he had represented that he held
    such an interest in order to obtain the workers' compensation insurance
    policies plaintiffs issued.     At trial, Fisher insisted Dunlap owned both
    companies. Junz, the controller of Techdan and Exterior, testified that Dunlap,
    not Fisher, solely owned Exterior.
    In any event, beginning in March 2004, Fisher, representing himself as
    the president of Techdan, signed insurance application documents that enabled
    Techdan to obtain workers' compensation insurance policies from plaintiffs.
    On March 23, 2005, Techdan's insurance broker, Michael Houlihan, informed
    Dunlap that in order to add Exterior to Techdan's workers' compensation
    insurance policy, Techdan and its owner must have a majority ownership in
    Exterior.
    A-3510-18
    9
    The following day, on March 24, 2005, Fisher filed paperwork stating
    that he was the president of Techdan and owned 100% of the company.
    Moreover, he claimed that he owned 51% of Exterior, while Dunlap owned the
    remaining 49%. In response, Houlihan contacted plaintiffs and requested the
    addition of Exterior to Techdan's workers' compensation insurance policy. In
    Houlihan's communications, he explained: that "[a]ll payroll w[ould] continue
    to run through Techdan"; "[t]he name [Exterior] was purchased for marketing
    and name recognition"; and that Exterior was "only a shell company that had
    no payroll exposure."
    By December 2005, in a letter to plaintiffs, Junz represented herself as
    the "controller" of Techdan, explaining that Techdan and Exterior were
    separate entities that had formed a joint venture. 3     Thereafter, Fisher and
    Dunlap each wrote to plaintiffs reiterating that Techdan and Exterior had
    formed a joint venture. Fisher informed plaintiffs that no cash was transferred
    between Techdan and Exterior.
    That same month, despite the claims made to plaintiffs, Dunlap informed
    Wachovia Bank in writing that funds were transferred between Techdan and
    3
    Junz executed paperwork where she represented that she was Techdan's
    controller and treasurer and, also, was Exterior's vice president, controller, and
    accountant.
    A-3510-18
    10
    Exterior, and that both entities were under his "control and direction." The
    claims in the December 2005 letter echoed prior claims made by Junz in
    December 2004 correspondence to Wachovia Bank.
    Ultimately, plaintiffs issued three workers' compensation insurance
    policies to Techdan from 2004 through 2007. When OIFP indicted Techdan
    and resolved the matter, plaintiffs were unaware of the extent of the fraud; it
    was discovered as a result of ongoing audits. Exterior was added to Techdan's
    second workers' compensation insurance policy beginning in March 2005 and
    the coverage continued through the third policy.
    The first policy premium, running from March 12, 2004 to March 12,
    2005, was calculated on $456,114 in wages. The tax documents Techdan filed
    for the same period showed a total payroll of $831,784.61.
    The second policy, running from March 12, 2005, and ending on March
    12, 2006, issued on the understanding that Techdan paid wages of $498,485.
    During that time, Techdan's actual payroll, based on filings with the State,
    came to $1,147,924.24.
    The third policy was effective on March 14, 2006 and ended on March
    12, 2007. Techdan reported wages of $932,708 to plaintiffs, while reporting
    wages to the State of $1,348,415.39.
    A-3510-18
    11
    III.
    On appeal, the Techdan defendants assert the following points of error:
    POINT I
    THE COURT ABRIDGED AND VIOLATED THE
    DEFENDANTS' CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO
    TRIAL BY JURY BY NULLIFYING THE JURY'S
    VERDICT AND SUBSTITUTING THE COURT’S
    VERDICT AND VIEW OF THE EVIDENCE
    ALONG WITH ITS PREFERENCES FOR AND
    AGAINST THE JURY'S FACT-FINDING; THERE
    WAS NO GROUND TO DISTURB THE JURY
    VERDICT BECAUSE THE RECORD CONTAINED
    SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE
    VERDICT.
    A.    The Court nullified a sustainable verdict for the
    individual defendants of zero compensatory damages,
    thereby violating their right to trial by jury.
    B.     The plaintiffs sought and the trial court granted
    a result by judicial fiat that trespassed on the jury's
    province, as it went beyond the most dramatic relief
    that the law would countenance, i.e. granting a new
    trial—when that standard was neither referenced nor
    satisfied by the record.
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL JUDGE EFFECTIVELY GRANTED
    POST[-]VERDICT RELIEF OF ADDITUR AND
    REMITTITUR, BY ITS RADICALLY DIFFERENT
    APPROACH OF REVISING AND NULLIFYING
    SOME OF THIS JURY'S DECISIONS. IN SHORT,
    THE COURT FAILED TO ADHERE TO THE
    REQUIREMENTS TO JUSTIFY INCREASING A
    A-3510-18
    12
    COMPENSATORY DAMAGES AWARD OR
    THOSE TO VOID A PUNITIVE DAMAGES
    AWARD.
    POINT III
    JOINT AND SEVERAL LIABILITY DOES NOT
    AUTHORIZE AN IMPOSITION OF 100 PERCENT
    OF THE DAMAGES AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS
    EVEN HAD THIS JURY BEEN SO INSTRUCTED
    AND THEN FOUND ALL TO BE JOINTLY AND
    SEVERALLY LIABLE.
    POINT IV
    THE COURT ERRED IN INFORMING THE JURY
    THAT TECHDAN HAD PLEADED GUILTY, AND
    THAT THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SOMERSET
    COUNTY, VIA MOTION DECISION, HAD
    ALREADY DETERMINED THAT THERE WAS
    INSURANCE FRAUD AND A FAILURE TO PAY
    CONTRACTUALLY REQUIRED PREMIUMS.
    POINT V
    PLAINTIFFS' SUMMATION WITH ITS CALL TO
    ARMS AND DISPARAGEMENT OF DEFENSE
    COUNSEL WARRANTED A STRONG CURATIVE
    INSTRUCTION    OR,  ALTERNATIVELY,   A
    MISTRIAL. NEITHER WAS GRANTED.
    Junz's points on appeal are as follows:
    POINT I
    THE COURT ABRIDGED AND VIOLATED MS.
    JUNZ'S RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY, BY
    NULLIFYING THE JURY'S VERDICT AND
    A-3510-18
    13
    SUBSTITUTING THE COURT'S VIEW OF THE
    EVIDENCE AND THE COURT'S PREFERENCES
    FOR THE JURY'S DETERMINATION; THERE
    WAS NO GROUND TO DISTURB THE JURY
    VERDICT BECAUSE THE RECORD CONTAINED
    SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE
    VERDICT.
    A.    The Court nullified a sustainable verdict in Ms.
    Junz's case of zero compensatory damages, and
    thereby violated her right to trial by jury.
    B.     The plaintiffs sought and the trial court granted
    a result by judicial fiat that trespassed on the jury's
    province, as it went beyond the most dramatic relief
    that the law would countenance, the granting of a new
    trial—when even that standard was not satisfied by the
    record.
    POINT II
    FOR THE TRIAL JUDGE TO GRANT POST
    VERDICT RELIEF BY WAY OF ADDITUR, THE
    COURT WOULD HAVE TO TAKE A RADICALLY
    DIFFERENT   APPROACH    THAN   SIMPLY
    REWRITING THE VERDICT AND NULLIFYING
    THE JURY'S DECISION—AND THE COURT
    FAILED TO FOLLOW THE PRESCRIBED PATH
    TO INCREASING A COMPENSATORY DAMAGES
    VERDICT.
    POINT III
    JOINT AND SEVERAL LIABILITY DOES NOT
    EQUATE WITH AN IMPOSITION OF 100
    PERCENT OF THE DAMAGES AGAINST ALL
    DEFENDANTS HELD JOINTLY AND SEVERALLY
    LIABLE.
    A-3510-18
    14
    POINT IV
    THE COURT ERRED IN INFORMING THE JURY
    THAT TECHDAN HAD PLEADED GUILTY, AND
    THAT THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SOMERSET
    COUNTY, VIA MOTION DECISION, HAD
    ALREADY DETERMINED THAT THERE WAS
    INSURANCE FRAUD AND A FAILURE TO PAY
    CONTRACTUALLY REQUIRED PREMIUMS AS
    IN WORKERS COMP[ENSATION] PREMIUM
    FRAUD AND A BREACH OF CONTRACT.
    POINT V
    PLAINTIFFS' SUMMATION IN ITS CALL TO
    ARMS AND DISPARAGEMENT OF DEFENSE
    COUNSEL WARRANTED A MISTRIAL.
    IV.
    All defendants contend that the Comparative Negligence Act (CNA),
    N.J.S.A. 2A:25-5.1 to -5.8, applied and required the jury to assess a percentage
    of fault to each party. Pursuant to the CNA, a jury is required to assess "[t]he
    extent, in the form of a percentage, of each party's negligence and fault" i n
    strict liability and negligence actions, including "civil actions for damages
    based    upon   theories   of    negligence,   products   liability,   professional
    malpractice[,] whether couched in terms of contract or tort[,] and like
    theories." N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2.
    A-3510-18
    15
    The CNA provides that a party may obtain the "full amount of the
    damages from any party determined by the trier of fact to be 60% or more
    responsible for the total damages." N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a). However, a party
    may obtain "[o]nly that percentage of the damages directly attributable to that
    party's negligence or fault from any party determined by the trier of fact to be
    less than 60% responsible for the total damages." N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(c). Any
    party who is compelled to pay more than his percentage of damages may seek
    contribution from the other joint tortfeasors.   N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-1; N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-2.
    The CNA requires that the trier of fact initially determine the full value
    of the injured party's damages without regard to negligence or fault. N.J.S.A.
    2A:15-5.2(a)(1). Next, the trier of fact must determine each party's negligence
    or fault in the form of a percentage. N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a)(2). Afterwards, the
    court must mold the verdict based on the findings of the trier of fact. N.J.S.A.
    2A:15-5.2.     Thus, New Jersey's adoption of the CNA "favor[s] []
    apportionment of liability among all parties in rough equivalence to their
    causal fault." Blazovic, 
    124 N.J. at 97
    . A plaintiff whose negligence is equal
    to or less than the defendant's is not barred from recovery, but recovery is
    A-3510-18
    16
    "diminished by the percentage of negligence attributed to the plaintiff by the
    trier of fact." 
    Id. at 98
    .
    A trial court's decision to apply the CNA is a legal question, reviewed
    pursuant to a de novo standard. Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of the
    Twp. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995). On appeal, defendants contend
    that it was an error for the court to decline to do so. The trial judge considered
    the CNA inapplicable because plaintiffs were blameless, and the verdicts
    signified that defendants engaged in a fraudulent scheme.
    Since the adoption of the CNA in 1973, however, the case law has
    extended its reach to encompass more than negligence and strict liability
    actions. For example, when the Court in Suter v. San Angelo Foundry &
    Machine Co., 
    81 N.J. 150
    , 161 (1979), held that the CNA applied to strict
    liability actions, it recognized that restricting the CNA to negligence actions
    would undermine the legislative intent of mitigating the unfairness of common
    law contributory negligence.
    Subsequently, in Blazovic, the Court explained that the CNA was
    intended to cover fault in more than just instances of negligence—including
    litigation involving wanton, willful, and reckless conduct. 
    124 N.J. at
    99 -101,
    106. Importantly, the CNA "applies to conduct characterized as intentional."
    A-3510-18
    17
    
    Id. at 100, 106
    ; see also McCann v. Lester, 
    239 N.J. Super. 601
    , 610 (App.
    Div. 1990) (stating that "the labels attached by the law to various types of
    conduct should not thwart the principle that it is the overall fault of the parties
    which is to be measured"). Under the CNA, intentional wrongdoing is only
    different in degree, not in kind, from claims of negligence or willful and
    wanton conduct. Blazovic, 
    124 N.J. at 106
    . Thus, the differences between
    negligence and intentional conduct do not preclude application by the jury. 
    Id. at 107
    .    Responsibility for the injuries a plaintiff sustained are to be
    apportioned according to each party's degree of fault, including the fault of
    intentional tortfeasors. 
    Ibid.
    Since Blazovic, courts have continued to apportion fault among parties,
    including among intentional tortfeasors and negligent defendants. Grubbs v.
    Knoll, 
    376 N.J. Super. 420
    , 441 (App. Div. 2005); see also Bonpua v. Fagan,
    
    253 N.J. Super. 475
    , 479 (App. Div. 1992) (stating that a tortfeasor's criminal
    conviction does not bar the tortfeasor from relying upon the CNA in
    subsequent civil action).    As the Court said in Gennari v. Weichert Co.
    Realtors, 
    148 N.J. 582
    , 608-09 (2007), the CNA applies to negligence, strict
    liability, intentional torts, and wanton conduct. Gennari applied the CNA to an
    action alleging the intentional tort of common law fraud and claims under the
    A-3510-18
    18
    Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -91. 
    Id. at 608-11
    ; see also
    Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Land, 
    186 N.J. 163
    , 176 (2006) (stating that "the
    closest statutory analogue to IFPA in New Jersey is the [CFA].").
    Thus, the trial judge should have applied the CNA, and required the jury
    to determine "the extent, in the form of percentage, of each party's negligence
    or fault." N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a)(2). The claims at issue included fraud, breach
    of contract, and conspiracy.    The determination of fault under the CNA
    encompasses those intentional torts.      See Gennari, 148 N.J. at 608-09
    (extending the application of the CNA to fraud and the CFA); see also Dunn v.
    Praiss, 
    139 N.J. 564
    , 577-78 (1995) (explaining that in breach of contract
    action plaintiff's conduct will be evaluated, and plaintiff must exercise
    reasonable care to avoid harm); Velop, Inc. v. Kaplan, 
    301 N.J. Super. 32
    , 41,
    58 (App. Div. 1997) (stating that contractual fault can be compared to other
    types of tortious fault when damages for breach of contract are the same as
    damages for tort theories); Giri v. Rutgers Cas. Ins. Co., 
    273 N.J. Super. 340
    ,
    352 (App. Div. 1994) (stating that fault should be apportioned between
    malicious civil prosecution and breach of contract alleged to have caused the
    same damages).
    A-3510-18
    19
    Notably, the supplemental notes to Model Jury Charges (Civil), 7.16,
    "Apportionment where the acts, or inactions, of an individual or entity
    substantially contributed to the alleged harm" (approved Oct. 1991; rev. Sept.
    2018), explain the instruction should be given in matters concerning
    intentional torts such as fraud and breach of contract. The charge itself states:
    In this case, [one party] alleges that the acts of
    [individual or entity subject to allocation] were
    negligent, willful, wanton or malicious, or intentional.
    If you find that the act, or failure to act, by [individual
    or entity subject to allocation] was negligent, willful,
    wanton or malicious, or intentional conduct and that
    his/her/its action, or inaction, substantially contributed
    to the harm, then you are to apportion the fault of all
    individuals and entities subject to allocation. In other
    words, you are to apportion the total responsibility of
    each individual or entity, depending on the degree of
    fault you assess to each individual or entity, including
    the fault attributable to an individual or entity whose
    acts are negligent, willful, wanton, malicious, in
    reckless disregard of one's safety, or intentional.
    [Ibid. (alterations in original).]
    Therefore, the trial judge erred by allocating 100% of the damages to all
    defendants based solely on the jury's unallocated findings of liability.         A
    finding of liability is not equivalent to an allocation of fault. See Ryan v. KDI
    Sylvan Pools, Inc., 
    121 N.J. 276
    , 292 (1990) (stating the terms liability and
    fault are "not synonymous or interchangeable").          The court should have:
    A-3510-18
    20
    included plaintiffs on the jury verdict sheet; told the jury to calculate the total
    amount of damages that would be recoverable by the injured parties regardless
    of any consideration of fault pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a)(1); and then
    allowed the jury to apportion fault among all of the parties, including
    plaintiffs, in the form of percentages pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a)(2).
    Afterwards, the court should have molded the verdict to correspond with each
    party's properly apportioned fault. N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2; see also Ryan, 
    121 N.J. at 291-93
     (explaining how to mold a verdict).
    The trial judge's reasoning that Blazovic and the CNA did not apply
    because plaintiffs were blameless was mistaken.            We have long since
    recognized that fault must be allocated among defendants even when a plaintiff
    is free from fault, either on the facts or as a matter of law. Lee's Hawaiian
    Islanders, Inc. v. Safety First Prods., Inc., 
    195 N.J. Super. 493
    , 505 (App. Div.
    1984). When a plaintiff is included on the verdict sheet, the jury may still
    apportion zero fault to them based upon the circumstances of the case.
    Moreover, the court's failure to ask the jury to assess a percentage of
    fault among the parties implicates whether the parties can seek contribution
    from one another. The CNA modified the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law
    (JTCL), N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2, which apportions fault among joint tortfeasors.
    A-3510-18
    21
    Blazovic, 
    124 N.J. at 103
    . After the passage of the CNA, joint tortfeasors no
    longer shared fault on a pro rata basis, but instead fault was determined by the
    trier of fact in the form of percentages.     
    Ibid.
       Thus, if a tortfeasor was
    compelled to pay more than his or her fair share, he or she could seek
    contribution from the other tortfeasors. 
    Ibid.
     As a result, the CNA and the
    JTCL work together to provide the framework for allocating fault when
    multiple parties are alleged to have contributed to a plaintiff's harm. Jones v.
    Morey's Pier, Inc., 
    230 N.J. 142
    , 160 (2017). Here, without the allocation of
    fault being made by the jury, defendants are unfairly prejudiced.
    V.
    The trial court also erred when it failed to charge the jury as to the
    "ultimate outcome" under IFPA. When a jury is misinformed or ill-informed
    about the effect of its percentage allocation of fault, it is more likely to make
    unwarranted assumptions about the effect of the verdict on the parties. Roman
    v. Mitchell, 
    82 N.J. 336
    , 345 (1980). In Fischer v. Canario, 
    143 N.J. 235
    , 251
    (1996), the Court explained that the "primary justification for giving a jury an
    ultimate outcome charge is that it informs the jury about the impact of its
    decision." The jury "should be given an ultimate outcome charge so that its
    deliberations on percentages of negligence will not be had in a vacuum, or
    A-3510-18
    22
    possibly based on a mistaken notion of how [a] statute operates." Roman, 
    82 N.J. at 345
    .
    In Wanetick v. Gateway Mitsubishi, 
    163 N.J. 484
    , 490 (2000), the Court
    considered whether a jury must be instructed as to the ultimate outcome in a
    case regarding the CFA, in which compensatory damages are trebled and
    counsel fees awarded. Concluding that jurors would benefit from being so
    advised in fulfilling their fact-finding role and avoiding confusion, the Court
    held a jury "should be informed of the legal effect of their actions so that their
    deliberations 'will not be had in a vacuum, or possibly based on a mistaken
    notion of how the statute operates.'" 
    Id. at 494
     (quoting Roman, 
    82 N.J. at 345
    ). The notion behind the decision is that the jury will better titrate their
    calculation of monetary awards and of punitive measures if told that
    compensatory damages will be trebled and counsel fees awarded. Id. at 495.
    In fact, the Court quoted from our earlier opinion in the same case, stating that
    knowing a judge will treble damages and award counsel fees will operate "to
    prevent a jury from inflating the compensatory award or awarding punitive
    damages on another count to make its outrage [at the CFA violation] known."
    Id. at 495-96 (citing Wanetick v. OCT P'ship, 
    318 N.J. Super. 156
    , 165-66
    (App. Div. 1999)).     Thus, the ultimate outcome charge in a case with an
    A-3510-18
    23
    idiosyncratic method of fixing compensation, like the CFA, or as here with the
    IFPA, "enhances the prospect that jurors will arrive at the correct verdict for
    the right reasons." Id. at 496.
    Thus, the trial court erred when it reversed course from the pre-trial
    decision on summary judgment to provide the instruction. The jury should
    have had the legal effect of a verdict explained. Failure to do so constituted a
    miscarriage of justice.
    VI.
    As to the overall jury charge, it is true that defendants failed to: raise
    these issues prior to trial; include the ultimate outcome charge in their
    proposed jury instructions; request such a charge during the charge conference;
    object to the absence of the ultimate outcome charge; and object to the absence
    of the allocation of percentages of fault on the jury sheet. The absence of
    objections to the jury charges indicates that counsel did not believe that error
    or prejudice stemmed from the charge. Risko v. Thompson Muller Auto. Grp.,
    Inc., 
    206 N.J. 506
    , 523 (2011).
    Additionally, defendants' failure to object prevented the trial court from
    correcting any confusion or errors in the jury charge in a timely manner.
    Bradford v. Kupper Assocs., 
    283 N.J. Super. 556
    , 573-74 (App. Div. 1995)
    A-3510-18
    24
    (stating failure to object prevents court from timely remedying confusion).
    Also, pursuant to Rule 1:7-2, "[e]xcept as otherwise provided by [Rule] 1:7-5
    and [Rule] 2:10-2 (plain error), no party may urge as error any portion of the
    charge to the jury or omissions therefrom unless objections are made thereto
    before the jury retires to consider its verdict, but opportunity shall be given to
    make the objection in open court, in the absence of the jury."
    However, a correct and proper jury charge is essential to a fair trial. It
    constitutes a "road map that explains applicable legal principles, outlines the
    jury's function, and spells out 'how the jury should apply the legal principles
    charged to the facts of the case at hand.'" Toto v. Ensuar, 
    196 N.J. 134
    , 144
    (2008) (quoting Viscik v. Fowler Equip. Co., 
    173 N.J. 1
    , 18 (2002)).
    Here, defendants raised the issues presented on appeal after the jury
    returned its verdict and after the court entered final judgment on the verdict on
    February 1, 2019. In particular, defendants filed motions for reconsideration
    pursuant to Rule 4:49-2 (motions to amend or alter a judgment or order) or, in
    the alternative, for a new trial pursuant to Rule 4:49-1 (pertaining to new trials
    and amendments of judgments).
    The failure of the court to inform the jury that they must allocate a
    percentage of fault to all parties was a critical omission, however, as was the
    A-3510-18
    25
    court's failure to give the ultimate outcome charge. These omissions were
    prejudicial errors compounded when the judge then molded the verdict
    according to his perception of the jury's view, which is itself impermissible.
    See Kassick v. Milwaukee Elec. Tool Corp., 
    120 N.J. 130
    , 135-36 (1990)
    (explaining that court cannot mold verdict based upon its own opinion of the
    jury's intent).
    "[J]udges are admonished not to readily substitute their own judgment
    for that of the initial factfinder." Thomas v. Toys R Us, Inc., 
    282 N.J. Super. 569
    , 579 (App. Div. 1995). That occurred in this case. The court substituted
    its own judgment for that of the jury, concluding that all defendants would be
    jointly and severally liable for 100% of the compensatory damages because
    they were involved in a scheme to defraud plaintiffs.
    The court was required to apply the CNA and have the jury allocate
    fault to all parties in the form of percentages. The failure to do so, along with
    the absence of the ultimate outcome charge, establishes "clearly and
    convincingly . . . a miscarriage of justice under the law." R. 4:49-1(a).
    VII.
    Defendants also contend that the court improperly nullified the jury's
    verdict with regard to compensatory damages. They further argue that the
    A-3510-18
    26
    court engaged in additur without the proper analysis, by altering the jury's
    intent when assessing the quantum of damages against each defendant.
    For compensatory damages, defined on the verdict sheet as the amount
    of lost premiums, the jury awarded plaintiffs a total of $756,990, broken down
    as $454,600 against Techdan and $227,330 against Exterior. Additionally, the
    verdict sheet explained that any amount the jury awarded against Techdan
    would be in addition to the $75,000 prior obligation by reason of the guilty
    plea to theft by deception.
    The jury did not assign any compensatory damages to Dunlap, Fisher, or
    Junz.    However, with regard to Dunlap, the verdict sheet explained that
    $75,000 was previously determined to be due by reason of the consent
    judgment filed in connection with Techdan's guilty plea, thus any damages
    against Dunlap would be in addition to the $75,000 amount.
    The jury did not assign punitive damages to either Techdan or Exterior.
    It assessed punitive damages against Dunlap in the amount of $200,000, Fisher
    in the amount of $10,000, and Junz in the amount of $45,000.
    The court held that all five defendants were liable, jointly and severally,
    for the total amount of compensatory damages, $756,990, because the jury
    concluded that they were liable for common law fraud, and aiding and
    A-3510-18
    27
    abetting. Thus, Dunlap, Fisher, and Junz were liable for the compensatory
    damages imposed on Techdan and Exterior and, also, the $75,000 assessed
    against Techdan and Dunlap for a total of $756,990. The judge held Dunlap,
    Junz, Techdan, and Exterior liable, jointly and severally, for the full a mount of
    compensatory damages because of the jury's verdict finding they committed
    workers' compensation fraud, insurance fraud, and a pattern of insurance fraud.
    Dunlap was liable for the compensatory damage award attributed to Techdan
    and Exterior because he was liable as a director, and the jury decided that the
    corporate veil should be pierced.
    Although the court discussed the prior grant of summary judgment
    against certain defendants, it did not change the jury's liability findings. The
    judge reiterated these findings only when discussing its rationale for imposing
    compensatory damages against all five defendants.
    For example, the court explained that the partial summary judgment
    order held all five defendants committed workers' compensation fraud and
    were jointly and severally liable for a minimum of $75,000 plus reasonable
    costs and attorneys' fees. Thus, all five defendants were liable to plaintiffs for
    compensatory damages, reasonable costs, and attorneys' fees for the workers'
    compensation insurance fraud count.
    A-3510-18
    28
    The judge said the prior summary judgment order held that Techdan,
    Exterior, Dunlap and Fisher were liable to plaintiffs for compensatory
    damages, reasonable costs, and attorneys' fees for the IFPA violation. While
    summary judgment was not granted against Junz as a matter of law, the jury
    subsequently concluded that Junz was liable for the IFPA violation.
    Therefore, all five defendants were liable to plaintiffs for compensatory
    damages, reasonable costs, and attorneys' fees for the IFPA violation.
    When discussing the compensatory damages against Fisher, the judge
    did not allocate any damages to him for workers' compensation fraud or the
    IFPA violation consistent with the jury's conclusions that he was not liable for
    those counts, despite the prior partial summary judgment order. Finally, the
    judge opined that Dunlap and Junz were "personally liable" due to the jury's
    verdict that they committed civil conspiracy.
    The judge further opined that the jury's verdict that Dunlap, Junz,
    Techdan, and Exterior engaged in a pattern of insurance fraud subjected them,
    jointly and severally, to IFPA treble damages, N.J.S.A. 17:33A-7(b). Plaintiffs
    were therefore entitled to trebled compensatory damages totaling $2,270,970 4
    from Dunlap, Junz, Techdan, and Exterior. The judge entered compensatory
    4
    This figure is reached upon multiplying $756,990 by a factor of three.
    A-3510-18
    29
    damages in favor of plaintiffs against Fisher only to the extent of $756,990,
    because the jury did not find him liable for the IFPA violation.
    The court vacated the punitive damages awards against Dunlap, Fisher,
    and Junz because he was uncertain that the factual underpinnings that
    supported the award were not commingled with the jury's conclusion that
    Dunlap, Junz, Techdan, and Exterior engaged in a pattern of insurance fraud.
    Additionally, the court vacated the punitive damages against Fisher, finding
    his actions were not malicious, wanton, or willful, since he merely "did what
    Dunlap told him to do."
    The court calculated the amount of attorneys' fees at $922,672.67 and
    the amount of costs at $96,682.87.        Once trebled, attorneys' fees totaled
    $2,768,018.01 and costs $290,048.61. Fees and costs were assessed against
    Techdan, Exterior, Dunlap, and Junz, jointly and severally, since IFPA,
    N.J.S.A. 17:33A-7, mandates trebling of costs and attorneys' fees when a
    pattern of insurance fraud has been demonstrated.
    A jury verdict is entitled to substantial deference. Risko, 
    206 N.J. at 521
    . It should not be set aside by the trial judge unless "after canvasing the
    record and weighing the evidence, . . . the continued viability of the judgment
    would constitute a manifest denial of justice." Baxter v. Fairmont Food Co.,
    A-3510-18
    30
    
    74 N.J. 588
    , 597-98 (1977). Moreover, the trial court should not alter the
    jury's verdict unless it is "clearly against the weight of the evidence."
    Caldwell v. Haynes, 
    136 N.J. 422
    , 432 (1994). To overturn a jury verdict, it
    "must shock the judicial conscience." 
    Ibid.
     Importantly, "a trial judge is 'not
    [to] substitute his [or her] judgment for that of the jury merely because he [or
    she] would have reached the opposite conclusion . . . .'" Risko, 
    206 N.J. at 521
    (alterations in original) (quoting Dolson v. Anastasia, 
    55 N.J. 2
    , 6 (1969)). A
    judge "is not a thirteenth and decisive juror." Dolson, 
    55 N.J. at 6
    .
    Without allocating fault in the form of percentages pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    2A:15-5.2, the court erred by assigning 100% of the damages to parties who
    were not specifically assigned at least 60% of the fault. The court improperly
    equated a finding of liability for a 100% allocation of fault.
    The judge substituted his own conclusions for those of the jury. He said
    "[t]he quantum and quality of the evidence before the jury was overwhelming
    in favor of [plaintiffs]" and that "[t]here [was] no question that the individual
    defendants share joint and several liability with the corporate defendants."
    The judge opined that the jury "clearly contemplated" that Dunlap, Junz, and
    Fisher would share equally in the compensatory damages due to the liability
    finding for aiding and abetting. The court also assumed that imposition of the
    A-3510-18
    31
    full amount of compensatory damages was contemplated by the jury when it
    held Dunlap liable for the damages assigned to Techdan and Exterior via
    director liability and their decision to pierce the corporate veil.
    The imposition of the full amount of compensatory damages against all
    defendants, however, was based upon faulty jury instructions as to allocation,
    the missing ultimate outcome charge, and the absent calculation of percentages
    of fault. Additionally, defendants also claim that the court engaged in additur
    as a vehicle for undoing the jury's verdict.
    Recently, the Court addressed the issue of additur in Orientale v.
    Jennings, 
    239 N.J. 569
    , 574 (2019). Additur is the court's power to increase
    the jury's damage award if such an increase is sustained by the evidence. Id. at
    574. When using additur, the court must attempt to determine an amount that
    a reasonable jury would have awarded, if the jury had been properly instructed.
    Id. at 593-94. However, the parties must agree that the amount that the court
    selects is reasonable. Id. at 590. If the parties cannot agree, then the case
    proceeds to a new damages trial. Ibid.
    Here, the court summarily concluded that the jury's liability findings,
    coupled with references to joint and several liability in the jury instructions,
    intended to impose 100% of the compensatory damages on all defendants.
    A-3510-18
    32
    Obviously, the amount of the court's adjusted damage award was not agreed
    upon by the parties. Additur in these circumstances was error.
    Next, Junz and the Techdan defendants complain that the court's
    decision effectively held them accountable for a $5 million verdict.
    Defendants include in the computation trebled attorneys' fees and costs
    assessed against Dunlap, Junz, Techdan, and Exterior.
    Unquestionably, the IFPA entitles the claimant to collect attorneys' fees
    and costs as compensatory damages. N.J.S.A. 17:33A-7(a), (b). The jury
    found Dunlap, Junz, Techdan, and Exterior liable for IFPA violations and a
    pattern of insurance fraud. Thus, in theory, the award of attorneys' fees against
    Junz and the Techdan defendants was proper. On appeal, however, Junz and
    the Techdan defendants argue that the total amount of attorneys' fees and costs
    was calculated in error. We do not address the issue—which will have to be
    revisited based on the next trial's outcome. 5
    In sum, the court erred in assessing the quantum of damages. Because
    the court failed to have the jury assign percentages of fault, the molding of the
    5
    The jury should not be charged as to punitive damages until after the li ability
    and compensatory damages verdict has been returned. Baglini v. Lauletta, 
    338 N.J. Super. 282
    , 304 (App. Div. 2001).
    A-3510-18
    33
    verdict was flawed. The court substituted its own conclusions for those of the
    jury with regard to the allocation of the damages by equating the finding of
    liability with the imposition of the full amount of compensatory damages
    against each party.
    VIII.
    The jury's verdict was fatally flawed because the CNA should have
    informed their deliberations and the verdict sheet.      Additionally, the jury
    should have understood the consequences of their verdict by way of an
    ultimate outcome charge. Therefore, "it clearly and convincingly appears that
    there was a miscarriage of justice under the law," and a new trial must be
    conducted. R. 4:49-1(a). This is warranted despite the fact the issue was not
    raised until after the entry of the verdict. See 
    ibid.
    Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
    A-3510-18
    34