JUAN CABRERA VS. NIA HALL (L-2119-17, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-2483-19
    JUAN CABRERA and PATRICIA
    RODRIGUEZ,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    NIA HALL,
    Defendant-Respondent,
    and
    SAMUEL ALPERT,
    EAN HOLDINGS, LLC,
    ENTERPRISE HOLDINGS, INC.,
    ENTERPRISE RENT-A-CAR,
    ALAMO RENT-A-CAR, and
    NATIONAL CAR RENTAL,
    Defendants.
    _____________________________
    Argued August 2, 2021 – Decided August 12, 2021
    Before Judges Mayer and Susswein.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Camden County, Docket No. L-2119-17.
    Casandra DeStefano argued the cause for appellant
    Juan Cabrera (Law Offices of Jef D. Henninger,
    attorneys; Jef D. Henninger, on the brief).
    Marc R. Jones argued the cause for respondent Nia Hall
    (Cipriani & Werner, PC, attorneys; Matthew K.
    Mitchell and Marc R. Jones, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiffs Juan Cabrera and Patricia Rodgriquez 1 appeal from a January
    10, 2020 order denying a motion to file a late demand for a trial de novo from
    an April 23, 2019 arbitration award. We affirm.
    Plaintiff was injured in a multi-car collision on June 5, 2015. Plaintiff
    filed a personal injury action seeking damages for injuries he sustained in the
    accident. Defendants filed answers, and the parties exchanged discovery. After
    the close of discovery, defendants, with the exception of defendant Nia Hall
    (Hall), moved for summary judgment. Defendant Samuel Alpert and the rental
    car defendants were granted summary judgment by orders dated May 24, 2019.2
    1
    Patricia Rodriguez, the wife of Juan Cabrera, asserted a per quod claim as a
    result of injuries sustained by her husband in the June 5, 2015 motor vehicle
    accident. We use plaintiff to refer to the direct claims assert by Juan Cabrera.
    2
    The summary judgment orders are not the subject of this appeal.
    A-2483-19
    2
    Because the matter was subject to the verbal threshold limitation of
    lawsuit elected by plaintiff in his automobile insurance policy, N.J.S.A. 39:6A-
    8, mandatory automobile arbitration was scheduled for April 23, 2019. Plaintiff
    was self-represented at the arbitration.3 The arbitrators found Hall one hundred
    percent responsible for the accident. However, based on the lack of medical
    documentation proffered in support of plaintiff's personal injury claim, the
    arbitrators had "no choice but to enter a no cause of action." To obtain an award
    of damages, plaintiff needed to demonstrate he sustained permanent injuries
    sufficient to overcome the verbal threshold limitation on lawsuit option.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, plaintiff signed the "report and award of
    arbitrator(s)."   Above the signature line, plaintiff received written notice
    rejection of the arbitration award required the filing of "a trial de novo request
    together with a $200 fee within thirty (30) days of today." The arbitrators also
    reiterated the thirty-day deadline to file a demand for a trial de novo if plaintiff
    was dissatisfied with the arbitration decision.
    In seeking to file a late demand for a trial de novo, plaintiff claimed he
    was represented by a new attorney at the time of the arbitration. He argued his
    3
    Plaintiff's attorney withdrew as counsel prior to the arbitration based on
    plaintiff's rejection of the recommended settlement offer and decision to proceed
    to trial.
    A-2483-19
    3
    new attorney possessed his medical records. However, at no time prior to the
    arbitration did plaintiff request an adjournment of the hearing so his new counsel
    could appear. Nor was there a substitution of attorney filed reflecting new
    counsel prior to the arbitration date.
    According to the record on appeal, plaintiff retained new counsel on May
    7, 2019, fourteen days after completion of the arbitration hearing. 4 In addition,
    the appellate record reflects plaintiff's prior counsel provided the personal injury
    file to plaintiff according to a receipt signed on April 5, 2019. Despite having
    his litigation file eighteen days before the arbitration hearing, plaintiff failed to
    explain why he could not produce medical records in support of his injury
    claims.
    Plaintiff knew he had thirty days from the April 23, 2019 arbitration
    hearing to file a demand for a trial de novo, and the filing deadline expired on
    May 23, 2019. Because plaintiff retained new counsel on May 7, 2019, he had
    4
    For the first time on appeal, plaintiff suggests his new attorney failed to appear
    at the arbitration hearing, resulting in eventual disbarment in the State of New
    York in March 2020. However, counsel's disbarment was unrelated to plaintiff's
    personal injury case and occurred nearly one year after the arbitration. Because
    plaintiff failed to raise this argument to the motion judge, we decline to address
    it. Nieder v. Royal Indem. Ins. Co., 
    62 N.J. 229
    , 234 (1973) (quoting Reynolds
    Offset Co., Inc. v. Summer, 
    58 N.J. Super. 542
    , 548 (App. Div. 1959)) (declining
    to address arguments not presented to the trial court unless the matters "go to
    the jurisdiction of the trial court or concern matters of great public interest ").
    A-2483-19
    4
    ample time to discuss the arbitration decision with his new attorney and file a
    trial de novo before the thirty-day period lapsed. There is nothing in the record
    evidencing an effort by plaintiff or his newly retained attorney to file a timely
    demand for a trial de novo.
    Based on plaintiff's failure to file a trial de novo, on May 28, 2019, Hall
    filed a motion to confirm the arbitration award. During the pendency of the
    motion, plaintiff removed the case to federal court, which deprived the New
    Jersey Superior Court judge of jurisdiction to decide Hall's motion.           In a
    December 20, 2019 order, the federal court remanded the case to the New Jersey
    Superior Court. In January 2020, after the case returned to the Superior Court,
    Hall refiled her motion to confirm the arbitration award. Plaintiff, still self-
    represented, moved to permit the late filing of a demand for a trial de novo.
    After hearing the parties' arguments, in separate January 10, 2020 orders,
    the motion judge denied plaintiff's motion and granted Hall's motion. The
    motion judge allowed plaintiff considerable leeway in raising arguments without
    any evidentiary support. Specifically, plaintiff claimed his lawyers "lied to him"
    and defense counsel paid his attorneys to forego legal action on his behalf.
    A-2483-19
    5
    The judge noted plaintiff "had multiple attorneys throughout this matter,
    each attorney at some point either withdrawing from representation or otherwise
    being terminated." The judge also stated:
    The [c]ourt has little discretion with respect to
    enforcing the requirement that any rejection of an
    arbitration award be filed within 30 days of the
    arbitration. Plaintiff's unhappiness with counsel he
    sought to retain . . . doesn't legally excuse the failure to
    file the trial de novo request within the 30 day period.
    ....
    Accepting everything that the plaintiff says as true, the
    plaintiff here still cannot satisfy the extraordinary
    circumstances standard set forth by the New Jersey
    Supreme Court. Plaintiff was aware of the arbitration
    result but failed to take any action to reject that decision
    within the 30 day period permitted under the court
    rules.
    Represented by counsel on appeal, plaintiff argues the arbitration should
    be vacated because his "previous attorney's failure to file an appearance . . .
    constitute[d] an 'extraordinary circumstance' warranting relief pursuant to Rule
    4:21A." We disagree.
    Because this appeal involves the interpretation of the court rules
    governing arbitration, our review is de novo. Vanderslice v. Stewart, 
    220 N.J. 385
    , 389 (2015). We note N.J.S.A. 39:6A-25(a) mandates arbitration in certain
    A-2483-19
    6
    automobile personal injury cases.      Our court rules address the procedural
    requirements associated with mandatory arbitration. Rule 4:21A-6 provides:
    An order shall be entered dismissing the action
    following the filing of the arbitrator's award unless:
    (1) within 30 days after filing of the arbitration award,
    a party thereto files with the civil division manager and
    serves on all other parties a notice of rejection of the
    award and demand for a trial de novo and pays a trial
    de novo fee as set forth in paragraph (c) of this rule; or
    ....
    (3) within 50 days after the filing of the arbitration
    award, any party moves for confirmation of the
    arbitration award and entry of judgment thereon.
    The timing for challenges to an arbitration award is mandated by statute
    as well as court rule. See N.J.S.A. 2A:23A-26; N.J.S.A. 39:6A-31. "The
    Legislature intended [N.J.S.A. 2A:23A-26] to be strictly enforced." Hartsfield
    v. Fantini, 
    149 N.J. 611
    , 616 (1997) (quoting Hart v. Prop. Mgmt. Sys., 
    280 N.J. Super. 145
    , 147 (App. Div. 1995)). See also Jones v. First Nat'l Supermarkets,
    Inc., 
    329 N.J. Super. 125
    , 127 (App. Div. 2000) (citing Stegmeier v. St.
    Elizabeth Hosp., 
    239 N.J. Super. 475
     (App. Div. 1990)) ("The express language
    of R. 4:21A-6(b)(1) provides that both filing and service of the demand must be
    accomplished within thirty days of the entry of an arbitration award.").
    A-2483-19
    7
    Although courts "possess the power to enlarge" the thirty-day period to
    file a demand for a trial de novo, "such power should be exercised only in
    extraordinary circumstances." Mazakas v. Wray, 
    205 N.J. Super. 367
    , 371 (App.
    Div. 1985). A "trial court's express and inherent power to relax rules and grant
    equitable relief must be sparingly exercised with a view to implementing both
    the letter and the spirit of the compulsory arbitration statute and the rules
    promulgated pursuant thereto, to the end that the arbitration proceedings achieve
    finality." 
    Id. at 372
    .
    Here, plaintiff attended the arbitration.     The arbitrators explained a
    demand for a trial de novo must be filed within thirty days of issuance of the
    arbitration award. In addition, plaintiff signed the arbitration award, which
    expressly stated the thirty-day filing period for a trial de novo. Plaintiff failed
    to take any action regarding the arbitration award within the required thirty -day
    period. Further, he articulated no extraordinary circumstances justifying the late
    filing of a demand for a trial de novo. Even on appeal, plaintiff failed to set
    forth extraordinary circumstances preventing his timely filing of a trial de novo.
    Plaintiff argues the statutory laws and court rules should be relaxed to
    protect self-represented litigants and allow them their day in court. However,
    self-represented litigants are bound by the same laws and rules of court as parties
    A-2483-19
    8
    represented by counsel. See Ridge at Back Brook, LLC v. Klenert, 
    437 N.J. Super. 90
    , 99 (App. Div. 2014). Likewise, self-represented litigants are held to
    the same standard for compliance with our court rules as attorneys. See Rubin
    v. Rubin, 
    188 N.J. Super. 155
    , 159 (App. Div. 1982).
    Plaintiff had his day in court at the arbitration hearing. He chose to
    represent himself at arbitration rather than seek an adjournment of the
    proceeding. Plaintiff's dissatisfaction with the "no cause" arbitration award was
    not a basis for the late filing of a request for a trial de novo. Plaintiff has only
    himself to blame for the dismissal of his claim.
    Applying the unequivocal thirty-day period to file a trial de novo under
    Rule 4:21A-6(b)(1), coupled with the legislative intent of N.J.S.A. 2A:23A-26
    strictly enforcing that time period, we affirm the motion judge's order denying
    plaintiff's motion to file an untimely trial de novo.
    Affirmed.
    A-2483-19
    9