KIM GLUCKER VS. ROBERT BARBALINARDO, M.D. (L-2373-13, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    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-3567-15T2
    KIM GLUCKER and OYVIND
    KARLSEN, her husband,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    ROBERT BARBALINARDO, M.D., and
    MONTCLAIR SURGICAL ASSOCIATES,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ————————————————————————————————————
    Argued September 12, 2017 – Decided September 26, 2017
    Before Judges Reisner and Hoffman.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Essex County, Docket No. L-2373-
    13.
    Ernest P. Fronzuto argued the cause for
    appellants (Fronzuto Law Group, attorneys; Mr.
    Fronzuto, of counsel and on the briefs; Casey
    Anne Cordes, on the briefs).
    Louis A. Ruprecht argued the                cause for
    respondents    (Ruprecht Hart                Weeks  &
    Ricciardulli, LLP, attorneys;               Daniel B.
    Devinney, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    In this medical malpractice case, plaintiffs Kim Glucker and
    her husband, Oyvind Karlsen,1 appeal from the March 18, 2016 Law
    Division order granting the summary judgment dismissal of their
    claims   against   defendant     Robert       Barbalinardo,      M.D.,      a    board-
    certified    general   surgeon,    and       his     surgical   group,      defendant
    Montclair Surgical Associates, P.A.                Plaintiffs also appeal from
    an order, entered the same day, which denied their cross-motion
    for waiver, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c).2                  Plaintiffs filed
    suit after plaintiff suffered a ruptured spleen during a routine
    colonoscopy    performed    by     defendant.            Because       we    conclude
    plaintiffs    satisfied    the    good       faith    standard    of    the      waiver
    provision of the Patients First Act, we reverse both orders under
    review and remand for trial.
    1
    For ease of reference, we refer to Kim Glucker individually as
    plaintiff and Dr. Barbalinardo as defendant.
    2
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c) is part of the New Jersey Medical Care
    Access and Responsibility and Patients First Act (Patients First
    Act or Act), N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-37 to -42. One provision of the Act,
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41, "'establishes qualifications for expert
    witnesses in medical malpractice actions' and 'provides that an
    expert must have the same type of practice and possess the same
    credentials, as applicable, as the defendant health care provider,
    unless waived by the court.'" Nicholas v. Mynster, 
    213 N.J. 463
    ,
    479 (2013) (quoting Assembly Health & Human Services Committee,
    Statement to Assembly Bill No. 50 at 20 (Mar. 4, 2004)). Commonly
    referred to as "the waiver provision," N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c)
    "allows an alternative to the kind-for-kind specialty requirement
    if a plaintiff has made a good faith effort but failed to identify
    an expert physician in the specialty area available to testify."
    
    Id. at 484
    .
    2                                      A-3567-15T2
    I
    These are the most pertinent facts.            On December 5, 2011,
    plaintiff went to defendant for a routine colonoscopy.            Defendant,
    a board-certified general surgeon who performs colonoscopies, does
    not   have    a   sub-specialty.     Plaintiff   alleges   that     defendant
    negligently       ruptured   her   spleen   during   the   course    of    the
    colonoscopy.       Following the colonoscopy, plaintiff experienced
    increasing abdominal pain and went to the emergency room at
    Mountainside Hospital, where doctors diagnosed an injury to her
    spleen.      On December 6, 2011, surgery to repair the injury proved
    unsuccessful, and the next day, plaintiff underwent an exploratory
    laparotomy and the removal of her spleen.            Plaintiff remained in
    intensive care until December 11, and went home on December 12,
    2011.
    After plaintiffs filed their complaint, they timely served
    an affidavit of merit (AOM) from a general surgeon, Peter Sarnelle,
    M.D., and an AOM from a gastroenterologist, Maxwell Chait, M.D.
    Plaintiffs then moved to confirm that both experts qualified to
    submit AOMs, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41.          On October 25, 2013,
    the court ruled that Dr. Sarnelle's AOM satisfied plaintiffs' AOM
    requirements, but that Dr. Chait's AOM did not.
    In March 2014, Dr. Sarnelle withdrew as an expert due to
    illness.     On February 9, 2015, plaintiffs served two reports from
    3                               A-3567-15T2
    proffered experts: Dr. Chait and an infectious disease expert,
    Richard K. Sall, M.D.
    On February 18, 2015, defendants filed a motion to bar the
    report of Dr. Chait.         Plaintiffs filed a cross-motion to allow for
    an exception under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c).            The motion judge barred
    Dr. Chait from testifying as an expert and denied plaintiff's
    cross-motion      for   an   exception.       However,     the   judge   extended
    discovery for ninety days and advised plaintiffs' counsel he could
    return to have the court further address his request for an
    exception, after completing additional searching for a replacement
    expert.
    On July 7, 2015, plaintiffs' counsel again filed a motion to
    permit a waiver under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c), citing a "good faith"
    effort    since   "none      of   the   seventeen   (17)   potential     surgical
    experts" he contacted "were able to provide an opinion in this
    matter."    On August 7, 2015, the same judge heard oral argument,
    initially found that plaintiffs "technically . . . met" the
    requirements of N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c) by "checking off the boxes."
    However, the judge expressed concern that the certification of
    plaintiffs' counsel lacked details about why the seventeen other
    potential doctors could not serve as experts, and thus, he could
    not discern a "good faith effort."             On these grounds, the judge
    denied the motion, but gave plaintiffs' counsel thirty days to
    4                               A-3567-15T2
    provide a supplemental certification, explaining, "I want more
    information on why the experts turned you down."
    On   September   1,     2015,   plaintiffs'    counsel    submitted    a
    supplemental certification, detailing his extensive efforts to
    secure a substitute expert for            Dr. Sarnelle.       These efforts
    "included    contacting    attorney       acquaintances,   contacting    the
    memberships of attorney organizations and contacting a service
    [which] finds experts for medical malpractice review."            While the
    expert witness service had fifty-eight general surgeons in its
    databank, "most were excluded immediately since they do not perform
    screening colonoscopies."       The seven general surgery experts who
    did perform colonoscopies "were all sub-certified in colo-rectal
    surgery."
    Plaintiff's counsel then contacted a second expert witness
    referral service, which had forty-nine active general surgery
    experts in its database.       None of the experts proved capable of
    providing   the   required    testimony.       Plaintiff's    counsel   then
    summarized his efforts to obtain a substitute board-certified
    general surgeon expert:
    In all, my firm has contacted colleagues,
    attorney organizations and two expert referral
    services, which represents a broad cross-
    section of referral sources for a medical
    expert referral.    From the expert referral
    services alone, we know that over 100 general
    surgery experts were considered; however they
    5                             A-3567-15T2
    did not meet the case specific qualification
    requirements.    This, of course, does not
    include the pool of general surgery experts
    that cannot be quantified from colleagues and
    attorney    organization    contacts,    which
    informally reviewed their potential general
    surgery expert pool and determined that there
    was not a fit for this case so as to not
    provide     a    referral.         Ultimately,
    notwithstanding our diligent efforts, we have
    been unable to locate a general surgery expert
    that meets the qualifications requirements of
    this case."
    On November 20, 2015, the judge heard oral argument, and
    remained    unsatisfied    with   the       supplemental    certification   and
    continued to deny plaintiffs' waiver motion.               The judge expressed
    concerns plaintiffs were circumventing the statute, but denied
    defendants' motion for summary judgment, citing "some alternatives
    . . . short of summary judgment."
    On February 2, 2016, defendants again moved for summary
    judgment.     On March 2, 2016, plaintiffs again cross-moved for a
    waiver under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c).             On March 18, 2016, the case
    came before a different judge (the second judge) for oral argument.
    Plaintiffs'    counsel    again   argued      his   certification   set   forth
    sufficient good faith efforts to warrant the grant of a waiver:
    This is a case where a general surgeon is doing
    a screening colonoscopy.         Most general
    surgeons, that is not within the scope of what
    they do. . . .        [T]he vast majority of
    screening    colonoscopies    are    done    by
    gastroenterologists.
    6                              A-3567-15T2
    . . . .
    And then we had . . . those expert referral
    services, they have . . . over 100 general
    surgery experts within their database. None
    of them met the case specific qualifications
    required in this case. General surgeon, not
    sub-certified in any other field, [who]
    performs screening colonoscopies.
    The     second    judge    agreed      with   plaintiffs,      ultimately
    acknowledging that a waiver was proper in this case.                     However,
    apparently believing the law of the case doctrine precluded him
    from granting the waiver, the second judge denied plaintiffs'
    waiver      request    and   granted    defendants'      motion    for    summary
    judgment.     This appeal followed.
    II
    In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we apply the same
    standard under Rule 4:46-2(c) that governs the trial court.                    See
    Liberty Surplus Ins. Corp. v. Nowell Amoroso, P.A., 
    189 N.J. 436
    ,
    445-46 (2007).         We "consider whether the competent evidential
    materials presented, when viewed in the light most favorable to
    the   non-moving       party,   are    sufficient   to    permit    a    rational
    factfinder to resolve the alleged disputed issue in favor of the
    non-moving party." Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 540 (1995).
    7                                A-3567-15T2
    A.
    In 2004, the Legislature enacted the New Jersey Medical Care
    Access and Responsibility and Patients First Act (Act), N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-37 to -42.          The Act set forth detailed standards for
    testifying experts, "generally requiring the challenging expert
    to be equivalently-qualified to the defendant[.]"                Ryan v. Renny,
    
    203 N.J. 37
    , 52 (2010).         However, the Act further provided "for
    waiver     of     the     newly-tightened         requirements    in     certain
    circumstances[.]" Id. at 53.        Specifically,
    [a] court may waive the same specialty or
    subspecialty recognized by the American Board
    of Medical Specialties or the American
    Osteopathic      Association     and     board
    certification requirements of this section,
    upon motion by the party seeking a waiver, if,
    after the moving party has demonstrated to the
    satisfaction of the court that a good faith
    effort has been made to identify an expert in
    the same specialty or subspecialty, the court
    determines    that   the    expert   possesses
    sufficient training, experience and knowledge
    to provide the testimony as a result of active
    involvement in, or full-time teaching of,
    medicine in the applicable area of practice
    or a related field of medicine.
    [N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c).]
    In Ryan, our Supreme Court reversed the decision of this
    court "declaring that [the plaintiff] failed to satisfy the good
    faith    standard    of   the   waiver       provision   of   N.J.S.A.   2A:53A-
    41(c)[.]"       Ryan, supra, 203 N.J. at 61.         In reversing, the Court
    8                               A-3567-15T2
    found that a plaintiff satisfied the required good faith standard
    and permitted a non-board-certified physician to testify that the
    actions of a board-certified specialists did not meet the standard
    of care.     Id. at 45.   The Court determined that counsel for the
    plaintiff undertook efforts that were sufficient for the good
    faith effort requirement.     Id. at 56.        The Court emphasized the
    plain language of the waiver provision, which "directs the judge
    to focus on the 'effort' the moving party made to obtain a
    statutorily-authorized    expert,   and   not    on   the   reasons    why    a
    particular expert or experts declined to execute an affidavit."
    Id. at 55.
    Indeed, the very existence of the waiver
    provision makes it obvious to us that the
    Legislature did not intend a malpractice case
    to stand or fall solely on the presence or
    absence of a same-specialty expert. If that
    were the case, the Legislature would not have
    provided for waiver or, at the very least,
    would have declared that waiver was somehow
    limited by the substance of an expert's
    refusal to execute an affidavit. It did not
    do so.
    By the broad waiver provision, the
    Legislature explicitly recognized that there
    would be legitimate malpractice claims for
    which a plaintiff would not be able to obtain
    an affidavit of merit from an equivalently-
    qualified expert or even from an expert in the
    same field. It thus created a safety valve for
    those cases by providing the judge with broad
    discretion   to   accept    an   expert   with
    "sufficient    training,     experience    and
    knowledge to provide the testimony[,]" but
    9                                 A-3567-15T2
    only if plaintiff made a good faith effort to
    satisfy the statute. The Legislature left it
    to the "satisfaction of the court" to
    determine whether an honest "effort" was made
    to identify an expert in the same specialty
    or subspecialty. It is the "effort" of the
    movant that is the focal point of the waiver
    provision.
    [Id. at 55-56]
    B.
    The principal issue on this appeal is whether the second
    judge properly applied the law of the case doctrine in upholding
    the decision of the first judge, denying plaintiffs a waiver under
    N.J.S.A.   2A:53A-41(c).     Plaintiffs    argue    the    second     judge
    erroneously applied the law of the case doctrine by following the
    previous ruling that plaintiffs failed to meet the requirements
    for a waiver pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c).
    The law of the case doctrine provides "that a legal decision
    made in a particular matter 'should be respected by all other
    lower or equal courts during the pendency of that case.'" Lombardi
    v. Masso, 
    207 N.J. 517
    , 538 (2011) (quoting Lanzet v. Greenberg,
    
    126 N.J. 168
    , 192 (1991)); State v. Reldan, 
    100 N.J. 187
    , 203
    (1985).    Although   non-binding,   the   doctrine   is   "intended       to
    'prevent relitigation of a previously resolved issue'" in the same
    case, "by a different and co-equal court."         Lombardi, 
    supra,
     207
    10                                  A-3567-15T2
    N.J. at 538-39 (quoting In re Estate of Stockdale, 
    196 N.J. 275
    ,
    311 (2008)).
    However, the law of the case "doctrine is not an absolute
    rule   as   'the   court   is   never    irrevocably    bound   by    its   prior
    interlocutory ruling[.]'"        Jacoby v. Jacoby, 
    427 N.J. Super. 109
    ,
    117 (App. Div. 2012) (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted).    Thus, when "there is substantially different evidence"
    from that available at the time of the prior decision, "new
    controlling    authority,       or   the     prior   decision    was     clearly
    erroneous[,]" the doctrine does not apply.             Sisler v. Gannett Co.,
    
    222 N.J. Super. 153
    , 159 (App. Div. 1987), certif. denied, 
    110 N.J. 304
     (1988).      The rule is discretionary, and the doctrine is
    "applied flexibly to serve the interests of justice."                  State v.
    Reldan, 
    100 N.J. 187
    , 205 (1985).
    Here, we conclude the second judge mistakenly failed to
    exercise his discretion when he declared himself "bound by" the
    first judge's previous ruling.          Pursuant to the above principles,
    he was not required to follow the previous decision.                   See State
    v. Hale, 
    127 N.J. Super. 407
    , 411 (App. Div. 1974).                  Because the
    prior decision was clearly erroneous, and the second judge agreed
    with plaintiffs that the record supported the grant of a waiver
    under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-41(c) but incorrectly believed he could not
    11                               A-3567-15T2
    grant the waiver, the second judge's failure to exercise his
    discretion warrants reversal of both orders under review.
    The record here clearly establishes that plaintiffs made an
    honest effort to identify an expert in the same specialty or
    subspecialty as defendant.    As Justice Long explained in Ryan, "It
    is the 'effort' of the movant that is the focal point of the waiver
    provision."   Ryan, supra, 203 N.J. at 56.   Plaintiffs' efforts to
    identify and retain a qualified expert here were extensive, and
    significantly greater than the efforts found adequate in Ryan.
    Ibid.   Contrary to Ryan, the first judge mistakenly focused on
    "the reasons why a particular expert or experts declined" to serve.
    Id. at 55.
    Reversed and remanded.    We do not retain jurisdiction.
    12                          A-3567-15T2