Alexa Baez Zucco v. Walgreen Eastern Co. Inc.

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 16, 2023
DocketA-1709-21
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alexa Baez Zucco v. Walgreen Eastern Co. Inc. (Alexa Baez Zucco v. Walgreen Eastern Co. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexa Baez Zucco v. Walgreen Eastern Co. Inc., (N.J. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-1709-21

ALEXA BAEZ ZUCCO and ENZO ZUCCO, her spouse,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

WALGREEN EASTERN CO., INC., NUNNO & NUNNO, PTR. LLC, BOROUGH OF LODI, COUNTY OF BERGEN, STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Defendants,

and

MERCER STREET LLC,

Defendant-Respondent.

Argued October 10, 2023 – Decided November 16, 2023

Before Judges Sabatino and Marczyk.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Bergen County, Docket No. L-5482-19. Grace Elizabeth Robol argued the cause for appellants (Davis Saperstein & Salomon PC, attorneys; Lisa Ann Lehrer, of counsel and on the briefs; Grace Elizabeth Robol, on the brief).

Edward Richard Nicholson argued the cause for respondent (Schiavetti, Corgan, DiEdwards, Weinberg & Nicholson LLP, attorneys; William Daniel Buckley, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

This appeal involves the trial court's analysis of Rule 4:26-4 and Rule 4:9-

3 in the context of a personal injury action. Plaintiffs, Alexa Baez-Zucco and

her husband, Enzo Zucco, appeal the trial court's September 10, 2021 order

granting Mercer Street, LLC summary judgment and the January 18, 2022 order

denying plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration. Following our review of the

record and the applicable legal principles, we affirm.

I.

On May 23, 2018, Baez-Zucco was walking in the parking area at a

Walgreens store in Lodi, which was adjacent to other commercial businesses,

when she slipped on loose gravel and rolled her ankle due to a surface depression

in the parking lot pavement. Police responded to the scene, completed an

investigation report, and identified the location of the accident as 20 Arnot Street

A-1709-21 2 in Lodi.1 The property at 20 Arnot Street was owned by Walgreen Eastern, Co.

Inc.

Plaintiffs retained counsel shortly after the incident, and on June 28, 2018,

plaintiffs and their engineering expert Kelly-Ann Kimiecik, P.E., visited the

scene of the fall. Kimiecik's July 7, 2018 report2 addressed to plaintiffs' law

firm indicates the incident occurred as plaintiff was walking toward Walgreens

"between the parking lot spaces and the adjacent building."3 Kimiecik opined

the depression in the asphalt was caused by "water surface runoff from the

adjacent building['s] downspout" coupled with poorly compacted subgrade and

"freeze thaw cycles" which caused the pavement to crack.

While at the inspection of the fall site, Kimiecik encountered Tracie

Nunno-D'Amico. Kimiecik and Nunno-D'Amico were together earlier that day

at a different site inspection for one of Nunno-D'Amico's cases. Nunno-

D'Amico is an attorney. Kimiecik informed Nunno-D'Amico there had been a

1 A central issue in this case concerns the ownership of the portion of the parking lot where plaintiff fell and surrounding properties. 2 Kimiecik prepared two reports. The first was dated July 7, 2018. The second report, dated February 4, 2021, was submitted in support of plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration. 3 The adjacent building—2 Mercer Street—is owned by Mercer Street, LLC. A-1709-21 3 fall at Walgreens, and she was performing an inspection. Nunno-D'Amico

informed Kimiecik that her family "held ownership" of property in the area.

However, Kimiecik notes in her February 4, 2021 report she "did not indicate

the specific location of . . . plaintiff's incident" to Nunno-D'Amico.4 Kimiecik

reported this encounter with Nunno-D'Amico later that day to plaintiffs' law

firm.

A year later, in July 2019, plaintiffs filed a complaint against defendants,

Walgreen Eastern, Co., Inc., Nunno & Nunno PTR LLC ("Nunno & Nunno") a

real estate holding company for property located at 2 Arnot Street, the Borough

of Lodi, the County of Bergen, the State of New Jersey, and other fictitious

parties.5 Although plaintiffs named the Nunno & Nunno entity as a defendant,

4 Nunno-D'Amico testified at her deposition Kimiecik advised her plaintiff's fall occurred in the Walgreens parking lot. Nunno-D'Amico was concerned because she had already retained Kimiecik, and she did not want there to be a conflict because if plaintiff fell on the "other property" (2 Mercer Street, owned by Mercer Street, LLC), there could be a conflict because her parents owned that property and her father owned the law firm that retained Kimiecik in the case Nunno-D'Amico and Kimiecik were working on together earlier that day. 5 Stipulations of dismissal were subsequently filed as to defendants, County of Bergen and the Borough of Lodi. The State of New Jersey was granted summary judgment.

A-1709-21 4 the true owners of the building with the downspout referenced in Kimiecik's

report was Mercer Street, LLC.6 Thereafter, the parties engaged in discovery.

William Nunno answered plaintiffs' interrogatories on behalf of Nunno &

Nunno. Plaintiffs assert Nunno & Nunno's responses to interrogatories were

inaccurate insofar as it responded it had no knowledge of Baez-Zucco's fall

despite Nunno-D'Amico's encounter with Kimiecik in the parking lot at the time

of the inspection. Further, plaintiffs contend Nunno & Nunno did not disclose

the location of plaintiff's fall was on a different property owned by a different

Nunno family holding company.

Nunno-D'Amico was deposed on August 26, 2020. At her deposition,

plaintiffs assert they learned for the first time Mercer Street, LLC owned the 2

Mercer Street property in the area where plaintiff fell. Plaintiffs subsequently

moved for and obtained leave to amend the complaint to name Mercer Street,

LLC as a defendant. At the close of discovery, Mercer Street, LLC moved for

summary judgment based on plaintiffs' failure to comply with the statute of

6 The principals of Mercer Street, LLC are Kathy Nunno and William Nunno alone. The principals of Nunno & Nunno are Kathy Nunno, William Nunno, Tracie Nunno-D'Amico, Lois Nunno, and Alisa Nunno DiChiara.

A-1709-21 5 limitations. The trial court, as discussed more fully below, granted the motion,

and denied plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration.

II.

Plaintiffs contend Mercer Street, LLC was timely joined pursuant to Rule

4:26-4 and that their claims relate back to the date of the original complaint and

should not be barred by the statute of limitations under Rule 4:9-3. More

specifically, plaintiffs assert they "did not know the identity of the exact Nunno

entity responsible [for the] area of the fall prior to the defendant property owners

advising of same." Plaintiffs further allege Nunno & Nunno and Mercer Street,

LLC were the "same people," and despite this, Nunno & Nunno never identified

the proper owner of the relevant property in its answers to interrogatories.

Defendant counters plaintiffs were aware of the building with the

downspout that purportedly caused the dangerous condition, and there is no

indication plaintiffs had difficulty in determining the address of the building

adjacent to the parking lot where the fall occurred. Defendant further argues

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