Bender v. Adelson

901 A.2d 907, 187 N.J. 411, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 1134
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 19, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by118 cases

This text of 901 A.2d 907 (Bender v. Adelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bender v. Adelson, 901 A.2d 907, 187 N.J. 411, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 1134 (N.J. 2006).

Opinions

[416]*416Justice ZAZZALI

delivered the opinion of the Court.

After plaintiffs husband died during a heart procedure, plaintiff sued his doctors for negligence, and a jury awarded plaintiff $1.6 million. The trial court, however, granted defendants’ motion for a mistrial. It found that comments that plaintiffs counsel made during summation asking the jury to draw an adverse inference from defendants’ failure to present certain independent experts were unfair and prejudicial because defendants had been barred from submitting the names and reports of three experts as untimely. Plaintiff appealed, and a divided Appellate Division panel reversed, holding that counsel’s summation comments were factually accurate, did not exceed the bounds of proper advocacy, and that those comments that were not accurate were redressed by the trial court’s curative instruction. The question concerning the propriety of counsel’s summation comments is before us because defendants appealed to this Court as of right. We granted defendants’ petition for certification on the issue whether the trial court abused its discretion when it barred the testimony and submission of defendants’ experts’ reports.

We hold that the trial court’s order granting a mistrial must be reinstated. Although we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it barred defendants’ experts, we conclude that the summation comment made by plaintiffs counsel concerning the absence of those experts had the capacity to mislead the jury and effected a “miscarriage of justice under the law” thus requiring a new trial under Rule 4:49-l(a).

I.

A.

In March 1999, after experiencing pain in his back and jaw, Robert Bender, the decedent, sought treatment from Dr. Richard Adelson, an interventional cardiologist. Dr. Adelson concluded that the decedent required a cardiac catheterization, an invasive diagnostic procedure that is used to assess the status of a patient’s [417]*417arteries. Thereafter, the decedent was admitted to Jersey Shore Medical Center, and Dr. Adelson performed the procedure with Dr. Maurice Weiss assisting.

During the procedure, Drs. Adelson and Weiss (defendants) observed clots in the right and left arteries of the decedent’s heart and determined that a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was necessary. PCI involves the use of angioplasty and stent placement to unclog arteries. In the morning before the PCI began, defendants initially gave the decedent 5,000 units of Heparin, an anticoagulant used to decrease the blood’s clotting. While finishing the angioplasty on the right artery, defendants administered an additional 7,500 units of Heparin and prepared for a second angioplasty on the decedent’s left arteries. During that second angioplasty, the decedent’s left anterior descending artery and diagonal artery closed, and defendants administered 2,000 additional units of Heparin and two doses of Integrilin, another anticoagulant, to the decedent.

After finishing that procedure, defendants moved the decedent to a holding area. A half-hour later, the decedent became restless, experienced back pain, vomited, and had seizures. Later, the decedent experienced low blood pressure, had another seizure, and defendants administered CPR. The decedent was rushed to the operating room where another doctor performed open-heart surgery. Unfortunately, that effort was unsuccessful, and the decedent entered into a coma and died. The decedent was forty-three years old at the time of his death and had two children, who were eighteen and ten years old.

B.

On April 5, 2000, plaintiff Kathleen Bender, the decedent’s wife, filed a complaint alleging negligence and naming Dr. Adelson, Dr. Weiss, Shore Heart Group, and unnamed doctors and nurses as defendants. The pre-trial proceedings, which we detail here because they serve in part as the basis for this appeal, involved various extensions and delays.

[418]*418Discovery originally was scheduled to end on September 27, 2001, but on September 5, 2001, the parties and the trial court agreed to a sixty-day extension. Soon thereafter, the trial court set a January 28, 2002 trial date. On September 25, 2001, plaintiff submitted her expert reports to defendants. Those reports were prepared by Dr. Michael Lux, an interventional cardiologist, and Dr. Ronald Sacher, a hematologist, and were dated April 7 and October 21, 2000. Then, on January 11, 2002, the court again extended discovery until July 11, 2002, and adjourned the trial date as a result of defendants’ unopposed motion.

Because defendants had not yet submitted their expert reports, on March 27, 2002, plaintiff moved to compel their production by April 29, 2002. The trial court granted plaintiffs motion, ordering that “any defense expert whose report is not served by April 29, 2002 [will be barred] from testifying at trial.” To comply with the order’s deadline, defendants identified themselves as experts on April 26, 2002. Defendants also sought more time to identify additional experts. Plaintiff consented, and, on May 17, 2002, the trial court entered an order allowing expert reports until May 29, 2002. The order contained the same exclusionary language as the prior month’s order, indicating that “any defense expert whose report is not served by May 29, 2002 shall be barred from testifying at trial.” Eight days prior to the May 29 deadline, defendants submitted to plaintiff the name and report of Dr. Mark Hochberg, a cardiac surgeon. After the May 29 deadline, in letters dated June 25 and July 8, 2002, defendants requested plaintiffs permission to amend their answers to plaintiffs interrogatories and submitted the names and reports of three additional experts: Drs. Samin Sharma and E. Scott Monrad, interventional cardiologists, and Dr. Stephen M. Factor, a pathologist.

Plaintiff responded in a letter dated July 11, 2002, formally objecting to defendants’ untimely submission of the three additional experts. Also, in a notice dated July 11,2002, the trial court set a new trial date for September 11, 2002. Then, on July 19, 2002, defendants moved before the trial court to admit the names and [419]*419reports of the three experts, extend discovery, and adjourn the trial date. At a hearing before the motion judge, defense counsel explained the untimely submission of the three experts by stating that “we litigants are to a vast degree at the mercy of people who are willing to be experts in cases like this. It was a long process of trying to find the right people, and some of them just didn’t want to become involved.” Defense counsel also argued that admission of the late experts was necessary to ensure a fair trial because Dr. Hochberg, the only independent and timely expert, did not have the requisite expertise.

[Dr. Hochberg is] not an evasive [sic] cardiologist. He’s done maybe six procedures. He’s not a pathologist. He’s not a hematologist. We’ve got him because we had these deadlines and we were trying to find somebody who would write a report. So he’s been deposed and he is vaguely knowledgeable about this area, but nowhere near the kind of specialties that the plaintiffs experts have and the ones that we finally were able to locate.

Plaintiffs counsel responded by arguing that Dr. Hochberg could adequately testify as an expert witness on defendants’ behalf.

Dr. Hochberg has a ten-page resume to set forth just how much he knows. I believe he is competent to testify and cover the defendant’s [sic] case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Madelaine Wallace v. Michael J. McGinnis
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Kdn, Inc. v. Youry Antipin
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Daniel Cohen v. Weg & Myers, Pc
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Keith Salters, Etc. v. South Mountain Rehabilitation Center, LLC
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Estate of Amelia Bainlardi, Etc. v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Anna K. D'antonio v. the Newark Public Schools, Etc.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Pascal Lamothe v. Dajeya Huggins
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Christine Sullivan v. Dr. Asit Shah, M.D. ph.D.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Ashley Smith v. Annette Nieves, Lrn
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
Renee Ransdell v. Shari Waldron
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
Helen F. Yates, Etc. v. Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corporation
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
Maureen Widofsky v. New Brunswick Parking Authority
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
Kenneth Hagel v. Kevin Davenport
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
State of New Jersey v. Harold K. Colbert
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
901 A.2d 907, 187 N.J. 411, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 1134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bender-v-adelson-nj-2006.