Brown v. Puente

608 A.2d 377, 257 N.J. Super. 203
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 2, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 608 A.2d 377 (Brown v. Puente) 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
Brown v. Puente, 608 A.2d 377, 257 N.J. Super. 203 (N.J. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

257 N.J. Super. 203 (1992)
608 A.2d 377

GREGORY BROWN, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
LOUIS PUENTE, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Submitted April 14, 1992.
Decided June 2, 1992.

*204 Before Judges PRESSLER, SHEBELL and D'ANNUNZIO.

Chierici & Wright, attorneys for appellant (Donald R. Chierici, Jr., on the brief).

Richard L. Freedman, attorney for respondent.

The opinion of the court was delivered by PRESSLER, P.J.A.D.

This appeal requires us to address important procedural questions respecting the right of persons subject to the so-called verbal threshold of N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8a to bring a common-law negligence action to recover the non-economic losses they sustain in automobile accidents where there is a genuine dispute as to whether the threshold has been met. We hold that the disputed issue is to be determined at trial, not before trial, and by the jury, not the judge.

Plaintiff Gregory Brown brought this action to recover damages for soft tissue back and neck injuries he suffered when the automobile in which he was a passenger was struck by a vehicle owned and operated by defendant Louis Puente. On leave granted defendant appeals from a partial summary judgment *205 entered by the trial court denying his motion to dismiss the action by reason of plaintiff's failure to meet the verbal threshold prescribed by N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8a and granting plaintiff's cross-motion for a declaration that he did meet the threshold. We affirm the denial of defendant's motion but reverse the grant of plaintiff's motion.

The accident occurred on July 11, 1989. Plaintiff, then seventeen, was on his summer vacation between his junior and senior years in high school. His doctors' reports attest to cervical and lumbosacral strain and sprain accompanied by chronic pain and objectively determined limitation of motion. The treating physician's report of an examination conducted on November 29, 1991, more than two years after the accident, continues to report significant limitation of motion of both the cervical and lumbosacral spine accompanied by marked tenderness, muscle spasm and pain. The physician's conclusion was that "... these injuries are of a permanent nature especially since they have lasted as long as they have after the accident and course of intensive physical therapy." Plaintiff's own certifications attest to his severe chronic pain since the accident, his having had to give up high school athletics and particularly track at which he had excelled in his first three years of high school, and the adverse effect of the injury on his ability to manage as a college student since he is unable to sit or read or study for long periods of time.

Against the foregoing characterization of plaintiff's injuries and their effect on him is the report of the defense physician who examined plaintiff on August 14, 1990. The physician reports plaintiff's complaints of daily headaches, his lack of complaint about his neck or back, the lack of objective findings of a continuing orthopedic disability referable to the accident, and the physician's opinion that plaintiff indeed suffered from no continuing orthopedic disability.

The trial judge, responding to defendant's motion and plaintiff's cross-motion, concluded that the issue of the verbal *206 threshold could be decided on these proofs alone without an evidential hearing. He also concluded that despite the apparent dispute of plaintiff's condition by defendant's examining physician, plaintiff had satisfied the verbal threshold. While we are persuaded that the questions raised by the record on the motion respecting plaintiff's meeting of the verbal threshold precluded the grant of defendant's motion to dismiss, those questions were not resolvable in plaintiff's favor either before trial or by the judge. Consequently, we are satisfied that the trial judge erred in granting plaintiff's cross-motion.

We need not repeat the history of the 1988 amendments of our no-fault legislation or the underlying considerations motivating the Legislature's adoption of the verbal threshold option. These are matters we discussed at length in Emmer v. Merin, 233 N.J. Super. 568, 572-574, 559 A.2d 845 (App.Div.), certif. denied, 118 N.J. 181, 570 A.2d 950 (1989), and Oswin v. Shaw, 250 N.J. Super. 461, 595 A.2d 522 (App.Div.), certif. granted, 127 N.J. 552, 606 A.2d 365 (1991). Suffice it to say that the basis of the legislative compromise on the verbal threshold issue was the intent to lower insurance premiums for those insureds willing to forego a dollar threshold, thereby conditioning their right to recover non-economic damages on meeting a verbal threshold. Oswin at 464, 595 A.2d 522. The verbal threshold option formulated by L. 1988, c. 119, § 6, codified as N.J.S.A. 39:6A-8a, provides as follows:

Every owner, registrant, operator or occupant of an automobile to which section 4 of P.L. 1972, c. 70 (C.39:6A-4), personal injury protection coverage, regardless of fault, applies, and every person or organization legally responsible for his acts or omissions, is hereby exempted from tort liability for noneconomic loss to a person who is subject to this subsection and who is either a person who is required to maintain the coverage mandated by this act, or is a person who has a right to receive benefits under section 4 of P.L. 1972, c. 70 (C.39:6A-4), as a result of bodily injury, arising out of the ownership, operation, maintenance or use of such automobile in this State, unless that person has sustained a personal injury which results in death; dismemberment; significant disfigurement; a fracture; loss of a fetus; permanent loss of use of a body organ, member, function or system; permanent consequential limitation of use of a body organ or member; significant limitation of use of a body function or system; or a medically determined injury or impairment of a non-permanent *207 nature which prevents the injured person from performing substantially all of the material acts which constitute that person's usual and customary daily activities for not less than 90 days during the 180 days immediately following the occurrence of the injury or impairment ...

The verbal threshold option includes, therefore, nine separate definitions of an injury sufficiently severe so as to relieve an injured person from his contractual waiver of the right to sue for non-economic damages. Some of these, such as death, dismemberment, fracture, and loss of a fetus, are not readily subject to genuine dispute. That is, the causal relationship of these injuries to the accident may be disputed, but the existence of the physical condition itself ordinarily is not. The problem, exemplified by this case, arises because of the interpretive range of other definitions of severity, particularly the last three, which include "permanent consequential limitation of use of a body organ or member; significant limitation of use of a body function or system; or a medically determined injury or impairment of a non-permanent nature which prevents the injured person from performing substantially all of the material acts which constitute the person's usual and customary daily activities for not less than 90 days during the 180 days immediately following the occurrence of the injury or impairment...."

In short, each of these categories may encompass serious soft tissue injuries.

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608 A.2d 377, 257 N.J. Super. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-puente-njsuperctappdiv-1992.