NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-2903-24
CHARLOTTE REEVES, as Executrix of the Estate of GEORGE REEVES, and CHARLOTTE REEVES in Her Own Right,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
INSPIRA HEALTH NETWORK, INC. and INSPIRA MEDICAL CENTERS, INC.,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
COOPER UNIVERSITY HEALTH CARE, COOPER UNIVERSITY EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS, PC, COOPER UNIVERSITY TRAUMA PHYSICIANS, PC, TIMOTHY PILLA, MD, CHRISTOPHER NOEL, MD, and DANIELLE BROCCO, RN,
Defendants. Submitted January 15, 2026 – Decided February 19, 2026
Before Judges Mawla and Marczyk.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Burlington County, Docket No. L-0677-23.
Sacchetta & Baldino, attorneys for appellants (Thomas F. Sacchetta, of counsel and on the brief, Randi S. Greenberg, on the brief).
Grossman, Heavey & Halpin PC, attorneys for respondents (Michael G. Halpin, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
In this medical malpractice and wrongful death action, plaintiff Charlotte
Reeves, as Executrix of the Estate of George Reeves (decedent), and in her own
right, appeals from the trial court's April 25, 2025 order granting defendant
Inspira Medical Centers, Inc. Mullica Hill's (Inspira)1 motion to dismiss
plaintiff's complaint with prejudice for failure to serve an appropriate affidavit
of merit (AOM) as required by the AOM statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26 to -29.
The primary issue on appeal is whether the AOM authored by Kenneth C.
McCawley, R.N. was sufficient to support plaintiff's vicarious liability claim
1 Plaintiff incorrectly named Inspira as Inspira Health Network, Inc., and Inspira Medical Centers, Inc. A-2903-24 2 against Inspira. We conclude the court erred in dismissing plaintiff's complaint.
Therefore, we reverse and remand.
I.
On February 22, 2021, decedent, then eighty-three years old, presented to
Inspira and underwent a laparoscopic right colon resection performed by
defendant Timothy Pilla, M.D. After surgery, decedent remained at Inspira's
facility under the care of its staff. A member of the nursing staff, Jamie
Macauley, R.N., allegedly failed to raise the railings on decedent's bed, and on
the day following surgery, decedent fell out of his bed and sustained a hip
fracture. As a result of the fall, decedent required further surgical intervention.
Following a second surgery, decedent's hemoglobin dropped. Although he
received blood transfusions, his condition continued to deteriorate, and on
March 4, 2021, he passed away.
Plaintiff filed a complaint 2 in February 2023, alleging medical negligence
and various related claims, including vicarious liability, ostensible agency,
corporate negligence, wrongful death, and a survival action against the
following: Inspira; Cooper University Health Care, Cooper University
2 Plaintiff's complaint was filed in Camden County, but venue was later transferred, pursuant to a consent order, to Burlington County in March 2023. A-2903-24 3 Emergency Physicians, PC, Cooper University Trauma Physicians, PC (Cooper
defendants); Dr. Pilla; Christopher Noel, M.D.; Danielle Brocco, R.N.; and
various John Doe defendants. Inspira, Dr. Pilla, and Nurse Brocco answered the
complaint in early March 2023, and the remaining defendants answered later
that month.
On May 5, 2023, plaintiff served an AOM on Inspira, prepared by Nurse
McCawley.3 The AOM, in pertinent part, provided:
[] As a result of my review in this matter, I can state that there exists a reasonable probability that the care, skill[,] or knowledge exercised in the treatment of [decedent] by defendants, [Nurse] Brocco, . . . [Inspira], Cooper University Health Care, Cooper University Emergency Physicians, [and] Cooper University Trauma Physicians[,] that are the subject of the [c]omplaint, fell below acceptable professional standards causing harm to [decedent].
3 Plaintiff also served AOMs prepared by Howard Yeaton, M.D., as to Dr. Noel, Dr. Pilla, and the Inspira and Cooper defendants. A-2903-24 4 A Ferreira conference4 was subsequently held in June 2023, and a case
management order with a discovery end date of May 31, 2024 was entered.5 At
the Ferreira conference, Inspira acknowledged the AOMs were sufficient,
"except to the extent [p]laintiff's theory of the case against said [d]efendants
involves allegations relating to negligent administration." Plaintiff never filed
an amended AOM and concedes she abandoned the negligent administration
claims.
In a February 2024 consent order, discovery was extended until October
30, 2024. Notably, the deposition of Nurse Brocco was conducted on March 4,
2024. Plaintiff's counsel maintained he did not learn Nurse Macauley, rather
than Nurse Brocco, was on duty at the time of decedent's injury until shortly
before Nurse Brocco's deposition. Counsel explains he only realized Nurse
Macauley's involvement upon receiving a complete copy of Inspira's records for
the first time. He confirmed Nurse Macauley's involvement at Nurse Brocco's
4 In Ferreira v. Rancocas Orthopedic Associates, our Supreme Court established that an accelerated case management conference (also known as a Ferreira conference) should be conducted within ninety days of the filing of a defendant's answer in order to identify and address any issues concerning the AOM served or not served by a plaintiff. 178 N.J. 144, 154-55 (2003). 5 Thereafter, the Cooper defendants and Dr. Noel were dismissed, in an unopposed motion, due to plaintiff's failure to comply with the AOM statute. That order is not before us on appeal. A-2903-24 5 deposition. The day after Nurse Brocco's deposition, plaintiff moved for leave
to amend her complaint to add Nurse Macauley as a defendant. The Inspira
defendants opposed the motion, and Nurse Brocco cross-moved for summary
judgment.6
The trial court subsequently conducted oral argument and rejected
plaintiff's argument she had only recently learned the identity of Nurse
Macauley. The court stated, "[i]t seems as though this medical chart identifying
Nurse . . . Macaul[e]y was produced prior to the . . . March . . . 2024 date." 7 The
court continued, noting:
I[t was] inclined to deny th[e motion] without prejudice because it does appear that . . . the statute of limitations would be violated at this point by joining Nurse Macaul[e]y, [and] it does appear from the papers that the chart was produced prior to the litigation. Nurse Macaul[e]y's name is identified[,] and it's not a situation of not being able to read somebody's handwriting. The various pages of the chart in and around the time of the . . . fall do show Nurse Macaul[e]y's name. So[,] it would seem . . . the amendment would be futile.
6 The parties subsequently entered a stipulation of dismissal with prejudice as to Nurse Brocco, and her cross-motion was withdrawn. 7 Later in the argument, plaintiff's counsel acknowledged their receipt of the records prior to Nurse Brocco's deposition in March 2024 "was [not] the first time [they] saw Nurse . . . Macaul[e]y's name in the records." Plaintiff's counsel then conceded Nurse Macauley's name was provided in the records Inspira previously produced in or about April 2021. A-2903-24 6 The court therefore denied plaintiff's motion to amend the complaint.
In September 2024, discovery was again extended until January 31, 2025.
The parties subsequently entered a stipulation of dismissal with prejudice as to
Dr. Pilla in October 2024. At that juncture, Inspira was the only remaining
defendant. In February 2025, discovery was extended a third time, until March
31, 2025.
In March 2025, Inspira moved to dismiss plaintiff's complaint based on
her failure to comply with the AOM statute. Inspira argued it was the only
remaining defendant because the nurse and doctor defendants had been
dismissed, and plaintiff had no AOM regarding Inspira's vicarious liability
beyond the actions of Nurse Brocco or Dr. Pilla. Plaintiff opposed the motion.
The trial court entertained oral argument and stated:
[W]e had a Ferreira conference, [at which] it was made clear that there was not a . . . direct claim against Inspira based on [the] failure to properly administer . . . the care afforded to . . . decedent.
On . . . [March 20, 2024,] . . . plaintiff had moved . . . to join Nurse Macaul[e]y as a defendant, and that motion was denied on June 24[ ], 2024[,] because . . . the claims were time[-]barred by the two-year wrongful death statute of limitations . . . . The [c]ourt determined . . . plaintiff had known of the identity of Nurse Macaul[e]y long before the expiration of the statute of limitations, in fact, even before the suit was filed. . . . [P]laintiff had the medical records for . . . decedent's
A-2903-24 7 care, and Nurse Macaul[e]y had been identified. And so the [c]ourt held that there was no discovery rule that would apply in this case. . . .
And so, . . . since . . . April 11[ ], 2024[,] . . . there were no individual defendants who [we]re Inspira nurses that remain[ed] in the case.
....
Inspira moves now to dismiss on the grounds . . . [plaintiff's] claims are barred under the [AOM] statute because there was no [AOM] that placed it on notice that any particular employees of Inspira were responsible, and it points to the fact that there's no [longer any] individual employee joined . . . .
Additionally, the court, noted:
. . . Hargett[8] is . . . much more on point under the circumstances here because . . . what we have is a situation where . . . the only person that was tied to Inspira was Nurse Macaul[e]y . . . .
Once Nurse Macaul[e]y [wa]s out of the case[,] there [wa]s no [AOM] asserting claims against any employee of Inspira . . . .
Accordingly, on April 25, 2025, the court entered an order granting Inspira's
motion to dismiss.
8 Hargett v. Hamilton Park OPCO, LLC, 477 N.J. Super. 390 (App. Div. 2023). A-2903-24 8 II.
Plaintiff argues Nurse McCawley's AOM was sufficient to support the
vicarious liability claim against Inspira. She further asserts, even if the AOM
was deficient, she substantially complied with N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27. Plaintiff
also contends Inspira's motion to dismiss should have been denied based upon
estoppel and laches, and Inspira waived its right to object to the AOM through
the conduct of counsel.
We review a trial court's dismissal of a complaint based on the AOM
statute de novo. Hoover v. Wetzler, 472 N.J. Super. 230, 235 (App. Div. 2022).
The AOM statute requires plaintiffs alleging professional malpractice to:
[W]ithin [sixty] days following the date of filing of the answer to the complaint by the defendant, provide each defendant with an affidavit of an appropriate licensed person that there exists a reasonable probability that the care, skill or knowledge exercised or exhibited in the treatment, practice or work that is the subject of the complaint, fell outside acceptable professional or occupational standards or treatment practices. The court may grant no more than one additional period, not to exceed [sixty] days, to file the affidavit pursuant to this section, upon a finding of good cause.
[N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27.]
The failure to provide the AOM is a failure to state a cause of action under
N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-29, requiring a dismissal with prejudice of a malpractice
A-2903-24 9 action. See A.T. v. Cohen, 231 N.J. 337, 346 (2017). "The core purpose
underlying the statute is 'to require plaintiffs . . . to make a threshold showing
. . . their claim is meritorious, in order that meritless lawsuits readily could be
identified at an early stage of the litigation.'" Paragon Contractors, Inc. v.
Peachtree Condo. Ass'n, 202 N.J. 415, 421 (2010) (first omission in original)
(quoting In re Petition of Hall, 147 N.J. 379, 391 (1997)). "[W]here a plaintiff
fails to provide an [AOM] within the statutorily mandated timeframe, it shall be
deemed a failure to state a cause of action unless the plaintiff satisfies an
exception to the [AOM] requirement." Cowley v. Virtua Health Sys., 242 N.J.
1, 23 (2020).
Our Supreme Court has explained the AOM statute has a dual purpose:
"to weed out frivolous lawsuits early in the litigation while, at the same time,
ensuring that plaintiffs with meritorious claims will have their day in court."
Ferreira, 178 N.J. at 150 (quoting Hubbard v. Reed, 168 N.J. 387, 395 (2001)).
The Court has made clear, "[t]he legislative purpose [behind the AOM statute]
was not to 'create a minefield of hyper-technicalities in order to doom innocent
litigants possessing meritorious claims.'" Id. at 151 (quoting Mayfield v. Cmty.
Med. Assocs., PA, 335 N.J. Super. 198, 209 (App. Div. 2000)).
A-2903-24 10 Plaintiff argues Nurse McCawley's AOM complies with the requirements
of N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27 because the AOM is meant to be "read in conjunction
with the complaint, particularly in a case such as this one, where the complaint
is incorporated into the [AOM] by reference." She asserts "[i]t is clear" in the
AOM, she "alleged vicarious liability on the part of . . . Inspira . . . based upon
the alleged negligence of . . . their nursing staff."
Plaintiff also alleges the AOM statute is silent as to any requirement an
AOM specifically identify a defendant by name. She further contends, because
"corporations[] cannot have any direct liability . . . in the care rendered to . . .
decedent, . . . [i]t should have been obvious to the defense . . . the only basis for
liability as to . . . Inspira . . . was pursuant to respondeat superior." (Emphasis
omitted).
Plaintiff relies on Moschella v. Hackensack Meridian Jersey Shore
University Medical Center, asserting our Supreme Court there found the AOM
was "legally sufficient" even though it did not identify the specific defendant or
employee whose conduct caused the decedent's death. 258 N.J. 110, 129 (2024).
She also relies on Walker v. Choudhary for the proposition joinder of a principal
and agent is not necessary, and an action may be maintained separately against
an agent or a principal. 425 N.J. Super. 135, 149 (App. Div. 2012). Plaintiff
A-2903-24 11 further contends the trial court's reliance on Hargett was misplaced because the
facts of this case are distinguishable. Specifically, she asserts, unlike in Hargett,
the vicarious liability claim here is based on the actions of a single, identifiable
nurse on a specific evening, who allegedly failed to raise the bed rails , thereby
allowing decedent to fall and sustain injuries.
We conclude the trial court erred in dismissing plaintiff's vicarious
liability claim against Inspira based on the AOM statute. Under Walker and
Hargett, notwithstanding the court barring any individual claims against Nurse
Macauley based on the statute of limitations, Nurse McCawley's AOM was
sufficient to maintain plaintiff's vicarious liability claim against Inspira.
In Walker, we addressed whether, under the principle of respondeat
superior, a medical practice group 9 that employs a physician could "be subject
to suit regardless of whether the action against the alleged tortfeasor doctor
[wa]s barred by the statute of limitations." 425 N.J. Super. at 139. Although
Walker was not decided in the context of the AOM statute, its rationale is
germane to our analysis of the issues in this appeal.
9 Walker also involved a vicarious liability claim against a hospital. 425 N.J. Super. at 140-41. A-2903-24 12 The plaintiff in Walker, as executor and personal representative of the
estate of the decedent, filed a complaint against several defendants alleging
wrongful death and medical malpractice. Id. at 140. Among the named
defendants were three physicians. Ibid. The plaintiff also named South Jersey
Health Systems Emergency Physician Services (Physician Services). Ibid. One
of the defendant physicians moved to dismiss the complaint against him based
on an affidavit of non-involvement alleging he did not administer any medical
care to the decedent. Ibid. The plaintiff then moved to amend the complaint to
add another defendant, Tara Kiger, M.D., who was employed by Physician
Services and had rendered care to the decedent. Ibid. The trial court granted
the defendant physician's motion to dismiss the complaint as well as the
plaintiff's motion to add Dr. Kiger as a defendant. Id. at 141. Thereafter, the
plaintiff filed an amended complaint naming Dr. Kiger as a defendant. Ibid.
However, the court later dismissed the complaint against Dr. Kiger with
prejudice because the plaintiff's claims against Dr. Kiger were time-barred under
the statute of limitations. Ibid.
Following Dr. Kiger's dismissal, Physician Services moved for partial
summary judgment, seeking to dismiss the claims against it based on vicarious
liability stemming from Dr. Kiger's actions as the alleged tortfeasor. Ibid.
A-2903-24 13 Physician Services argued it "could not be liable because [Dr.] Kiger was no
longer a defendant in the case." Ibid. The trial court granted Physician Services'
motion.10 Ibid.
On appeal, we addressed "whether [Dr.] Kiger's involuntary dismissal, on
statute of limitations grounds, operate[d] as an adjudication on the merits,
triggering res judicata and barring [the] plaintiff's timely respondeat superior
claim for vicarious liability against . . . Physician Services, for injuries arising
out of the same incident." Id. at 148. We stated:
Because . . . Physician Services w[as] timely served within the statute of limitations period, [the] plaintiff's action could have been prosecuted against them, even without [Dr.] Kiger being named as a defendant in the complaint. We note it would be incongruous to hold that [the] plaintiff's claim against Physician Services must fail because [Dr.] Kiger was named and then dismissed because the claim was time-barred, while in the same breath observing that the same claim against Physician Services would survive if [Dr.] Kiger had not been named [a defendant] at all.
[Id. at 150 (emphasis added).]
10 The plaintiff then filed a motion for reconsideration of the summary judgment orders granted in favor of Dr. Kiger and Physician Services. Ibid. Shortly thereafter, the hospital defendant cross-moved for partial summary judgment, also seeking dismissal of the claims against it based on vicarious liability for Dr. Kiger's alleged negligence. Ibid. The court denied the plaintiff's motion for reconsideration and granted the hospital's motion for partial summary judgment. Ibid. The parties then filed stipulations dismissing the claims against the remaining individual physicians and the hospital. Ibid. A-2903-24 14 We also noted:
Physician Services rel[ies] on the principle that "a verdict which exonerates the employee from liability requires also the exoneration of the employer." Kelley v. Curtiss, 16 N.J. 265, 270 (1954). This conclusion is rooted in "considerations of fundamental fairness that, if the employee is not to be held responsible for his wrongdoing, the employer whose liability is asserted solely upon the basis of imputed responsibility for his employee's wrong cannot in fairness and justice be required to respond in damages for it." Id. at 271. However, the concept is premised on the principle that the employee is actually exonerated by a decision on the merits. Here, the judgment was not grounded on a finding that [Dr.] Kiger's care for [the] decedent was not negligent.
[Id. at 152 (emphasis added).]
We further determined, "[t]he basis on which the summary judgment was
granted, the statute of limitations, bears no relationship to the actual merits of
the case. When summary judgment was granted, the merits were never
examined." Id. at 154. Moreover, we observed, "to label such an order as an
adjudication on the merits would be the embodiment of promoting form over
substance." Ibid. Lastly, we commented:
Although a motion for summary judgment granted on statute of limitations grounds is technically an "adjudication on the merits," we determine in this context it does not possess the same legal consequences for . . . Physician Services as a summary judgment [on the merits] . . . .
A-2903-24 15 We conclude an employer can be subject to suit for the negligent actions of its employee under the principle of respondeat superior even though the employee is dismissed because the claims against [them] were filed outside the statute of limitations. Therefore, [the] plaintiff's malpractice and wrongful death claims against . . . Physicians Services are not barred by the doctrine of res judicata and are reinstated.
[Ibid. (emphasis added).]
Here, in the absence of a finding there was no tortious conduct on the part
of Nurse Macauley, but only that the claim against her was barred by the statute
of limitations, Inspira's vicarious liability for her conduct was not extinguished.
That is, Inspira can be vicariously liable even if its agent has a defense that bars
liability against them based on the statute of limitations. Had there been a
decision on the merits, such as a jury verdict finding Nurse Macauley was not
negligent, or a substantive determination by way of summary judgment that she
did not deviate from accepted standards of care, Inspira could not be held
vicariously liable for her conduct under Kelley. See 16 N.J. at 270. However,
Nurse Macauley was not exonerated from liability on the merits in this manner
but rather avoided liability due to the running of the statute of limitations.
Like in Walker, if plaintiff had decided to only pursue a vicarious liability
claim against Inspira, there would have been no basis for Inspira to move to
dismiss based on the AOM statute. Plaintiff's unsuccessful attempt to name
A-2903-24 16 Nurse Macauley, based on the failure to comply with the statute of limitations,
does not warrant a dismissal of the vicarious liability claims against Inspira,
even under the AOM statute, based on the specific facts of this case.
We have repeatedly utilized the principles governing vicarious liability to
govern the application of the AOM statute. In Shamrock Lacrosse, Inc. v. Klehr,
Harrison, Harvey, Branzburg & Ellers, LLP, the plaintiff sued two law firms,
but not any individual attorneys, based on the "allegedly negligent omissions by
a [deceased] patent attorney who had worked, in succession, at the two law
firms." 416 N.J. Super. 1, 4 (App. Div. 2010). The plaintiff argued it was not
required to serve an AOM on the firms because N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26(c) listed
only "an attorney" and not a law firm as a "licensed person" entitled to an AOM.
Id. at 13. We rejected that claim, emphasizing, "if [the] plaintiff's reading of the
statute were accepted, that individualized protection would provide no solace to
a law firm that could have vicarious liability for the actions or inactions of the
licensed attorneys employed by, or affiliated with, that firm." Id. at 22. We
rejected that result because the plaintiff sought "to invoke principles of vicarious
liability . . . to make those law firms financially accountable for the harm that"
their employees caused. Id. at 23; see also id. at 18 (citing with approval Martin
v. Perinni Corp., 37 F. Supp. 2d 362, 365-66 (D.N.J. 1999), which applied
A-2903-24 17 principles of vicarious liability to require an AOM against an architectural firm
run by a licensed architect).
We agreed "it would be 'entirely anomalous' to allow a plaintiff to
circumvent the affidavit requirement by naming only law firms as defendants in
a legal malpractice complaint and not the individual attorneys who performed
the services." Id. at 26. Here, plaintiff did not attempt to evade the statute in
the manner discussed in Shamrock. Rather, she provided an AOM from Nurse
McCawley, an appropriate licensed person under the AOM statute. In doing so,
plaintiff was able to advance a vicarious liability claim against Inspira for the
conduct of its employees, who allegedly provided negligent care to decedent.
Simply because plaintiff was later unsuccessful in naming Nurse Macauley as
an individual defendant does not mean plaintiff cannot maintain her original
claim against Inspira.
We likewise conclude the trial court mistakenly relied on Hargett in
finding Nurse McCawley's AOM was insufficient as to Inspira. In Hargett, the
decedent initially resided at the defendant Alaris Health, LLC (Alaris) nursing
facility for one month and later developed serious health-related issues. 477
N.J. Super. at 393. She was subsequently transferred to Jersey City Medical
Center (Jersey City), where her condition worsened. Ibid. The decedent died
A-2903-24 18 approximately one year thereafter, and the plaintiff subsequently filed a medical
negligence action against Jersey City and Alaris based on the treatment rendered
by their nursing staff. Ibid. The complaint did not name any individual nurses.
Ibid.
The plaintiff served a single AOM on Jersey City and Alaris, stating there
existed a reasonable probability both facilities and "members of their nursing
and nursing administrative staff"—without identifying any specific medical
professionals—deviated from the standard of care by failing to provide
appropriate treatment to the decedent. Id. at 394. Alaris objected to the AOM
and moved to dismiss because the "AOM was a blanket statement that failed to
identify any individually negligent persons or acts." Ibid.
The trial court agreed, holding the AOM was deficient because it did not
"'provide specific notification as to a specific employee [regarding] a specific
claim of negligence' and failed to provide 'notice as to who may have violated'
the applicable standard of care." Id. at 395. On appeal, the plaintiff argued the
trial court erred because she pled a valid vicarious liability claim based on the
"collective failure" of Alaris's nursing staff to provide proper treatment and
therefore was not required to identify any individual nurses in the complaint or
the AOM. Ibid.
A-2903-24 19 We affirmed the dismissal, concluding the AOM was insufficient to
support the plaintiff's vicarious liability claim because "it [wa]s not possible to
identify" any negligent nurses of Alaris. Id. at 398. Indeed, "the AOM refer[red]
generally to the entire Alaris . . . nursing staff[,] . . . indiscriminately combine[d]
the nursing staffs of two separate facilities," and failed to identify any individual
nurses for whom Alaris could be vicariously liable. Ibid. We reasoned a single
AOM's ambiguous reference to all nurses at separate facilities deprived Alaris
of its right to an appropriate AOM offering "a clear opinion that its own nurses
deviated from the applicable standard of care." Id. at 398-99.
Importantly, however, we recognized an AOM need not always name the
licensed person who forms the basis for vicarious liability. Id. at 397.
Specifically, we stated, "[t]hat is not to say an AOM must always name the
licensed person who is the subject of a vicarious liability claim." Ibid. We
observed, "[a] number of decisions considered and accepted an AOM that did
not identify the licensed person by name," provided "it was possible to identify
by the description within the AOM the licensed person . . . alleged to have
deviated from the applicable standard of care." Id. at 397-98; see, e.g., Galik v.
Clara Maass Med. Ctr., 167 N.J. 341, 358 (2001) (unnamed radiologist was
identifiable because there had only been one radiologist who treated the
A-2903-24 20 plaintiff); Fink v. Thompson, 167 N.J. 551, 562 (2001) (doctor who discontinued
certain medication was identifiable from the plaintiff's expert report); Medeiros
v. O'Donnell & Naccarato, Inc., 347 N.J. Super. 536, 542 (App. Div. 2002)
(AOM that referred to engineers generally was nevertheless sufficient because
there was only one engineering firm involved in the matter).
The facts here are distinguishable from Hargett. There, we precluded the
plaintiff from serving a single AOM that opined on the alleged collective
negligent care provided by nurses at two distinct facilities because the decedent
received different treatment at both facilities at different points in time, and thus
the plaintiff was required to serve separate AOMs to distinguish between the
care provided by the nurses at each facility. 477 N.J. Super. at 398. Here,
however, plaintiff did not need to obtain a separate AOM because decedent only
received treatment at one facility. More importantly, plaintiff did not
indiscriminately "combine nursing staffs" in a single AOM. Plaintiff's AOM
referenced her complaint and the discrete acts of alleged negligence against
Inspira, stemming from a nurse's failure to properly raise decedent's bed rails.
Inspira was not left to guess as to which licensed person plaintiff alleged was
negligent, even if plaintiff failed to specifically identify that individual—Nurse
Macauley—in the complaint or AOM. Moreover, when plaintiff's AOM is read
A-2903-24 21 in conjunction with her complaint—which clearly articulated plaintiff's
vicarious liability theory against Inspira—we are satisfied plaintiff fulfilled her
obligations under the AOM statute, even if Nurse Macauley was not named as
an individual defendant in a timely manner. 11
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's order dismissing plaintiff's
vicarious liability claims against Inspira. Because we reverse the trial court's
order for the reasons noted above, we need not address plaintiff's substantial
compliance, estoppel, laches, or waiver arguments.
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
11 Plaintiff's failure to name Nurse Macauley, of course, precludes the assessment of any liability or damages against her individually. A-2903-24 22