Colonial Specialty Foods, Inc. v. County of Cape May

721 A.2d 748, 317 N.J. Super. 207, 1999 N.J. Super. LEXIS 3
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 8, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 721 A.2d 748 (Colonial Specialty Foods, Inc. v. County of Cape May) 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
Colonial Specialty Foods, Inc. v. County of Cape May, 721 A.2d 748, 317 N.J. Super. 207, 1999 N.J. Super. LEXIS 3 (N.J. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WEFING, J.A.D.

County of Cape May (Cape May) appeals, pursuant to leave granted, from an order entered by the trial court denying its motion to dismiss plaintiffs complaint with prejudice under R. 4:23-5(a)(2). We affirm.

Because of the narrow issue before us, it is unnecessary to set forth at length the nature of the underlying disputes between the parties. We note merely that plaintiff Colonial Specialty Foods, Inc. (Colonial) leased from Cape May a building that it intended to use for its food processing business. Colonial contended that the building was unfit for this use and that the building’s condition led to the loss of its business. When plaintiff ceased paying rent, Cape May instituted a summary dispossess proceeding that was transferred from the Special Civil Part to the Law Division under N.J.S.A. 2A: 18-60.

Additional parties were joined and the matter was assigned to case management. It is clear that the discovery process has been a difficult one, with each side attributing fault to the other. It is immaterial to our analysis of the matter which version is correct.

The trial court has entered six case management orders, from June 1, 1994 through June 30, 1997. This last order directed plaintiff to answer certain interrogatories concerning its experts and to respond to Cape May’s request for document production by July 13,1997. When plaintiff did not comply with these deadlines, Cape May filed a motion to dismiss the complaint. On September 12, 1997, the trial court granted Cape May’s motion but modified Cape May’s proposed order. The trial court struck the “with [210]*210prejudice” portion of the order and added the provision that the dismissal was for “plaintiffs failure to comply with the Court’s Case Management Order.” Under R. 4:37-2(a), that dismissal was without prejudice.

Approximately three months later, Cape May filed another motion in which it sought to convert the September 12, 1997 dismissal into a dismissal with prejudice. Plaintiff opposed the motion and sought to reinstate its complaint. Plaintiffs counsel submitted a certification in which he noted various problems he had experienced that had contributed to the delay in discovery. These included serious health problems suffered by both his wife and himself, and the disruption to his practice attendant to the unavoidable relocation of his law office. The trial court denied Cape May’s motion and restored plaintiffs complaint. This appeal followed.

We are satisfied that the trial court correctly interpreted R. 4:23-5(a)(2). One party cannot obtain a dismissal with prejudice under that rule unless an earlier dismissal without prejudice was entered under R. 4:23-5(a)(1). Cape May argues that, because R. 4:23-5(a)(2) does not specifically refer to R. -4:23-5(a)(1), a trial court may dismiss a matter with prejudice under R. 4:23— 5(a)(2) when there has been an earlier dismissal without prejudice for failure to supply discovery. Furthermore, Cape May stresses that the earlier dismissal was for failure to answer interrogatories and therefore contends that the order of September 12, 1997 should be treated as the functional equivalent of an order entered under R. 4:23-5. We are entirely unpersuaded by this argument. Adopting Cape May’s argument would deprive a party of the procedural safeguards incorporated throughout R. 4:23-5, and overlooks the rule’s integrated structure and purpose. Subsection (a)(2) of the rale exists in the context of a rule that provides for dismissal for failure to answer interrogatories; it does not exist independently to allow a litigant to convert a dismissal without prejudice, obtained under a rule other than R. 4:23-5, into a dismissal with prejudice.

[211]*211The underpinnings of the rule support the trial court’s conclusion. The “main objective [of the rule] is to compel the answers [to interrogatories] rather than to dismiss the case____” Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment of R. 4:23-5 (quoting 1990 Report of the Committee on Civil Practice, 125 N.J.L.J. Index page 421). In Zimmerman v. United Services Automobile Assoc., 260 N.J.Super. 368, 376, 616 A.2d 957 (App.Div.1992), Judge Pressler wrote that “achievement of the salutary scheme of the revised rule requires meticulous attention to its critical prescriptions, and particularly to those provisions [that] are intended to afford a measure of protection to the party who is faced with the ultimate litigation disaster of termination of his cause.” The approach advocated by Cape May would lessen the need for such “meticulous attention.”

Because we are satisfied that Cape May was not entitled to relief under R. 4:23-5(a)(2), there is no basis for its further argument that plaintiff was required to establish the existence of extraordinary circumstances before its complaint could be restored.

Affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
721 A.2d 748, 317 N.J. Super. 207, 1999 N.J. Super. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-specialty-foods-inc-v-county-of-cape-may-njsuperctappdiv-1999.