Kahrar v. Borough of Wallington

791 A.2d 197, 171 N.J. 3, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 27, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 791 A.2d 197 (Kahrar v. Borough of Wallington) 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
Kahrar v. Borough of Wallington, 791 A.2d 197, 171 N.J. 3, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 56 (N.J. 2002).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

STEIN, J.

The issue on appeal is whether plaintiff, Sharon Kahrar, has satisfied the threshold for awarding pain and suffering damages under the Tort Claims Act, N.J.S.A. 59:9 — 2d, based on a torn rotator cuff that was surgically repaired. The Appellate Division affirmed the dismissal of plaintiffs cause of action, concluding that plaintiffs shoulder injury did not constitute a “permanent loss of a bodily function” that was “substantial,” the standard adopted by this Court in Brooks v. Odom, 150 N.J. 395, 406, 696 A2d 619 (1997). We hold that on the facts in this record the shoulder injury satisfies the statutory threshold requirement.

I

On June 28,1997 at approximately 12:00 p.m., plaintiff, then 51-years-old, drove to a market in Wallington, New Jersey. Before entering the market, plaintiff decided to throw out some trash from her vehicle into a trash receptacle located across the street. Holding the trash in front of her body with both hands, plaintiff proceeded across the street without using the designated crosswalk. As she walked across the street, her right foot entered a hole in the middle of the street, causing her to fall forward on her hands and knees.

Plaintiffs foot had entered an opening seven-and-a half inches in diameter in a water valve-box area that was located two inches below the pavement’s surface. Ideally, that type of valve box would be covered with a lid that sits on the valve’s rim so as to be [6]*6even with the pavement above. However, in this instance, the lid cover fit improperly.

Following her fall, plaintiff noticed that she had cuts and bruises on her hands and left knee. Despite her injuries, plaintiff managed to crawl over to the side of the road. After declining the assistance of a passerby and sitting on the side of the road for a few minutes, plaintiff again gathered her trash, threw it into the receptacle and proceeded to the market as planned.

Plaintiff later informed the police of the condition in the road. When plaintiff arrived home, her daughter applied ice to her right ankle. Plaintiffs left shoulder, knee and the palms of her hands were painful. During the day her ankle swelled, her left shoulder stiffened, and she experienced increased pain in that shoulder. However, plaintiff did not seek professional medical attention until the following morning when her husband drove her to a hospital emergency room and X-rays revealed a broken elbow and right ankle. Hospital personnel placed an ace bandage on her ankle and told her to schedule a follow-up visit with the emergency room physician, Dr. Eugene Coyle.

Plaintiff was examined by Dr. Coyle within a week of the accident. She met -with Dr. Coyle on a weekly basis and also received physical therapy three times a week. However, after three weeks of treatment plaintiff was still in pain. Dr. Coyle recommended that she see an orthopedist.

Plaintiff was seen by Dr. Gary Savatsky, an orthopedist, in July 1997. Dr. Savatsky took an MRI that revealed a massive tear of plaintiffs rotator cuff. Dr. Savatsky performed surgery in August 1997 to repair the torn rotator cuff. The operative record revealed that plaintiff

had a massive tear of the cuff with entire retraction of the proximal 90% of the supraspinatus[,] [one of the muscles that make up the rotator cuff]. Roughly two-thirds of the [top of the ball portion of the shoulder] was exposed. Only the posterior aspect of the supraspinatus remained intact. There was also delamination into the tendon itself which was thickened and inflamed____
The cuff tear was deemed too large to repair adequately with an arthroscopic assisted technique. Therefore, a traditional Neer skin incision was made from the [7]*7coracoid to the anterolateral acromion. The skin and subcutaneous tissues were divided down. The deltoid was taken from the anterior acromion and then split distally for 3 cm. The coracoacromial ligament was divided. A formal Neer acromioplasty [surgical removal of the anterior portion of the acromion] was performed with the above noted findings.

Consistent with the operative record, plaintiff characterized the surgical intervention as one in which “the surgeon removed a portion of the bone in her shoulder and reattached the severed tendon to the shoulder. This procedure shortened the length of the tendon which reduced the function of the patient’s arm movement.”

Within three weeks of surgery, Dr. Savatsky noted that plaintiff was improving. Approximately two months after surgery, Dr. Savatsky observed that plaintiffs incision was well-healed and that there was no swelling in the shoulder, although she still had pain and achiness.

However, three months after surgery Dr. Savatsky also observed that she could rotate her shoulder only twenty-five degrees, and subsequent post-operative reports described significant limitation in the movement of plaintiffs left arm. Thus, Dr. Savatsky’s last and next-to-last reports — rendered 150 and 227 days after surgery — describes her forward flexion (raising of the arm forward and upward) as measuring 120 degrees, compared with 170 degrees for the right arm. Similarly, external rotation with the arm abducted (moving the arm horizontally with the elbow at the side, extending the hand sideways) measured forty-five degrees, compared with eighty degrees for the right arm. Finally, her ability to extend her arm behind 'her back was compromised because she was able to reach only the second of the five lumbar vertebra (lower back) with her left hand, but could extend her right arm higher to reach the eighth of the twelve thoracic vertebra (mid back).

Defendant’s expert’s observations also confirm the plaintiffs surgeon’s post-operative reports that plaintiffs loss of motion in her left arm is medically significant. The defense’s expert, Dr. [8]*8Lawrence Livingston, examined plaintiff in July 1998, approximately one year after surgery. Dr. Livingston noted that

[t]here is only 90 degrees of abduction, 100 degrees of forward flexion as compared to 180 degrees of abduction and forward flexion of the opposite shoulder. There is approximately 45 degrees of external rotation of the left shoulder, 90 degrees of the right. Internal rotation is present to the belt line on the left side and present to the mid thoracic spine on the right side with about 6" loss of internal rotation, terminal position. There is mild weakness to the external rotation and abduction of the left shoulder. There is negative drop test. The biceps and triceps are normal. The deltoid was slightly atrophied but sensory was intact. The supra— and infrascapula fossae were non tender.

Significantly, Dr. Livingston noted that plaintiff had approximately forty percent loss of full motion in her left shoulder. Accordingly, both examining physicians agreed that plaintiff had sustained substantial motion loss in her left arm that apparently was attributable to weakness in the reattached tendon.

After surgery, plaintiff began a course of physical therapy that continued for about nine months. By the time she returned to her employment, she had missed approximately 100 days of work. Plaintiff sustained approximately $6,225 in lost wages and approximately $25,000 in medical bills.

Plaintiff returned to work as a secretary almost two months after her surgery and was noted to be performing her full duties without restrictions.

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Bluebook (online)
791 A.2d 197, 171 N.J. 3, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahrar-v-borough-of-wallington-nj-2002.