NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-0155-24
M.J.L.,1
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
S.N.,
Defendant-Respondent. ________________________
Argued May 11, 2026 – Decided May 21, 2026
Before Judges Natali, Walcott-Henderson and Bergman.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Somerset County, Docket No. L-1728-19.
Michael Confusione argued the cause for appellant (Hegge & Confusione, LLC, attorneys; Michael Confusione, of counsel and on the briefs).
1 We use initials to exclude from public access the identity of individuals referenced in this dispute to maintain the confidentiality of their medical information. R. 1:38-3(a)(2). S.N., self-represented respondent, argued the cause (Rajeh A. Saadeh and Alex Barrett Dowland, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
Plaintiff, M.J.L, appeals from a September 16, 2024 final judgment issued
after a non-jury trial. The judgment memorialized the court's determination of
a no cause of action verdict with respect to the defamation claim asserted against
defendant S.N., and also granted defendant a $232,327.45 judgment, reflecting
$100,000 in compensatory damages, $100,000 in punitive damages, $31,852.45
in prejudgment interest and $475 in costs with respect to her counterclaim for
intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED).
Plaintiff raises only the following three challenges to the court's final
judgment. First, she contends the court committed legal error when it denied
her application to dismiss defendant's counterclaim of IIED, which plaintiff
argues the statute of limitations barred despite the court's finding that its
predicate campaign of harassment began in 2015 and continued through 2020.
Second, she maintains the court abused its discretion when it reconsidered a
motion in limine and admitted certain evidence of that harassment. Third, she
contends the court failed to apply properly the New Jersey Tort Claims Act,
A-0155-24 2 N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to :12-3 (TCA) as a shield against civil liability. We discern no
merit to any of plaintiff's arguments and accordingly affirm the final judgment.
I.
The trial record reflects the following facts which we recount in detail,
and at a higher level of granularity than normal, as we deem it necessary to
address the nature and gravity of the continuing, egregious conduct perpetrated
by plaintiff upon defendant as found by the trial court and further confirmed by
the record.
Defendant met L.S. in 2012 or 2013, and their relationship was initially
platonic. The same year, she met plaintiff, a psychiatric nurse practitioner at
Rutgers United Behavioral Health (UBHC). At the time the parties met,
defendant and L.S. were twenty-one years old, and plaintiff was over fifty.
According to defendant, L.S. suffered "from bipolar disorder" and a
dependency on oxycodone. Defendant knew L.S. used drugs recreationally, but
was not specifically aware he was addicted to opiates. Defendant also knew
L.S. was in an "on and off" relationship with plaintiff, and that plaintiff was
"very generous" with gifts to him. Plaintiff bought L.S. a car, funded L.S. "tens
of thousands of dollars on one trip to Atlantic City," "offered to pay for his
college," and paid L.S.'s legal fees in DUI cases. Plaintiff was also "very close
A-0155-24 3 with his family," and loaned L.S.'s mother about $74,000 "for various reasons"
including to "pay off her mortgage."
Defendant also maintained plaintiff supplied drugs to L.S. and to his
cousin, who was in a relationship with plaintiff's sister. Defendant testified
L.S.'s cousin told her he was "grossed out" by L.S.'s relationship to plaintiff,
which he perceived to be an exchange of sex for drugs and money. Defendant
testified L.S. told her that his relationship with plaintiff "was purely
transactional" and "not romantic."
Defendant and L.S. began to date, while defendant grew increasingly
aware of L.S.'s drug problem and arrangement with plaintiff. She considered
plaintiff to be L.S.'s "sugar momma" who gave him money in return for sex. In
2014, L.S. confessed to defendant that plaintiff was prescribing him oxycodone,
and he was addicted to it.
Defendant ended her relationship with L.S. six months later and moved to
her mother's home in Virginia. Defendant came from a religious "Palestinian
background" that did not approve of dating absent marriage. Her parents were
"stricter than perhaps most American parents would be," and gave defendant a
"very sheltered" upbringing. For those reasons, when L.S. visited defendant in
A-0155-24 4 Virginia and proposed marriage to her, defendant's mother pressured her to
accept.
Plaintiff bought L.S. "a train ticket to New Jersey" a week later, but
defendant said she and L.S. lived together in Virginia for two or three months.
During this time, L.S. continued to use drugs. Defendant did not know where
L.S. obtained the drugs, but testified he often traveled to New Jersey for days at
a time. Defendant believed L.S. remained desperate for drugs throughout their
marriage and ultimately asked L.S. for a separation. L.S. returned to New Jersey
while defendant remained in Virginia. The pair never reunited, but remained
legally married until defendant filed for divorce in 2018 or 2019.
On or about January 6, 2015, plaintiff filed a criminal complaint against
L.S. and defendant. Plaintiff alleged defendant drove L.S. to plaintiff's office,
where he stole $200 and a prescription pad; and drove him to a pharmacy, where
he used the prescription pad to obtain opiates. When L.S. informed defendant
of the complaint, she was still living in Virginia. Defendant believed L.S.
committed the theft, but she did not contact the police.
The police discovered that "from 2011 through May 2015," plaintiff
"prescribed 96 prescriptions for oxycodone outside" the scope of plaintiff's
psychiatric practice. On March 7, 2015, plaintiff told the police there had been
A-0155-24 5 "nine fraudulent prescriptions passed on her prescription blanks in the name of
Alex Instodder Flasher Florino," and "Alex" was indicted. On March 26, 2015,
L.S. told the police plaintiff prescribed him "pain medication . . . even though
he was not in pain and she was not his doctor." "He stated he became addicted
and received prescriptions from" plaintiff "for oxycodone with the prescription
either completed by" plaintiff "or given to him to complete by forging the
signature." The ensuing investigation revealed the handwriting on certain
oxycodone prescriptions was plaintiff's, and that plaintiff "would not be within
the scope of her practice to issue a prescription for pain medications."
In September 2015, the State indicted plaintiff on charges related to fraud;
the manufacture and distribution of controlled dangerous substances; and
"hindering" or "false information." The State denied plaintiff's request for
pretrial intervention. Plaintiff notified the Board of Nursing of the arrest on or
about the day it occurred.
The police also arrested L.S. The police did not charge, arrest, question,
or contact defendant. Even so, someone—who defendant claimed, and the court
found, was plaintiff—began "taunting" defendant by alleging there was an
incriminating video that would put defendant "in some kind of crazy trouble."
Plaintiff publicly tweeted "images" of defendant "walking in a pharmacy" and
A-0155-24 6 stated L.S. would "be the subject of the day." Defendant began to receive
messages on Twitter stating: "If you think for one minute you're getting out of
stealing my prescription pads with your husband, this is just getting started ."
Plaintiff contacted defendant "incessantly every single day" to say defendant
was "going to be exposed" and that plaintiff wanted defendant dead. These
"relentless" messages came from fifteen different Twitter accounts, and plaintiff
also sent "14 different messages on Facebook to" defendant's "family and
friends." These messages began a campaign of harassment that started in 2015
and lasted through "the pandemic."
Following the tweets in 2015, defendant received messages stating she
would not "like the next page." In 2016, plaintiff created multiple Instagram
pages with composite images of defendant's face on the "nude" bodies of other
women with defendant's "skin tone." One composite image placed defendant's
face on a woman's "spread eagle" nude body with "a penis in the mouth."
Another had "a vagina flailed open." A third image placed "an eggplant emoji
near" defendant's "mouth to indicate" defendant was "engaging in oral sex."
These pages had usernames such as "Sara Whore," which rhymes with
defendant's name, and the accounts' public-facing "profile photo" would show
defendant's face with a penis in defendant's mouth. From these pages, plaintiff
A-0155-24 7 "requested" defendant's friends, coworkers, and family members, including
defendant's parents. Defendant's family saw the images and did not know they
were composites. Even defendant did not know, at the time, if plaintiff intruded
into defendant's home to photograph defendant secretly.
As 2016 continued, plaintiff contacted defendant's mother and sister to tell
them defendant was a "criminal," a "thief," and a "homewrecker." Plaintiff sent
defendant text messages about "You," a television program about a stalker who
murders his victims. Plaintiff continued to tweet about defendant from multiple
accounts, one of which had the username "Rutgers58." For example, plaintiff
tweeted: "On July 29th your video will be the subject of the day. Why don't
you show up? . . . Use your Virginia plates." Plaintiff tweeted a copy of
defendant and L.S.'s marriage certificate with the caption: "@S[N.] . . . XOXO,
same address on forged Rx to Elmwood Park. I told you I'd see you in court ."
Plaintiff also tweeted: "@S[N.], you better pray your email address wasn't
involved with . . . wire fraud attempts your husband tried with my bank. It's
next." Plaintiff continued to tweet about defendant throughout that summer.
Defendant's friends saw the tweets.
Using five pictures of defendant and the username "ArabianDollXO,"
plaintiff created an account on "Seeking Arrangement," a website that permits
A-0155-24 8 "sugar baby" users "to solicit older men for sex" in exchange for money.
Plaintiff gave defendant's phone number or email to men seeking to cheat on
their wives with a "sugar baby." At "every time of the day," defendant would
receive solicitations for sex "from old men." This "lasted for weeks," and
defendant received hundreds of such messages. Defendant felt "worthless,"
"cheap," and "like I was for sale."
Defendant began "rotating" addresses and changing telephone numbers to
avoid plaintiff, but plaintiff "would be aware of every single" such change.
Defendant believed plaintiff received this up-to-date information by
"conducting some form of a background check." In January 2017, Rutgers
UBHC terminated plaintiff and she later went into private practice. That year,
plaintiff created "a public Instagram account" impersonating defendant stating,
"Stealing your man plus your money." The account posted another composite
photograph of defendant's face on another woman's nude body, displaying "a
zoomed up, close-up shot of the vagina." Plaintiff began sending messages to
defendant's professional connections, including clients and investors. Although
defendant had been able to maintain various sales jobs for a time, defendant
ultimately needed to seek financial support from her mother and younger sister,
L.N., beginning in 2017.
A-0155-24 9 Plaintiff's unrelenting, outrageous conduct continued and, according to
defendant, 2018 was "the most distressing" time. L.N. noticed that defendant,
who had been outgoing and creative, and once sought to become a lawyer,
became withdrawn. After "[Plaintiff] entered her life," L.N. saw defendant
become "isolated," reluctant to socialize, and "easily panicked," in particular by
unexpected phone calls. L.N. invited defendant to live with her. That January,
between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m., plaintiff sent frequent text messages to defendant
about the television program "You." Plaintiff sent defendant and L.N. text
messages accusing defendant of being "a thief" and sleeping "on an air mattress"
in L.N.'s home. Defendant was, in fact, sleeping on an air mattress in L.N.'s
home, "which suggested that [plaintiff] had . . . seen inside the windows of the
house she was in." Plaintiff sent the two sisters "disgusting" photographs of a
man holding a "rat penis." Defendant "became a shut-in" and "wasn't really able
to function because" the communication "was so incessant."
L.N. was, in contrast to her sister, "more of a science geek" who had
intended to apply to medical school. But although L.N.'s ambitions lay
elsewhere, L.N. agreed to start "a real estate business" with defendant.
Plaintiff's messages "graduated to physical threats." Plaintiff sent L.N.
about fifteen sexually explicit text messages, such as asking, "does your ass
A-0155-24 10 come with the home?" "And then she would text" defendant to state: "I'm going
to show up at your next showing and F you up." Defendant "feared that
[plaintiff] would make an appointment and come and attack her and perhaps kill
her." The sisters ended their real estate venture after "about a month" and made
about $20,000.
That year, defendant also attempted a "business sales opportunity with"
C.L., an "influencer" with 6.7 million followers on social media. Defendant
sought to help "connect businesses to him" for "exposure" on C.L.'s popular
webpages. Plaintiff told C.L. defendant had "sticky fingers," yeast infections,
and "gonorrhea;" was "using" C.L. "for fame and money;" and was "mooching
off" L.N. Defendant and C.L. completed one deal and ceased their relationship.
Defendant continued to receive text messages. One message dated March
1, 2018, stated: "You dumb whore. Stop acting like you're a good Muslim girl
when you suck dick and get fucked, and not only sucking my man's dick, but
everyone else's." On April 2 and 3, 2018, defendant received "incessant" phone
calls "in the middle of the night" and other "text messages stating, 'Baby girl, I
miss you and that ass. My angel.'" Beginning in June 2018, defendant received
"constant" text messages from a self-described "anonymous notification tool"
warning that a "sexual partner recently tested positive for an STD" and
A-0155-24 11 defendant should also get tested. On October 8, 2018, defendant received "a
direct message on Instagram" from an account purporting to be L.S.'s then-
current girlfriend, stating:
You bitch. You will still stalk my grave because you want to live in my box. You're obsessed with me. Go find someone who will keep you around longer than a month. [L.S.] abused you and you know that, but talk about me? Do you even have a job or work? Are you done putting up a front? I dare you to even call my job. I will come to your house again. If you come out this time, I will run you over. That's if you don't shoot me since you make threats. Dirty bitch. Go clean your cottage ass and your purple pussy.
Another text message read:
You're 30 and still no husband. It's because you know no Muslim man will want your rancid vagina. You're an embarrassment to your own kind or any kind because you're an armpit smelling ho that smells like cold cuts in your vagina that's purple roast beef mixed with Victoria's Secret body spray because you're still living off [L.N.]. She kicked you out again last week. Sleep on an air mattress.
On January 31, 2019, C.L. received "an explicit image saying 'Put the
whole thing in your mouth? Give me some sugar.'" At the same time, the
"incessant" messages and calls to defendant continued. Defendant "would
receive thousands and thousands and thousands of messages telling me to kill
myself at various times of the day." Defendant used TrapCall, "an app that
A-0155-24 12 detects phone numbers," to trace the messages and calls to plaintiff's number.
Some messages contained information that defendant could not tell how plaintiff
knew: for example, what home defendant lived in or what car defendant drove.
Other messages were ethnically or racially charged, such as one text message
sent in January 2019, which stated:
You're such a ho. You love it. Proud ho who sucks everyone's fat Joe and maybe even their toe if they feed your bum ass. Watch out. You're going to get beat up heffy heifer. You horny hippo ho. I heard more guys explode in you than Gaza, ho. Don't get beat up again.
Defendant received more than one text message mocking defendant for
being "on Medicaid" and having an HPV infection, which plaintiff described as
having a "purple P-U-S-S." Defendant was taken aback that "the text message
I had received had indicated the form of insurance I used and my medical
condition." Defendant believed that plaintiff, as a former employee of Rutgers
UBHC, would have had access to defendant's medical records, and may have
accessed them to discover embarrassing information about defendant.
Up until that point, defendant had not reported plaintiff's communications
to the police "every single time" they occurred. Defendant testified "I wanted
to extend grace and think that, you know, maybe she's just going through a hard
time," or "maybe she's lonely." Defendant also testified that "at this time I was
A-0155-24 13 moving around a lot, which also made it difficult to file reports in different
municipalities, and also harassment in general is a difficult complaint just in
general to prove." That said, defendant explained when plaintiff's conduct "only
grew more aggressive and more concerning, I was left with no choice ."
Defendant testified that when "you knew my location, you knew the car I drove,
you started saying that you want me dead, have I watched the show 'You,' it
started becoming really concerning." Defendant did complain to the police in
May or June 2019 and ultimately obtained a "no-contact order" against plaintiff.
Defendant also sought mental health treatment in 2019, which defendant
had "never required" before. Defendant testified that the only local provider
that accepted her insurance, Medicaid, was Rutgers UBHC. Rutgers UBHC was
"less than five minutes away" from where defendant lived, and defendant knew
plaintiff "was no longer employed there."
On July 8, 2019, defendant enrolled as a patient at Rutgers UBHC. During
the "basic assessment," defendant stated: "I've been feeling anxious and
paranoid about [plaintiff] harassing my life." Defendant stated that plaintiff
"sends her offensive text messages, contacts her employers, and somehow had
access to her health records and would disclose information" even "after she
divorced her husband at age 24." Defendant described "paranoid thoughts"
A-0155-24 14 about the court system; "anxiety, especially for court dates;" loss of sleep; lost
work; "strong emotional responses;" and "explosive" behavior.
On or about October 31, 2019, defendant filed a complaint with "the Board
of Nursing" putting forth plaintiff's harassment and slander from "2014 through
2019." Defendant attached a "not identifiable" but large number of text
messages. Plaintiff testified the report accused her of: making "countless fake
Instagram accounts, dating accounts, . . . pornographic photos," texts, and
telephone calls; and contributing to defendant's "ex-husband's legal trouble . . .
by prescribing opiates, although he was never" plaintiff's patient. The report
also accused plaintiff of "illegally" accessing defendant's "medical records" to
discover and reveal "embarrassing medical information" about defendant.
Defendant testified plaintiff's harassment continued through "the
pandemic." Defendant attended appointments at Rutgers UBHC on March 23,
2020; March 23, 2021; April 8, 2021; May 19, 2021; July 26, 2021; and August
24, 2021. On April 8, 2021, defendant explained to the Rutgers UBHC therapist
that she had "been avoiding individual therapy" because "she's being stalked by
a mental health professional."
Defendant was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD),
depression, "general anxiety disorder," insomnia, and "binge eating." These
A-0155-24 15 diagnoses resulted from various psychological harms defendant had suffered
since plaintiff's activity began, including: weight gain; nightmares;
dissociation; flashbacks; feelings of embarrassment, isolation, shame, and
helplessness; outbursts of anger; trust issues; an inability to socialize; and
feelings that she was unable to support L.N., who had cancer at the time of trial.
Defendant also received therapy and prescriptions for several medications
including antidepressants, anxiety medication, and "Vyance for binge eating,
which is something [plaintiff] would constantly shame me for, is the 50-pound
weight gain in the past few years."
Doctor Roy Lubit testified at trial "as an expert in psychiatry and
emotional trauma." Lubit opined defendant "meets the criteria for major
depression" and chronic PTSD. PTSD involves a panoply of symptoms
including "allostatic attrition, which . . . means that the person's ability to deal
with a certain stressor decreases." Allostatic attrition created "secondary
problems" for defendant such as social withdrawal, binge eating, irritability, and
shame. Additionally, a "lack of trust is classic" in PTSD patients, "and it is a
huge issue, because that leads to withdrawal, failure to get medical care." Lubit
explained another symptom of the illness is "[l]earned helplessness," meaning
the individual loses the ability often to protect themselves, that they start questioning themselves,
A-0155-24 16 wondering is it their fault, which is actually one of the symptoms that often occurs, is the person starts blaming themselves and thinking what's wrong with me? Why did this happen to me? What have I done that caused this? And it's a pretty serious symptom.
In Lubit's opinion, defendant "has not improved over time despite therapy
and despite time and she is continuing to suffer a great deal." Although Lubit
would hope "that things were going to go better" with therapy, "they haven't ."
"Prognosis is unfortunately poor, because after ten years, it's greatly weakened
her." Lubit opined defendant will "indefinitely" suffer damage to "cognition
and memory and ability to think." "The proximate cause" of all this damage
would be "the harassment, which she reports to me she suffered at the hands of
[plaintiff]."
Lubit opined defendant requires a "well trained" doctor to conduct years
of "intensive trauma therapy," but even with therapy, defendant will "probably
need to be on medication the rest of her life." "This many years of depression
and PTSD leave ongoing changes in the brain." "And we know that people who
have suffered especially complex trauma as she has, that they have far more
medical problems as time goes on." Lubit also recommended "couples therapy
to try to undo some of the damage to" defendant's current relationship. And
A-0155-24 17 defendant "needs help with her weight," requiring "a nutritionist and" a "gym
membership."
Lubit estimated the cost of defendant's therapy, going forward, to be
"about $180,000." Defendant's psychopharmacology appointments and
medication will cost about $80,000. Couples therapy will cost about $30,000 .
Lubit did not estimate the cost of a nutritionist or gym membership
As noted, the court found there was an "overwhelming amount of
evidence" proving "very clearly and certainly" that plaintiff "was the person
behind the series of severe, outrageous communications." The court premised
this conclusion on: the communications themselves, which sometimes
referenced events only plaintiff knew of; the social media usernames of the
harassing accounts, which sometimes contained plaintiff's name; the syntax and
word choice in some messages, which suggested someone pretending to be
younger and/or Middle Eastern; plaintiff being "perhaps the only person who
would have had the motive" for this conduct; references in the messages to
seeing defendant before a judge; L.N.'s credible testimony that she spoke with
plaintiff on the phone, and then identified plaintiff at trial; C.L.'s credible
testimony that plaintiff called him and "introduced herself by name" before
texting him from several "bogus" numbers; defendant's testimony that she
A-0155-24 18 identified plaintiff's telephone number with an app called TrapCall; anonymous
or impostor social media accounts that responded when defendant called them
by plaintiff's real name; and that in 2019, defendant obtained "a no-contact order
against [plaintiff] . . . , and magically the communications" generally "stopped."
II.
In her first argument, plaintiff contends the court erred by applying the
continuous tort doctrine to permit "defendant to base her claims on conduct that
occurred outside the two-year statutory period." Plaintiff maintains defendant
should not have been able to recover for "conduct that occurred before February
3, 2018" because the continuing violation doctrine applies only "to workplace
discrimination and harassment claims." Alternatively, plaintiff contends the
facts did not demonstrate plaintiff's "wrongful acts" were "so interconnected and
continuous that they cannot be separated into discrete actionable events but,
rather, are parts of one alleged wrong."
We disagree with all of these arguments. First, we reject plaintiff's legal
argument that the continuing violation or continuous tort doctrine applies only
to workplace discrimination and harassment claims. Second, contrary to her
factual argument, the trial record, which we recounted above, indisputably
established plaintiff's actions were part of an interconnected and continuous
A-0155-24 19 campaign of harassment which permitted defendant to recover damages for such
conduct.
Plaintiff raised the issue on the third day of trial when she made a "motion
to dismiss" which the court found was "in reality . . . a motion to exclude
evidence under the [c]ontinuing [t]ort [d]octrine." The court apparently
reserved judgment on the motion at that time and addressed it "within" its
ultimate decision on plaintiff's claims and defendant's counterclaims. In that
decision, the court considered "the statute of limitations for bringing" an IIED
claim that alleged plaintiff waged "a years-long campaign, primarily from
approximately 2016 into 2019 . . . of harassing phone calls, text messages," and
offensive, "disparaging and false social media posts." The court recited that
N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2 provides "general torts which include the claims of intentional
infliction of emotional distress are governed by a two-year statute of
limitations."
In rejecting plaintiff's application, the court relied on an unpublished
decision from our court which "analyzed a similar issue and . . . also recognized
that the [c]ontinuing [t]ort or [c]ontinuing [v]iolation [d]octrine provides an
exception to the statute of limitations for the claim of intentional infliction of
emotional distress." The court explained that the unpublished authority "also
A-0155-24 20 observed that when an individual is subject to a continual, cumulative pattern of
tortious conduct, the statute of limitations does not begin to run until the action
ceases."
Accordingly, the court held "as far as the beginning of that statute of
limitations period, it would begin running from the date that the pattern of
tortious conduct ceases." The court found in this case, defendant's proofs
established "the statute of limitations would not have even begun running until
some point 2019 [sic] at its earliest" and "would not close until some date in
2021." "[Defendant] instituted suit on her counterclaim for intentional infliction
of emotional distress in February of 2020, well within the statute of limitations
period."
The court also held defendant's IIED claim succeeded, given: there was
an "overwhelming amount of evidence" proving "very clearly and certainly" that
plaintiff "was the person behind the series of severe, outrageous
communications;" plaintiff's "campaign of mental torture was extremely
egregious;" defendant suffered damages "as a direct and proximate result of the
years-long campaign of harassment;" and "the emotional distress was so severe
that it genuinely would have caused substantial emotional distress and mental
harm to the average person."
A-0155-24 21 The court recited defendant sought compensation for emotional distress;
pain and suffering; economic losses, including lost income; "medical expenses,
including the future medical expenses"; out-of-pocket expenses; and punitive
damages. As noted, the court awarded defendant $100,000 in general damages,
and $100,000 in punitive damages. The court did not award damages for
defendant's economic losses or medical expenses.
The court awarded defendant "actual general damages" to compensate for
"the pain and suffering caused by the intentional infliction of emotional
distress." The court found defendant's own testimony established "the mental
anguish, pain and suffering she endured for several years and which she still
experiences." The court also found Lubit's testimony established defendant
suffers "from chronic post-traumatic stress disorder" with "severe and
permanent" damages and a "poor" prognosis "given the length of time she has
had to endure the stress." The court explained for these reasons and based on
the "proofs presented, this Court finds that the award of $100,000 is the amount
of money to adequately compensate" defendant "for the damages caused by
plaintiff's intentional conduct."
The court also awarded punitive damages. The court found plaintiff had
"specialized training and years of experience in the field" of psychiatry and
A-0155-24 22 "employed it as a weapon to attack the person whom she blamed for causing her
loss of her romantic partner" as well as "for her legal troubles including criminal
arrest, prosecution, and conviction." "When a person trained to help people with
mental health issues does everything in her power to torment another person
over a long and repetitive campaign," the court found that person knows "the
likelihood that serious harm would result." The court credited L.N.'s testimony
that defendant's "personality and demeanor changed for the far worse the longer
[plaintiff] tortured her." The court also credited defendant's testimony "that she
started questioning whether [plaintiff] was right about her."
The court declined to award defendant "any special or economic pecuniary
losses" because defendant "failed to demonstrate any such damages by a
preponderance of the evidence." The court also declined to award "the
calculated medical expenses" because defendant "failed to present any quantum
of proof as to that amount of money expended solely for medical treatment
related to the emotional distress caused by [plaintiff], and" Lubit's "calculations
as to what her future mental health treatment would cost" were "very
speculative," given it "appeared that the calculations were being made right from
the witness stand rather than based on a sound and reasoned analysis ."
A-0155-24 23 III.
We review a court's factual findings under a deferential standard, Balducci
v. Cige, 240 N.J. 574, 595 (2020), and defer "to the trial court that heard the
witnesses, sifted the competing evidence, and made reasoned conclusions ," In
re Twp. of Bordentown, 471 N.J. Super. 196, 217 (App. Div. 2022) (quoting
Griepenburg v. Twp. of Ocean, 220 N.J. 239, 254 (2015)). We do not disturb
the court's factual findings unless they are "so manifestly unsupported by or
inconsistent with the competent, relevant and reasonably credible evidence as to
offend the interests of justice." Ibid. (quoting Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Invs.
Ins. Co. of Am., 65 N.J. 474, 484 (1974)); accord Gnall v. Gnall, 222 N.J. 414,
428 (findings "by a trial court are binding on appeal when supported by
adequate, substantial, credible evidence.").
We review "questions of law," including "the application of a statute of
limitations," however, under a de novo standard. Smith v. Datla, 451 N.J. Super.
82, 88 (App. Div. 2017). A "trial court's interpretation of the law and the legal
consequences that flow from established facts are not entitled to any special
deference." Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 140 N.J.
366, 378 (1995).
A-0155-24 24 Finally, to any extent plaintiff is appealing from an evidentiary decision,
such "decisions are reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard . . . . " Est.
of Hanges v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 202 N.J. 369, 384 (2010). "A court
abuses its discretion when its 'decision is made without a rational explanation,
inexplicably departed from established policies, or rested on an impermissible
basis.'" State v. Chavies, 247 N.J. 245, 257 (2021) (quoting State v. R.Y., 242
N.J. 48, 65 (2020)). A "functional approach to abuse of discretion examines
whether there are good reasons for an appellate court to defer to the particular
decision at issue." R.Y., 242 N.J. at 65 (quoting Flagg v. Essex Cnty.
Prosecutor, 171 N.J. 561, 571 (2002)).
To recover for IIED, a party must show (1) intentional or reckless conduct
"(2) outrageously and (3) proximately caused (4) severe distress." G.D. v.
Kenny, 411 N.J. Super. 176, 194 (App. Div. 2009); accord Tarr v. Ciasulli, 181
N.J. 70, 77 (2004). The conduct complained of must be "so outrageous in
character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of
decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized
community." Buckley v. Trenton Sav. Fund Soc'y, 111 N.J. 355, 366 (1988)
(quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 46, cmt. d (1965)). In addition, "the
emotional distress suffered . . . must be 'so severe that no reasonable [person]
A-0155-24 25 could be expected to endure it.'" Ibid. (alteration in original) (quoting
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 46, cmt. j).
IIED claims have a two-year statute of limitations. N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2. The
limitations period generally serves "to cut off a claim that is filed more than two
years after the complained-of" conduct. Roa v. Roa, 200 N.J. 555, 566 (2010).
This doctrine reflects the "unfairness and injustice which stem from litigation
based on distant circumstances and faded memories." Tevis v. Tevis, 79 N.J.
422, 430-31 (1979).
Time passing between the accrual of a claim and the filing of a complaint
may threaten a party's "fair opportunity to defend" against the claim. Id. at 430.
Limitations periods thus seek to protect this opportunity and "promote repose
by giving security and stability to human affairs." O'Keeffe v. Snyder, 83 N.J.
478, 490-91 (1980) (quoting Wood v. Carpenter, 101 U.S. 135, 139 (1879)).
Hence, "considerations of individual justice as well as the broader
considerations of repose coincide to bar" the action of a claimant who
"voluntarily sleeps on his rights." Ferdinandi v. Strully, 35 N.J. 434, 438 (1961).
"The continuing violation doctrine" may offer "an exception to that
limitations period." Shepherd v. Hunterdon Developmental Ctr., 174 N.J. 1, 18
(2002). The doctrine provides that when a claimant "is subject to a continual,
A-0155-24 26 cumulative pattern of tortious conduct, the statute of limitations does not begin
to run until the wrongful action ceases." Wilson v. Wal-Mart Stores, 158 N.J.
263, 272 (1999). That is, although the limitations period for a tort claim is
generally two years, N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2, the continuing violation doctrine
provides "the entire claim may be timely if filed within two years of 'the date on
which the last component act occurred,'" Alexander v. Seton Hall Univ., 204
N.J. 219, 229 (2010) (quoting Roa, 200 N.J. at 567).
"The doctrine is based on the premise that the conduct becomes tortious
and actionable precisely because 'of its continuous, cumulative, synergistic
nature.'" Bolinger v. Bell Atl., 330 N.J. Super. 300, 306 (App. Div. 2000)
(quoting Wilson, 158 N.J. at 273). It permits "the aggregation of acts, each of
which, in itself, might not have alerted the" claimant "of the existence of a claim
. . . ." Roa, 200 N.J. at 569.
Over 100 years ago, without giving this rule an explicit name, the Court
of Errors and Appeals recognized a defendant's "persistence in" a "wrongful"
trespass left a claimant "entitled to recover" for harm suffered outside the
bounds of the limitations period. Morey v. Essex Cnty., 94 N.J.L. 427, 430 (E.
& A. 1920). In that case, the defendant constructed part of a highway on
plaintiffs' land "in direct violation of the property rights of plaintiffs." Id. at
A-0155-24 27 428. The plaintiffs brought suit outside the statute of limitations, but the court
instructed the "jury that the statute of limitations was no bar to the action . . . ."
Id. at 430. The Court of Errors and Appeals affirmed. Ibid. It held the "right
of action of the plaintiffs does not rest entirely upon the original tortious entry
and partial destruction of their property, but upon the continued occupation and
user of the property by the defendant following the original entry." Ibid. "In
other words, the constant repetition of the defendant's unlawful acts, its
persistence in its wrongful occupation of plaintiffs' land, constituted continuous
trespass, and the plaintiffs were entitled to recover from the defendant the
damages sustained by them for all six years" before plaintiffs ultimately filed
suit. Ibid.
This court later described the rule in Morey as "the concept of continuing
wrong . . . ." Stanley Dev. Co. v. Millburn Twp., 26 N.J. Super. 328, 331-32
(App. Div. 1953). In Stanley, the defendant installed a "storm sewer" that
blocked an adjoining parcel of land from accessing or using the nearby "sanitary
sewer . . . ." Id. at 330. Thirty-seven years after both sewers were constructed,
the plaintiff took title to the adjoining land and constructed "another outlet" to
the blocked sanitary sewer. Id. at 330-31. The plaintiff brought suit to recover
its construction costs, arguing it had a viable claim under Morey. Ibid. This
A-0155-24 28 court declined to apply Morey, finding the plaintiff did not allege "a trespass"
or demonstrate damages. Id. at 331. In dicta, the panel noted that "even where
the concept of continuing wrong has been applied, recovery is ordinarily
permitted only with respect to damages sustained during the period of
limitations preceding the suit." Id. at 331-32.
While Stanley suggested Morey's rule was limited to trespass actions, this
court and the Supreme Court proceeded to recognize the doctrine—which this
court called "the concept of 'continuous tort'"—in other circumstances, such as
a continual "inverse condemnation," "negligent representation by an attorney,"
or "course of negligent treatment by a physician . . . ." Giovine v. Giovine, 284
N.J. Super. 3, 37 (App. Div. 1995) (citing Russo Farms, Inc. v. Vineland Bd. of
Educ., 280 N.J. Super. 320, 327-28 (App. Div. 1995); Aykan v. Goldzweig, 238
N.J. Super. 389, 392 (Law Div. 1989); Tortorello v. Reinfeld, 6 N.J. 58, 66
(1950)).
In Russo Farms, the plaintiff farmers alleged "the improper siting and
construction of a public high school across the street" caused the farm to flood.
280 N.J. Super. at 323-24. The flooding began before August 1987, ended "by
May 1990," and in July 1990, the farmers filed a complaint against defendants
alleging, among other claims, inverse condemnation. Id. at 326. The trial court
A-0155-24 29 granted defendants summary judgment "on the ground that every claim was
barred by a statute of limitations, a statute of repose, or the notice provisions of
the Tort Claims Act." Id. at 324. We reversed. Id. at 331. The decision noted
a "separate cause of action" for inverse condemnation "accrued with each
incursion of floodwater." Id. at 326. The decision adopted the dicta in Stanley
by holding that even "where the concept of continuing wrong has been applied,
recovery is ordinarily permitted only with respect to damages sustained during
the period of limitations preceding the suit." Id. at 328 (quoting Stanley Dev.
Co., 26 N.J. Super. at 331-32).
Language used in the "continuous tort" cases, such as Morey and Russo
Farms, generally mirror the standards formulated in the "continuing violation"
cases, such as Wilson and Roa. Compare Morey, 94 N.J.L. at 430 (recovery for
"constant repetition of the defendant's unlawful acts" beyond limitations period)
with Wilson, 158 N.J. at 273 (recovery for "continuous, cumulative, synergistic"
acts beyond limitations period); compare Russo Farms, 280 N.J. Super. at 326
(a "separate cause of action accrued with each incursion of floodwater") with
Roa, 200 N.J. at 569 (citation omitted) (each "discrete . . . act starts a new clock
for filing charges alleging that act.").
A-0155-24 30 As such, we accept that the line of "continuous tort" cases apply to this
case so long as defendant can demonstrate a "constant repetition of . . . unlawful
acts." Morey, 94 N.J.L. at 430. On this point, the court's factual findings that
plaintiff's conduct involved the constant repetition of wrongful acts are
overwhelmingly supported by the trial record.
By way of summary, plaintiff accused defendant of being a criminal or
thief in 2015, and 2016, and 2018. Plaintiff taunted defendant on social media
in 2015, in 2016, and until at least 2017. Plaintiff contacted defendant
relentlessly and at inconvenient hours beginning in 2015, throughout 2018, and
in 2019. These communications often suggested a racial or ethnic hostility, such
as the "ArabianDollXO" username on Seeking Arrangements, the text telling
defendant to stop "acting like you're a good Muslim girl" in 2018, and the text
stating "more guys explode in you than Gaza" in 2019. Plaintiff degraded
defendant sexually by making and broadcasting composite photographs of
defendant's face on other women's nude bodies in 2016 and 2017, creating a
"sugar baby" profile on Seeking Arrangements, texting defendant warnings
about sexually transmitted diseases in 2018, and mocking defendant's HPV
diagnosis in 2018 and 2019. Throughout all of 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and
2019, plaintiff contacted defendant's family, friends, and professional
A-0155-24 31 connections seeking to frighten or humiliate defendant. The "incessant" nature
of these communications was the reason defendant gave for becoming "a shut -
in" who was unable to function. Given "the constant repetition" and
"persistence" of plaintiff's wrongful acts, we are convinced the continuous tort
doctrine permitted defendant to bring the IIED claim based on conduct occurring
before February 2018. Morey, 94 N.J.L. at 430.
Further, the court's damages award was entirely consistent with the
holding in Russo Farms that "recovery is ordinarily permitted only with respect
to damages sustained during the period of limitations preceding the suit" in
continuous tort cases. 280 N.J. Super. at 328 (quoting Stanley Dev. Co., 26 N.J.
Super. at 331-32). The court premised its award of damages on the "severe"
pain and suffering defendant "still experiences" and which has caused
"permanent" damage to defendant with a "poor" prognosis, which defendant
necessarily suffered within the limitations period.
We note as a matter of policy that defendant suffered "[l]earned
helplessness" due to PTSD, and complained of "paranoid thoughts" about the
court system following the harassment. Because the record demonstrated
defendant did not "voluntarily" sleep on her rights, we also conclude the policy
A-0155-24 32 considerations underpinning our limitations periods would not be served by
barring this claim. Ferdinandi, 35 N.J. at 438.
IV.
We next consider, and reject, plaintiff's argument that the court committed
error when it ostensibly granted her motion in limine to exclude evidence, only
to later rely on those proofs when considering the timeliness of defendant's IIED
claim. Specifically, plaintiff maintains defendant attempted to marshal
unauthenticated text messages, but then later withdrew the "request to admit"
them.
First, we stress that the court never granted plaintiff's motion in limine.
The court originally ruled the issue was moot, but after trial, the court
reconsidered the motion and denied it, which Rule 4:25-8(d) expressly permitted
the court to do. In the alternative, even if it was error for the court to admit the
three messages plaintiff highlights on appeal, it was not plain error given the
overwhelming evidence against plaintiff in this matter.
Before trial, plaintiff moved in limine to exclude certain text messages
and social media posts, asserting—among other things—that because many of
the text messages came from "random" phone numbers, they could not be
authenticated without metadata. Exhibit A to the motion, condensed into eight
A-0155-24 33 pages of plaintiff's appendix, contained two screenshots of social media posts
and about thirty-six text messages. At oral argument, the defense "withdrew
their intention to utilize those text messages," citing difficulties obtaining their
metadata, and the court ruled the motion was "moot."
The court noted the withdrawal and said defense counsel "stipulate[d] that
those text messages will not be admitted into evidence." The court held "that
motion moot" and informed plaintiff that "by bringing that motion, that would
have meant that you also would not be able to reference those text messages ."
Later that day, the court reiterated the motion in limine to exclude text messages
and Twitter screenshots was moot because "defendant withdrew their intention
to utilize those text messages." In its ultimate decision, by contrast, the court
held: "There was a motion in limine by the plaintiff filed July 8th to exclude
the defendant's texts and the Twitter screenshots. That motion is denied. That
material had been provided and, in fact, that material was utilized effectively by
the plaintiff during the course of the trial."
This court reviews the trial court's rulings on "in limine motions
adjudicating the admissibility of evidence" for an abuse of discretion. Primmer
v. Harrison, 472 N.J. Super. 173, 187 (App. Div. 2022); accord Brenman v.
Demello, 191 N.J. 18, 31 (2007). "A court abuses its discretion when its
A-0155-24 34 'decision is made without a rational explanation, inexplicably departed from
established policies, or rested on an impermissible basis.'" Chavies, 247 N.J. at
257 (quoting R.Y., 242 N.J. at 65). A "functional approach to abuse of
discretion examines whether there are good reasons for an appellate court to
defer to the particular decision at issue." R.Y., 242 N.J. at 65 (quoting Flagg,
171 N.J. at 571).
A motion in limine is a "pretrial request that certain inadmissible evidence
not be referred to or offered at trial." Black's Law Dictionary 1109 (9th ed.
2009); accord Conforti v. County of Ocean, 255 N.J. 142, 170 (2023). Rule
4:25-8, which governs motions in limine, provides the "court shall rule on all
motions submitted under this rule in a timely manner based on the issue raised
in the particular motion." R. 4:25-8(a)(4). That said, a "trial court's ruling on a
motion in limine shall not preclude the court from reconsidering or modifying
that ruling, sua sponte or at the request of a party, based on later developments
at trial." R. 4:25-8(d). And while it did not expressly remind plaintiff of this
provision at the time of its initial ruling, the court did inform plaintiff, on a
separate motion in limine not appealed, that the ruling was open to
reconsideration.
A-0155-24 35 Plaintiff accuses the court of legal error by granting the motion and then
denying it. That did not happen: the court never granted the motion, and
repeatedly stated it was moot. But even if the court had taken the action plaintiff
described, it did not constitute reversible error. The Court Rules permit the court
to reconsider or modify a ruling "based on later developments at trial," as the
court stated it had done here. R. 4:25-8(d).
In any event, even accepting plaintiff's argument that the court erred, it
did not constitute plain error. A predominant theme of defendant's trial
testimony was that someone sent "incessant," and ultimately perhaps
"thousands," of antagonistic text messages to her "on a daily basis." Defendant's
extensive recitation of these messages included a description (but not a full
quotation) of certain text messages accusing her of having HPV, described as a
"purple P-U-S-S;" being "broke" or jobless; and using Medicaid. Exhibit A did
contain similar messages, but according to defendant, these were representative
of many others she received across a period of years. Plaintiff did not object to
this description when defendant offered it, and later in the trial, herself
marshaled text messages which read: "You should take yourself to get checked
for your pussy. . . . You have HPV . . . and a purple pussy and the purple cow
A-0155-24 36 nipples." Otherwise, our review of the trial indicates the exact messages in
Exhibit A were kept out of the record.
Regarding the supposedly random phone numbers from which those text
messages emanated, defendant testified she believed plaintiff used a "third-party
application to change her number" so that text messages would seem to pour in
from anonymous strangers, L.S.'s new girlfriend, or a "notification tool" for STI
diagnoses. Yet, defendant explained she knew plaintiff authored these messages
because of "the context" they arrived in; because they "stopped once the case
started;" and because they were written in a consistent voice, often repeating
uncommon phrases like "heifer" or "purple pussy." Defendant explained:
I know it's [plaintiff]. I don't know if I'm allowed to say that, but I know it's [plaintiff] because the wording on all of [plaintiff]'s messages to me are always redundant. She always says that I put my hands in people's wallets. She always says I'm a whore. It's always redundant. And there’s hundreds of other messages where she repeats the exact same claims dating from 2015.
Later, by way of another example, defendant pointed out that some of the
anonymous text messages would use the word
"Vallaj," which is the Albanian way to say "Vallei," (phonetic) which means I swear to god, which is a very interesting thing. . . . I have many Albanian Muslim friends and never have I heard them referring to swearing to God and telling someone to kill themselves
A-0155-24 37 in the same sentence. So it's obvious that's not coming from someone who is an Albanian or of Muslim descent
....
BY [PLAINTIFF]:
Q You're aware I'm not Albanian, correct?
A Yes, I'm aware.
That is: defendant testified the misuse of an Albanian Muslim oath
indicated the anonymous author of these text messages was not Albanian, and
plaintiff then elicited testimony that she was not Albanian.
On appeal, plaintiff argues it was error for the court to grant the motion in
limine, then deny the motion in its final decision, and so rest its holding on a
tweet, an Instagram message, and a text message not included in Exhibit A but
"essentially the same" as those in Exhibit A. The tweet read: "If you think for
one minute you're getting out of stealing my prescriptions with your husband
. . . just getting started." The Instagram message read: "Donnie [sic] abused
you and you know that" and "I dare you to even call my job. I will come to your
house again. If you come out this time, I will run you over. That's if you don't
shoot me, since you make threats, dirty bitch." The text message read: "You
fucked him for my money, you slut. You are basically my hooker."
A-0155-24 38 Apart from not including these writings in Exhibit A, plaintiff did not
object to their admission at trial, and does not claim to have done so on appeal.
As such, the plain error standard governs review. R. 2:10-2. That standard
provides any "error or omission shall be disregarded by the appellate court
unless it is of such a nature as to have been clearly capable of producing an
unjust result." Ibid.
Given the overwhelming nature of the remaining evidence against
plaintiff—including evidence regarding the voluminous number of similar text
messages sent to defendant, L.N., and C.L., whose admissibility plaintiff does
not contest—the three she highlights on appeal were not clearly capable of
producing an unjust result. Cf. State v. Sui Kam Tung, 460 N.J. Super. 75, 98-
99 (App. Div. 2019) (under the plain error standard, "a reviewing court may
consider whether, absent the evidence admitted in error, there was
overwhelming evidence of the defendant's guilt.").
Finally, plaintiff argues the court erred by failing to find the TCA
immunized her from civil liability. Plaintiff contends that immunity applied
because defendant premised her counterclaim "in part on" an allegation that
plaintiff wrongfully retrieved defendant's medical records while employed at
A-0155-24 39 Rutgers UBHC. Plaintiff also argues defendant failed to show plaintiff's
"conduct was outside the scope of her employment or willful, wanton, or grossly
negligent" as required to bring the counterclaim beyond the TCA's scope. In
addition to disagreeing with these arguments as a matter of law, we note the
court declined to find plaintiff accessed defendant's medical records.
As noted, defendant alleged that plaintiff, as a former employee of Rutgers
UBHC, accessed defendant's medical records to discover, and later disseminate,
embarrassing information about defendant. Plaintiff filed a pre-trial motion to
dismiss, which stated the TCA "covered" both the "public entity" holding
defendant's medical records and plaintiff, as an employee of that entity.
The court's final decision noted defendant testified "the person harassing
her was putting information into the social media posts that could only have
come from her medical records," and defendant also testified plaintiff had
"access to medical records" as an employee of Rutgers UBHC. From these
premises, defendant "deduced and argued that it had to be [plaintiff] who
somehow accessed" the medical records. Yet, the court rejected that deduction,
concluding the evidence "hardly amounts to any level of proof" necessary "to
make the leap of faith to conclude that there could be no one else who could
have accessed those medical records other than [plaintiff], and then the
A-0155-24 40 additional leap of faith to conclude that the shared information could have only
come from [defendant's] medical records."
On appeal, plaintiff presented us with selective quotes from the court's
recitation of defendant's testimony, but omitted the paragraphs which
immediately follow it, in which the court explicitly rejected the inferences
defendant urged it to make. The court held the IIED claim succeeded
notwithstanding defendant's unproven allegation regarding the medical records,
not because of the allegation. It rejected the one fact which would, per plaintiff's
argument, implicate the TCA.
Additionally, we note plaintiff's conduct was clearly outside the scope of
her employment. See Velez v. City of Jersey City, 358 N.J. Super. 224, 239
(App. Div. 2003) (quoting N.J.S.A. 59:3-14) ("Nothing in this act shall
exonerate a public employee from liability if it is established that his conduct
was outside the scope of his employment or constituted a crime, actual fraud,
actual malice, or willful conduct."). As the trial court articulated, plaintiff had
"specialized training and years of experience in the field" of psychiatry and
"employed it as a weapon to attack the person whom she blamed for causing her
loss of her romantic partner" as well as "for her legal troubles including criminal
arrest, prosecution, and conviction." "When a person trained to help people with
A-0155-24 41 mental health issues does everything in her power to torment another person
over a long and repetitive campaign," that person knows "serious harm" would
likely result.
To the extent we have not addressed the remaining arguments raised by
plaintiff it is because we have determined they lack sufficient merit to warrant
further discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
A-0155-24 42