NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-2670-22
MORRIS BELLIFEMINE, M.D., PA,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
MEADOWLANDS HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER, MHA, LLC, f/d/b/a MEADOWLANDS HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER, LYNN MCVEY, and TAMARA DUNAEV,
Defendants-Respondents. ______________________________________
Argued December 17, 2024 – Decided January 13, 2025
Before Judges Smith and Chase.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Hudson County, Docket No. L-4332-20.
Constantine Bardis argued the cause for appellant (Law Office Constantine Bardis, LLC, attorneys; Constantine Bardis and Ronald M. Gutwirth, on the briefs). Benjamin V. Parisi argued the cause for respondents (Parisi & Santaite, LLC, and Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, PC, attorneys; Benjamin V. Parisi, of counsel and on the brief; Thomas J. Reilly, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
In this breach of contract case, plaintiff Dr. Morris Bellifemine appeals
from four trial court orders: an August 5, 2022 order barring the amendment of
his complaint and introduction of evidence produced after the close of
discovery; another August 5, 2022 order quashing a subpoena served by plaintiff
on a nonparty; a February 28, 2023 order granting defendants' motion for
summary judgment; and an April 14, 2023 order denying reconsideration of the
same. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part, and reverse in part.
I.
Plaintiff, a licensed physician, was employed at defendant MHA, LLC
f/d/b/a Meadowlands Hospital Medical Center, from sometime in 2010 until its
sale at the end of 2017. Defendant Lynn McVey was MHA's CEO from 2010 to
2015. Defendant Tamara Dunaev was one of MHA's owners. 1
The parties entered into several employment agreements over the years:
a December 2010 contract for plaintiff to serve as Director of the Pulmonary
1 Collectively MHA, McVey, and Dunaev are referred to as "Defendants".
A-2670-22 2 Unit;2 a June 2011 contract for plaintiff to serve as Director of the Sleep Center
for $19,500 annually; a December 2012 contract for plaintiff to serve as both
President of the Medical Staff for $25,000 annually and Co-Director of the
Intensive Care Unit ("ICU") for $33,600 annually; and a September 2014
contract for plaintiff to serve as Chief Medical Officer for $75,000 annually.
The contracts specifically required bi-weekly payments absent any agreement to
the contrary.
Plaintiff alleged that beginning in December 2013, MHA did not properly
compensate him per the terms of the contracts. Plaintiff produced eleven checks
dated between April 2016 to September 2017 totaling $85,189.68, which he
testified were the only payments he received from MHA during the contested
period. Those checks were not itemized by role or contract.
Plaintiff claimed he spoke monthly with an employee from MHA's
accounting department, later identified as Diana Zheludkova, who kept a
running total of the money owed to plaintiff in a ledger. According to plaintiff,
these conversations with Zheludkova led him to arrive at $255,000 in damages
alleged in his complaint. Plaintiff also maintains non-party Dr. Richard Lipsky,
2 The record does not reflect the promised compensation for this role. A-2670-22 3 another of the hospital's owners, promised him in December 2017 that he would
be paid once the hospital was sold.
Plaintiff filed suit in November 2020. Defendants answered, raising,
among other affirmative defenses, plaintiff's own breach of the contract's terms,
statute of limitations, lack of damages, and accord and satisfaction.
Defendants requested a statement of damages pursuant to Rule 4:5-2, a
request they repeated upon receiving plaintiff's discovery requests. They also
sought discovery from plaintiff, including his personal and business tax records.
Ultimately, plaintiff was ordered to respond to defendants' discovery requests
by November 2, 2021, or risk dismissal of his complaint under Rule 4:23.
When plaintiff failed to supply the requested discovery, the trial court
granted defendants' motion to dismiss plaintiff's complaint with prejudice.
Plaintiff successfully moved for reconsideration, and the motion judge
reinstated the complaint and set a new discovery end date ("DED") in May 2022.
See R. 4:24-1(c).
On the DED, plaintiff deposed McVey in the morning, and defendants
deposed plaintiff in the afternoon. At the outset of McVey's deposition,
plaintiff's counsel asked defense counsel, "is this the only witness you are
A-2670-22 4 producing today?" Defense counsel replied, "[t]his is it for today. We have to
get dates for Tamara [Dunaev] and Dr. [Richard] Lipsky."
About a month after the DED, plaintiff subpoenaed Zheludkova for
deposition. Defendants then moved to quash the subpoena. Before the court
heard defendants' motion to quash, Zheludkova failed to appear for the
deposition. The parties placed a statement on the record, in which defense
counsel noted they would be producing "the other two parties," ostensibly
referring to Dunaev and Dr. Lipsky.
Plaintiff then moved to: amend his complaint and reinstate Hudson
Regional Hospital as a defendant; extend discovery; and compel depositions of
both Zheludkova and Dunaev. In his certification, plaintiff's counsel asserted
discovery remained incomplete. He stated that while he noticed Dunaev's
deposition prior to the DED, defense counsel was unable to produce her but
promised to do so after the DED. Before the court heard or decided plaintiff's
motion to amend the complaint, extend discovery, and compel the depositions,
defendants produced Dunaev for deposition. A week later, defendants filed a
cross-motion to bar any evidence adduced after the DED.3
3 Defendant conceded the deposition of Dunaev is not barred because the parties agreed to complete her deposition. A-2670-22 5 The trial court granted defendants' motion to quash the subpoena of
Zheludkova, determining it did not have the discretion to force someone to be
deposed after the DED unless the party seeking the discovery had successfully
moved before a different judge, the Presiding Civil Judge, to reopen discovery
and a conforming order had been entered to that effect. That same day, the
Presiding Civil Judge denied plaintiff's motion to amend the complaint and
granted defendants' motion to bar any evidence obtained after the DED. The
court wrote in the order:
Granted. The motion to amend was denied on procedural grounds. The motion to bar is granted because discovery was obtained outside the discovery end date. The Plaintiff did not seek to extend discovery beyond the May 26, 2022 discovery end date but rather went ahead and conducted discovery without seeking that permission. As such, the discovery conducted beyond the discovery end date is barred. Trial remains.
Therefore, the February 15, 2023 trial date remained. The motion to
reopen discovery was denied on procedural grounds, specifically plaintiff's
failure to comply with the Chief Justice's March 27, 2020 omnibus order
requiring all submissions in excess of thirty-five pages be provided to the court
in hard copy.
Months later, after plaintiff failed to attempt to cure the procedural errors
in his motion to extend discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment.
A-2670-22 6 Defendants made several arguments in support of summary judgment: plaintiff
failed to adduce evidence of his alleged damages of $255,000; plaintiff breached
material terms of the contract by failing to timely complete patient charts;
plaintiff's claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations; a $10,000
check issued to plaintiff in January 2018 represented an accord and satisfaction
of any purportedly past-due amounts; and in the alternative, if the entire
complaint could not be dismissed, plaintiff's unjust enrichment, breach of the
implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and conversion claims should
be dismissed as a matter of law.
Plaintiff responded, contending the damages claim was supported by: the
conversations between plaintiff and Zheludkova, which would be admissible as
party-opponent statements; defendants' responses to interrogatories, which
plaintiff claimed included admissions by Dunaev and Dr. Lipsky that plaintiff
was owed the money alleged; and the contracts themselves.
At oral argument the motion court inquired as to whether discovery had
revealed any defendants' statements acknowledging the debt and promising to
pay plaintiff once the hospital was sold. Defense counsel did not recall such a
statement. Plaintiff's counsel stated that it was in the doctor's certification
attached to the opposing papers, however the motion court replied that the
A-2670-22 7 doctor's certification was a "sham affidavit." Plaintiff's counsel argued that the
sham affidavit doctrine did not apply because the doctor's certification did not
directly conflict with the deposition testimony. The court responded that
plaintiff's failure to identify the conversations in response to defendant s'
interrogatories, only to contain them in the later certification, was a "conflict on
a critical issue." The court then noted if the defendants had told plaintiff he
would be paid when the hospital was sold, then the statute of limitations could
be equitably tolled until that date, "because there's a date where your guy could
have reasonably relied on the promise."
The court found plaintiff was unable to determine whether he was paid in
full for any of the four contracts under which he worked, was unable to produce
his tax forms to substantiate his claims of nonpayment and was unable to present
other evidence besides his alleged conversations with Diana Zheludkova. The
court found no evidence in the record that either Dunaev or Lipsky confirmed
the $255,000 amount. The court then stated, "if that was the only question that
would be enough to defeat the defendant's [sic] motion for summary judgment
on the question of the amount of damages because we now have an admissible
statement by an . . . unidentified woman of defendant representative saying
$255,000."
A-2670-22 8 Noting that the inquiry did not end there, the court then found the record
was devoid of any disclosure by a representative of the defendants that plaintiff
should wait until the hospital is sold to get paid. Additionally, the court stated,
"[t]here is nothing on this motion record from which a rational jury can reach a
rational conclusion as to whether all, some or what part of the $255,000 should
be apportioned for 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017. That's eight
years of annual contract." Without proof of a later promise to pay upon the sale
of the hospital, the court held any claim prior to November 2014 was barred by
the six-year statute of limitations. The court then dismissed plaintiff's
complaint:
for failure and inability to be able to prove the amount of damages which survive after application of the Statute of Limitation: i.e., the plaintiff cannot prove to a jury based upon the accountant's statement alone . . . what the amount of $255,000 was attributable to the period after . . . November 24, 2014 until the date the complaint was filed November 24, 2020. For completeness, the court also held that had the statute of limitations
not dismissed all claims, allegations of plaintiff's breach, and plaintiff's claims
for unjust enrichment and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing would have been a jury question. The court also rejected accord and
satisfaction as a basis for summary judgment, since the record contained no
A-2670-22 9 agreement between the parties that a January 2018 payment of $10,000 settled
all plaintiff's claims. The court stated it would dismiss the conversion count to
the extent that it represented a claim of fraud against Dunaev. The court then
entered summary judgment in defendants' favor, dismissing the complaint with
prejudice as against all parties. 4
Plaintiff moved for reconsideration, arguing the court misapplied the sham
affidavit doctrine because the statements in plaintiff's certification did not
"clearly and sharply contradict" his previous statements. Plaintiff's counsel
identified the specific passages from plaintiff's deposition recounti ng a
December 2017 promise by Dr. Lipsky that plaintiff would be paid once the
hospital was sold, which, according to the court's reasoning at the original
hearing, could justify an equitable tolling of the statute of limitations. In the
alternative, even if equitable tolling were not available, plaintiff argued the last
payment doctrine would permit the plaintiff to apply whatever payments he did
receive to the oldest debts, preserving the remaining amount owed as within the
statute of limitations. Plaintiff also argued defendants' answers to
4 The order granting summary judgment in defendants' favor also reflected plaintiff's voluntary dismissal of all claims against McVey.
A-2670-22 10 interrogatories, together with the contract documents themselves, were a
sufficient basis for a jury to calculate damages owed.
The court denied the motion for reconsideration, standing by its earlier
ruling that the statements in plaintiff's certification accompanying the motion
for summary judgment constituted a sham affidavit. The court reiterated that
even if defendants' statements promising to pay plaintiff equitably tolled the
statute of limitations, the jury would not be able to determine how to apportion
the damages among the years without speculating.
On appeal, plaintiff argues: summary judgment was inappropriate
because the complaint was timely and defendants failed to sustain their burden
as to a statute of limitations defense; the statute of limitations should be
equitably tolled and the court incorrectly applied the sham affidavit doctrine to
prevent such equitable tolling; and denial of plaintiff's motion to extend
discovery was an abuse of discretion.
II.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, using the same standard
that governed the trial court's decision. Samolyk v. Berthe, 251 N.J. 73, 78
(2022). Summary judgment may be granted "if the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories[,] and admissions on file, together with the affidavits,
A-2670-22 11 if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact challenged and
that the moving party is entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law." RSI
Bank v. Providence Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 234 N.J. 459, 472 (2018) (quoting R.
4:46-2(c)); see also Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520, 540
(1995). However, "[a] trial court should never decide on its merits a dispute on
which a rational jury could go either way." Driscoll Const. Co. v. State, Dep't
of Transp., 371 N.J. Super. 304, 315 (App. Div. 2004) (citing Gilhooley v. Cnty.
of Union, 164 N.J. 533, 545-46 (2000)). "When no issue of fact exists, and only
a question of law remains," the reviewing court owes no special deference to the
trial court's decision. Templo Fuente De Vida Corp. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins.,
224 N.J. 189, 199 (2016).
III.
Plaintiff posits that summary judgment based on the statute of limitations
is inappropriate where, as here, the claims arose from payments owed both
within and outside the six-year window. According to plaintiff, because
defendants did not differentiate his payments among the different contracts, the
payment application rule permits him to apply these partial payments to the
oldest claims falling outside of the six-year window, therefore preserving the
entirety of the amounts due to him within the six-year window. Plaintiff stresses
A-2670-22 12 defendants bore the burden of proof on its statute of limitations defense, and
they failed to show that his contractual claims accrued prior to November 24,
2014.
A party alleging breach of contract must "prove that there was a breach
which in fact caused some damage. Once the fact of damage is established, the
mere uncertainty as to the amount will not bar recovery." Tannock v. N.J. Bell
Tel. Co., 223 N.J. Super. 1, 7 (App. Div. 1988). The "uncertainty" factor applies
to "uncertainty as to the fact of damage and not as to its amount, and where it is
certain that damage has resulted, mere uncertainty as to the amount will not
preclude the right of recovery." V.A.L. Floors, Inc. v. Westminster Cmtys., Inc.,
355 N.J. Super. 416, 424 (App. Div. 2002) (quoting Tessmar v. Grosner, 23 N.J.
193, 203 (1957)).
N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1(a) requires a party bringing a breach of contract claim
to file suit within six years of the date of the accrual of the cause of action. To
determine when the cause of action has accrued, "the relevant question is when
did the party seeking to bring the action have an enforceable right." Metromedia
Co. v. Hartz Mt. Assocs., 139 N.J. 532, 535 (1995) (quoting Andreaggi v. Relis,
171 N.J. Super. 203, 235-36 (Ch. Div. 1979)). Courts have used the
"installment" method of accrual to apply the statute of limitations to claims
A-2670-22 13 involving agreements to make periodic payments, determining that "a new cause
of action arises from the date each payment is missed." Id. at 535 (citing 4
Arthur L. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts § 951 (1951 & Supp. 1994)).
Generally speaking, and subject to some exceptions where a third-party's
interests are implicated, the payment application rule allows "a creditor who is
owed more than one debt by a debtor [to] apply the payments to the debtor's
account in any manner it chooses so long as the debtor has not issued specific
directions to the contrary." Craft v. Stevenson Lumber Yard, Inc., 179 N.J. 56,
72 (2004).
Here, in the statement of facts accompanying their motion for summary
judgment, defendants acknowledge the June 2011 Sleep Center contract for
$19,500 annually, the December 2012 Medical Staff President and ICU Co-
Director contracts for $25,000 annually and $33,600 annually, respectively, and
the September 2014 Chief Medical Officer contract for $75,000 annually. All
these contracts specified bi-weekly payments. Where such express and
unambiguous contract terms exist, indefiniteness as to plaintiff's damages
cannot serve as a valid basis for summary judgment in defendants' favor.
Dividing the annual amounts into twenty-six equal amounts to reflect bi-weekly
pay periods would not be an exercise in speculation, as the trial court feared.
A-2670-22 14 Plaintiff testified defendants' payments began to dwindle beginning in
December 2013. If so, December 2013 would be when his cause of action first
accrued, and new causes would have accrued each time defendants failed to
issue a biweekly paycheck. From December 2013 through August 2014,
plaintiff held three roles—Director of the Sleep Center, President of Medical
Staff, and Co-Director of the ICU—for a combined annual salary of $78,100, or
$3,003.85 each biweekly pay period. In September 2014, he took on the
additional role of Chief Medical Officer for an annual salary of $75,000, or
$2,884.62 each biweekly pay period, for a total expected biweekly pay for all
four roles of $5,888.46.
To preserve the oldest of his claims, plaintiff needed to file suit within six
years of the first claim accrued, or by December 2019. Instead, he filed suit in
November 2020, barring any claim accrued prior to November 2014. Therefore,
the statute of limitations prevents him from asserting claims for paychecks
missed between December 2013 and November 2014. N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1 serves
as a basis for partial summary judgment in defendants' favor for any cause of
action accruing prior to November 2014. However, each pay period missed from
November 2014 until the sale of the hospital in December 2017 represents a
A-2670-22 15 cause of action accruing within the six-year timeframe, and the statute of
limitations does not serve as a basis to dismiss these portions of plaintiff's claim.
Plaintiff's invocation of the payment allocation rule does not render his
alleged damages so speculative as to warrant summary judgment in defendants'
favor. Neither party has produced evidence of any payments made except for
the eleven checks dated between April 2016 to September 2017 and totaling
$85,189.68. Viewing this record in the light most favorable to plaintiff as the
non-moving party means giving him the favorable inference that these were the
only checks he received from December 2013 until the sale of the hospital.
Since the lump sum checks did not specifically denote the pay period to which
they applied or the contracted roles for which plaintiff was being paid, plaintiff
would be permitted to apply those amounts to older debts, even if the statute of
limitations would prevent him from recovering those amounts in suit. 5
Whether plaintiff materially breached the terms of his contract such that
defendants were justified in withholding payment is a genuine question of
material fact precluding summary judgment. Similarly, whether plaintiff
5 Even if the payment application rule did not apply to preserve the entirety of plaintiff's causes of action accruing within six years of his complaint, the record provides sufficient basis for a reasonable factfinder to award him the amounts owed under the contract less the amounts received in the eleven checks. A-2670-22 16 received an additional $10,000 after the hospital was sold and whether that
represented accord and satisfaction of any outstanding debt is also a genuine
question of material fact precluding summary judgment. The order granting
summary judgment in defendants' favor for claims accruing on and after
November 2014 is reversed, and the matter is remanded for a jury to determine
if plaintiff has proven that he is owed salary.
IV.
Plaintiff next argues the court abused its discretion when denying his
motion to extend discovery and granting defendants' motion to quash the
subpoena on Zheludkova. A trial court's discovery rulings are reviewed under
the abuse of discretion standard. Brugaletta v. Garcia, 234 N.J. 225, 240 (2018).
See also Leitner v. Toms River Reg'l Sch., 392 N.J. Super. 80, 88-89 (App. Div.
2007) (reviewing for abuse of discretion the denial of a motion to reopen
discovery for good cause shown under Rule 4:24-1(c)).
Here the court, denied the motion to reopen discovery on procedural
grounds. On appeal plaintiff argues good cause existed to extend discovery.
Had plaintiff cured his procedural errors, he would have had to prove
"exceptional circumstances" existed to extend discovery because the motion
came after the conclusion of the applicable discovery period, and after the trial
A-2670-22 17 date has been fixed. R. 4:24-1(c); Huszar v. Greate Bay Hotel & Casino, Inc.
375 N.J. Super. 463, 472-73 (App. Div. 2005). However, plaintiff never
attempted to cure his procedural errors. As such, the court did not abuse its
discretion in failing to reopen discovery.
To the extent we have not specifically addressed any remaining
arguments, it is because we find them to be without sufficient merit to warrant
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(e).
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
A-2670-22 18