Ortiz v. Van Wagoner
This text of 485 A.2d 341 (Ortiz v. Van Wagoner) 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.
Opinion
ALEX ORTIZ, A MINOR BY HIS GUARDIAN AD LITEM, HECTOR M. ORTIZ, AND HECTOR M. ORTIZ, INDIVIDUALLY, PLAINTIFFS,
v.
JOHN VAN WAGONER AND MARILYN F. VAN WAGONER, DEFENDANTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division Morris County.
*525 James J. Mahoney for plaintiffs (Blume, Vazquez, Goldfaden, Kuhn & Berkowitz, attorneys).
Brian R. O'Toole for defendants (O'Donnell, McCord, Leslie & O'Toole, attorneys.)
MacKENZIE, J.S.C.
The New Jersey Court Rules governing civil procedure authorize a party to propound interrogatories as part of pretrial *526 discovery. R. 4:17-1 et seq. In an ordinary bodily injury case, the defense will routinely request that the plaintiff be examined by one or more medical doctors in accordance with R. 4:19. The attorney for the defendant(s) will send the plaintiff's counsel a copy of the defense expert's report; typically, it is appended to and made part of the answers to plaintiff's interrogatories. See R. 4:10-2(d)(1), (2); R. 4:17-4(a). If the defendant has answered the plaintiff's interrogatories before the plaintiff has been examined by the defense's expert, then the defendant's attorney will forward the report to the plaintiff under separate cover. The report is generally accompanied by a cover letter which requests that the defendant's answers be amended to include the examining physician as one of the witnesses whom the defendant may call at trial. See R. 4:17-7.
Here, defendant submitted the reports of two examining physicians as part of her answers to interrogatories, but chose not to call either doctor to testify at trial. At plaintiff's behest, this Court had to decide whether submission of the reports should be deemed an expression of defendant's reliance upon their contents and, if so, whether these reports should be admissible as adoptive admissions, Evid.R. 63(8)(b), or as vicarious admissions, Evid.R. 63(9)(a). For reasons hereinafter expressed, this Court decided that neither report was admissible.
The infant plaintiff, Alex Ortiz, (Alex) suffered serious bodily injuries on September 2, 1981 when, as he was crossing Black-well Street in Dover, New Jersey, he was struck by an automobile driven by the defendant. He was unconscious during the first eleven days of his four-week hospitalization at Dover General Hospital where he was treated for a subdural hematoma, fractures of the right femur and left clavicle, and multiple lacerations and abrasions. He was discharged on September 30, 1981, but he remained under the care of various medical specialists.
A neurologist who monitored Alex's progress at the hospital and after his discharge concluded that he had not suffered any *527 permanent neurological impairment. Treatment of the fractured femur included the insertion of a Steinmann's pin and skeletal traction and produced a generally positive result, although at trial one of Alex's legs was a half-inch shorter than the other. This caused him to walk and run with a limp. Alex thus asserted claims for both temporary and permanent orthopedic impairment. Although a plastic surgeon's efforts to repair and conceal the lacerations were largely successful, a visible forehead scar remained. While the plastic surgeon has recommended additional cosmetic revision, the plaintiff and his parents have not yet given their consent. Thus, at trial, plaintiff also contended that the accident had both temporarily and permanently disfigured him.
Defendant invoked R. 4:19[1] and requested that the infant plaintiff be examined by an orthopedic surgeon and by a plastic surgeon. Each examining physician, Dr. Theodore Levine and Dr. Donald Malton, produced a report for defendant's attorney which contained his findings, diagnosis and prognosis with regard to Alex's condition. The opinions of those physicians generally concurred with those recorded by the plaintiff's treating orthopedist and his plastic surgeon.
Alex demanded copies of all reports of defendant's experts in the interrogatories which he propounded. The defendant, who *528 had answered the interrogatories before she had received the reports from those physicians, then amended her answers by sending a copy of each report to the plaintiff's attorney. The cover letter accompanying each report contained the following representations respectively:
Enclosed herein please find the report of Dr. Donald Malton who examined your client on our behalf. Please amend our answers to include Dr. Malton as an expert witness at the time of trial.
Enclosed please find the report of Dr. Theodore Levine who examined your client on our behalf. Kindly amend our answers to interrogatories to include Dr. Levine as an expert witness at the time of trial.
At trial, the defense decided not to call either Dr. Levine or Dr. Malton. On rebuttal, Alex moved that the reports by these examining doctors be admitted as substantive evidence. He contended that the defendant had adopted the contents of these reports and that they embodied defendant's position regarding the nature and extent of plaintiff's injuries. Alex relied upon Evid.R. 63(8)(b).[2] Plaintiff argued that both the letter and spirit of Sallo v. Sabatino, 146 N.J. Super. 416 (App.Div. 1976), certif. den. 75 N.J. 24 (1977) supported his argument.
Rule 63(8)(b) provides that a statement is admissible against a party if (s)he, with knowledge of the statement, has expressly or impliedly manifested her/his adoption of it or belief in its truth. Here, Alex did not show that the defendant knew what either doctor had written in his report before the reports were made available and her interrogatories were amended. Nor did the text of her attorney's cover letters support a conclusion that he, on her behalf, adopted the reports. Defense counsel, in the judgment of this Court, simply transmitted the reports to his adversary as required by the Court Rule R. 4:19.
*529 There was another impediment to admission of the reports. The opinion of an expert who has conducted an examination pursuant to R. 4:19[3] is discoverable as a matter of law. R. 4:10-2(d)(1). The opinions of experts other than those who examine under the authority of R. 4:19 and who are not expected to testify at trial are discoverable only upon a showing of extraordinary circumstances. R. 4:10-2(d)(3). Thus, the defense had no right to refuse to allow plaintiff to discover the reports of doctors who have examined him/her in accordance with R. 4:19. Forwarding these reports should not be interpreted either as an adoption by defendant of the examining doctors' findings or as an affirmation of her belief in the accuracy of those findings. When one is compelled to supply a report, it cannot be said that one assents to, ratifies or adopts the contents of that report. Thus, when the defendant's attorney fulfilled his obligation to turn over to plaintiff the reports of the two examining physicians, that act did not constitute an adoptive admission.
Furthermore, the reports of these doctors were not admissible as vicarious admissions simply because defendant's attorney acted on her behalf when he mailed them to plaintiff's *530 counsel. Neither physician was an agent, employee or representative of defendant. See Evid.R. 63(9)(a).
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485 A.2d 341, 197 N.J. Super. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ortiz-v-van-wagoner-njsuperctappdiv-1984.