Rahnefeld v. Security Ins. Co. of Hartford

560 A.2d 670, 115 N.J. 628, 1989 N.J. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 18, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 560 A.2d 670 (Rahnefeld v. Security Ins. Co. of Hartford) 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
Rahnefeld v. Security Ins. Co. of Hartford, 560 A.2d 670, 115 N.J. 628, 1989 N.J. LEXIS 86 (N.J. 1989).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In Zupo v. CNA Insurance Co., 98 N.J. 30 (1984), we adopted the principle that when an automobile liability-insurance carrier has made payments of personal injury protection (PIP) benefits *630 in connection with a compensable injury and is chargeable with knowledge at the time of its last payment that the injury will probably require additional treatment in the future, then the “two years after payment” provision of N.J.S.A. 39:6A-13.1 will not bar an action brought within a reasonable time after rejection of a prompt claim for payment of additional medical expenses for such treatment. Id. at 31-32. A restriction on the foregoing principle was that it embraced only “a severely limited class of causally-related medical conditions, namely, those whose insidious nature is such that their recurrence after an extended period of apparent cure is probable.” Id. at 33.

The issue on this appeal, here on certification granted, 108 N.J. 586 (1987), is whether the trial court, affirmed by the Appellate Division in an unreported opinion, correctly held that the circumstances of this case brought the PIP claim within the holding of Zupo, thereby rendering it “timely” despite the “two years after payment” bar. We affirm.

I

In September 1974, plaintiff Jeffrey Rahnefeld, then eighteen, was severely injured when, as a pedestrian, he was struck by an automobile and sustained injuries that included fractures of both legs. Because he was a resident member of his parents’ household, Jeffrey was an additional insured under his father’s automobile liability-insurance policy with defendant, Security Insurance Company of Hartford (Security), and as such was entitled to PIP benefits. Security paid the medical expenses for Jeffrey’s two-months stay in a hospital and for treatment by physicians, including Dr. Ciccone, an orthopedic surgeon, who treated Jeffrey on nine occasions after the hospitalization. During the ninth such visit, on November 9, 1977, Dr. Ciccone made a notation of Jeffrey’s condition: “[g]ood gait, no return of sensation or dorsiflexion of the left foot, the foot was cold, the left knee unstable.” According to Jeffrey’s *631 mother, plaintiff Helen Rahnefeld (henceforth reference in this opinion to “plaintiff” indicates plaintiff Jeffrey), Dr. Ciccone told Jeffrey that “there was nothing more he could do for him right now, but that in the future he would need the brace or this corrective shoe and * * * he did not recommend anything in the way of surgery, additional.” Dr. Ciccone advised Jeffrey to continue exercising and to come back one year later.

It was not until more than five years thereafter, on April 1, 1984, that Jeffrey returned to Dr. Ciccone. He complained that the pain in his right leg had “slowly worsened,” that it “[smarted in one area” and the area “increased in size.” He related his discomfort to “over walking or exercising.” Not satisfied with Dr. Ciccone’s examination, Jeffrey consulted Dr. Marvin P. Rosenberg, an orthopedic specialist, on June 21, 1984. Dr. Rosenberg took x-rays and performed an examination, on the basis of which he concluded, according to his certification, that Jeffrey had sustained “serious, permanent injuries which included comminuted fractures involving the articulating surfaces of the knee joints; serious compression of the popliteal artery and branches; severe trauma to the left tibial nerve; and other injuries * * In Dr. Rosenberg’s opinion, given “with reasonable medical certainty,” Jeffrey’s injuries, particularly those involving the tibial plateau within the knee, were such that deterioration would follow and “future treatment would of necessity be required.”

When the bills for the examinations by Dr. Ciccone and Dr. Rosenberg were submitted for payment, Security rejected them inasmuch as the charges had been incurred more than two years after the last previous treatment or payment. Security relied on the statute-of-limitations provision of the New Jersey Reparation Reform Act (No Fault Act), found in 39:6A-13.1(a), which reads:

Every action for the payment of benefits set forth in sections 4 and 10 of this act, except an action by a decedent’s estate, shall be commenced not later than 2 years after the injured person or survivor suffers a loss or incurs an expense and either knows or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should know that the *632 loss or expense was caused by the accident, or not later than 4 years after the accident whichever is earlier, provided, however, that if benefits have been paid before then[,] an action for further benefits may be commenced not later than 2 years after the last payment of benefits.
[Footnote statutory reference omitted; emphasis added.]

This action for a declaration of Security’s liability for outstanding medical bills and expenses followed. Defendant moved for summary judgment, but the hearing on the motion was adjourned to afford Security the opportunity to rebut the information in Dr. Rosenberg’s certification, summarized above, particularly in respect of the need for future medical treatment. Thereafter the trial court conducted what it denominated an “abbreviated trial,” in which it considered the deposition testimony of Jeffrey Rahnefeld and his mother, the deposition testimony of Dr. Ciccone, the certification of Dr. Rosenberg, and the report of Dr. Ira A. Roschelle, an orthopedic surgeon, who examined Jeffrey at the behest of defense counsel and who concluded that Jeffrey had “significant permanent partial impairment of both knees” that “[might] very well, in the future, require [him] to seek a high tibial osteotomy” or “a total knee replacement.” The trial court concluded that the circumstances came within the Zupo exception to the “two years after payment” statute of limitations of the No Fault Act, and therefore awarded judgment for plaintiffs. The Appellate Division affirmed.

II

In Zupo, supra, 98 N.J. 30, this Court affirmed, with a “housekeeping” modification, the judgment of the Appellate Division, which had reversed a grant of summary judgment in favor of a PIP carrier. We did so substantially on the basis of Judge Pressler’s opinion, reported at 193 N.J.Super. 374 (1984), which in the course of carefully parsing the No Fault Act pointed out that (1) when an automobile liability insurer acknowledges its responsibility for PIP benefits by the “unambiguous act” of making medical payments, it also necessarily assumes the responsibility to continue to make future payments *633 for an indefinite period of time “provided only that the claimed medical expenses are related to and are necessitated by the original occurrence,” id., at 381; (2) hence, if an insured suffers from a causally-related medical problem requiring continuing treatment, his or her right to payment from the PIP carrier is “vouchsafed for the indefinite future,” ibid; (3) the same right to payment is, by express statutory provision in N.J.S.A.

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Bluebook (online)
560 A.2d 670, 115 N.J. 628, 1989 N.J. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rahnefeld-v-security-ins-co-of-hartford-nj-1989.