S.T. v. 1515 Broad Street, LLC (081916) (Essex County & Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 9, 2020
DocketA-87-18
StatusPublished

This text of S.T. v. 1515 Broad Street, LLC (081916) (Essex County & Statewide) (S.T. v. 1515 Broad Street, LLC (081916) (Essex County & Statewide)) 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
S.T. v. 1515 Broad Street, LLC (081916) (Essex County & Statewide), (N.J. 2020).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

S.T. v. 1515 Broad Street, LLC (A-87-18) (081916)

Argued November 6, 2019 -- Decided March 9, 2020

ALBIN, J., writing for the Court.

Only when, through proper legal procedures, a court determines that a litigant lacks the mental capacity to govern her affairs may the litigant be deprived of the right to decide the destiny of her lawsuit. In this appeal, the Court considers whether the trial court adhered to those procedures when it empowered a guardian ad litem to make “any and all decisions regarding the ultimate disposition of this case, whether by trial or settlement,” on behalf of plaintiff S.T. without ever conducting a guardianship hearing.

On March 11, 2008, S.T. was a forty-four-year-old chemical engineer fluent in four languages. She came to this country as a teenage refugee from Vietnam and later served in the United States Army. She held a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering and master’s degrees in both chemical engineering and environmental sciences. On the evening of March 11, S.T. was working as a chemical engineer at ABB Lummis Global, located at 1515 Broad Street in Bloomfield, N.J. While exiting the building, S.T. was struck in the head by a metal plate that fell from above the building’s doorway. The next day, she went to the hospital, was diagnosed with a concussion, and was given intravenous medications for the pain. That was the first of more than 500 visits S.T. made to healthcare providers to address a constellation of conditions related to her claim that she suffered a traumatic brain injury.

One year after the accident, the Social Security Administration declared S.T. permanently disabled and awarded her permanent disability benefits. A clinical psychologist diagnosed S.T. as suffering from cognitive, anxiety, and depressive disorders and opined that S.T.’s cognitive impairment is “expected to be a chronic and permanent condition.” A forensic psychiatrist diagnosed S.T. as suffering from such conditions as post-concussion syndrome, major depressive disorder, post-traumatic migraine disorder, intracranial hypertension, and left trigeminal neuralgia and found those conditions to be “causally related to the accident and . . . permanent in nature.” A 2013 psychological report indicated that S.T.’s “[m]easures of verbal comprehension . . . suggest[ed] a superior level of receptive language functions” and that her “measures of nonverbal domains including memory, spatial processing and nonverbal abstract reasoning” were above average. On the other hand, her speed in processing complex information remained impaired.

1 In February 2010, S.T. filed a civil complaint alleging that she suffered serious injuries resulting from the negligence of the building owner and other purported responsible parties. In July 2013, defendants filed an offer of judgment in the amount of $475,000 to settle the case. S.T. rejected the offer against the advice of her attorney.

Because the attorney believed that S.T. suffered from a diminished mental capacity and that her rejection of defendants’ offer was not in her best interests, he applied to the trial court for the appointment of a guardian ad litem and arranged for the forensic psychologist to examine S.T. again. The doctor opined that S.T. “shows a diminished capacity to fully consider the risks of her decisionmaking in regard to how to proceed with the case.” S.T. later asserted that she was not advised of the purpose of the examination.

The court appointed attorney Frederick Miceli as a guardian ad litem and then ceded to him the authority to determine whether S.T. had the mental capacity to make an informed decision on whether to accept or reject a settlement offer. Miceli reviewed the “extensive case materials,” including the discovery and medical records, and interviewed S.T. twice in person and once over the telephone. He finally expressed his opinion that a guardian ad litem should be entrusted with the authority to decide for S.T. whether the case should be resolved by trial or settlement. Without conducting a guardianship hearing, the court entered an order empowering Miceli to make “all decisions regarding the ultimate disposition of this case, whether by trial or settlement in accordance with the powers of a Guardian Ad Litem as set forth in the Rules of Court.”

Without S.T.’s consent, an agreement was reached among the parties to settle the lawsuit for the sum of $625,000. The court conducted a “friendly hearing” to assess the reasonableness and fairness of the settlement and to determine whether to approve it. Based on the recommendation of the guardian ad litem and S.T.’s personal-injury attorney, the court accepted a settlement of the lawsuit against S.T.’s forceful objections.

The Appellate Division affirmed the judgment of the trial court and the procedures that led to the approval of the settlement. 455 N.J. Super. 538, 548-49 (App. Div. 2018). The Court granted S.T.’s petition for certification. 238 N.J. 437 (2019).

HELD: Before depriving S.T. of the right to control the direction of her case and appointing a guardian to make legal decisions on her behalf, the court was required to conduct a hearing to determine whether she lacked “sufficient capacity to govern [herself] and manage [her] affairs” “by reason of mental illness or intellectual disability.” See N.J.S.A. 3B:1-2; N.J.S.A. 3B:12-24; R. 4:86-4. At such a hearing, S.T. had the right to independent counsel. See R. 4:86-4(a)(7). In the absence of a guardianship hearing and a judicial finding by clear and convincing evidence that S.T. lacked the requisite mental capacity to decide how to proceed with her lawsuit, the court had no authority to accept a settlement against S.T.’s wishes. 2 1. Generally, a lawyer agrees to pursue the goals of a client to the extent the law permits, even when the lawyer believes that the client’s desires are unwise. RPC 1.14(b) presents an exception to that rule; it permits a lawyer who “reasonably believes that the client has diminished capacity, is at risk of substantial . . . financial . . . harm unless action is taken and cannot adequately act in the client’s own interest” to “take reasonably necessary protective action, including . . . , in appropriate cases, seeking the appointment of a guardian ad litem.” The Court does not question that S.T.’s attorney acted in good faith when he requested the appointment of a guardian ad litem. S.T.’s counsel, however, erred in not copying his client on the motion for the appointment of a guardian ad litem. The Court agrees with the Appellate Division that when “counsel for an alleged mentally incapacitated person makes a motion to appoint a [guardian ad litem],” the motion must be served on that person. See 455 N.J. Super. at 560 n.3. (pp. 23-25)

2. The Court also finds that the trial court, after reviewing S.T.’s counsel’s certification along with the attached expert medical reports, properly exercised its discretion in appointing a guardian ad litem. The court’s order, however, should have cited the basis of the court’s authority and made clear the role to be played by the guardian ad litem. The Court explains that the interplay between Rule 4:26-2 and Rule 4:86 is critical to an understanding of how this case should have proceeded. (p. 25)

3. Paragraph (b) of Rule 4:26-2 sets forth the initial procedure that follows when a person is alleged to be mentally incapacitated. Under Rule 4:26-2(a), a guardian for a “mentally incapacitated person” is authorized to prosecute a legal action on her behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
S.T. v. 1515 Broad Street, LLC (081916) (Essex County & Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-v-1515-broad-street-llc-081916-essex-county-statewide-nj-2020.