Twanda Jones v. Morey’s Pier, Inc. (077502) (Cape May and Statewide) , 230 N.J. 142 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                      SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. 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 Supreme Court. Please note that, in the interest of brevity,
    portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
    Twanda Jones v. Morey’s Pier, Inc. (A-75-15) (077502)
    Argued February 27, 2017 – Decided July 27, 2017
    PATTERSON, J., writing for the Court.
    In this appeal arising from the tragic death of eleven-year-old Abiah Jones after she fell from a ride in an
    amusement park, the Court considers the following: 1) the circumstances under which a defendant is barred from asserting
    contribution and common-law indemnification claims against a public entity for purposes of the Tort Claims Act; 2)
    whether the jury should be permitted to allocate a percentage of fault to a public entity pursuant to the Comparative
    Negligence Act and the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law; and 3) the effect of any such allocation of fault on plaintiffs’
    recovery of damages if the jury returns a verdict in their favor.
    On June 3, 2011, when Abiah Jones’s death occurred, she was visiting an amusement park on a trip organized by
    her charter school, PleasanTech Academy. The school is operated by the PleasanTech Academy Education Association
    (Association) and is treated as a public entity for purposes of the Tort Claims Act (TCA). Her parents filed a wrongful
    death action against Morey’s Pier, Inc., Morey’s Attractions, LLC, and the Morey Organization, Inc. (Morey defendants)
    alleging that their daughter’s death resulted from the negligent operation of the park. Neither plaintiffs nor the Morey
    defendants served a TCA notice of claim on the Association within ninety days of Abiah Jones’s death. Plaintiffs
    attempted to litigate this case in Pennsylvania, but the Superior Court dismissed the complaint on March 10, 2014.
    On June 3, 2013, plaintiffs filed this wrongful death and survival action in New Jersey. The Morey defendants
    filed a third-party complaint against the Association and sought contribution and common-law indemnification, alleging
    that its negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s death. The Association moved for summary judgment, invoking
    the TCA’s ninety-day notice of claim provision. The trial court denied the Association’s motion, finding that the TCA does
    not require the service of a notice of claim as a prerequisite to contribution or common-law indemnification claims against a
    joint tortfeasor that is a public entity. The Association filed a motion for leave to appeal in the Appellate Division, which
    was denied. The Court subsequently granted the Association’s motion for leave to appeal. 
    226 N.J. 206
     (2016).
    HELD: When a defendant does not serve a timely notice of claim on a public entity, and is not granted leave to file a late
    notice of claim, the statute bars that defendant’s cross-claim or third-party claim for contribution and common-law
    indemnification against the public entity. Accordingly, the Morey defendants’ third-party contribution and common-law
    indemnification claims against the Association are barred. On remand, the trial court should afford the Morey defendants
    an opportunity to present evidence that the Association was negligent and that its negligence was a proximate cause of
    Abiah Jones’s death. If the Morey defendants present prima facie evidence, the trial court should instruct the jury to
    determine whether any fault should be allocated to the Association. If the jury finds that the Association was negligent and
    that its negligence was a proximate cause of her death, the trial court should mold any judgment entered in plaintiffs’ favor
    to reduce the damages awarded to plaintiffs by the percentage of fault that the jury allocates to the Association.
    1. As the operator of a charter school, the Association may sue and be sued, but only to the same extent and upon the same
    conditions that a public entity can be sued. The claims asserted against the Association in this case are therefore subject to
    the TCA. When it enacted N.J.S.A. 59:8-8, the Legislature imposed a strict constraint on public entity liability. If notice is
    not timely served, the claimant shall be forever barred from recovering against a public entity. (pp. 11-13)
    2. The Court has not previously determined whether a defendant’s contribution and common-law indemnification claims
    against a public entity are barred when defendant fails to timely serve notice of a tort claim. The Court concurs with the
    analysis set forth in two published opinions, in which trial courts focused on N.J.S.A. 59:8-8’s plain language and
    construed it to bar all claims, including contribution and indemnification claims, if the claimant failed to serve a timely
    TCA notice. The Legislature did not distinguish between a plaintiff’s claim and a defendant’s cross-claim or third-party
    claim. To permit a defendant to assert a contribution or indemnification claim against a public entity or employee months
    or years after the plaintiff’s claim accrued would undermine the Legislature’s intent. Given that neither plaintiffs, nor the
    Morey defendants, served a timely notice of claim or invoked the procedure for obtaining judicial approval of a late-served
    notice, the Association is entitled to summary judgment dismissing the third-party complaint with prejudice. (pp. 14-18)
    1
    3. The Comparative Negligence Act (CNA) and Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law (JTCL) may mitigate the impact of the
    notice requirement on a defendant whose third-party claim or cross-claim for contribution is barred. In a negligence or
    strict liability action in which the question of liability is in dispute, the trial court molds the judgment based on the
    factfinder’s determination of damages and allocation of fault. A defendant compelled to pay more than the percentage of
    damages corresponding to the allocation of fault ordinarily has a remedy under the CNA: a claim for contribution governed
    by the JTCL. Application of the CNA and JTCL is complicated when an alleged joint tortfeasor is not a defendant at the
    time of trial. Even if the claims against a defendant are dismissed by the operation of a statute, apportionment of fault to
    that defendant is required by the CNA and the JTCL. Allocation of a percentage of fault to a joint tortfeasor that is not a
    defendant at trial may afford to a remaining defendant the practical benefit of the contribution claim to which it is entitled
    under the CNA and the JTCL. (pp. 18-27)
    4. In accord with the legislative policy to ensure prompt notice to public entities of potential claims against them, the TCA
    bars any claims against the Association in this case. In the CNA and the JTCL, the Legislature has expressed a policy in
    favor of a fair apportionment of damages as among joint defendants in accordance with the factfinder’s allocation of fault.
    A ruling permitting the Morey defendants to seek an allocation of fault to the Association at trial harmonizes and furthers
    the statutes’ separate goals and is an equitable result in the circumstances of this case. Despite the New Jersey location of
    the accident and the New Jersey domicile of all parties when that accident occurred, plaintiffs elected to bring their action
    in a Pennsylvania court. When this action was instituted in New Jersey, the period for the service of a TCA notice, and the
    one-year period for leave to serve a late notice had long expired. The equities thus weigh against plaintiffs, whose strategy
    deprived the Morey defendants of the opportunity to preserve their right to file a cross-claim against the Association. The
    procedural posture of this case allows for a fair determination of the Association’s alleged fault as the parties have long
    been on notice of the Morey defendants’ intention to seek the apportionment of a percentage of fault. (pp. 27-30)
    5. The Court also considers the Morey defendants’ argument that if plaintiffs prevail at trial, the court should limit the
    Morey defendants’ liability for damages to any percentage of fault that the jury apportions to them. The CNA provides that
    a plaintiff is entitled to collect the full amount of the damages awarded from any party that the factfinder determines to be
    sixty percent or more responsible for the total damages, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a), and affords to a defendant “compelled to
    pay more than his percentage share” of the damages a contribution claim against joint tortfeasors, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(e).
    The JTCL, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-3, defines that contribution claim. As the Appellate Division recognized in Burt v. West
    Jersey Health Systems, 
    339 N.J. Super. 296
     (App. Div. 2001), a joint tortfeasor’s statutory right to a dismissal of the claims
    against it could disrupt the allocation scheme. To the panel deciding Burt, a ruling limiting the defendants’ liability to the
    percentage allocated by the jury, even if that percentage met the sixty-percent threshold of N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a), best
    furthered the Legislature’s equitable intent. The Court considers the Appellate Division’s analysis in Burt to effectively
    reconcile the governing statutes. If the Morey defendants present evidence at trial that the Association was negligent and
    that its negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s death, the jury should be instructed to determine whether the
    Morey defendants have met their burden of proof on those issues. If it finds that the Morey defendants have met that
    burden, the jury may allocate a percentage of fault to the Association. If the jury allocates a percentage of fault to the
    Association, the trial court shall mold the judgment to reduce the Morey defendants’ liability in accordance with the fault
    allocated to the Association. If the jury does not find that the Morey defendants have met their burden, it should not
    allocate fault to the Association. In that case, an award of damages to plaintiffs will not be affected. (pp. 30-35)
    6. The Court reminds litigants that any party intending to pursue a claim against a public entity or employee subject to the
    TCA must act expeditiously to preserve it. Such a party must serve a notice pursuant to the Act within ninety days of the
    accrual of the claim or file an application within one year of that date for leave to serve a late notice of claim, on a showing
    of extraordinary circumstances. A plaintiff that is aware of a potential cause of action against a public entity—and litigates
    the case in a manner that deprives a defendant of an opportunity to serve a TCA notice on that entity—risks a reduction in
    any damages award by virtue of an allocation of fault under the CNA and JTCL. A defendant that is aware of its potential
    cross-claim against a public entity that may be a joint tortfeasor, but foregoes its opportunity to serve a TCA notice on that
    entity, may lose the benefit of an allocation of fault to the public entity in accordance with those statutes. (pp. 35-36)
    The trial court’s summary judgment determination is REVERSED and summary judgment is GRANTED to the
    Association. The Morey defendants’ third-party and common-law indemnification claims are DISMISSED with prejudice.
    The matter is REMANDED to the trial court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON
    and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE PATTERSON’s opinion.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-75 September Term 2015
    077502
    TWANDA JONES, CO-ADMINISTRATOR
    OF THE ESTATE OF ABIAH JONES AND
    AND BYRON JONES, CO-ADMINISTRATOR
    OF THE ESTATE OF ABIAH JONES,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    MOREY’S PIER, INC., MOREY’S
    ATTRACTIONS, LLC, AND THE
    MOREY ORGANIZATION, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    v.
    PLEASANTECH ACADEMY EDUCATION
    ASSOCIATION, INC.,
    Third-Party Defendant-Appellant.
    Argued February 27, 2017 – Decided July 27, 2017
    On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
    Division.
    Jason D. Attwood argued the cause for
    appellant (Pashman Stein, attorneys; Dawn
    Attwood, of counsel; Jason D. Attwood and
    Dawn Attwood, on the briefs).
    John H. Osorio argued the cause for
    respondents Morey’s Pier, Inc., Morey’s
    Attraction, LLC, and the Morey Organization,
    Inc. (Marshall Dennehey Warner Coleman &
    Goggin, attorneys; John H. Osorio, Larry I.
    Zucker, Adam E. Levy, and Walter F. Kawalec,
    III, on the briefs).
    1
    Heidi G. Villari argued the cause for
    respondents Twanda Jones, co-administrator
    of the Estate of Abiah Jones and Byron
    Jones, co-administrator of the Estate of
    Abiah Jones (The Beasley Firm, attorneys).
    Daniel M. Vannella, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for amicus curiae Attorney
    General of New Jersey (Christopher S.
    Porrino, Attorney General, attorney; Melissa
    H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of
    counsel; Ashley Gagnon, Deputy Attorney
    General, on the brief).
    Susan C. Sharpe submitted a brief on behalf
    of amicus curiae New Jersey Municipal Excess
    Liability Joint Insurance Fund (Dorsey &
    Semrau, LLC, attorneys; Fred C. Semrau, of
    counsel; Susan C. Sharpe on the brief).
    Wilson D. Antoine and Gary S. Lipshutz
    submitted a brief on behalf of amicus curiae
    City of Newark (Willie L. Parker,
    Corporation Counsel, attorney; Wilson D.
    Antoine, of counsel; Wilson D. Antoine and
    Gary S. Lipshutz, on the brief).
    JUSTICE PATTERSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    This appeal arises from the tragic death of eleven-year-old
    Abiah Jones after she fell from a ride in an amusement park.
    When the accident occurred, Abiah Jones was visiting the
    amusement park on a school trip organized by her charter school,
    PleasanTech Academy, operated by the PleasanTech Academy
    Education Association (Association).
    Plaintiffs Twanda Jones and Byron Jones, Abiah Jones’s
    parents and the co-administrators of her estate, filed this
    wrongful death action against Morey’s Pier, Inc., Morey’s
    2
    Attractions, LLC, and the Morey Organization, Inc. (Morey
    defendants).    Plaintiffs allege that their daughter’s death
    resulted from the Morey defendants’ negligent operation of the
    amusement park.    Plaintiffs did not name the Association as a
    defendant.     Neither plaintiffs nor the Morey defendants served
    notice of a tort claim on the Association within the ninety-day
    period prescribed by the notice of claims provision of the Tort
    Claims Act, N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.
    The Morey defendants filed a third-party claim for
    contribution and common-law indemnification against the
    Association, alleging that the Association was negligent and
    that its negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s
    death.   The Association moved for summary judgment, invoking the
    ninety-day deadline of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.     The trial court denied
    the Association’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 does not apply to contribution or common-law
    claims asserted by defendants against public entities.     We
    granted the Association’s motion for leave to appeal.
    The appeal requires that we consider three issues.     First,
    we determine whether N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 bars the Morey defendants
    from asserting contribution and common-law indemnification
    claims against the Association, which is treated as a public
    entity for purposes of the Tort Claims Act.     Second, we decide
    whether the jury should be permitted to allocate a percentage of
    3
    fault to the Association pursuant to the Comparative Negligence
    Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.8, and the Joint Tortfeasors
    Contribution Law, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-1 to -5, notwithstanding the
    parties’ failure to serve a notice of claim on the Association
    in accordance with N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.   Third, we consider the
    effect of any allocation of fault by the jury to the charter
    school on plaintiffs’ recovery of damages, in the event that the
    jury returns a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor and the trial court
    molds the judgment in accordance with N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(d).
    We reverse the trial court’s determination.    The plain
    language of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 requires parties such as the Morey
    defendants seeking to assert a claim against a public entity to
    serve a notice of claim within ninety days of the date on which
    the cause of action accrues.   Because the Morey defendants did
    not serve a timely notice of claim on the Association, their
    third-party contribution and common-law indemnification claims
    against the Association are barred.
    We hold, however, that the trial court should afford the
    Morey defendants an opportunity to present evidence at trial
    that the Association was negligent and that its negligence was a
    proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s death.   If the Morey defendants
    present prima facie evidence, the trial court should instruct
    the jury to determine whether any fault should be allocated to
    the Association in accordance with N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2.   Should
    4
    the jury find that the Association was negligent and that its
    negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s death, the
    trial court should mold any judgment entered in plaintiffs’
    favor pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(d) to reduce the damages
    awarded to plaintiffs by the percentage of fault that the jury
    allocates to the Association.
    I.
    We base our account of the facts on the allegations set
    forth in plaintiffs’ complaint and other materials in the
    summary judgment record presented to the trial court.
    Abiah Jones was a student at PleasanTech Academy, a charter
    school in Pleasantville operated by the Association in
    accordance with a charter granted by the New Jersey Department
    of Education.    According to plaintiffs, to celebrate the
    achievements of its honor students at the close of the school
    year, PleasanTech Academy organized a school trip to an
    amusement park in Wildwood owned and operated by the Morey
    defendants.1    The school trip took place on June 3, 2011.
    Plaintiffs allege that Abiah Jones was killed after falling
    from the “Giant Wheel” amusement ride, a Ferris wheel that is,
    at its highest point, almost one hundred sixty feet tall.     They
    1  In its third-party complaint, the Morey defendants assert that
    defendant Morey’s Pier, Inc., has not existed since 1997, when
    it became part of the Morey Organization.
    5
    assert that at the time of the accident, the child was riding
    alone in a carriage on the “Giant Wheel,” contrary to the Morey
    defendants’ operating procedures, which required at least two
    riders in each carriage, and that high winds made the ride
    unsafe.   Plaintiffs claim that the Morey defendants failed to
    warn of the dangerous wind conditions, failed to provide
    adequate safety instructions, failed to install proper safety
    measures to prevent falls from the “Giant Wheel” carriages,
    inadequately maintained the locks on the carriages, and failed
    to lock the door on the carriage from which the child fell.
    It is undisputed that neither plaintiffs nor the Morey
    defendants served a Tort Claims Act notice of claim on the
    Association pursuant to N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 within ninety days of
    Abiah Jones’s death.
    Plaintiffs initially attempted to litigate this case in a
    Pennsylvania forum.    On July 7, 2011, they filed a complaint in
    the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania.
    The Morey defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on forum non
    conveniens grounds.    They relied on the New Jersey site of the
    accident; the New Jersey residence of Abiah Jones and her
    mother, plaintiff Twanda Jones; the New Jersey locations of
    PleasanTech Academy and the amusement park; and the absence of
    any nexus between Pennsylvania and this case other than the
    Pennsylvania domicile of the child’s father, plaintiff Byron
    6
    Jones.2   The Morey defendants agreed to waive any statute of
    limitations defense and accept service of process in New Jersey.
    Although the Pennsylvania trial court denied the Morey
    defendants’ motion, the Superior Court of Pennsylvania reversed
    the trial court’s determination and dismissed the complaint
    without prejudice on March 10, 2014.
    On June 3, 2013, two years after their daughter’s death,
    plaintiffs filed this wrongful death and survival action.       The
    Morey defendants filed a third-party complaint against the
    Association.    They claimed that the Association negligently
    organized, supervised and chaperoned the field trip to the
    amusement park, and that the Association’s negligence
    proximately caused Abiah Jones’s death.    The Morey defendants
    sought contribution pursuant to the Joint Tortfeasors
    Contribution Law, as well as common-law indemnification and
    other relief.
    The Association moved for summary judgment pursuant to Rule
    4:46-2.   It contended that because defendants served no notice
    of claim under N.J.S.A. 59:8-8, the Tort Claims Act barred the
    assertion of the contribution and common-law indemnification
    claims.   The Association suggested to the motion judge that at
    trial, the jury should be permitted to allocate fault to it
    2  At the time of Abiah Jones’s death, her father was also a New
    Jersey resident.
    7
    pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2, notwithstanding the dismissal of
    the Morey defendants’ cross-claims against it.    The Morey
    defendants countered that their cross-claims were not barred by
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 because that provision applies only to claims
    asserted by plaintiffs.   Plaintiffs urged the trial court to
    reserve decision on the question of an allocation of fault to
    the Association.
    The trial court denied the Association’s summary judgment
    motion.   Declining to follow case law to the contrary, the court
    interpreted N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 to limit only a plaintiff’s right to
    assert a claim against a public entity.   It concluded that
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 does not require the service of a notice of
    claim as a prerequisite to a defendant’s contribution or common-
    law indemnification claims against a joint tortfeasor that is a
    public entity.
    The Association filed a motion for leave to appeal in the
    Appellate Division.   An Appellate Division panel denied the
    motion.   We granted the Association’s motion for leave to
    appeal.   
    226 N.J. 206
     (2016).   We also granted the motions of
    the City of Newark, the New Jersey Municipal Excess Liability
    Insurance Fund, and the Attorney General to appear as amici
    curiae.
    II.
    8
    The Association urges the Court to reverse the trial
    court’s determination.   It states that as a charter school, it
    is entitled to the protection of the Tort Claims Act’s notice
    provision, N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.    It contends that the trial court’s
    decision thwarts the Legislature’s objectives in enacting the
    Tort Claims Act.   The Association contends that a ruling
    permitting the jury to allocate a percentage of fault to it
    pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2 would afford the Morey defendants
    an opportunity to reduce their liability to plaintiffs, as a
    substitute for their third-party claim.    It urges the Court to
    refrain from imposing any obligation on it to provide discovery
    to the parties in this case.
    The Morey defendants assert that plaintiffs’ failure to
    serve a notice of claim against the Association should not
    deprive them of their right to assert contribution and
    indemnification claims against that entity.   They argue that if
    the Court bars their third-party claims under N.J.S.A. 59:8-8,
    it should authorize the jury to apportion fault to the
    Association.   The Morey defendants seek a ruling directing the
    trial court to mold any judgment in plaintiffs’ favor, so that
    their share of an award of damages will not exceed the
    percentage of fault allocated to them by the jury.    They also
    ask the Court to ensure that if their claims against the
    9
    Association are dismissed, the Association will provide
    discovery to the parties.
    Citing N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a), plaintiffs contend that the
    liability of the Morey defendants should not be limited to the
    percentage of fault that the jury allocates to those defendants
    if that percentage is sixty percent or more.   They argue that
    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a) is unambiguous and that they are entitled
    to one hundred percent of any damages that the jury awards.
    Amicus curiae the City of Newark argues that N.J.S.A. 59:8-
    8 bars any party that fails to comply with the Tort Claims Act’s
    notice provisions from suing a public entity, even if that
    public entity is a joint tortfeasor that may otherwise be liable
    for contribution.   The City of Newark urges the Court to
    authorize the factfinder to allocate fault to the public entity
    that is immune from suit and to limit any award of damages
    against the private tortfeasor in accordance with the percentage
    of fault allocated by the factfinder, even when that percentage
    constitutes or exceeds sixty percent.
    Amicus curiae New Jersey Municipal Excess Liability Joint
    Insurance Fund similarly contends that N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 bars any
    claim against a public entity unless a notice of claim is served
    and supports the allocation of a percentage of liability to an
    entity that is immune under the Tort Claims Act.
    10
    Amicus curiae the Attorney General asserts that the Tort
    Claims Act mandates a determination that the Association is
    immune from all claims.   The Attorney General argues that the
    Court may reconcile the statutes at issue by permitting the jury
    to apportion a percentage of fault to the Association, and
    limiting the Morey defendants’ liability to the percentage of
    fault that the jury allocates to it.
    III.
    A.
    All parties agree that neither plaintiffs nor the Morey
    defendants served a Tort Claims Act notice on the Association
    within the time period prescribed by N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.
    Accordingly, no party contended before the trial court, or
    argues here, that facts material to the summary judgment motion
    were in dispute; the parties contest only the legal consequences
    of undisputed facts.   See Rule 4:46-2(c) (providing that summary
    judgment should be awarded if record demonstrates “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”).
    When, as here, “no issue of fact exists, and only a
    question of law remains, this Court affords no special deference
    to the legal determinations of the trial court.”   Cypress Point
    Condo. Ass’n v. Adria Towers, L.L.C., 
    226 N.J. 403
    , 415 (2016)
    11
    (citing Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995)).    We review the trial court’s decision de
    novo.
    B.
    As the operator of a charter school, the Association may
    “[s]ue and be sued, but only to the same extent and upon the
    same conditions that a public entity can be sued.”    N.J.S.A.
    18A:36A-6(b).   The claims asserted against the Association in
    this case are therefore subject to the Tort Claims Act.
    The Tort Claims Act provides “broad but not absolute
    immunity for all public entities.”    Marcinczyk v. N.J. Police
    Training Comm’n, 
    203 N.J. 586
    , 597 (2010).    The statute is
    intended “to bring uniformity to the law in this State with
    respect to sovereign immunity to tort claims enjoyed by public
    entities.”   Tryanowski v. Lodi Bd. of Educ., 
    274 N.J. Super. 265
    , 268 (Law Div. 1994).    The Act’s “guiding principle” is that
    “immunity from tort liability is the general rule and liability
    is the exception.”    D.D. v. Univ. of Med. & Dentistry of N.J.,
    
    213 N.J. 130
    , 134 (2013) (quoting Coyne v. Dep’t of Transp., 
    182 N.J. 481
    , 488 (2005)).
    When it enacted N.J.S.A. 59:8-8, the Legislature imposed a
    strict constraint on public entity liability.    That provision
    mandates that “[a] claim relating to a cause of action for death
    or for injury or damage to person or to property shall be
    12
    presented . . . not later than the 90th day after accrual of the
    cause of action.”   N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.   If notice is not timely
    served in accordance with the statute, “[t]he claimant shall be
    forever barred from recovering against a public entity.”    Ibid.;
    see also D.D., supra, 213 N.J. at 146 (explaining consequences
    of party’s failure to meet ninety-day deadline); Rogers v. Cape
    May Cty. Office of Pub. Defs., 
    208 N.J. 414
    , 420 (2011) (noting
    that Tort Claims Act establishes procedures for bringing claims,
    which “include filing of a timely notice”).3
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 is intended
    (1) to allow the public entity at least six
    months for administrative review with the
    opportunity to settle meritorious claims prior
    to the bringing of suit; (2) to provide the
    public entity with prompt notification of a
    claim in order to adequately investigate the
    facts and prepare a defense; (3) to afford the
    public entity a chance to correct the
    conditions or practices which gave rise to the
    claim; and (4) to inform the State in advance
    as to the indebtedness or liability that it
    may be expected to meet.
    3  N.J.S.A. 59:8-9 authorizes a claimant, “within one year after
    the accrual of his claim” to file an application for leave to
    serve a late tort claims notice. That application may be
    granted “in the discretion of a judge of the Superior Court,” if
    there is a showing of “sufficient reasons constituting
    extraordinary circumstances” for the claimant’s failure to
    timely serve the notice, and if the public entity will not be
    “substantially prejudiced thereby.” N.J.S.A. 59:8-9; see also
    D.D., supra, 213 N.J. at 134-35 (applying N.J.S.A. 59:8-9);
    McDade v. Siazon, 
    208 N.J. 463
    , 477 (2011) (same); Rogers,
    supra, 
    208 N.J. at 427
     (same). In this case, neither plaintiffs
    nor the Morey defendants filed an application pursuant to
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-9.
    13
    [McDade v. Siazon, 
    208 N.J. 463
    , 475-76
    (2011) (internal quotation marks omitted) (
    quoting Beauchamp v. Amedio, 
    164 N.J. 111
    ,
    121-22 (2000)).]
    Thus, when it enacted the notice of claim provision, the
    Legislature sought to afford to public entities an “opportunity
    to plan for potential liability and correct the underlying
    condition.”   Id. at 476.
    We have not previously determined whether a defendant’s
    contribution and common-law indemnification claims against a
    public entity are barred when it fails to serve a notice of tort
    claim within the time limit imposed by N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.   Our
    courts’ published decisions addressing that issue reach
    divergent results.
    In three published decisions, the Appellate Division and
    Law Division viewed a defendant’s claims for contribution and
    indemnification to be beyond the reach of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.     See
    S.P. v. Collier High Sch., 
    319 N.J. Super. 452
    , 475 (App. Div.
    1999) (construing N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 to authorize defendant to file
    third-party action for contribution, common-law indemnification
    and contractual indemnification against public entity, despite
    defendant’s failure to comply with N.J.S.A. 59:8-8’s notice
    requirement); Ezzi v. De Laurentis, 
    172 N.J. Super. 592
    , 600
    (Law Div. 1980) (“[P]laintiff’s failure to comply with the time
    and notice provisions of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 will not bar
    14
    defendants’ third-party claim for contribution against the
    municipality.”); Markey v. Skog, 
    129 N.J. Super. 192
    , 200 (Law
    Div. 1974) (holding that because contribution claim is “inchoate
    right which does not ripen into a cause of action until [the
    defendant] has paid more than his pro rata portion of the
    judgment obtained against him by the plaintiff,” defendant may
    assert that right despite failure to serve notice of claim under
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8); see also D’Annunzio v. Wildwood Crest, 
    172 N.J. Super. 85
    , 88, 91-92 (App. Div. 1980) (relying on Markey to
    hold that N.J.S.A. 59:9-2(e), which prohibits actions “under a
    subrogation provision in an insurance contract against a public
    entity or public employee,” does not bar defendant’s
    contribution claim for subrogation).
    In two other published opinions, trial courts construed
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 to bar all claims, including contribution and
    indemnification claims, if the claimant failed to serve a Tort
    Claims Act notice within the ninety-day period set forth in the
    statute.   See Estate of Kingan v. Estate of Hurston, 
    139 N.J. Super. 383
    , 384-85 (Law Div. 1976) (holding that “[t]here is no
    sense in the Legislature carefully prescribing that a notice be
    given to governmental agencies if the courts can emasculate the
    statute’s intent by judicial construction” and dismissing third-
    party claims against public entity given claimant’s failure to
    serve notice of claim under N.J.S.A. 59:8-8); Cancel v. Watson,
    15
    
    131 N.J. Super. 320
    , 322 (Law Div. 1974) (barring third-party
    contribution and indemnification claims against municipality
    based on noncompliance with terms of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8).
    We concur with the analysis set forth in Kingan and Cancel,
    in which the courts properly focused on N.J.S.A. 59:8-8’s plain
    language.   See Wilson v. City of Jersey City, 
    209 N.J. 558
    , 572
    (2012) (noting that in statutory construction, “[o]ur paramount
    goal . . . is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent”
    (citing State v. Maguire, 
    84 N.J. 508
    , 514 (1980)), and that
    “[w]hen that intent is revealed by a statute’s plain language --
    ascribing to the words used ‘their ordinary meaning and
    significance’ -- we need look no further” (quoting DiProspero v.
    Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492 (2005))).
    The statute is expansively phrased.    The Legislature did
    not distinguish between a plaintiff’s claim and a defendant’s
    cross-claim or third-party claim against a public entity.     See
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.   It did not exempt from the tort claims notice
    requirement a defendant’s claim for contribution and
    indemnification, or any other category of claims.   See 
    ibid.
         In
    short, the statute’s import is clear:   it governs contribution
    and indemnification claims brought by defendants, as it governs
    direct claims asserted by plaintiffs.
    Were we to interpret N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 to permit a defendant
    to assert a contribution or indemnification claim against a
    16
    public entity or employee months or years after the plaintiff’s
    claim accrued, we would undermine the Legislature’s intent:     to
    permit public entities to promptly investigate claims, correct
    the conditions or practices that gave rise to the claim, prepare
    a defense, and assess the need for reserves.     McDade, supra, 
    208 N.J. at 475-76
    ; Beauchamp, 
    supra,
     
    164 N.J. at 121-22
    .     Moreover,
    a judicial determination excluding contribution and
    indemnification claims from the tort claims notice requirement
    would contravene the public policy stated by the Legislature in
    the Tort Claims Act itself:    “public entities shall only be
    liable for their negligence within the limitations of this act
    and in accordance with the fair and uniform principles
    established herein.”     N.J.S.A. 59:1-2.   “In light of that
    overriding policy, the [Tort Claims Act] has been construed to
    allow the finding of liability against public entities only when
    permitted by the Act.”    Frugis v. Bracigliano, 
    177 N.J. 250
    , 275
    (2003).   The Tort Claims Act does not permit the imposition of
    liability on the Association by direct claim, cross-claim, or
    third-party claim, and we do not revise its terms.
    Accordingly, we hold that when a defendant does not serve a
    timely notice of claim on a public entity pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    59:8-8 and is not granted leave to file a late notice of claim
    under N.J.S.A. 59:8-9, the Tort Claims Act bars that defendant’s
    17
    cross-claim or third-party claim for contribution and common-law
    indemnification against the public entity.
    Given that neither plaintiffs nor the Morey defendants
    served a timely notice of claim under N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 or invoked
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-9’s procedure for obtaining judicial approval of a
    late-served tort claims notice, the Association is entitled to
    summary judgment dismissing the Morey defendants’ third-party
    complaint with prejudice.
    C.
    1.
    When N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 is applied to dismiss a defendant’s
    cross-claim or third-party complaint against a public entity or
    public employee, it may deprive a defendant of its right to
    pursue a claim against a joint tortfeasor before the defendant
    is aware that the claim exists.     As the Appellate Division
    observed in S.P., supra, a defendant “may not even learn that he
    has a potential contribution claim within this period, since the
    plaintiff may not file suit until well after the 90-day period.”
    
    319 N.J. Super. at 475
     (quoting Perello v. Woods, 
    197 N.J. Super. 539
    , 546 (Law Div. 1984)).
    In some circumstances, however, the statutory scheme for
    the allocation of fault to joint tortfeasors, prescribed by the
    Comparative Negligence Act and Joint Tortfeasors Contribution
    Law, may mitigate the impact of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 on a defendant
    18
    whose third-party claim or cross-claim for contribution is
    barred.4   The Comparative Negligence Act was designed to further
    the principle that “[i]t is only fair that each person only pay
    for injuries he or she proximately caused.”   Fernandes v. DAR
    Dev. Corp., 
    222 N.J. 390
    , 407 (2015) (quoting Waterson v. Gen.
    Motors Corp., 
    111 N.J. 238
    , 267 (1988)).   To that end, in a
    negligence or strict liability action “in which the question of
    liability is in dispute,” the trier of fact makes two
    determinations:
    (1) The amount of damages which would be
    recoverable by the injured party regardless of
    any consideration of negligence or fault, that
    is, the full value of the injured party’s
    damages.
    (2) The extent, in the form of a percentage,
    of each party’s negligence or fault.      The
    percentage of negligence or fault of each
    party shall be based on 100% and the total of
    all percentages of negligence or fault of all
    the parties to a suit shall be 100%.
    [N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a).]
    4 The common-law indemnification claim asserted by the Morey
    defendants and dismissed pursuant to N.J.S.A. 59:8-8 in this
    case is distinct from defendants’ statutory contribution claim.
    Neither the Comparative Negligence Act nor the Joint Tortfeasors
    Contribution Act governs a common-law indemnification claim, and
    an allocation of fault pursuant to those statutes is unrelated
    to such a claim. See Gulf Oil Corp. v. ACF Indus., Inc., 
    221 N.J. Super. 420
    , 431 (App. Div. 1987), certif. denied, 
    111 N.J. 613
     (1988); White v. Newark Morning Star Ledger, 
    245 N.J. Super. 606
    , 612 (Law Div. 1990).
    19
    After the factfinder determines the total damages and
    allocates fault in accordance with N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a), the
    trial court molds the judgment based on those findings.
    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(d).   In that calculation, the judge reduces
    the damages “by the percentage of negligence attributable to the
    person recovering.”   N.J.S.A. 59:9-4.    Under another provision,
    the plaintiff may recover “[t]he full amount of the damages from
    any party determined by the trier of fact to be 60% or more
    responsible for the total damages.”      N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a).   The
    plaintiff’s recovery from “any party determined by the trier of
    fact to be less than 60% responsible for the total damages” is
    limited to “[o]nly that percentage of the damages directly
    attributable to that party’s negligence or fault,” as determined
    by the factfinder.    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(c).
    A defendant compelled to pay more than the percentage of
    damages corresponding to the jury’s allocation of fault to that
    defendant ordinarily has a remedy under the Comparative
    Negligence Act:   a claim for “contribution from the other joint
    tortfeasors.”   N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(e).     The contribution claim is
    governed by the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law, in which the
    Legislature declared that “[t]he right of contribution exists
    among joint tortfeasors.”   N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2.    “The Joint
    Tortfeasors Contribution Law was enacted to promote the fair
    sharing of the burden of judgment by joint tortfeasors and to
    20
    prevent a plaintiff from arbitrarily selecting his or her
    victim.”    Holloway v. State, 
    125 N.J. 386
    , 400-01 (1991)
    (citation omitted).    The statute provides that where an injury
    is caused by the conduct of joint tortfeasors, and a joint
    tortfeasor pays the judgment “in whole or in part,” that party
    shall be entitled to recover contribution from other joint
    tortfeasors “for the excess so paid over his pro rata share.”
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-3.
    Applied together, “[t]he Comparative Negligence Act and the
    Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law comprise the statutory
    framework for the allocation of fault when multiple parties are
    alleged to have contributed to the plaintiff’s harm.”      Town of
    Kearny v. Brandt, 
    214 N.J. 76
    , 96 (2013).    As this Court has
    observed:
    The modified comparative negligence approach
    reflected by our statute provides a fairer
    framework     for     imposing    liability,
    apportioning losses, and allowing redress.
    Our modified joint and several liability
    statute also promotes redress to plaintiffs
    and provides for a fair apportionment of
    damages as among joint defendants.      When
    applied together, the statutes implement New
    Jersey’s approach to fair apportionment of
    damages among plaintiffs and defendants, and
    among joint defendants.
    [Erny v. Estate of Merola, 
    171 N.J. 86
    , 98-
    99 (2002) (citations omitted).]
    The two statutes “promote ‘the distribution of loss in
    proportion to the respective faults of the parties causing that
    21
    loss.’”   Town of Kearny, supra, 214 N.J. at 102 (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (quoting Brodsky v. Grinnell Haulers,
    Inc., 
    181 N.J. 102
    , 114 (2004)).       They ensure that damages are
    ordinarily apportioned to joint tortfeasors in conformity to the
    factfinder’s allocation of fault.      Ibid.
    2.
    A trial court’s application of the Comparative Negligence
    Act and Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law is complicated when,
    as here, a party alleged to be a joint tortfeasor is not a
    defendant at the time of trial.     In a series of decisions, our
    courts have considered whether a factfinder may apportion fault
    in such a setting.
    In general, “our courts have barred apportionment where, as
    a matter of law, [the person or entity to whom an allocation of
    fault is sought] could not under any circumstances be a joint
    tortfeasor under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2.”       Town of Kearny, supra, 214
    N.J. at 102 (citing Brodsky, 
    supra,
     
    181 N.J. at 115
    ).5      In other
    5  In Ramos v. Browning Ferris, the Appellate Division rejected
    the argument of the defendant supplier of workplace equipment
    that the jury should allocate fault to the plaintiff’s employer,
    which was immune from civil liability under any circumstances
    under the Workers’ Compensation Act, N.J.S.A. 34:15-1 to -146.
    Ramos v. Browning Ferris Indus. of S. Jersey, Inc., 
    194 N.J. Super. 96
    , 106 (App. Div. 1984), rev’d on other grounds, 
    103 N.J. 177
     (1986). In Bencivenga v. J.J.A.M.M., Inc., the
    Appellate Division denied a defendant’s request that the jury
    allocate fault to an unidentified individual who had assaulted
    the plaintiff on the defendant’s premises and was named in the
    complaint as a fictitious defendant pursuant to Rule 4:26-4.
    22
    decisions, however, this Court and the Appellate Division have
    permitted a factfinder to allocate fault to an individual or
    entity, notwithstanding the fact that at the time of trial that
    individual or entity is not liable to pay damages to the
    plaintiff, and the allocation may reduce the amount of damages
    awarded to the plaintiff.
    This Court’s first decision recognizing that principle was
    Young v. Latta, 
    123 N.J. 584
     (1991).   There, the plaintiff in a
    medical malpractice action settled with one physician defendant
    and proceeded to trial against another physician.     
    Id.
     at 596-
    97.   Although the non-settling physician had not asserted a
    contribution claim against the settling defendant, the Court
    permitted the jury to allocate fault to the settling defendant.
    
    Ibid.
       It held that “a non-settling defendant may seek a credit
    in every case in which there are multiple defendants, whether or
    not a cross-claim for contribution has been filed.”    
    Id. at 596
    .
    The Court noted that “a non-settling defendant’s right to a
    
    258 N.J. Super. 399
    , 406-07 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    130 N.J. 598
     (1992). But see Krzykalski v. Tindall, 
    448 N.J. Super. 1
    , 8 (App. Div. 2016) (finding that jury may apportion fault to
    uninsured motorist even if not labeled “party”), certif.
    granted, ___ N.J. ___ (2017); Cockerline v. Menendez, 
    411 N.J. Super. 596
    , 619 (App. Div.) (“[T]o preclude defendants from
    seeking an apportionment of liability against the phantom
    [defendants] . . . frustrates the purposes of the joint
    tortfeasor and comparative fault law. The trial court erred
    when it precluded the jury from making such an apportionment.”),
    certif. denied, 
    201 N.J. 499
     (2010).
    23
    credit [for the percentage of fault allocated to the settling
    defendant] takes the place of contribution rights extinguished
    by the settlement.”    Id. at 595; see also Kranz v. Schuss, 
    447 N.J. Super. 168
    , 181-82 (App. Div.) (holding that “[t]he
    equitable result is to permit defendants to have any judgment
    that plaintiffs may secure against them reduced by the amount of
    fault a jury attributes” to New York defendants, not subject to
    New Jersey jurisdiction, who settled separate action in New
    York), certif. denied, 
    228 N.J. 424
     (2016).
    The allocation procedure discussed in Young, 
    supra,
     has
    been held to govern a range of circumstances beyond the
    settling-defendant situation in which that case arose.     
    123 N.J. at 586
    .    In Brodsky, 
    supra,
     this Court reversed a motor vehicle
    negligence judgment and remanded for a new trial on the ground
    that the trial court improperly gave the jury an ultimate-
    outcome instruction that a defendant whose fault was found to be
    sixty percent or more would be liable for the total damages
    awarded.    
    181 N.J. at 113-16
    .   In reaching that holding, the
    Court noted that the jury should assess the fault of an
    uninsured driver notwithstanding the trial court’s dismissal of
    the claims against that driver because those claims were
    discharged in bankruptcy.    
    Ibid.
    In Town of Kearny, supra, 214 N.J. at 103-04, although the
    statute of repose, N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1.1(a), barred the claims
    24
    against a defendant in a construction dispute, we authorized the
    allocation of fault to that defendant at trial.       There, we noted
    that “apportionment of fault under the Comparative Negligence
    Act and the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law does not turn on
    whether the plaintiff is in a position to recover damages from
    the defendant at issue” and that apportionment is not
    necessarily barred by virtue of “statutory constraints on a
    plaintiff’s ability to recover from a given defendant.”       Id. at
    103 (citing Brodsky, 
    supra,
     
    181 N.J. at 116
    ; Bolz v. Bolz, 
    400 N.J. Super. 154
    , 161-62 (App. Div. 2008); Johnson v.
    Mountainside Hosp., 
    239 N.J. Super. 312
    , 319 (App. Div.),
    certif. denied, 
    122 N.J. 188
     (1990)).      In Town of Kearny, the
    remaining defendants were entitled to an allocation of fault
    against the defendant dismissed pursuant to the statute of
    repose, with any allocation to the dismissed party reducing the
    award of damages to the plaintiff.       Id. at 103-04.
    The appellate panel deciding Bolz, 
    supra,
     
    400 N.J. Super. at 159-60
    , considered the interplay of the Tort Claims Act, the
    Comparative Negligence Act and the Joint Tortfeasors
    Contribution Law.     In Bolz, the Tort Claims Act barred both the
    plaintiff and a defendant from asserting claims against a public
    entity and public employee because the plaintiff was found not
    to have sustained an injury meeting the statutory criteria of
    N.J.S.A. 59:9-2(d).     
    Id. at 160-61
    .   The panel held that the
    25
    defendant “was entitled to have the jury determine each party’s
    percentage of negligence or fault in causing the injury,” and
    that if that defendant was determined to be less than sixty
    percent at fault, “he would be responsible to pay damages only
    for his percentage of fault.”     
    Id. at 160
    .
    In Johnson, supra, 
    239 N.J. Super. at 319-20
    , another
    appellate panel extended the allocation principle to a setting
    in which a joint tortfeasor remained a defendant at trial but
    was not liable to pay damages in excess of a statutory limit.
    There, a section of the Charitable Immunity Act, N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-7 to -11, imposed a cap on the quantum of damages that
    could be imposed on a hospital.    
    Ibid.
       Despite that cap, the
    Appellate Division held that the jury was permitted to allocate
    a percentage of fault to the hospital, potentially reducing the
    total damages to be awarded to the plaintiff.      
    Ibid.
    Our courts have thus held in several settings that even if
    the claims against a defendant are dismissed by virtue of the
    operation of a statute, apportionment of fault to that defendant
    is required by the Comparative Negligence Act and the Joint
    Tortfeasors Contribution Law.     See Town of Kearny, supra, 214
    N.J. at 103; Brodsky, 
    supra,
     
    181 N.J. at 116-18
    ; Bolz, 
    supra,
    400 N.J. Super. at 159-60
    ; Burt v. W. Jersey Health Sys., 
    339 N.J. Super. 296
    , 304-05 (App. Div. 2001).       As those decisions
    recognize, allocation of a percentage of fault to a joint
    26
    tortfeasor that is not a defendant at trial may afford to a
    remaining defendant the practical benefit of the contribution
    claim to which it is entitled under the Comparative Negligence
    Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(e), and the Joint Tortfeasors
    Contribution Law, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2, -3.
    3.
    Against that backdrop, we consider whether the objectives
    of the Tort Claims Act, the Comparative Negligence Act and the
    Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law are furthered by an
    allocation of fault to the Association if the Morey defendants
    present prima facie evidence at trial that negligent conduct by
    the Association was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s death.
    When, as here, we construe multiple statutes, we follow the
    principle that “[s]tatutes that deal with the same matter or
    subject should be read in pari materia and construed together as
    a unitary and harmonious whole.”      St. Peter’s Univ. Hosp. v.
    Lacy, 
    185 N.J. 1
    , 14-15 (2005) (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting In re Adoption of a Child by W.P. & M.P., 
    163 N.J. 158
    , 182 (2000) (Poritz, C.J., dissenting)).
    In accord with the legislative policy to ensure prompt
    notice to public entities of potential claims against them, the
    Tort Claims Act bars any claims against the Association in this
    case.   N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.   In the allocation provisions of the
    Comparative Negligence Act, and the contribution right created
    27
    by the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law, the Legislature has
    expressed a policy in favor of “a fair apportionment of damages
    as among joint defendants” in accordance with the factfinder’s
    allocation of fault.   Erny, supra, 
    171 N.J. at 99
    ; see also
    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(d), -5.3(e); N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2, -3.    A ruling
    permitting the Morey defendants to seek an allocation of fault
    to the Association at trial harmonizes and furthers the three
    statutes’ separate goals.
    Authorizing the Morey defendants to seek an allocation of
    fault to the Association is an equitable result in the
    circumstances of this case.   Despite the New Jersey location of
    the accident and the New Jersey domicile of all parties when
    that accident occurred, plaintiffs elected to bring their action
    in a Pennsylvania court which may not have had personal
    jurisdiction over the Association, the operator of a New Jersey
    charter school.   When the Pennsylvania appellate court granted
    defendants’ motion to dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds,
    and this action was finally instituted in a New Jersey court,
    the ninety-day period for the service of a Tort Claims Act
    notice on the Association under N.J.S.A. 9:2-2, and the one-year
    period for moving before a Superior Court judge for leave to
    serve a late notice under N.J.S.A. 9:2-2, had long expired.     The
    equities thus weigh against plaintiffs, whose Pennsylvania
    strategy thus deprived the Morey defendants of the opportunity
    28
    to preserve their right to file a cross-claim against the
    Association.
    Moreover, the procedural posture of this case allows for a
    fair determination of the Association’s alleged fault.     The
    parties have long been on notice of the Morey defendants’
    intention to seek the apportionment of a percentage of fault to
    the Association at trial.6   Limited discovery, overseen by the
    trial court in accordance with the court rules, will afford the
    Morey defendants the opportunity to prove the fault of the
    Association and give plaintiff the opportunity to gather
    evidence to oppose those proofs.7
    6  In Young, 
    supra,
     the Court stressed the importance of notice
    to the plaintiff, “as early in the case as possible,” that a
    non-settling defendant would seek an allocation of fault to a
    settling defendant, and cautioned courts and parties that a non-
    settling defendant’s delay in providing that notice may bar the
    allocation. 
    123 N.J. at 597
    . Rule 4:7-5, which codifies the
    allocation procedure set forth in Young, requires that the
    plaintiff be “fairly apprised prior to trial that the liability
    of the settling defendant remained an issue and was accorded a
    fair opportunity to meet that issue at trial.” R. 4:7-5(c); see
    also Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment 2.2
    on R. 4:7-5 (2017). A defendant should similarly provide prompt
    notice to the plaintiff and other defendants that it intends to
    seek an allocation of fault to a joint tortfeasor dismissed from
    the action by virtue of N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.
    7  We do not agree with the Morey defendants that the Association
    should remain a defendant in this case in order to provide
    discovery. The Association need not be a defendant in order to
    be subject to discovery. See, e.g., R. 4:14-7(a) (authorizing
    service of subpoena on witness for deposition and production of
    documents). On remand, the trial court should ensure that the
    Association responds to all parties’ reasonable requests for
    discovery.
    29
    Accordingly, if the Morey defendants present prima facie
    evidence of the Association’s negligence when the case proceeds
    to trial, the trial court should instruct the jury to determine
    whether the Morey defendants have proven by a preponderance of
    the evidence that the Association was negligent and that its
    negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s injuries and
    death.8
    4.
    Finally, we consider the Morey defendants’ argument that if
    plaintiffs prevail at trial and the trial court molds the
    judgment pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(d), the court should
    limit the Morey defendants’ liability for damages to any
    percentage of fault that the jury apportions to them, whether or
    not that percentage meets the sixty-percent threshold of
    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a).
    The Morey defendants rely on the Appellate Division’s
    analysis in Burt, supra, 
    339 N.J. Super. at 305-10
    .
    There, an Appellate Division panel harmonized the allocation
    scheme of the Comparative Negligence Act and the Joint
    8  In the limited record before the Court, the Morey defendants
    do not describe the evidence that they would offer to prove that
    the Association, the operator of a charter school, was negligent
    and that its negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s
    amusement park accident. We take no position as to whether
    there exists any such evidence in this case.
    30
    Tortfeasors Contribution Law with the Affidavit of Merit Act,
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27 to -29.     
    Id. at 307-08
    .   The trial court had
    dismissed the plaintiff’s medical malpractice claim against the
    anesthesiologists who had treated her because she did not timely
    file an affidavit of merit supporting her malpractice claims
    against them, as required by the Act.      
    Id. at 302-03, 308
    .    The
    court granted the plaintiff’s application to bar the remaining
    defendants, the treating hospital and nurses, from asserting at
    trial that the dismissed anesthesiologists were negligent.        
    Id. at 309-10
    .
    The Appellate Division reversed the trial court’s
    determination.   
    Id. at 311
    .    It acknowledged the Legislature’s
    intent, in enacting the Comparative Negligence Act and the Joint
    Tortfeasors Contribution Law, was to “provide that ordinarily
    each tortfeasor will respond in damages according to its own
    adjudicated percentage of fault.”      
    Id. at 304
    .   The panel held
    that the defendant hospital and nurses were entitled to an
    allocation of fault against the dismissed anesthesiologists.
    
    Id. at 307-10
    .   It ruled that the “plaintiff’s recovery must be
    diminished by” any percentage of fault attributed to the
    anesthesiologists, even if the jury were to allocate sixty
    percent or more of the fault to the remaining defendants.        
    Id. at 307
    .   The panel reasoned:
    31
    To   hold   otherwise   would   deprive   the
    [remaining] defendants of their right to seek
    contribution from [the anesthesiologists],
    even though the [remaining] defendants are
    found to be sixty percent or more responsible
    for the total damages. Again, the [remaining]
    defendants should not be prejudiced by the
    failure of plaintiff to file the required
    Affidavit of Merit.
    [Id. at 308.]
    The panel recognized that it had “denied plaintiff the
    ability to recover all her damages from the [remaining]
    defendants if the jury found them to be sixty percent or more
    responsible for plaintiff’s damages.”   
    Id. at 309
    .   It
    concluded, however, that its remedy was essential to preserve
    the remaining defendants’ statutory right to a cross-claim in
    the event that the defendants were required to pay damages in
    excess of their allocated percentages of fault.   
    Ibid.
    This Court has not previously decided a case in which a
    party has requested that the trial court mold the judgment in
    accordance with the Appellate Division’s analysis in Burt.9    In
    9  Although we cited Burt in our opinions in Brodsky and Town of
    Kearny on the question whether fault should be allocated to a
    dismissed defendant, we did not address the molding of the
    judgment in those cases, other than to note the Comparative
    Negligence Act’s provisions authorizing a plaintiff to collect
    one hundred percent of the damages from a defendant adjudicated
    sixty percent or more at fault. See Town of Kearny, supra, 214
    N.J. at 98, 102 (citing Burt on allocation issue, and noting
    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(c)’s rule on liability of defendant found to
    be sixty percent or more at fault); Brodsky, 
    supra,
     
    181 N.J. at
    113 (citing Burt for principle that fault should be allocated to
    party dismissed from action and damages award against remaining
    32
    the circumstances of this case, we consider the Appellate
    Division’s analysis in Burt to effectively reconcile the
    governing statutes.
    The Comparative Negligence Act provides that a plaintiff is
    entitled to collect the full amount of the damages awarded from
    any party that the factfinder determines to be sixty percent or
    more responsible for the total damages.    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a).
    In a different subsection of the same statute, the Act affords
    to a defendant “compelled to pay more than his percentage share”
    of the damages a contribution claim against joint tortfeasors.
    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(e).    The Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law,
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-3, defines that contribution claim.   Considered
    together, the three provisions envision an equitable outcome:
    if the plaintiff collects the full amount of damages from a
    defendant adjudged to be sixty percent or more but less than one
    hundred percent at fault, that defendant may assert a
    contribution claim against a joint tortfeasor for any damages in
    excess of its allocated share.    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a), 5.3(e);
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-3.    With the benefit of its contribution claim
    against joint tortfeasors, the defendant will ordinarily pay a
    percentage of damages that is consonant with the factfinder’s
    allocation of fault.     
    Ibid.
    defendant reduced, but characterizing rule as applicable to
    defendants allocated less than sixty percent of fault).
    33
    As the Appellate Division recognized in Burt, 
    supra,
     a
    joint tortfeasor’s statutory right to a dismissal of the claims
    against it could disrupt the allocation scheme.     
    339 N.J. Super. at 308
    .    In that case, because the Affidavit of Merit Act barred
    all claims against the anesthesiologist defendants, the
    remaining defendants’ right to a contribution claim would have
    been nullified if they were adjudged sixty percent negligent but
    required to pay one hundred percent of the damages.     
    Ibid.
       To
    the panel deciding Burt, a ruling limiting the defendants’
    liability to the percentage allocated by the jury, even if that
    percentage met the sixty-percent threshold of N.J.S.A. 2A:15-
    5.3(a), best furthered the Legislature’s equitable intent.
    
    Ibid.
    In light of the Association’s dismissal pursuant to
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-8, the same issue might arise at trial in this
    case.     If the jury were to allocate sixty percent or more of the
    fault -- but less than one hundred percent -- to the Morey
    defendants, and the Morey defendants were required to pay one
    hundred percent of the damages under N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.3(a), they
    would similarly be denied the benefit of their contribution
    claim.    In the setting of this case, that result would defeat
    the Legislature’s clear objective:     to fairly apportion
    liability for damages in accordance with the factfinder’s
    34
    allocation of fault.   See N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(a), (d), -5.3(a),
    (c), (e); N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2, -3.
    Accordingly, if the Morey defendants present evidence at
    trial that the Association was negligent and that its negligence
    was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s death, the jury should be
    instructed to determine whether the Morey defendants have met
    their burden of proof on those issues.   The jury should be
    instructed that if it finds that the Morey defendants have
    proven that the Association was negligent and that the
    Association’s negligence was a proximate cause of Abiah Jones’s
    death, it may allocate a percentage of fault to the Association
    pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2.    If the jury allocates a
    percentage of fault to the Association, the trial court shall
    mold the judgment to reduce the Morey defendants’ liability to
    plaintiffs in accordance with the percentage of fault allocated
    to the Association.    N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(d).   If the jury does
    not find that the Morey defendants have met their burden to
    prove that the Association’s negligence was a proximate cause of
    the accident, it should not allocate fault to the Association.
    In that case, an award of damages to plaintiffs will not be
    affected.
    We remind litigants and their counsel that any party –-
    plaintiff or defendant -- intending to pursue a claim against a
    public entity or employee subject to the Tort Claims Act must
    35
    act expeditiously to preserve that claim.   Such a party must
    serve a notice pursuant to the Act within ninety days of the
    accrual of the claim under N.J.S.A. 59:8-8, or file an
    application within one year of that date for leave to serve a
    late notice of claim, on a showing of “extraordinary
    circumstances,” under N.J.S.A. 59:8-9.   A plaintiff that is
    aware of a potential cause of action against a public entity --
    and litigates the case in a manner that deprives a defendant of
    an opportunity to serve a Tort Claims Act notice on that entity
    -- risks a reduction in any damages award by virtue of an
    allocation of fault under the Comparative Negligence Act and the
    Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law.   A defendant that is aware
    of its potential cross-claim against a public entity that may be
    a joint tortfeasor -- but foregoes its opportunity to serve a
    Tort Claims Act notice on that entity -- may lose the benefit of
    an allocation of fault to the public entity in accordance with
    those statutes.
    IV.
    The trial court’s summary judgment determination is
    reversed, and summary judgment is granted to the Association
    dismissing with prejudice the Morey defendants’ third-party
    contribution and common-law indemnification claims.    The matter
    is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings in
    accordance with this opinion.
    36
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN,
    FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE PATTERSON’s
    opinion.
    37
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-75-15

Citation Numbers: 230 N.J. 142, 165 A.3d 769, 2017 WL 3184454, 2017 N.J. LEXIS 812

Judges: Albin, Fernandez-Vina, LaVECCHIA, Patterson, Rabner, Solomon, Timpone

Filed Date: 7/27/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (31)

Burt v. W. Jersey Health Systems , 339 N.J. Super. 296 ( 2001 )

Young v. Latta , 123 N.J. 584 ( 1991 )

Markey v. Skog , 129 N.J. Super. 192 ( 1974 )

White v. NEWARK MORN. STAR LEDG. , 245 N.J. Super. 606 ( 1990 )

Bolz v. Bolz , 400 N.J. Super. 154 ( 2008 )

Ramos v. Browning Ferris Ind. of So. Jersey, Inc. , 194 N.J. Super. 96 ( 1984 )

Bencivenga v. JJAMM, INC. , 258 N.J. Super. 399 ( 1992 )

Cockerline v. Menendez , 411 N.J. Super. 596 ( 2010 )

Wilson v. City of Jersey City , 209 N.J. 558 ( 2012 )

Ramos v. Browning Ferris Industries of South Jersey, Inc. , 103 N.J. 177 ( 1986 )

Holloway v. State , 125 N.J. 386 ( 1991 )

Manalapan Realty v. Township Committee of the Township of ... , 140 N.J. 366 ( 1995 )

Brodsky v. Grinnell Haulers, Inc. , 181 N.J. 102 ( 2004 )

Coyne v. State, Department of Transportation , 182 N.J. 481 ( 2005 )

McDade v. Siazon , 208 N.J. 463 ( 2011 )

Cancel v. Watson , 131 N.J. Super. 320 ( 1974 )

Johnson v. Mountainside Hospital , 122 N.J. 188 ( 1990 )

SP v. Collier High School , 319 N.J. Super. 452 ( 1999 )

Perello v. Woods , 197 N.J. Super. 539 ( 1984 )

Marcinczyk v. STATE POLICE TRAINING COM'N , 203 N.J. 586 ( 2010 )

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