DOUGLAS MARTIN VS. BANK OF AMERICA (L-4030-08, MONMOUTH COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2018 )


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    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2128-15T4
    DOUGLAS MARTIN and
    KIMBERLY MARTIN, his wife,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants/
    Cross-Respondents,
    v.
    BANK OF AMERICA,
    Defendant-Respondent/
    Cross-Appellant,
    and
    MGCC GROUP OF COMPANIES, M.G.C.C. GROUP,
    INC.; C.G.I. DEVELOPMENT CO., INC.;
    CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT CO., INC.; M.G.
    INVESTMENT GROUP, INC., CGIMG GROUP, LLC,
    JOHN TEDESCO, Member and as an Individual
    Owner of CGIMG GROUP, LLC; M.G.T. GROUP,
    INC., WILLIAM A. GREENBERG, IRWIN M.
    NUDELMAN, and ARTHUR J. GALLY,
    Individually, and as Officers, Directors
    of Principals of M.G.C.C. GROUP OF
    COMPANIES, M.G.C.C. GROUP, INC.,
    CRYSTAL CREEK REALTY, INC., C.G.I.
    DEVELOPMENT CO., INC., C.G.I. CONSTRUCTION
    MANAGEMENT CO., INC., well as ARTHUR
    J. GALLY, President of M.G.C.C. GROUP OF
    COMPANIES, M.G.C.C. GROUP, INC. and CRYSTAL
    CREEK REALTY, INC., ABBINGTON ASSOICIATES,
    INC., JAMES P. KOVACS, P.E., L.S.,
    Individually and as Principal of
    ABBINGTON ASSOCIATES, INC., JAMES R.
    IENTILE, INC., JAMES R. IENTILE,
    Individually, and as Principal of
    JAMES R. IENTILE, INC.; CHARLES E.
    LINDSTROM, Individually, ANDERSON
    BALLIS & LINDSTROM ASSOCIATES, INC.,
    LINDSTROM & DIESSNER ASSOCIATES, PC
    CONDO/HOUSE MART INC., HOUSE MART,
    INC., SUSAN SMITH and DEBRA BURAGINA,
    Defendants,
    and
    M.G.C.C. GROUP, INC., WILLIAM A.
    GREENBERG, IRWIN M. NUDELMAN,
    ARTHUR J. GALLY, C.G.I. DEVELOPMENT
    CO., INC., C.G.I. CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT
    CO., INC., M.G. INVESTMENT GROUP, INC.,
    JOHN J. TEDESCO, M.G.T. GROUP, INC.,
    and CRYSTAL CREEK REALTY INC.,
    Individually,
    Third-Party Plaintiffs,
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF HOWELL,
    Third-Party Defendant.
    _________________________________________
    Submitted May 14, 2018 – Decided July 30, 2018
    Before Judges Sabatino, Rose and Firko.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Monmouth County, Docket No. L-
    4030-08.
    Shackleton   &   Hazeltine,    attorneys   for
    appellants/cross-respondents     (Richard   J.
    Shackleton and Brian J. Coyle, on the briefs).
    2                          A-2128-15T4
    Meyner   and  Landis,   LLP,  attorneys   for
    respondent/cross-appellant (Scott T. McCleary
    and Matthew P. Dolan, on the briefs).
    PER CURIAM
    This     appeal   and     cross-appeal    have   their   genesis       in
    misrepresentations and omissions by defendant Bank of America's
    ("BOA")     predecessor   to    the   Howell   Township   Planning     Board
    ("Board"), regarding the third phase of residential development
    ("section III") of Crystal Creek Estates ("CCE").              Plaintiffs
    Douglas and Kimberly Martin purchased a home in CCE's second phase
    of development ("section II"), and thereafter sought recovery for
    property damages from flooding caused by the construction of
    section III.      They filed claims against BOA and many others,1
    pursuant to the Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -195
    ("CFA"), and under common law theories of trespass and nuisance.
    Following a six-week jury trial and verdict in their favor,
    plaintiffs appeal from certain portions of the December 21, 2015
    1
    In their second amended complaint, plaintiffs also named as
    defendants: M.G.C.C. Group, Inc., C.G.I. Development Co., Inc.,
    Construction Management Co., Inc., Crystal Creek Realty Inc., and
    their representatives (collectively, "M.G.C.C.").    The M.G.C.C.
    named the Township of Howell as a third-party defendant. Prior
    to trial, plaintiffs' claims against the other individuals and
    entities were dismissed with prejudice, either voluntarily or by
    way of summary judgment. None of the other defendants is a party
    to this appeal.
    3                              A-2128-15T4
    final judgment, claiming the judge erred as a matter of law by:
    (1) determining the appropriate measure of damages on the CFA and
    trespass claims was the diminution in the market value of their
    property, and by limiting those damages to the value assessed by
    BOA's expert; (2) reducing their counsel fees and failing to award
    prejudgment interest on the fee award;2 (3) permitting the jury to
    allocate comparative negligence, thereby reducing the CFA award
    by thirty-five percent; and (4) denying their July 21, 2015 motion
    for   leave    to   file   a    third    amended      complaint    alleging       legal
    abatement so as to conform to the jury's verdict.                         BOA cross-
    appeals,      contending       the   trial     judge    erred     in    denying     its
    applications to dismiss plaintiffs' CFA claim before and during
    trial, and the judge's award of fees should have been reduced
    further    because    plaintiffs        were   only    nominally       successful    in
    obtaining monetary relief.3
    For the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment entered
    in favor of plaintiffs on their CFA claim and counsel fee award,
    2
    Plaintiffs also appeal from the January 8, 2016 final order
    awarding fees and costs on the same basis.
    3
    In addition to appealing from the December 21, 2015 final
    judgment and January 8, 2016 order, BOA appeals from a December
    1, 2010 order denying its motion to dismiss the CFA claim, a
    December 27, 2012 order denying summary judgment, and a September
    18, 2013 order granting plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration of
    an April 22, 2013 order dismissing their CFA claim.
    4                                   A-2128-15T4
    thereby rendering moot the appeal and cross-appeal concerning the
    adequacy of fees. We affirm that portion of the judgment regarding
    the trial court's legal determination on the appropriate measure
    of damages for plaintiffs' trespass claim, but vacate the court's
    monetary calculation and remand the assessment of trespass damages
    for a jury determination.        Further, we affirm the trial court's
    denial    of   plaintiffs'     application   to   file    a   third   amended
    complaint, and the court's decision that principles of mitigation
    of damages apply to the entire verdict.
    I.
    A.
    Initially, we consider the trial court's judgment denying
    BOA's motion for involuntary dismissal at the close of plaintiffs'
    case, Rule 4:37-2, and judgment at the close of all evidence, Rule
    4:40-1. In doing so, we discern the pertinent facts and procedural
    history   from   the   trial    record,   extending      to   plaintiffs   all
    favorable inferences.        Smith v. Millville Rescue Squad, 
    225 N.J. 373
    , 397 (2016).4
    4
    Plaintiffs would be entitled to comparable inferences in our
    review of BOA's summary judgment motions.       R. 4:46; Davis v.
    Brickman Landscaping, Ltd., 
    219 N.J. 395
    , 406 (2014); Brill v.
    Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 536 (1995). Because
    we dispose of plaintiffs' CFA claims pursuant to BOA's applications
    made during trial, we need not reach BOA's pre-trial applications.
    5                                A-2128-15T4
    At   trial,   plaintiffs     presented      evidence   that     BOA's
    predecessor, Fleet Bank NA ("Fleet"),5 concealed engineering plans
    and made misrepresentations to the Board in order to obtain final
    approvals for section III, which Fleet needed to complete the sale
    to   co-defendant   developer,    M.G.C.C.     Plaintiffs    claimed     the
    concealed plans indicated that six lots in section II, including
    their lot, needed regrading to prevent infiltration by surface and
    groundwater runoff from section III. Plaintiffs, who had no direct
    contact with BOA, argued if Fleet had disclosed the plans, the
    Township would not have approved section III, the developer would
    not have purchased the real estate, and in turn their property
    would not have flooded.
    CCE's   subdivision   was   designed   by    co-defendant     Charles
    Lindstrom, the project engineer.        Following the Board's approval
    of the plan, the Department of Environmental Protection adopted
    regulations, which required stormwater management planning for
    major developments, and mandated installation of detention basins
    to reduce flooding and minimize runoff.        To effectuate a properly
    functioning drainage system, Lindstrom revised the engineering
    5
    First Jersey National Bank acquired title by deed in lieu of
    foreclosure to land for the development of section III. That bank
    was acquired by National Westminster Bank NJ, which became known
    as NatWest Bank NA ("NatWest"), which was acquired by Fleet, which
    was then acquired by BOA.
    6                               A-2128-15T4
    plan to regrade the rear yards of lots 2-6 in section II so that
    they would be level with those of section III.
    Although the Board granted site plan approval for section III
    in April 1990, work on the project could not commence until several
    of its conditions were satisfied.           Those conditions included
    redesign of the stormwater or detention basin "to meet current
    ordinance requirements as to slopes, depth, lot size, etc."             In
    the   meantime,   BOA's   predecessor,   NatWest,   contracted   to   sell
    section III to an individual, who later assigned the contract to
    M.G.C.C.    The contract required        NatWest to meet the Board's
    conditions for approval and to convey thirty-one buildable lots.
    By July 1996, NatWest had been acquired by Fleet, whose
    attorney and Lindstrom appeared before the Board.           Among other
    things, they indicated NatWest was then or formerly the owner of
    lots 2-6 in section II, and failed to present an engineering map
    depicting the proposed and required regrading of those lots. Based
    on the presentation by Lindstrom and Fleet's counsel, the Board
    approved section III in August 1996.
    In April 2002, Fleet conveyed title of section III to M.G.C.C.
    Fleet did not present to M.G.C.C. the engineering map that depicted
    the regrading of lots 2-6 in section II.       M.G.C.C. then commenced
    construction according to the revised approved engineering plans.
    When installing the drainage pipes along the south side of Alexis
    7                             A-2128-15T4
    Drive where sections II and III meet, M.G.C.C. discovered the
    discrepancy    between   the   revised   plans   and   the   actual     field
    conditions.     Specifically, the existing grade of the rear yards
    of lots 2-6 in section II was two to three feet below the grade
    of section III, causing the trapping of water in the rear yards
    of lots 2-6.
    Plaintiffs' home is located on Alexis Drive, and designated
    as block 184.02, lot 6 on the Township's tax map.            The house was
    constructed in 1995 by their predecessors in title, Steven and
    Linda Lefker.    In late 2002, the Lefkers experienced surface water
    flooding on their property, and dampness and water in the sump
    pump well in their basement.       They filed suit against M.G.C.C.6
    and the Township, seeking to enjoin further construction of section
    III until the plans were redesigned to provide that the homes in
    that section would be built at the same elevation as those in
    section II.
    During the course of litigation, the Lefkers retained Bernard
    Berson, a civil engineer.      Among other things, Berson opined that:
    a discrepancy in the grading elevations was causing the flooding;
    changes in the water level of the detention basin might affect
    6
    M.G.C.C. filed a third-party complaint against Fleet.
    8                                 A-2128-15T4
    groundwater elevations on the property; and continued construction
    of section III would cause more harm to the property.
    In October 2003, the Lefkers settled their claims.                      According
    to the settlement agreement, M.G.C.C. agreed to repurchase the
    property   for     $453,000,    pay     certain    legal    fees,      and     fund    a
    remediation plan.       Fleet contributed toward those costs, but the
    Lefkers did not release any claims against the bank.
    Pursuant to the remediation plan, M.G.C.C. constructed a
    retaining wall to resolve the grade differential and a concrete
    swale to carry surface water to a drainage inlet, alleviating
    water infiltration.       By correspondence dated March 23, 2004, an
    authorized    representative       of     M.G.C.C.       informed      its     listing
    realtors   that    it   was    "important"       they    advise    "any      potential
    purchasers    of   [XX]   Alexis      Drive"     about    the     litigation,       the
    engineering   determination        that       several    homes    in   section      II,
    including that home, were constructed below the grade proposed for
    section III, and "it is likely that remedial work that will benefit
    [XX] Alexis Drive and the neighboring properties will be undertaken
    and completed in the future."
    In July 2004, M.G.C.C. sold the property to Brian and Dawn
    Veprek.    The following year, the Vepreks sold the property to
    plaintiffs.      During their one year of ownership, the Vepreks did
    9                                    A-2128-15T4
    not experience any issues with flooding or water intrusion in the
    basement.
    Plaintiffs      obtained    a   home   inspection     report    before
    purchasing the property.          The report indicated the basement was
    dry, and there was insufficient water in the sump pump pit to test
    it.   Nonetheless, the inspector recommended plaintiffs regrade the
    land from the house to reduce possible moisture intrusion into the
    basement.     Because "[o]ngoing site preparation for another housing
    development at the rear of the property [might] also have an effect
    on    the   drainage    of   [plaintiffs']    property[,]"   the   inspector
    recommended "it would be prudent to contact the local government
    to review the site plans and particularly the discussion on the
    effect to adjoining areas such as this property."
    Plaintiffs claimed the home inspection did not alert them to
    any potential problems with flooding in the yard or the basement.
    Although the retaining wall and concrete swale had been constructed
    behind the house, and a sump pump and French drain were installed
    in the basement when they purchased the home, plaintiffs were not
    aware of any flooding or water intrusion problems at that time.
    Approximately four months after plaintiffs moved in, M.G.C.C.
    continued to dump fill behind plaintiffs' home to raise the
    elevation of the abutting section III lots.            Plaintiffs claimed
    they experienced some backyard and basement flooding during their
    10                             A-2128-15T4
    first year of ownership.     Two years after they moved in, however,
    plaintiffs installed an in-ground swimming pool and a patio in
    their backyard.
    As the construction of section III progressed, plaintiffs
    testified that the water intrusion became increasingly worse,
    causing water to stream into their basement through the walls and
    up from the French drains.          Snakes were found in the basement,
    along with a "little spout of water" squirting from the wall,
    interfering with their use of their basement.              The flooding did
    not interfere, however, with use of their backyard, pool or patio.
    Plaintiffs admitted they had not taken measures to remediate
    the   water   damage.     They    did     not   regrade   the   property,     as
    recommended by their home inspection report; hire an exterminator
    to determine the snakes' origin; or waterproof the basement.
    The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiffs against
    BOA on the CFA, trespass, and nuisance claims.            The judge set the
    amount of damages on the CFA and trespass claims at $25,000, based
    on    the   unrebutted   expert    testimony     of   defense   real    estate
    appraiser, Mohammad Imran.        The jury awarded $2500 on the nuisance
    claim, pertaining to the water infiltration in the basement of
    plaintiffs' home. The jury also determined plaintiffs were thirty-
    five percent at fault for "fail[ing] to exercise reasonable care
    to address the water intrusion."          After molding the damage awards
    11                                A-2128-15T4
    accordingly,   the   judge    issued    a   final   judgment   against    BOA,
    awarding plaintiffs treble damages of $48,750 on their CFA claim,
    $1625 on the nuisance and trespass claims, and $1,817,937 in
    counsel fees and expenses as prevailing parties under the CFA.7
    This appeal followed.
    B.
    A party is authorized by Rule 4:40-1 to move for judgment at
    the close of all evidence. A trial judge considering such a motion
    must apply this "evidential standard: 'if, accepting as true all
    the evidence which supports the position of the party defending
    against the motion and according [such party] the benefit of all
    inferences   which   can     reasonably     and   legitimately   be   deduced
    therefrom, reasonable minds could differ, the motion must be
    denied[.]'" Smith, 225 N.J. at 397 (second alteration in original)
    (quoting Verdicchio v. Ricca, 
    179 N.J. 1
    , 30 (2004) (citation
    omitted)).   We apply the same governing standard when we review a
    trial judge's decision on a motion for a directed verdict.             Frugis
    v. Bracigliano, 
    177 N.J. 250
    , 269 (2003).              However, we review
    7
    The judge offset the damages award by thirty-five percent,
    representing plaintiffs' allocated share of fault. The judge also
    awarded pre-judgment interest in the amount of $3,841 on the CFA
    claim and $153 on the nuisance and trespass claims. Pursuant to
    the January 8, 2016 order, the judge awarded an additional $15,720
    in counsel fees and $1,631 in costs, but denied plaintiffs'
    application for pre-judgment interest on their fees.
    12                                A-2128-15T4
    issues of law de novo, according no deference to the trial judge's
    conclusions on issues of law.   Perez v. Professionally Green, LLC,
    
    215 N.J. 388
    , 399 (2013) (citing Manalapan Realty, LP v. Twp.
    Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995)); Zabilowicz v.
    Kelsey, 
    200 N.J. 507
    , 512-13 (2009).
    As amended in 1971, the CFA "provides a private cause of
    action to consumers who are victimized by fraudulent practices in
    the marketplace."     Gonzalez v. Wilshire Credit Corp., 
    207 N.J. 557
    , 576 (2011).    "It was enacted 'to combat "sharp practices and
    dealings" that victimized consumers by luring them into purchases
    through fraudulent or deceptive means.'"     Manahawkin Convalescent
    v. O'Neill, 
    217 N.J. 99
    , 121 (2014) (quoting Cox v. Sears Roebuck
    & Co., 
    138 N.J. 2
    , 16 (1994)).        The CFA prescribes a cause of
    action on behalf of "[a]ny person who suffers any ascertainable
    loss of moneys or property, real or personal, as a result of the
    use or employment by another person of any method, act, or practice
    declared unlawful under this act . . . ."     N.J.S.A. 56:8-19.
    A CFA claim brought by a consumer "requires proof of three
    elements: '(1) unlawful conduct by defendant; (2) an ascertainable
    loss by plaintiff; and (3) a causal relationship between the
    unlawful conduct and the ascertainable loss.'"      Manahawkin, 217
    N.J. at 121 (quoting Bosland v. Warnock Dodge, Inc., 
    197 N.J. 543
    ,
    557 (2009)).   "A plaintiff who proves all three elements may be
    13                          A-2128-15T4
    awarded   treble    damages,      'attorneys'    fees,   filing   fees     and
    reasonable costs of suit.'"        
    Ibid.
     (quoting N.J.S.A. 56:8-19).
    Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 56:8-2, an "unlawful practice" includes:
    any   unconscionable   commercial   practice,
    deception, fraud, false pretense, false
    promise, misrepresentation, or the knowing,
    concealment, suppression, or omission of any
    material fact with intent that others rely
    upon   such   concealment,   suppression   or
    omission, in connection with the sale or
    advertisement of any merchandise or real
    estate, or with the subsequent performance of
    such person as aforesaid, whether or not any
    person has in fact been misled, deceived or
    damaged thereby . . . .
    "An 'unlawful practice' contravening the CFA may arise from (1)
    an affirmative act; (2) a knowing omission; or (3) a violation of
    an administrative regulation."           Dugan v. TGI Fridays, Inc., 
    231 N.J. 24
    , 51 (2017) (citation omitted).
    Here, there was sufficient evidence to support the jury's
    verdict   as   to   the   first    CFA    element.   For   example,      BOA's
    predecessor committed unlawful acts in misrepresenting to the
    Board its ownership of lots 2-6 in section II, and in omitting,
    with the intent to deceive M.G.C.C., an engineering map depicting
    "the proposed and required regrading of [s]ection II, lots 2
    through 6."
    The crux of BOA's argument concerning the CFA, however, is
    the lack of a causal connection between the unlawful conduct
    14                               A-2128-15T4
    surrounding the conveyance of section III and plaintiffs' purchase
    of their home in section II.        In contrast to common law fraud, the
    causation element of N.J.S.A. 56:8-19 is not "the equivalent of
    reliance."   Dugan, 231 N.J. at 53 (quoting Lee v. Carter-Reed Co.,
    
    203 N.J. 496
    , 522 (2010)).        Instead, in a private action, "the CFA
    requires a showing of 'a causal relationship between the unlawful
    conduct and the ascertainable loss.'"       
    Ibid.
     (quoting Bosland, 
    197 N.J. at 557
    ).    The statutory phrase "as a result of" connotes a
    "causal nexus requirement."        Bosland, 
    197 N.J. at 557-58
     (quoting
    N.J.S.A. 56:8-19).        However, contractual privity is not required
    to bring a CFA claim.        Perth Amboy Iron Works, Inc. v. Am. Home
    Assurance Co., 
    226 N.J. Super. 200
    , 210-11 (App. Div. 1988).
    Our courts "have generally found causation to be established
    for CFA purposes when a plaintiff has demonstrated a direct
    correlation between the unlawful practice and the loss; they have
    rejected proofs of causation that were speculative or attenuated."
    Heyert v. Taddese, 
    431 N.J. Super. 388
    , 421 (App. Div. 2013).               A
    "complete    lack"   of    any   relationship   between   the   defendant's
    unlawful conduct and the plaintiff's loss compels a finding of a
    lack of causation under the CFA.            Marrone v. Greer & Polman
    Constr., Inc., 
    405 N.J. Super. 288
    , 296 (App. Div. 2009); see also
    Sullivan, N.J. Consumer Fraud, § 11:2-2 (2018).
    15                             A-2128-15T4
    In cases in which the alleged misrepresentation was made to
    a prior purchaser and not to a plaintiff asserting the CFA claim,
    we have held there was a fatal lack of proof of a causal connection
    between the misrepresentation and the alleged loss.    See Dean v.
    Barrett Homes, Inc., 
    406 N.J. Super. 453
    , 462 (App. Div. 2009);
    Marrone, 
    405 N.J. Super. at 295-297
    ; O'Loughlin v. Nat'l Cmty.
    Bank, 
    338 N.J. Super. 592
    , 606-07 (App. Div. 2001); Chattin v.
    Cape May Greene, Inc., 
    216 N.J. Super. 618
    , 641 (App. Div. 1987).
    For example, in Chattin, a group of homeowners instituted a
    class action suit against the builder for damages allegedly caused
    by defective windows.   Chattin, 
    216 N.J. Super. at 622
    .    The trial
    court dismissed the claims filed by subsequent home purchasers,
    holding only the plaintiffs who had had direct contact with the
    builder could recover under the CFA.    
    Id. at 624
    .   We affirmed,
    finding:
    Plaintiffs'    argument     that    subsequent
    purchasers of homes should have been permitted
    to recover consumer fraud damages, even though
    they never received either the brochure or any
    oral   representation   from   [the   builder]
    concerning the windows, is clearly lacking in
    merit.    There is no basis for finding a
    violation of the [CFA] with respect to these
    purchasers because [the builder] made no
    representation to them. Stated another way,
    these purchasers have not suffered "any
    ascertainable loss of moneys or property" as
    a result of [the builder's] use of a practice
    declared unlawful by the [CFA], and hence they
    have no claim under N.J.S.A. 56:8-19.
    16                            A-2128-15T4
    [Id. at 641.]
    Similarly, in O'Loughlin v. National Community Bank, 
    338 N.J. Super. 592
    , 606-07 (App. Div. 2001), we discerned no basis for a
    CFA claim where the defendant bank, which, like BOA here, had
    acquired title by deed in lieu of foreclosure to unsold units, but
    had not sold the condominium units to the plaintiffs, or made
    promises to the plaintiffs that were connected to the sale of the
    units.     The record also did not reveal "any specific conduct in
    violation of the [CFA] on the part of the Bank associated with
    plaintiffs' individual units, occurring subsequent to the time the
    Bank obtained title."        Id. at 606.
    Further, we relied on Chattin              in deciding Marrone.           In
    Marrone,     the   plaintiffs     asserted       CFA       claims   against   the
    manufacturer and distributor of defective exterior siding, which
    was used to build their home, eight years before they purchased
    it.   Marrone, 
    405 N.J. Super. at 291
    .               The original owners were
    unaware that the siding was defective and had not experienced any
    problems with it.     
    Id. at 295
    .        After the plaintiffs bought the
    home, they discovered both the siding was defective and that it
    was improperly installed.       
    Id. at 292
    .       We affirmed the dismissal
    of the CFA claims because there was "a complete lack of proof of
    a   causal   connection   between    the     .   .     .   defendants'   alleged
    17                                   A-2128-15T4
    misrepresentations about their product and plaintiffs' decision
    to purchase the house."       
    Id. at 296
    .
    Thereafter, in Dean, we adopted our reasoning in Marrone,
    affirming the dismissal of CFA claims where a subsequent owner
    sued the same manufacturer of defective siding.                  Dean, 406 N.J
    Super. at 462.      The court found that the plaintiffs "neither
    received nor relied on any misrepresentation" by the defendants,
    and that there was "no nexus between plaintiffs' purchase of the
    house and [the defendants'] conduct or lack thereof."                 
    Ibid.
    In the present case, as in Chattin, O'Loughlin, Marrone, and
    Dean, BOA had no contact with plaintiffs, and did not make any
    misrepresentations or omissions to them.                  Rather, the proofs
    adduced   at   trial    established       that    BOA's       predecessor     made
    misrepresentations     and   omissions     in    order    to   gain   site    plan
    approval for section III, and to sell the real estate to M.G.C.C.,
    which did not construct plaintiffs' home in section II nor sell
    the property to them.
    Indeed, plaintiffs' alleged connection with BOA is even more
    tenuous than that of the plaintiffs in Dean, Marrone, O'Loughlin,
    and Chattin.    Plaintiffs' causal theory that if the Township had
    not granted the approval, M.G.C.C. would not have purchased the
    property, section III would not have been built, and their property
    in   section   II   would    not   have   flooded,       is    speculative    and
    18                                  A-2128-15T4
    attenuated.         In particular, there is no proof that if M.G.C.C.
    declined to purchase the property, that section III, for which the
    Board had already granted conditional approval, and had been
    remediated pursuant to the Lefkers' settlement agreement, would
    not have been built by another developer.
    Further, we are not persuaded by plaintiffs' reliance on
    Matera v. M.G.C.C. Group, Inc., 
    402 N.J. Super. 30
     (Law Div. 2007).
    There, the Matera court reinstated8 the CFA claims of adjoining
    property owners in section II who, like plaintiffs here, purchased
    their properties from individual owners and not from BOA.                       Id. at
    42.   Those CFA claims were grounded in the same misrepresentations
    and omissions made by BOA's predecessor to the Board in July 1996.
    Id. at 34-35.         Citing Gennari v. Weichert Company Realtors, 
    148 N.J. 582
     (1997), the Matera court found significant that "the
    Court      stated    a     violator     of    the    [CFA]    is   liable     for   any
    misrepresentations whether 'any person has in fact been misled,
    deceived, or damaged thereby . . . it did not say any party.'"
    Id.   at    41.      The    Matera    court       then   determined   BOA's    alleged
    misrepresentations           to   the    Board       and   M.G.C.C.    damaged      the
    plaintiffs, holding "that although some nexus is necessary to
    8
    The Law Division judge reinstated the claims following
    plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration of his earlier order,
    dismissing the CFA claims on summary judgment.
    19                                A-2128-15T4
    establish a claim under the [CFA], that nexus need only be between
    the   alleged   unlawful    conduct   and   the   ascertainable    loss;    it
    requires no contact between the parties."          Ibid.
    The Matera court's reasoning is not binding on us, nor do we
    find it persuasive. Initially, the Gennari Court did not emphasize
    the distinction between "any person" and "any party."             Further in
    Gennari, the misrepresentations at issue were statements by the
    defendant   realtor    to     plaintiffs     concerning    the    builder's
    qualifications and experience.         Gennari, 
    148 N.J. at 589-90
    .         We
    note here, as we did in Marrone, Gennari "is not on point."
    Marrone, 
    405 N.J. Super. at 296, n.4
    .             Rather, as we found in
    Marrone, "in this case, there is not only a lack of privity, there
    is a complete lack of proof of a causal connection between [BOA's]
    alleged misrepresentations . . . and plaintiffs' decision to
    purchase the house."       
    Id. at 296
    .
    Consistent with our prior holdings, we are satisfied the
    undisputed facts adduced at trial demonstrate a lack of causation
    that was fatal to plaintiffs' CFA claim as a matter of law.                We,
    therefore, vacate the December 21, 2015 final judgment in so far
    as it awarded damages and attorney's fees on plaintiffs' CFA
    claims, and the trial court's January 8, 2016 order awarding
    counsel fees.
    20                             A-2128-15T4
    II.
    A.
    We next consider plaintiffs' argument that the court erred
    in determining the proper measure of damages to their property as
    the   diminution      in   its   market       value,    and   not   the   cost    of
    restoration.9      Although      we   have     vacated   that   portion    of    the
    judgment awarding damages for plaintiffs' CFA claim, the court's
    legal determination concerning the measure of damages is also
    applicable to plaintiffs' trespass claim.                 In setting forth the
    facts from the record pertaining to that motion, plaintiffs are
    not entitled to the same benefit of favorable inferences as the
    CFA claim dismissed pursuant to Rule 4:37-2 and Rule 4:40-1.
    Initially, we note the December 21, 2015 final judgment
    appears to be at odds with the jury charge and verdict sheet.                     In
    particular, the judgment indicates the jury awarded $25,000 for
    plaintiffs'     CFA   claims,     and    $2500    for    plaintiffs'      combined
    trespass and nuisance claims.           However, the trial court instructed
    the jury that if they "find in favor of plaintiffs on their [CFA]
    claims, [and] trespass claim . . . the [c]ourt's legal rulings
    9
    Following plaintiffs' pretrial motion to bar Imran from
    testifying about the diminution in value, the parties agreed that
    evidence of both damages theories would be presented to the jury,
    and, at the close of the evidence, the judge would decide the
    appropriate measure of damages as a matter of law.
    21                                 A-2128-15T4
    have already addressed the measure of damages to which plaintiffs
    are entitled and . . . you will not have to calculate those
    damages."   (Emphasis added).
    Further, the verdict sheet contains two separate questions
    for the jury to consider regarding plaintiffs' nuisance claims,
    i.e., "damages for annoyance, inconvenience, or discomfort."     One
    question addresses plaintiffs' nuisance claims for damage to the
    basement, for which the jury awarded $2500.     The other question
    pertains to plaintiffs' nuisance claims for damage to the backyard.
    The jury did not award any damages for that claim.        Thus, it
    appears that the $25,000 judgment includes the trial court's
    determination of damages for both the CFA and trespass claims, and
    the $2500 award pertains solely to plaintiffs' nuisance claim
    regarding the basement.
    Pertinent to the judge's determination, plaintiffs presented
    evidence that restoration costs, including raising the grade of
    the house, pool, deck, patio and grounds three feet to the level
    of the abutting section III properties, totaled approximately
    $750,000.   They presented no evidence as to the diminution in
    value or the cost of waterproofing the basement.
    Conversely, BOA adduced proof that the diminution in value
    of the property totaled $25,000, representing $475,000 for the
    value of house without water infiltration, less $450,000 for the
    22                          A-2128-15T4
    value of house as adjusted by what appeared to be a one-time water
    infiltration.     BOA also presented evidence that it would cost
    $28,000 to completely waterproof the basement.
    At the close of all evidence the judge issued a lengthy oral
    opinion, observing:
    the   [restoration]   costs   put   forth  by
    plaintiffs are not reasonable. This is not a
    unique bit of property.     [Plaintiffs] have
    said that they simply want to live in Howell
    Township because of the school system. They
    [have] not identified anything unique about
    this particular property such that it would
    not constitute unreasonable economic waste to
    invest $750,000 into a house that is
    apparently worth $450,000.
    Considering as I must the overall
    limitation of reasonableness, the [c]ourt
    finds that diminution in value better reflects
    the plaintiffs' actual loss, rather than the
    restoration costs.
    In so ruling, the judge found that plaintiffs were seeking
    more than restoration costs, i.e., "a change in the topography of
    their property.   They're asking that soil be added to the property
    that wasn't there.     They're asking that the house be put in a
    position it never was in before. They're asking for new vegetation
    . . . ."    Further, "They are asking for a very different house
    than the one that the[y] purchased."
    23                          A-2128-15T4
    B.
    "[W]e review de novo the trial court's legal determination
    as to the appropriate measure of damages" for plaintiffs' common
    law claims.    Mosteller v. Naiman, 
    416 N.J. Super. 632
    , 637 (App.
    Div. 2010) (citing Manalapan Realty, 
    140 N.J. at 378
    ).                     "The
    appropriate measure of damages for injury done to land is a complex
    subject and courts have responded to such claims in a great variety
    of ways depending upon the evidence in the particular case."
    Velop, Inc. v. Kaplan, 
    301 N.J. Super. 32
    , 64 (App. Div. 1997)
    (citing Daniel B. Dobbs, Remedies, §§ 5.2-5.16 at 310-34 (1973)).
    "In almost every case [concerning damages to real property],
    one of two measures is employed."             Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 638
    .    Both measures have "a wide sphere of application, and the
    court's   selection   of   one   test    or    the   other   is   basically   an
    assessment of which is more likely to afford full and reasonable
    compensation."    
    Ibid.
     (quoting Velop, 301 N.J. Super. at 64).
    The first measure, described as the "most commonly mentioned
    in the opinions," is diminution of value.             Velop, 301 N.J. Super.
    at 64 (citation omitted).        "Under this measure the plaintiff is
    entitled to recover the difference in the value of his property
    immediately before and immediately after the injury to it, that
    [is], the amount his property has diminished in value as a result
    of the injury."    Ibid.
    24                                 A-2128-15T4
    The    diminution-of-market-value          measure      of     damages       is
    generally    applicable    in    cases   in   which    the   harm    to    land    is
    permanent.    Woodsum v. Pemberton, 
    177 N.J. Super. 639
    , 646 (App.
    Div. 1981); see also 8 Thompson on Real Property, Third Thomas
    Edition, § 67.06(a)(2) at 157 (David A. Thomas ed. 2016) (permanent
    damages for harm to property are measured by depreciation in market
    value of the property).         This measure has been applied in similar
    cases   involving   damage      caused   by   excessive      excavation     on     an
    adjoining lot, McGuire v. Grant, 
    25 N.J.L. 356
    , 368 (1856) (measure
    of damages "is not what it will cost to restore the lot to its
    former situation, or to build a wall to support it, but what is
    the   lot   diminished    in    value    by   reason   of    the    acts   of     the
    defendant"), and involving damage caused by the overflow of water
    resulting from the negligent maintenance of drainage pipes and
    ditches, Kita v. Borough of Lindenwold, 
    305 N.J. Super. 43
    , 51
    (App. Div. 1997).
    The second measure, "the replacement-cost or restoration-cost
    measure[,] . . . 'awards the plaintiff the reasonable cost of
    restoring or repairing the damage.'"            Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 638
     (quoting Velop, 301 N.J. Super. at 64).                 This measure is
    generally applied where the damage is temporary.                    Woodsum, 
    177 N.J. Super. at 646
    .       For example, restoration-cost was applied in
    a faulty construction case involving damage from the defective
    25                                 A-2128-15T4
    installation of glass panels.   St. Louis, LLC v. Final Touch Glass
    & Mirror, Inc., 
    386 N.J. Super. 177
    , 194 (App. Div. 2006).
    Further, the Restatement (Second) of Torts section 929 (Am.
    Law Inst. 1979), as cited and generally accepted by our courts,
    see Ayers v. Jackson, 
    106 N.J. 557
    , 571 (1987), and Siligato v.
    State, 
    268 N.J. Super. 21
    , 31 (App. Div. 1993), affords a plaintiff
    the option to elect the measure of damages as follows:
    (1) If one is entitled to a judgment for harm
    to land resulting from a past invasion and not
    amounting to a total destruction of value, the
    damages include compensation for
    (a) the difference between the value of the
    land before the harm and the value after the
    harm, or at his election in an appropriate
    case, the cost of restoration that has been
    or may be reasonably incurred . . . .
    [Emphasis added.]
    Although   the   Restatement   does   not   explicitly    define
    "appropriate case," comment b to subsection 1(a) of section 929
    of the Restatement (emphasis added) explains:
    Restoration[:] Even in the absence of value
    arising from personal use, the reasonable cost
    of replacing the land in its original position
    is ordinarily allowable as the measure of
    recovery. Thus if a ditch is wrongfully dug
    upon the land of another, the other normally
    is entitled to damages measured by the expense
    of filling the ditch, if he wishes it filled.
    If, however, the cost of replacing the land
    in its original condition is disproportionate
    to the diminution in the value of the land
    caused by the trespass, unless there is a
    26                             A-2128-15T4
    reason personal to the owner for restoring the
    original condition, damages are measured only
    by the difference between the value of the
    land before and after the harm.     This would
    be true, for example, if in trying the effect
    of explosives, a person were to create large
    pits upon the comparatively worthless land of
    another.
    On the other hand, if a building such as a
    homestead is used for a purpose personal to
    the owner, the damages ordinarily include an
    amount for repairs, even though this might be
    greater than the entire value of the building.
    So, when a garden has been maintained in a
    city in connection with a dwelling house, the
    owner is entitled to recover the expense of
    putting the garden in its original condition
    even though the market value of the premises
    has not been decreased by the defendant's
    invasion.
    In   selecting      between    these    two    measures    of    quantifying
    property damages, our courts have recognized that "it can be unfair
    to use the restoration-cost method when 'the cost of repairs vastly
    exceeds   .    .   .   the   probable   market     value   of   the   property.'"
    Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 638
     (alteration in original) (quoting
    Correa v. Maggiore, 
    196 N.J. Super. 273
    , 285 (App. Div. 1984));
    see also Model Jury Charge (Civil), 8.40, "Trespass to Real
    Property" (2018) ("The measure of damages to be awarded to a
    plaintiff entitled to a verdict is the difference between the fair
    market value of his/her property before and after the trespass by
    the defendant.").
    27                                A-2128-15T4
    For   example,      in    Correa,    
    196 N.J. Super. at 277
    ,    the
    plaintiffs, who purchased a home from the defendant for $25,000,
    brought    an   action    to    recover       damages   allegedly       caused    by
    defendant's deliberate concealment of latent defects.                    The jury
    awarded the plaintiffs $33,000 in compensatory damages, reflecting
    the cost to raise and straighten the house.               
    Id. at 279-80
    .           We
    reversed the damage award, finding that "the cost of repairs
    approach should not be employed where . . . it would result in
    'unreasonable economic waste.'"              
    Id. at 285
     (quoting 525 Main St.
    Corp. v. Eagle Roofing Co., 
    34 N.J. 251
    , 255 (1961)).                  We reasoned
    as follows:
    By virtue of the age of the building and its
    present condition, the cost of reconstruction
    is not an appropriate measure of plaintiff's
    loss. This is so because the cost of repairs
    vastly exceeds the contract price and the
    probable market value of the property.      It
    would be anomalous to compel defendant to
    provide plaintiff with what essentially
    amounts to a totally refurbished home, which
    would be a result far exceeding what is
    necessary to make plaintiff whole.     Rather,
    the diminution in value caused by defendant's
    deceit better reflects plaintiff's actual loss
    and satisfies the reasonable expectations of
    the parties.
    [Id. at 285-86.]
    Nonetheless,     our      courts    have     recognized     that    in      some
    circumstances, "reasonable repair costs that exceed the diminution
    of the property's value are appropriate . . . [such as] 'where the
    28                                 A-2128-15T4
    property owner wishes to use the property rather than sell it.'"
    Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 638
     (quoting Velop, 301 N.J. Super.
    at 64).   As plaintiffs argue, restoration costs may be appropriate
    in instances where the land is used as a residence, Berg v.
    Reaction Motors Division, 
    37 N.J. 396
    , 412 (1962), or where the
    property had a peculiar value to the owner.              Huber v. Serpico, 
    71 N.J. Super. 329
    , 345 (App. Div. 1962).
    However, contrary to plaintiffs' argument, restoration costs
    are not a mandatory measure of damages in "homestead" cases.                 See
    525 Main St. Corp., 
    34 N.J. at 255
     (appropriate measure of damage
    "rests in good sense rather than in a mechanical application of a
    single formula"); Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 640
     (restoration
    cost "approach should not be applied mechanically").                      "[T]he
    'cardinal    principles     are     flexibility     of   approach   and     full
    compensation    to   the   owner,    within   the   overall    limitation    of
    reasonableness.'"      Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 640
     (quoting
    Huber, 
    71 N.J. Super. at 346
    ).
    Here, although plaintiffs had a "reason personal" for seeking
    to restore the property, as the trial judge properly found,
    completion of the repairs would result in "unreasonable economic
    waste."     525 Main St. Corp., 
    34 N.J. at 255
    ; Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 642
    ; St. Louis, LLC, 
    386 N.J. Super. at 188
    ; Velop, 301
    N.J. Super. at 64-66; Correa, 
    196 N.J. Super. at 285
    .                 As the
    29                              A-2128-15T4
    trial judge aptly recognized, plaintiffs' restoration costs of
    $750,000 to regrade the property and raise the house, would exceed
    what is necessary to make plaintiffs whole.            See Correa, 
    196 N.J. Super. at 285-86
    .   Indeed, restoration would completely change the
    condition of the property.      Additionally, the cost of restoration
    greatly exceeds the $25,000 diminution in the market value of the
    property especially where, as here, there was evidence in the
    record that plaintiffs could completely waterproof their basement
    for $28,000.
    Moreover,   the   property     flooded    years    before   plaintiffs
    purchased it in 2005, and both BOA and M.G.C.C. attempted to
    remediate the issue.       As the judge properly found, the present
    action is distinguishable from Berg, where the Court found the
    plaintiffs were entitled to restoration of their home to the
    "condition   immediately    prior   to   the   defendant's    activities."
    Berg, 
    37 N.J. at 412
    .      Thus, awarding plaintiffs full restoration
    costs of $750,000 would be unreasonable and would not represent
    their actual loss.      Accordingly, diminution in value was the
    appropriate measure of damages because it was "more likely to
    afford full and reasonable compensation."              Mosteller, 
    416 N.J. Super. at 638
    .
    30                              A-2128-15T4
    C.
    Although the trial court properly determined the measure of
    trespass damages, we part company with its determination of the
    amount of those damages as a matter of law.   In reaching a $25,000
    damage amount, the judge cited the unrefuted testimony of Imran.
    The judge reasoned:
    [A]ssessing the value of the property is
    beyond the ken of the jury. It's beyond the
    ken of a normal person.         That requires
    training.   That requires experience in real
    estate.    Experience in real estate around
    areas that have flood issues like Monmouth
    County . . . and the only evidence before them
    on that is Mr. Imran.
    [Plaintiffs' counsel] challenged him,
    . . . . But there's no countervailing
    assessment. Right? So, I think to say, gosh,
    he should have taken into consideration other
    factors, you may be right about that.     But
    then to say that it's up to the jury to
    determine how much more they should give,
    that's the part I'm concerned about. Because
    I think then you're asking them to engage in
    an analysis that only an expert is qualified
    to do.
    . . . .
    There was no expert to say . . . his estimate
    is way off. The . . . diminution of value of
    the property is substantially more than
    $25,000. There's no other testimony to that
    effect on diminution of value.     There just
    isn't.
    And I think that it's a matter of expert
    opinion.   It's a matter for an expert.     I
    think speculating on how water damage impacts
    31                           A-2128-15T4
    the value of the house, is beyond the ken of
    an average juror.     And . . . there's no
    countervailing expert . . . .
    Plaintiffs        contend   damages    should    have    been    determined
    instead      by   the    jury,    citing    the   court's     recognition       that
    "ultimately once the [expert] testimony is presented, it's for the
    jury to weigh that credibility."             Among other things, plaintiffs
    also claim Imran was not aware of "the true condition of [their]
    backyard and basement."           In particular, Imran confirmed "that no
    one   gave    [him]     any   information    that     there   was     an   elevated
    groundwater table beneath this house."              Because a jury may accept
    or reject expert testimony, we agree with plaintiffs that the
    amount of trespass damages should have been determined by the
    jury, as the factfinder, here.
    "Expert testimony is generally required to determine the fair
    market value of real property . . . ."                 Pansini Custom Design
    Assocs., LLC v. City of Ocean City, 
    407 N.J. Super. 137
    , 143 (App.
    Div. 2009); see also Smart SMR v. Borough of Fair Lawn Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    152 N.J. 309
    , 336 (1998) (proof of adverse effect by
    construction of a telecommunications tower on adjacent properties
    will generally require qualified expert testimony); Jacobitti v.
    Jacobitti, 
    263 N.J. Super. 608
    , 613 (App. Div. 1993) (cautioning
    "trial judges against fixing market value of real property without
    the benefit of expert appraisal evidence").             "Nevertheless, expert
    32                                   A-2128-15T4
    testimony need not be given greater weight than other evidence nor
    more weight than it would otherwise deserve in light of common
    sense and experience."   Torres v. Schripps, Inc., 
    342 N.J. Super. 419
    , 430 (App. Div. 2001).    Significantly, "a factfinder is not
    bound to accept the testimony of an expert witness, even if it is
    unrebutted by any other evidence."    
    Id. at 431
    ; Model Jury Charge
    (Civil), 1.13, "Expert Testimony" (2018) (instructing that jurors
    "are not bound by the testimony of an expert[;] . . . may give it
    whatever weight [they] deem is appropriate[;] [and] may accept or
    reject all or part of an expert's opinion(s)").
    Here, as the trial court observed, BOA's real estate appraiser
    testified, without objection or refutation by a competing expert,
    that the diminution in value of the property was approximately
    $25,000.   However, the jury was free to "accept or reject" Imran's
    expert testimony.    That liberty is especially applicable here
    where Imran admitted he was unaware of the extent of flooding on
    the property. Because Imran did not consider the property's entire
    flooding history in calculating the appraised value, the jury
    might not have perceived his testimony as unrefuted, and could
    have accepted or rejected his $25,000 opinion of the diminution
    in value of plaintiffs' property. As such, trespass damages should
    have been determined by the jury.    However, there is no reason to
    set aside the jury's award for nuisance damages to the basement.
    33                          A-2128-15T4
    We, therefore, find the trial judge erred in removing from
    the jury's consideration the amount of damages on plaintiffs'
    trespass claim. Accordingly, we vacate the portion of the December
    21, 2015 judgment awarding plaintiffs $25,000, and remand for a
    new trial on damages, only, as to plaintiffs' trespass claim.
    However, as discussed, infra, the thirty-five percent "avoidable
    consequences" offset, determined by the first jury, shall be
    applied to reduce any new jury award for trespass damages.
    In addressing the matters on remand, the trial court should
    conduct a case management conference within thirty days to set a
    schedule for revised or additional expert reports, limited to
    diminution in current market value, and to fix a new trial date.
    To avoid repetition and undue expense, the parties are encouraged
    to confer and reach stipulations, where applicable.
    III.
    Plaintiffs' argument that the trial court erred in denying
    their application to file a third amended complaint, more than one
    year after the jury verdict, lacks sufficient merit to warrant
    discussion.    R.   2:11-3(e)(1)(E).   Further,   we   find   equally
    unavailing plaintiffs' contention that they were not comparatively
    negligent. Because we are remanding for the jury to assess damages
    on plaintiffs' trespass claim, we add the following brief comments.
    Pursuant to the Comparative Negligence Act, a plaintiff's
    34                            A-2128-15T4
    negligence shall not bar recovery in an action
    by any person or his legal representative to
    recover damages for negligence resulting in
    death or injury to person or property, if such
    negligence was not greater than the negligence
    of the person against whom recovery is sought
    or was not greater than the combined
    negligence of the persons against whom
    recovery is sought.
    [N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1.]
    As such, "when the plaintiff's negligence exceeds each defendant's
    negligence    .    .   .   the   plaintiff's     cause   of    action      cannot   be
    sustained."       Vega by Muniz v. Piedilato, 
    154 N.J. 496
    , 528 (1998).
    In this action, the jury determined "[p]laintiffs' damages
    could have been avoided or alleviated by [p]laintiffs' exercise
    of reasonable care to address the water intrusion."                 The jury then
    assessed   plaintiffs'       percentage     of   damages      for   that    failure.
    Because plaintiffs offered proofs "that BOA committed intentional
    torts," they maintain "there is no way that apportionment as to
    fault can be made against [them]."                  Plaintiffs' argument is
    misplaced.    Restatement § 821D cmt. d. (recognizing that under
    trespass and private nuisance theories "liability may arise from
    an intentional or an unintentional invasion").
    Further, "The doctrine of 'avoidable consequences,' otherwise
    known as the duty to mitigate damages, is based on the premise
    that 'a plaintiff may not recover damages for injuries which he
    may have avoided.'"          Russo Farms v. Vineland Bd. of Educ., 144
    35                                    A-2128-15T4
    N.J. 84, 108 (1996) (quoting Barry v. Coca Cola Co., 
    99 N.J. Super. 270
    , 275 (Law Div.1967)).     "As opposed to contributory negligence,
    the doctrine of avoidable consequences 'normally comes into action
    when the injured party's carelessness occurs after the defendant's
    legal wrong has been committed.'" Id. at 108-09 (quoting Ostrowski
    v. Azzara, 
    111 N.J. 429
    , 438 (1988)); see also Dan B. Dobbs,
    Remedies, §§ 3.7 at 186 (1973).
    Here, plaintiffs admitted they had not taken measures to
    remediate the water damage.       For example, they did not regrade,
    as recommended by their home inspector, attempt to waterproof the
    basement, nor hire an exterminator to determine the snakes' origin.
    We   see   no   reason,   therefore,    to   disturb   the   trial   court's
    determination that principles of mitigation of damages applied to
    the entire verdict.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.              We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
    36                                A-2128-15T4