Mark R. Krzykalski v. David T. Tindall , 448 N.J. Super. 1 ( 2016 )


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  •                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2539-14T3
    A-2774-14T3
    MARK R. KRZYKALSKI and MICHELE
    KRZYKALSKI,                           APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,          December 5, 2016
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    DAVID T. TINDALL,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ____________________________________________________
    Submitted September 13, 2016 – Decided December 5, 2016
    Before Judges Fisher, Leone       and   Vernoia
    (Judge Leone concurring).
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Law Division, Burlington County,
    Docket No. L-3048-11.
    Law Offices of Robert F. Rupinski, attorneys
    for appellant Michele Krzykalski (Robert F.
    Rupinski, on the brief).
    Andres   &  Berger, P.C.,   attorneys for
    appellant Mark R. Krzykalski (Kenneth G.
    Andres, Jr., of counsel; Abraham Tran, on
    the brief).
    Parker Young & Antinoff, attorneys for
    respondent (Brad A. Parker, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FISHER, P.J.A.D.
    Plaintiff      Mark       R.   Krzykalski            commenced        this     action,
    alleging the negligence of both defendant David T. Tindall and a
    John   Doe    in    the    operation      of       their    vehicles       that    caused   an
    accident in which he was injured. In their separate appeals,
    which we consolidated, plaintiff and his ex-wife, Michele,1 argue
    the    jury's      award    of   damages       was    against       the    weight     of    the
    evidence     and    constituted       a   miscarriage          of    justice;       plaintiff
    also   contends,      among      other      things,        that     the    judge    erred    in
    allowing the jury to apportion liability between defendant and
    the fictitiously-named John Doe.                      We find no merit in their
    arguments and affirm.
    The auto accident in question occurred on October 24, 2009,
    at    the    intersection        of   Hornberger           Avenue    and    Route     130    in
    Florence Township.           Plaintiff's vehicle was in front of and in
    the same lane as Tindall's vehicle on northbound Route 130; both
    had slowed to allow an emergency vehicle enter onto Route 130
    from    Hornberger         Avenue.    Once      their       vehicles       began     to    move
    forward, a vehicle driven by the fictitious John Doe passed them
    from   the    right       lane   of   the      northbound         Route    130     lanes    and
    crossed their lane to make a left turn onto Hornberger Avenue.
    1
    Plaintiff Michele Krzykalski asserted a per quod claim for loss
    of consortium and services. The evidence revealed the marriage
    was troubled; they separated in June 2012 and later divorced.
    2                                     A-2539-14T3
    Both plaintiff and Tindall braked as a result of Doe's actions.
    Plaintiff was able to stop without striking the vehicle in front
    of   him;   Tindall's   vehicle   struck     the   rear   of   plaintiff's
    vehicle.
    By way of pre-verdict motions, the judge denied plaintiff a
    directed verdict on liability against Tindall and also rejected
    plaintiff's request that Doe's negligence, or the apportionment
    of liability between Tindall and Doe, be kept from the jury.
    The jury found both Tindall and Doe negligent, and found Tindall
    three   percent   and   Doe   ninety-seven    percent     responsible   for
    plaintiff's injuries. Damages were awarded in plaintiff's favor
    in the amount of $107,8902; no damages were awarded to Michele.
    In molding the verdict, the judge entered judgment in favor of
    plaintiff and against Tindall in the amount of $3,236.70.            Later
    motions for a new trial or additur were denied.
    Both plaintiff and Michele appealed. Plaintiff argues:
    I. THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED BY
    DENYING PLAINTIFF['S] MOTION FOR A DIRECTED
    VERDICT   ON   LIABILITY  AS   TO   DEFENDANT
    TINDALL, AND THE LIABILITY VERDICT OF 97% AS
    TO THE PHANTOM JOHN DOE, AND 3% AS TO
    DEFENDANT     TINDALL,     WHO     REAR-ENDED
    PLAINTIFF'S    STOPPED    VEHICLE,    IS    A
    MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE.
    2
    $91,250 in pain and suffering, disability and impairment, loss
    of enjoyment of life, and other non-economic losses, and $16,640
    in lost past wages.
    3                             A-2539-14T3
    II. THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN
    PLACING THE PHANTOM "JOHN DOE" ON THE JURY
    VERDICT SHEET.
    III. THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN
    BARRING PLAINTIFF['S] THOMAS JEFFERSON UNI-
    VERSITY HOSPITAL RECORDS FROM EVIDENCE.
    IV. THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN
    PERMITTING DEFENDANT TO PRESENT TESTIMONY
    AND ARGUE THAT PLAINTIFF['S] INJURIES WERE
    CAUSED BY HIS RIDING A ROLLER COASTER.
    V. THE DAMAGE VERDICT AS TO PLAINTIFF . . .
    IN THE AMOUNT OF $91,250.00 FOR PAIN AND
    SUFFERING, DISABILITY AND IMPAIRMENT, AND
    LOSS OF ENJOYMENT OF LIFE, DESPITE THE FACT
    THAT EVERY DOCTOR TESTIFIED PLAINTIFF HAD
    PERMANENT   RESIDUAL    BRAIN   DAMAGE   AND
    PERMANENT PARTIAL VISION LOSS, AND DEFENDANT
    STIPULATED THAT PLAINTIFF HAD INJURIES WHICH
    PIERCED THE LIMITATION ON LAWSUIT THRESHOLD,
    IS A MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE.
    A. Plaintiff is Entitled to a New
    Trial, in Light of the Extent of
    Plaintiff['s] Injuries.
    B.   The  Damage   Verdict  as  to
    Plaintiff . . . in the Amount of
    $91,250.00 was a Miscarriage of
    Justice   and   Shocking   to  the
    Conscience, and a New Trial Should
    be Granted Pursuant to He v.
    Miller.3
    VI. THE DAMAGE VERDICT AS TO PLAINTIFF . . .
    IN THE AMOUNT OF $16,540.00 FOR PAST LOST
    WAGES AND $0 FOR FUTURE LOST WAGES, ALTHOUGH
    THE EVIDENCE DEMONSTRATED THAT [PLAINTIFF'S]
    PAST AND FUTURE LOST WAGES AMOUNTED TO
    3
    During the pendency of this appeal, the Supreme Court rejected
    many aspects of its earlier holding in He v. Miller, 
    207 N.J. 230
    (2011). See Cuevas v. Wentworth, 
    226 N.J. 480
    (2016).
    4                        A-2539-14T3
    $350,000 AND $1,554,800.00, RESPECTIVELY, IS
    A MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE.
    VII. THE DAMAGE VERDICT OF ZERO AS TO
    PLAINTIFF MICHELLE KRZYKALSKI FOR HER PER
    QUOD CLAIM, DESPITE THE EVIDENCE SHOWING
    THAT [PLAINTIFF'S] INJURIES DESTROYED THEIR
    FAMILY, IS A MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE AND
    REFLECTS THE TRAVESTY OF THE ENTIRE VERDICT.
    Michele argues, in a single point, that the jury's decision to
    award her nothing was against the weight of the evidence and
    represented a miscarriage of justice.
    We turn first to whether the trial judge properly permitted
    the   jury's    consideration     and       apportionment   of    John   Doe's
    liability, as well as whether the jury's verdict that Tindall
    was only three percent responsible was against the weight of the
    evidence.4     Thereafter,   we    briefly        examine   the     arguments
    concerning the jury's award of damages.
    I
    In urging our reliance on statements in our case law that
    "a fictitious party is not a party to a suit," Bencivenga v.
    J.J.A.M.M., Inc., 
    258 N.J. Super. 399
    , 407 (App. Div.) (emphasis
    added), certif. denied, 
    130 N.J. 598
    (1992), and the statutory
    4
    We find insufficient merit in plaintiff's argument in his Point
    I that the judge erred in denying his motion for a directed
    verdict on Tindall's negligence to warrant discussion in a
    written opinion, R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E), because the jury in fact
    found Tindall negligent.
    5                            A-2539-14T3
    direction that the trier of fact determine "[t]he extent, in the
    form of percentage, of each party's negligence," N.J.S.A. 2A:15-
    5.2(b) (emphasis added), plaintiff contends that the trial judge
    erred in directing the jury to determine whether John Doe was
    negligent      and,        if    so,     the        percentage        to        which        he    was
    responsible.           Although         it     gives        the     appearance           of       some
    syllogistic logic, we do not find this argument persuasive.
    Consideration         of    an     alleged       tortfeasor's             negligence         and
    degree    of    responsibility            is     not       governed        by    whether          that
    tortfeasor may be said to be a "party" but turns on whether the
    other tortfeasor "will be affected by the verdict." See 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).     The law is best served, as the Court observed in Town
    of    Kearny    v.    Brandt,          
    214 N.J. 76
    ,     102     (2013),          when       the
    factfinder is allowed to evaluate the liability of all those
    potentially responsible. So, although, for example, an employer
    insulated      by    workers       compensation            laws     will        not     have       its
    responsibility apportioned, 
    Ramos, supra
    , 103 N.J. at 184, other
    tortfeasors,        such    as    those      who      have    sought       or     obtained         the
    protection     of     bankruptcy         laws,       and     therefore          are     no    longer
    answerable      in    damages,          should        nevertheless          be        considered,
    Brodsky v. Grinnell Haulers, Inc., 
    181 N.J. 102
    , 115 (2004); see
    6                                            A-2539-14T3
    also Town of 
    Kearny, supra
    , 214 N.J. at 103 (providing other
    examples   of     tortfeasors    whose       liability   was    considered    and
    apportioned despite plaintiff's inability to recover from them
    in whole or in part).
    Because the Comparative Negligence Act would be disserved
    by exalting the "party" label in adjudicating responsibility for
    a   plaintiff's    claim,   we   have    recognized      that   a   non-settling
    defendant has a right to have a jury apportion the liability of
    a settling defendant once it has been proven at trial that the
    settling defendant was, in fact, negligent.                See Green v. Gen.
    Motors Corp., 
    310 N.J. Super. 507
    , 545-46 (App. Div.), certif.
    denied, 
    156 N.J. 381
    (1998); Mort v. Besser Co., 
    287 N.J. Super. 423
    , 431 (App. Div. 1996), certif. denied, 
    147 N.J. 577
    (1997).
    Consequently, we have held that the comparative negligence of a
    phantom driver, such as John Doe here, should be considered by a
    jury in a trial brought by an injured party against another
    tortfeasor.       See Cockerline v. Menendez, 
    411 N.J. Super. 596
    ,
    618-19 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    201 N.J. 499
    (2010).
    Plaintiff argues this case differs from Cockerline because
    in that case a uninsured motorist (UM) carrier standing in the
    shoes of the fictitious driver settled with plaintiff prior to
    trial and, here, the proceedings between plaintiff and his UM
    7                              A-2539-14T3
    insurer     have    yet        to    be        resolved.5         Despite       that     factual
    difference, however, there remains in both instances a need to
    apportion responsibility between the two tortfeasors.                                  In short,
    if plaintiff and the UM insurer had settled prior to trial,
    apportionment would be required because Tindall, the remaining
    defendant, would be "chargeable with the total verdict less that
    attributable       to    the     settling            defendant's      percentage         share."
    Cartel Capital Corp. v. Fireco of N.J., 
    81 N.J. 548
    , 569 (1980).
    We see no distinction worthy of creating a different rule and
    drawing a different conclusion where the plaintiff and the UM
    insurer    have     not    yet       litigated          their      disputes.           To    allow
    plaintiff to obtain from Tindall the full amount of damages
    assessed    by    the     jury      and,       later,      seek    recovery      from       the   UM
    carrier,    could       result      in     a    windfall,         contrary      to    our    prior
    holdings. As we said in Cockerline, "to preclude defendants from
    seeking    an     apportionment            of     liability         against      the     phantom
    vehicles    does    not     advance            the    purposes      of    the    UM     law       and
    frustrates the purposes of the joint tortfeasor and comparative
    fault     law."    411     N.J.       Super.          at    619.         We,    thus,       reject
    plaintiff's contention that, because John Doe may not be labeled
    5
    According to the parties' submissions, plaintiff previously
    refused his UM carrier's offer of the policy limits both before
    and during trial, leaving that matter to be determined upon an
    eventual demand for UM arbitration.
    8                                      A-2539-14T3
    a "party," his negligence should not have been apportioned by
    the jury.6
    We also reject plaintiff's argument that the jury's finding
    that John Doe was ninety-seven percent responsible and Tindall
    only three percent responsible was against the weight of the
    evidence.    Plaintiff chiefly relies on Dolson v. Anastasia, 
    55 N.J. 2
    , 10-12 (1969), which held that a new trial was required
    when a jury failed to find defendant negligent when his vehicle
    struck plaintiff's vehicle from the rear.      Contrary to what
    required a new trial in Dolson, the jury here found Tindall
    negligent and his negligence a proximate cause of plaintiff's
    injuries.    The question posed here -- in the context of the
    trial judge's denial of a motion for a new trial on this point -
    6
    It may, at first blush, appear that our holding today and, for
    that matter, our holding in Cockerline, are inconsistent with
    our earlier decision in Bencivenga, where we upheld a decision
    not to submit a fictitious defendant's liability to the
    factfinder for apportionment.      Such an assumption would be
    mistaken. In deciding Bencivenga, we were persuaded that the
    defendant nightclub was in the best position to identify the
    fictitious defendant, who was one of its bouncers, and that it
    would have been inequitable to allow the nightclub to receive a
    potential benefit from its 
    reticence. 258 N.J. Super. at 410
    .
    Similarly, our holdings here and in Cockerline also provide a
    more equitable result. See also Kranz v. Schuss, __ N.J. Super.
    __, __ (App. Div. 2016) (slip op. at 20) (holding that the only
    "equitable result" in this New Jersey suit – where an earlier
    New York suit against a New York defendant – was to have the New
    Jersey jury assign and allocate the fault of both the New Jersey
    defendant and the New York tortfeasor, even though the New York
    tortfeasor could never be a "party" to the New Jersey suit due
    to lack of personal jurisdiction).
    9                       A-2539-14T3
    -     simply   concerns           whether       the       jury's      apportioning         of
    responsibility between two tortfeasors was against the weight of
    the evidence.
    A judge shall grant a motion for a new trial "if, having
    given due regard to the opportunity of the jury to pass upon the
    credibility      of   the        witnesses,        it     clearly    and     convincingly
    appears that there was a miscarriage of justice under the law."
    R. 4:49-1(a). In applying this standard, the judge must evaluate
    the   evidence    with      an    eye    toward         correcting       "clear    error   or
    mistake by the jury." 
    Dolson, supra
    , 55 N.J. at 6.                           The judge is
    to "take into account, not only tangible factors relative to the
    proofs as shown by the record, but also appropriate matters of
    credibility, generally peculiarly within the jury's domain, and
    the    intangible     'feel       of    the     case'     which     it    has     gained   by
    presiding over the trial." Kita v. Borough of Lindenwold, 
    305 N.J. Super. 43
    , 49 (App. Div. 1997). Even then, we will not
    reverse the judge's ruling on the motion unless "it clearly
    appears that there was a miscarriage of justice under the law."
    R. 2:10-1.
    In   ruling    on    the        motion      for    a   new    trial,       the   judge
    correctly observed that the jury was faced with the consequence
    of two negligent acts committed by two separate individuals.
    Tindall     failed    to    keep       sufficient        distance     from      plaintiff's
    10                                    A-2539-14T3
    vehicle to avoid striking it from behind, and John Doe cut off
    plaintiff's vehicle, Tindall's vehicle, and others, by crossing
    the northbound lanes to make a left turn off the roadway.             The
    degree of responsibility between these two tortfeasors presented
    a fact-sensitive question for the jury. In the jurors' eyes,
    John Doe was far more blameworthy than Tindall.        And the trial
    judge observed the witnesses, and gained a feel of the case,
    found no miscarriage of justice in what the jury concluded.
    After close examination of the record in light of our standard
    of review, we cannot conclude that it "clearly appears" the
    verdict was "a miscarriage of justice." R. 2:10-1.
    II
    We find insufficient merit in plaintiff's contention that
    the jury's award of damages, either separately or collectively
    examined,   constituted   a   miscarriage   of   justice   to   warrant
    discussion in a written opinion.       R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).      We come
    to the same conclusion with regard to Michelle's contention that
    the jury's verdict on her claim for damages also constituted a
    miscarriage of justice. We add only the following few brief
    comments.
    In his third point, plaintiff argues the trial judge erred
    in barring admission of plaintiff's Thomas Jefferson University
    Hospital records.   In his brief, plaintiff did not refer us to
    11                            A-2539-14T3
    where in the record this ruling was made and he did not identify
    the particular records in question. Based on our own review of
    the record, we assume plaintiff refers in this point to hospital
    records he offered into evidence for the first time shortly
    before      summations.      The    record    suggests      that    although    medical
    experts may have either alluded to or based their opinions on
    their review of some hospital records, Tindall objected because
    there were things mentioned in the records in question that had
    not been addressed by any witness.                        The judge sustained that
    objection.
    We find no abuse of discretion in the judge's ruling. To
    the    extent   the     records      contained       information     not    previously
    mentioned by a witness, the judge correctly excluded them.                            And
    to    the   extent    they    were     offered       to   corroborate      an   expert's
    testimony, their exclusion was harmless.
    Lastly, we reject the arguments of both plaintiff and his
    ex-wife that the verdict on damages was against the weight of
    the evidence and represented a miscarriage of justice.                            To be
    sure, plaintiff has advocated his injuries were extensive and
    that the jury was mistaken in rendering an award far short of
    what he believes is fair and just.                    The fact of the matter is,
    however,      that     the    extent     and      significance       of    plaintiff's
    injuries     was     much    in    dispute,    and    the    jury   was    entitled    to
    12                                 A-2539-14T3
    exercise   its     judgment    in    crediting   or     rejecting   plaintiff's
    claims.    By the same token, the jury's decision to award nothing
    to Michele likely was based in part on its view that plaintiff
    was not injured as severely as he claimed.                 Also, Michele took
    on no additional responsibilities due to the accident and, with
    the deterioration of their marriage that started prior to the
    accident, she incurred no loss as a result of the accident.                      We
    have   been   presented       with   no    principled    reason     for   second-
    guessing the jury's determinations on damages.
    Affirmed.
    13                              A-2539-14T3
    LEONE, J.A.D., concurring.
    I concur in the result reached by my colleagues but write
    separately to explain why, in my view, that result hews to the
    statute and the governing precedent of our Supreme Court because
    a fictitious party is a "party" under the Comparative Negligence
    Act ("Act").     N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.8.
    The Act provides that the trier of fact shall determine
    "[t]he 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)(2) (emphasis added).
    Our Supreme Court has held that the Act "restricts the
    assessment of negligence to 'the parties to [the] suit.'"                     Ramos
    v. Browning Ferris Indus., Inc., 
    103 N.J. 177
    , 193 (1986) [Ramos
    II] (quoting N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2(b) (1973)).                   In Ramos II, the
    Court found that once an employer, immune under the Workers'
    Compensation Act, "obtain[ed] its summary judgment of dismissal,
    [it] was no longer a party to the suit, and the trial court
    correctly decided not to submit [its] negligence to the jury."
    
    Ibid. Subsequent to Ramos
    II, the Court allowed the assessment of
    the    negligence   of   parties   who     could   not   be   held   liable    for
    reasons other than immunity.                 Town of Kearny v. Brandt, 
    214 N.J. 76
    , 83 (2013) (holding that "when the claims against a defendant
    are    dismissed        on    statute       of     repose     grounds,        fault         may    be
    apportioned        to   the    dismissed         defendant      under       the    Comparative
    Negligence Act"); Brodsky v. Grinnell Haulers, Inc., 
    181 N.J. 102
    , 116 (2004) (holding that fault may be apportioned to "a
    joint tortfeasor whose case is dismissed before trial because of
    a bankruptcy discharge"); Young v. Latta, 
    123 N.J. 584
    , 596-97
    (1991)      (holding     that       a    non-settling       defendant        may       obtain      an
    allocation of fault to a settling defendant).
    In those cases, the Court distinguished Ramos II because
    "no cause of action in tort against the employer ever arose" as
    the    employer     was      completely          immune   and     thus      "not       a    'party'
    within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.2."                             
    Brandt, supra
    , 214
    N.J.   at    99,    103;      see       
    Brodsky, supra
    ,     181    N.J.       at       115   ("an
    employer cannot be a party to a negligence action").                                   The Court
    reaffirmed      that      allocation        of       negligence       was   only       available
    against a "party" within the meaning of the Act.                                   See 
    Brandt, supra
    , 214 N.J. at 98 ("the terms 'each party' and 'all the
    parties to a suit,' as used in the Comparative Negligence Act,
    encompass defendants who have been granted dismissals pursuant
    to the statute of repose" (citation omitted)); 
    Brodsky, supra
    ,
    181 N.J. at 110 ("a defendant who has been dismissed from a case
    2                                          A-2539-14T3
    as a result of a bankruptcy discharge is still a 'party' to whom
    a   percentage     of       fault   may   be       allocated");        see   also    
    Brandt, supra
    , 214 N.J. at 100 ("[Young] implicitly recognized 'that a
    defendant who settles and is dismissed from the action remains a
    "party" to the case for the purpose of determining the non-
    settling    defendant's         percentage         of     fault'"      (quoting     
    Brodsky, supra
    , 181 N.J. at 113)).
    Thus, the issue before us is whether an unidentified person
    named as a fictitious party is a "party" within the meaning of
    the Act.     In Bencivenga v. J.J.A.M.M., Inc., 
    258 N.J. Super. 399
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    130 N.J. 598
    (1992), we correctly
    recognized that the Act addresses "apportioning negligence among
    parties to the lawsuit."              
    Id. at 411;
    see Steele v. Kerrigan,
    
    148 N.J. 1
    , 33 (1997) (noting "with approval the holding in
    
    Bencivenga, supra
    ,      that    the      obligation         to    apportion        fault
    applies     only       to    tortfeasors           that     are   defendants        in    the
    litigation").       However, 
    Bencivenga, supra
    , then ruled that "the
    plain and ordinary meaning of the statutory language precludes
    inclusion    of    a    fictitiously        named         tortfeasor     from     the    Act's
    commands for apportioning 
    fault." 258 N.J. Super. at 406
    .               The
    rationales    for      that    ruling     are       flawed    and      out   of   step    with
    subsequent Supreme Court cases.
    3                                    A-2539-14T3
    First, Bencivenga cited the language in N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1
    providing that contributory negligence does not bar recovery if
    it "was not greater than the combined negligence of the persons
    against whom recovery is sought."                        
    Bencivenga, supra
    , 258 N.J.
    Super. at 406.          We then reasoned that "[a] fictitious person is
    not someone against whom recovery can be sought because the
    fictitious person rule, R. 4:26-4, and due process prevent entry
    of judgment against a person designated by a fictitious name."
    
    Id. at 406-07.
             However, a fictitious defendant literally is a
    person   against        whom       recovery       is    sought.           It   is   true      that
    recovery    cannot          be   obtained         until       the   fictitious         party    is
    identified and served.               However, subsequent to Bencivenga, our
    Supreme Court in Brodsky and Brandt permitted allocation of the
    negligence    of     parties         against          whom     recovery        could    not    be
    obtained.          In        any     event,           N.J.S.A.       2A:15-5.1         addresses
    contributory negligence, not comparative negligence.
    Second,    
    Bencivenga, supra
    ,          reasoned       that     "a   fictitious
    person   is   not       a    party     to     a       suit.         The   person       plaintiff
    identifies as a fictitious defendant only becomes a party to the
    suit when the defendant's true name is substituted in an amended
    complaint and service is 
    effected." 258 N.J. Super. at 407
    .
    However, a fictitious defendant is listed as a party in the
    complaint, and "process may issue against the defendant under a
    4                                     A-2539-14T3
    fictitious      name."     R.    4:26-4.       Bencivenga      cited    Farrell     v.
    Votator Division of Chemetron Corp., 
    62 N.J. 111
    , 120 (1973),
    but   Farrell    ruled    that    substituting      a   fictitious     defendant's
    true name was not the addition of "a new party" but the renaming
    of the existing fictitious party.                 Ibid.; see Stegmeier v. St.
    Elizabeth Hosp., 
    239 N.J. Super. 475
    , 484 (App. Div. 1990).
    Third, Bencivenga stated its "result is supported by our
    holding in Ramos v. Browning Ferris Ind. of So. Jersey, Inc.,
    
    194 N.J. Super. 96
    (App. Div. 1984) [Ramos I], rev'd on other
    grounds, 
    103 N.J. 177
    (1986) [Ramos II]."                     
    Bencivenga, supra
    ,
    258 N.J. Super. at 407.               Bencivenga quoted Ramos I's reasoning
    that "[a] truer verdict is more likely to be returned where the
    fact finder's attention is ultimately fixed on the conduct of
    the   parties    who     will    be    affected    by   the   verdict."        
    Ibid. (quoting Ramos I,
    supra, 194 N.J. Super. at 106
    ).
    [T]here is no more reason to have a fact
    finder assign a percentage of negligence to
    someone who is not affected by the verdict
    than to assign a percentage of negligence to
    acts of God (such as the snow in this case)
    or a myriad of other causative factors that
    may have contributed to the happening of an
    accident.
    [Ibid. (emphasis added) (quoting                   Ramos    
    I, supra
    , 194 N.J. Super. at 106).]
    5                                A-2539-14T3
    However, our "affected by the verdict" test in Ramos I was
    not   adopted     by    our    Supreme       Court    in    Ramos    II.1      Moreover,
    subsequent      to     Bencivenga,       the     Court      in    Brodsky    and     Brandt
    permitted allocation of the negligence of parties who would not
    be affected by the verdict, such as defendants protected by
    bankruptcy or the statute of repose.
    Thus,     it     appears      Bencivenga       is    no    longer     good    law    on
    whether apportionment of negligence is possible from a party
    from whom recovery is not currently possible.                               While    Brandt
    mentioned Bencivenga in describing how "[t]he Appellate Division
    has   also     considered        the    issue    of       apportionment      in     several
    settings,"       Brandt       did      not   involve        fictitious       defendants.
    
    Brandt, supra
    , 214 N.J. at 101-02, 103.                          Thus, we do not read
    Brandt    as    adopting       the     holding       in    Bencivenga       barring       the
    assessment of negligence of fictitious parties.                              Indeed, the
    Court    in    Brandt    announced       four    "guiding        principles"       for    the
    assessment of negligence, which support assessing the negligence
    of a fictitious party.              
    Id. at 102–03.
    1
    Ramos I
    I, supra
    , did agree that "other causes, such as the snow
    that fell on the ground, might have contributed to the happening
    of the accident, yet the degree of fault to be attributed to
    those additional causes was not submitted to the 
    jury." 103 N.J. at 193
    (citing Ramos 
    I, supra
    , 194 N.J. Super. at 106).
    Unlike snow and other acts of God, however, a fictitious driver
    can be sued, may be liable, and should be considered in
    assessing the comparative negligence of the persons who
    contributed to causing an accident.
    6                                      A-2539-14T3
    "First,        the      Comparative        Negligence        Act   and        the       Joint
    Tortfeasors Contribution Law promote 'the distribution of loss
    "in proportion to the respective faults of the parties causing
    that loss."'"           
    Id. at 102
    (quoting 
    Brodsky, supra
    , 181 N.J. at
    114).        "Given the impact of a defendant's percentage of fault on
    the scope of its liability, the statutes' objectives are best
    served        when     the      factfinder        evaluates        the   fault           of    all
    potentially responsible parties."                     
    Ibid. That principle plainly
    supports       assessing        the      negligence      of   a   fictitious        party      who
    helped cause the loss and is potentially responsible.                                      Absent
    allocation of negligence of the fictitious party, "a defendant
    who     is     found     to     be       one   percent    negligent      would        be      held
    responsible for ninety-nine percent of the negligence caused by
    a joint tortfeasor."                 See 
    Brodsky, supra
    , 181 N.J. at 116.                       The
    Court    "decline[d]           to    follow     th[at]    approach,"     and        we     should
    likewise decline to impose 100% liability on defendant though
    the jury found him only 3% liable and the fictitious driver 97%
    liable.       See 
    ibid. "Second, our courts
    have barred apportionment where, as a
    matter of law, defendant could not under any circumstances be a
    joint tortfeasor under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-2."                           
    Brandt, supra
    , 214
    N.J. at 102.           Unlike the employer "immunized from any action in
    tort"     in     Ramos        II,    a     fictitious     party     could      be     a       joint
    7                                       A-2539-14T3
    tortfeasor     under      N.J.S.A.    2A:53A-2        if   identified      and   served.
    See ibid.2
    "Third,      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."                      
    Id. at 103.
          Thus, the
    apportionment        of    negligence    of       a   fictitious     party       is    not
    precluded because the plaintiff will not be in a position to
    recover damages until it identifies and serves that party.
    "Fourth, a claimant's failure to conform to a statutory
    requirement for asserting claims against a given defendant does
    not necessarily bar apportionment of that defendant's fault at
    trial."      
    Ibid. There is no
    statutory bar against asserting a
    claim against a fictitious defendant; indeed, it is permitted by
    Rule 4:26-4.
    Thus, assessing the negligence of a fictitious party is
    consistent with all four guiding principles articulated by our
    Supreme   Court      in     Brandt.      "Applied          here,   these    principles
    require that we affirm the [Law] Division's decision on the
    2
    For   purposes of   N.J.S.A.  2A:53A-2,  "the  term  'joint
    tortfeasors' means two or more persons jointly or severally
    liable in tort for the same injury to person or property,
    whether or not judgment has been recovered against all or some
    of them." N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-1.
    8                                   A-2539-14T3
    issue of apportionment."                 See 
    Brandt, supra
    , 21 N.J. at 103.
    "The    goals      of    our     comparative         fault     statutory    scheme       are
    advanced     if    the    jury    assesses        the   [fictitious]       defendant['s]
    potential fault in this case" because such assessment "promotes
    fair    allocation        of     responsibility          and     avoids    creating       an
    incentive for a plaintiff to strategically target only one of a
    range of culpable defendants."                See 
    id. at 104.
    Indeed, as the majority opinion points out, plaintiffs have
    the ability to indirectly obtain a measure of compensation based
    on the negligence of the fictitious driver through uninsured
    motorist (UM) insurance, but chose not to complete that process
    before going to trial against defendant.                           Cf. Cockerline v.
    Menendez,       411      N.J.    Super.       596,      617-19     (App.    Div.      2010)
    (approving apportionment of negligence of a fictitious driver
    after    the      plaintiff      recovered        for    his     negligence      under    UM
    insurance).        Assessing the negligence of the fictitious driver
    prevents       plaintiffs        from    strategically           waiting    to     proceed
    against UM insurance, allocates fault based on actual negligence
    of     the   various       drivers,       and      avoids        double    recovery       by
    plaintiffs.
    For   these       reasons,       the   trial      court's    apportionment         of
    negligence was proper and should be affirmed.
    9                                    A-2539-14T3