Estate of Myroslava Kotsovska, by Olena Kotsovska , 433 N.J. Super. 537 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •                    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5512-11T4
    ESTATE OF MYROSLAVA KOTSOVSKA,
    by OLENA KOTSOVSKA, Administrator,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    December 26, 2013
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    SAUL LIEBMAN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________________
    Argued March 20, 2013 - Decided December 26, 2013
    Before Judges Grall, Simonelli and Accurso.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Union County, Docket
    No. L-4258-09.
    Robert F. Cox argued the cause for appellant
    (McCreedy and Cox, attorneys; Mr. Cox, on
    the briefs).
    George E. Spaneas of the New Hampshire bar,
    admitted pro hac vice, argued the cause for
    respondent (Smith, Stratton, Wise, Heher &
    Brennan, LLP, and Mr. Spaneas, attorneys;
    Gerald D. Wixted, and Mr. Spaneas, of
    counsel and on the briefs).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    ACCURSO, J.A.D.
    Defendant Saul Liebman appeals from a $565,806.37 final
    judgment in this wrongful death action, following a jury verdict
    in favor of plaintiff Estate of Myroslava Kotsovska (the
    estate), and from the denial of his motion for a new trial.
    Liebman contends that decedent was his employee, and thus the
    Workers' Compensation Act's (the Act) exclusivity bar, N.J.S.A.
    34:15-8, prohibits her estate from maintaining this action.     The
    central issue on appeal is whether the question of the
    decedent's status as an employee or independent contractor,
    which the jury determined adversely to Liebman, should have been
    decided in the Division of Workers' Compensation (the Division).
    We conclude that the Division was the proper forum for
    resolution of that issue pursuant to Kristiansen v. Morgan, 
    153 N.J. 298
     (1998), modified on other grounds, 
    158 N.J. 681
     (1999).
    Because the Superior Court has concurrent jurisdiction to decide
    whether the decedent was an employee or independent contractor,
    however, that error would not alone require the course of this
    matter to be rerun.   But as we also conclude that the jury
    instructions on the issue were seriously flawed, reversal and
    remand is required.   Because we reject Liebman's remaining
    points of error, however, we affirm the jury's damages verdict
    and preserve it pending remand to the Division to determine
    decedent's employment status.
    2                          A-5512-11T4
    The basic facts of this tragic case are easily summarized.
    In September 2008, Liebman, then eighty-one years old, was
    living alone following the recent death of his wife.     His
    daughter, Robin Ross, was making inquiries among her friends for
    someone who could move into her father's home, cook his meals
    and assist him in his daily activities.    Decedent, a 59-year-old
    Ukrainian citizen on an extended visit with her daughter in New
    Hampshire, was referred to Ross for the role.1
    Ross initially communicated with decedent, who spoke almost
    no English, through decedent's daughter.   Decedent agreed to
    come to New Jersey to meet Ross and her father and, if the
    arrangements were suitable, to begin work immediately.
    Decedent met with Ross and Liebman in Liebman's home,
    accompanied by her son-in-law who served as a translator.        The
    parties agreed that decedent would move into Liebman's home and
    work seven days a week for one hundred dollars a day, which she
    would receive in cash.   Decedent was responsible for preparing
    three meals a day, doing the laundry, performing light
    housekeeping, accompanying Liebman on errands, and assisting him
    with whatever tasks he required.    Liebman walked with a cane and
    occasionally needed assistance on stairs or getting in or out of
    1
    Decedent had apparently provided similar services to a New
    Jersey family on an earlier visit.
    3                              A-5512-11T4
    the car.    Decedent was to also accompany Liebman if he chose to
    go out to eat, at his request.
    The parties did not discuss whether decedent's visa
    authorized her to work in this country, which it did not, or
    whether decedent was to be Liebman's employee or considered an
    independent contractor.    There was also no discussion as to the
    duration of the arrangement, although the parties did discuss
    the decedent returning to her daughter's home for the Christmas
    holiday.    Decedent's son-in-law advised Ross that decedent was
    without health insurance, and that he and his wife would pay her
    medical bills if she got sick.
    The parties met on October 21, 2008, and decedent began her
    duties immediately thereafter.    On December 8, 2008, Liebman and
    decedent were running errands and stopped at the Millburn Diner
    for lunch.    Decedent got out of the car and stood on the
    sidewalk while Liebman pulled into the parking space in front of
    her.   As decedent stood on the sidewalk in front of a low patio
    wall, Liebman suddenly accelerated, driving the car over the
    parking block and onto the sidewalk.    Liebman crashed the car
    into decedent, pinning her against the low wall.    The accident
    severed decedent's left leg below the knee, resulting in her
    death nearly an hour later.
    4                           A-5512-11T4
    The estate filed a wrongful death action against Liebman in
    Superior Court.    Liebman answered and asserted an affirmative
    defense of lack of subject matter jurisdiction, contending that
    exclusive jurisdiction was in the Division.    Liebman
    subsequently filed a motion to dismiss on the same grounds.       The
    court denied the motion and advised the parties that it would
    entertain a motion for summary judgment after the completion of
    discovery.   If after hearing that motion the court concluded
    that decedent was an employee, the matter would be transferred
    to the Division.
    Following discovery, Liebman filed a motion before another
    judge to transfer the case to the Division.    That judge denied
    the motion because there was no claim pending in the Division
    and the limitations period for filing a workers' compensation
    petition had expired.    Liebman's motion for reconsideration was
    denied.   Liebman moved again for reconsideration, this time
    attaching a certification from his homeowner's insurance carrier
    acknowledging the existence of workers' compensation coverage
    and notice of the claim.   The carrier conceded that the accident
    arose out of the course of decedent's employment and agreed not
    to raise a limitations defense to transfer of the claim.    The
    court again denied the motion.    We denied Liebman's motion for
    5                         A-5512-11T4
    leave to appeal.   Liebman's subsequent motion for summary
    judgment was also denied.
    The case was tried over several days.    The jury determined
    that decedent was an independent contractor and awarded the
    estate $300,000 for decedent's pain and suffering and $225,000
    for her wrongful death.   Liebman's motion for new trial was
    denied.   This appeal followed.
    We conclude that this matter should have been transferred
    to the Division for determination of decedent's employment
    status.   The Court in Kristiansen held that, although the
    Superior Court and the Division have concurrent jurisdiction to
    decide an exclusivity defense, primary jurisdiction is in the
    Division where, as here, "no issue has been raised that the
    Division cannot decide in a manner that is binding on all the
    interested parties."   Kristiansen, supra, 
    153 N.J. at 311
    .
    The trial court rejected that Kristiansen controlled
    because both it and Wunschel v. City of Jersey City, 
    96 N.J. 651
    (1984), on which Kristiansen relied, involved situations, unlike
    this one, in which there was no dispute that the deceased worker
    was an employee covered by the Act.   It noted the Kristiansen
    Court emphasized that the Legislature did not intend workers who
    had accepted the provisions of the Act, pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    34:15-7, to have an election as to whether to pursue common-law
    6                          A-5512-11T4
    tort remedies.   Kristiansen, supra, 
    153 N.J. at 311-12
    .
    Reasoning that decedent could not be deemed to have accepted the
    provisions of the Act if she were not defendant's employee, as
    her estate maintained, the trial court determined that the
    Division's jurisdiction could not be considered exclusive while
    a dispute existed over decedent's employment status.   The court
    thus concluded that the Superior Court "must have jurisdiction
    to determine whether plaintiff is an employee," at least when
    the plaintiff has not also filed a workers' compensation
    petition.
    We think that Wunschel and Kristiansen compel a different
    result.   In Wunschel a city police officer, Wunschel, was
    accidently shot and killed by his on-duty partner, who was
    picking Wunschel up at his second job to start their tour.
    Wunschel, supra, 
    96 N.J. at 655-56
    .   Wunschel's widow filed a
    petition for workers' compensation benefits against both of
    Wunschel's employers, and a wrongful death suit against them as
    well as against Wunschel's partner.   
    Id. at 656
    .   The central
    issue in both actions was whether Wunschel was working for the
    City or his second employer when he was shot.   
    Id. at 657
    .     When
    the case reached the Supreme Court, the Wunschel Court was
    confronted with a situation in which the Division and the
    Superior Court had reached the opposite result on that same
    7                            A-5512-11T4
    factual issue.   
    Id. at 658
    .    In order to avoid such "illogical
    inconsistenc[ies]" in the future, the Court determined to
    "design a procedure to 'assure that a controversy, or its most
    critical facets, will be resolved by the forum or body which, on
    a comparative scale, is in the best position by virtue of its
    statutory status, administrative competence and regulatory
    expertise to adjudicate the matter.'"     Kristiansen, supra, 
    153 N.J. at 309
     (quoting Wunschel, 
    supra,
     
    96 N.J. at 664
    ).
    The Court decided that the best forum for "employment
    issues" is the Division.     Wunschel, 
    supra,
     
    96 N.J. at 664
    .   The
    Wunschel Court acknowledged, however, that the Division's
    limited jurisdiction would on occasion make it impossible for
    the Compensation Court to exercise jurisdiction over a party
    whose participation was necessary to resolve all aspects of the
    controversy, such as when the fellow-servant defense is
    implicated and the fellow servant declines to intervene in the
    Division proceeding.     
    Id. at 664, 665-67
    .   In such cases, the
    Court recognized concurrent jurisdiction in the Superior Court
    to decide the employment issues related to the fellow-servant
    defense.   
    Id. at 666
    .
    The Court revisited the question of the concurrent
    jurisdiction of the Division and the Superior Court in these
    matters in Kristiansen.     Kristiansen was employed by the State
    8                          A-5512-11T4
    as a bridge operator.   Kristiansen, supra, 
    153 N.J. at 302
    .       He
    was struck and killed by a motorist as he was leaving the bridge
    at the end of his shift.   
    Id. at 304
    .    His widow filed both a
    claim petition in the Division and a wrongful death action
    against the State and the driver.   
    Ibid.
       The trial court
    rejected the State's exclusivity defense, concluding that it had
    concurrent jurisdiction to decide whether Kristiansen was still
    within the scope of his employment when he was run over on the
    bridge.   
    Id. at 302
    .
    Describing the issue as "different from, yet related to,
    the employment issue raised in Wunschel," the Kristiansen Court
    held that although the Superior Court had concurrent
    jurisdiction to decide whether Kristiansen was within the scope
    of his employment at the time of his death, primary jurisdiction
    over that question was in the Division.     
    Id. at 313-14
    (explaining that primary jurisdiction analysis requires
    determining which of possible tribunals has predominant interest
    in, and expertise to decide, disputed issue).    The Court
    determined that the Division's jurisdiction was primary because,
    unlike in Wunschel, the Division could decide all aspects of the
    controversy in a manner binding on all the interested parties,
    and "[r]egardless of whether the employer admits or denies the
    compensability of an accident, the Division is the forum best
    9                             A-5512-11T4
    suited to decide whether the accident falls within the coverage
    formula of the Act."   
    Id. at 313
    .
    Thus, although it is certainly true, as the trial court
    noted, that both Wunschel and Kristiansen addressed the
    compensability of the accidents that befell those workers and
    not their status as employees,2 we think that distinction less
    important than the Court's broader point that the Division is
    "the forum best suited to decide employment issues," between the
    Superior Court and the Division in a primary jurisdiction
    analysis.   
    Id. at 309, 313-14
    .   Larson likewise questions the
    soundness of hinging the primary jurisdiction of a compensation
    board on the distinction between employment status and
    compensability of the accident, 6 Lex K. Larson, Larson's
    Workers' Compensation Law § 102.06 (Mathew Bender rev. ed. 2013)
    (criticizing distinction on basis that employment status is more
    "fundamental" than compensability as "very questionable"),
    arguing that the Board is equally without jurisdiction to award
    compensation in the absence of employment relation as injury in
    the course of employment.   Id. at § 130.07.
    2
    The precise question in Wunschel was whether the deceased
    police officer was working as an employee of Jersey City's
    police department or moonlighting for a private employer, or
    both, at the time of his death. Wunschel, 
    supra,
     
    96 N.J. at 660
    . Accordingly, the question in that case is closely
    analogous to the employment status issue presented in this
    matter.
    10                        A-5512-11T4
    While the presence of other parties could, depending on the
    circumstances, counsel against transfer to the Division,
    Wunschel, 
    supra,
     
    96 N.J. at 666
    , here, because there was no such
    impediment, Kristiansen compelled the transfer, 
    153 N.J. at 313
    .
    Accordingly, we hold that because Liebman's exclusivity defense
    turned on whether decedent was his employee or an independent
    contractor, an issue over which the Division could enter a
    binding judgment, and one which the Division was best suited "by
    virtue of its statutory status, administrative competence and
    regulatory expertise to adjudicate," 
    id. at 309
     (quoting
    Wunschel, 
    supra,
     
    96 N.J. at 664
    ), the trial court should have
    transferred the case to the Division.
    Because the Law Division had concurrent jurisdiction to
    decide whether the decedent was an employee or independent
    contractor, the failure to recognize the Division's primary
    jurisdiction would not, standing alone, require the case to be
    reversed.   Kristiansen, supra, 
    153 N.J. at 318
    .   We agree with
    Liebman, however, that the instructions to the jury were
    seriously flawed and clearly capable of producing an unjust
    result, thus requiring reversal.     R. 2:10-2.
    The court charged the jury generally regarding the
    distinctions between an employee and a general contractor with
    11                         A-5512-11T4
    reference to a lengthy list of factors.     Specifically, and by
    way of example, the judge instructed that
    hiring, payment of regularly weekly sum,
    provision of tools, supplies of a workplace
    and being terminable at will are factors
    that weigh in favor of the employer/employee
    relationship. Lack of payroll deductions,
    payment in cash are factors that weigh
    against the employer/employee relationship.
    Determining whether an individual is an employee or an
    independent contractor is often difficult and a recitation of
    factors organized into "pro-employee and pro-independent
    contractor lists is not particularly helpful" in accomplishing
    the task.    Marcus v. E. Agric. Ass'n, 
    58 N.J. Super. 584
    , 600
    (App. Div. 1959) (Conford, J.A.D. dissenting), rev'g on dissent,
    
    32 N.J. 460
     (1960).    Moreover, because the Act is socially
    remedial legislation, "[t]he term 'employee' is to be defined
    liberally in order to bring as many cases as possible within the
    scope of the Workers' Compensation Act," even when the employee
    is attempting to have himself excluded from its coverage.      Sloan
    v. Luyando, 
    305 N.J. Super. 140
    , 147 (App. Div. 1997).
    The trial court's instructions focused only on defining
    whether decedent was an employee based on the control test,
    which is grounded in traditional master-servant principles.        New
    Jersey Prop.-Liab. Ins. Guar. Ass'n v. State, 
    195 N.J. Super. 4
    ,
    14 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    99 N.J. 188
     (1984) (explaining
    12                         A-5512-11T4
    the control test's four factors as the degree of control the
    employer has the right to exercise, the method of payment, who
    furnishes the equipment, and the right of termination).    In
    compensation cases, however, the Supreme Court has adopted an
    additional "economic and functional" test, of which the
    determinative criteria are "'not the inconclusive details of the
    arrangement between the parties, but rather the extent of the
    economic dependence of the worker upon the business he serves
    and the relationship of the nature of his work to the operation
    of that business.'"   Id. at 10 (quoting Marcus, supra, 
    58 N.J. Super. at 603
     (Conford, J.A.D., dissenting)).   The trial court
    did not instruct the jury on this relative nature of the work
    test, although highly relevant here as decedent would appear to
    have been entirely economically dependent on Liebman.
    In addition, the trial court's instruction that the lack of
    payroll deductions and payment in cash are factors weighing
    against a finding of employment was incomplete and misleading.
    Although they are obvious factors suggesting independent
    contractor status, we acknowledged their reduced importance in
    this context more than fifty years ago.   Brower v. Rossmy, 
    63 N.J. Super. 395
    , 405-06 (App. Div. 1960) (noting that factor of
    lack of payroll deductions for withholding taxes was de-
    emphasized in Congleton v. Pura-Tex Stone Corp., 
    53 N.J. Super. 13
                             A-5512-11T4
    282, 290 (App. Div. 1958), certif. denied, 
    34 N.J. 65
     (1961)).
    We have cautioned that these factors, included in the control
    test, must be viewed critically in light of Larson's
    acknowledgment of the desire on the part of some "employers to
    avoid both the financial cost and the bookkeeping and reporting
    inconvenience that goes with workmen's compensation,
    unemployment compensation, social security and the like."
    Hannigan v. Goldfarb, 
    53 N.J. Super. 190
    , 205-06 (App. Div.
    1958) (quoting Larson, supra, §§ 43.51, 45.10) (finding taxi
    driver to be "employee" for purposes of the Act despite official
    title of independent contractor).
    Their inclusion by the trial judge without further
    explanation, part of a larger failure to tailor the specifics of
    the court's charge to the facts of the case, combined with the
    absence of an instruction on the relative nature of the work
    test, resulted in a charge that did not adequately convey the
    law and was clearly capable of producing an unjust result.     Sons
    of Thunder, Inc. v. Borden, Inc., 
    148 N.J. 396
    , 418 (1997).3
    3
    Although Liebman lodged several objections to the court's
    charge, the failure to include the relative nature of the work
    test and the instruction on the effect of the cash payments and
    lack of withholding were not among them. Nevertheless, we are
    satisfied that they are appropriately noticed under the plain
    error doctrine. Ewing v. Burke, 
    316 N.J. Super. 287
    , 293 (App.
    Div. 1998) (explaining that under the plain error rule, even
    when counsel fails to object to jury instructions, "a charge
    (continued)
    14                           A-5512-11T4
    Turning to the issue of damages, Liebman contends that the
    court's improper judicial notice of decedent's conscious pain
    and suffering resulted in an unjustified award on her survival
    claim.   He also contends that because the Division should have
    decided whether decedent was an employee or independent
    contractor, the jury's entire damages verdict must likewise be
    set aside.    We disagree.
    The purpose of taking judicial notice is to save time and
    promote judicial economy by dispensing with the necessity of
    proving facts that cannot be seriously disputed and are
    generally or universally known.     State v. Silva, 
    394 N.J. Super. 270
    , 275 (App. Div. 2007).     There is no dispute that decedent
    did not die instantaneously.    As counsel and the court were
    discussing the court's introductory remarks to the jurors in
    anticipation of voir dire, Liebman stipulated to negligence and
    sought to preclude details of the accident being presented to
    the jurors.   Plaintiff objected as such details were relevant to
    the estate's survival claim.    That led to the following exchange
    between defense counsel and the court.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: [The decedent] was
    conscious before but as soon as the accident
    occurred, we have no idea. That is an area
    (continued)
    which misleads the jury will require a reversal and a new
    trial").
    15                        A-5512-11T4
    for expertise unless the court can take
    judicial notice of that. I don't believe
    the court can.
    THE COURT: I'll take judicial notice that
    anybody who is conscious and gets their leg
    traumatically amputated, suffered pain.
    "[F]acts that can be reasonably questioned or disputed may
    not be judicially noticed."   
    Ibid.
       Accordingly, the trial judge
    should not have taken judicial notice of decedent's conscious
    pain and suffering as a result of the accident, which he did.
    That error, however, was harmless as plaintiff developed ample
    evidence from both Liebman, as well as a man who stopped to
    help, that decedent appeared conscious for several minutes
    following the accident, her eyes were open, she was breathing
    laboriously, murmuring or groaning, and appeared to be trying to
    respond to those speaking to her.     Smith v. Whitaker, 
    160 N.J. 221
    , 236 (1999) (noting New Jersey allows recovery for pain and
    suffering when it can be shown that decedent survived her
    injuries, "however briefly").   Accordingly, we reject Liebman's
    challenge to the jury's award for pain and suffering on that
    ground.
    At oral argument, we asked the parties to brief their
    positions on whether the jury's verdict on damages could stand
    were we to remand the question of decedent's employment status
    to the Division and it were to conclude that decedent was an
    16                          A-5512-11T4
    independent contractor.   Liebman contends that the jury's
    damages verdict must be set aside in that event because the
    verdict "was tainted by evidence and testimony of witnesses
    which the jury should never have been exposed to."   In essence,
    Liebman posits that the jury may have punished him for appearing
    to have failed to provide decedent with the benefits of
    employment during her life then seeking the shelter of the Act
    once she was dead.
    The proofs would certainly be somewhat different in a trial
    limited to damages, but that alone is insufficient to set aside
    the jury's damages verdict.   Truchan v. Sayreville Bar & Rest.,
    Inc., 
    323 N.J. Super. 40
    , 53 (App. Div. 1999) (preserving a
    damages award pending a new trial on liability despite
    reversible error because "the liability issues and the damages
    issues were fairly separable"); Showalter v. Barilari, Inc., 
    312 N.J. Super. 494
    , 515-16 (App. Div. 1998) (remanding for a new
    trial as to liability only as "none of the errors identified
    impacted on the damage verdict").    Except with regard to the
    claim as to judicial notice, which we have rejected, Liebman
    does not claim that the damages verdict is excessive, and we do
    not find it so.   Jastram v. Kruse, 
    197 N.J. 216
    , 228 (2008)
    (explaining that damages awards should be set aside only upon a
    17                           A-5512-11T4
    finding of manifest miscarriage of justice).     Accordingly, we
    preserve it pending remand to the Division.
    We have considered Liebman's remaining arguments and
    determined that they are not of sufficient merit to warrant
    discussion in a written opinion.     R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    To summarize, we reverse the judgment on liability only and
    remand the matter to the Division to determine whether the
    decedent was defendant's employee or performed services for him
    as an independent contractor.   The Division shall thereafter
    transfer the matter to the Law Division, which shall, in
    accordance with the Division's determination of decedent's
    employment status, either reinstate the judgment in favor of the
    estate or dismiss the matter with prejudice in accordance with
    this opinion.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for
    further proceedings.   We do not retain jurisdiction.
    18                          A-5512-11T4