Paul Roik v. Anita Roik ( 2024 )


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  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2522-21
    PAUL ROIK,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,            APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    January 18, 2024
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    ANITA ROIK,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    __________________________
    Argued November 27, 2023 – Decided January 18, 2024
    Before Judges Sabatino, Mawla, and Chase.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Monmouth County,
    Docket No. FM-13-0156-21.
    Edward Peter Fradkin argued the cause for appellant
    (Law Office of Edward Fradkin, LLC, attorneys;
    Edward Peter Fradkin, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Coulter Richardson argued the cause for respondent
    (Richardson & Richardson, LLC, attorneys; Coulter
    Richardson, of counsel and on the briefs).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    MAWLA, J.A.D.
    As a general proposition, when a spouse dies pending a divorce, the
    divorce proceeding abates, and with it the statutory right to equitable
    distribution attendant to a divorce. Carr v. Carr, 
    120 N.J. 336
    , 342-43 (1990).
    The exception to this rule is where "unusual or exceptional" circumstances exist
    that permit a party to invoke equitable remedies to effect a distribution of marital
    property notwithstanding the other party's death. 
    Id. at 343, 349-50
    . Recently,
    our Legislature amended our intestacy laws and the equitable distribution statute
    to remedy this issue and close the proverbial "black hole" of Carr.
    We hold the amended statutes, namely, N.J.S.A. 3B:5-3(d), N.J.S.A.
    3B:8-1, and N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23.1(h)(2) apply retroactively. Independent of the
    new statutes, we hold where, as here, parties have entered a matrimonial
    settlement agreement (MSA) and one of the parties has died pending an
    uncontested divorce hearing, the Family Part may enforce the MSA as long as it
    is entered at arm's length, and it is fair and equitable to effectuate the parties'
    mutual intent to divide their assets and liabilities. For these reasons, we reverse
    and remand the trial court's April 11, 2022 order for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    I.
    Plaintiff Paul Roik and defendant Anita Roik were married for forty-six
    years when plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce on August 3, 2020. The
    A-2522-21
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    complaint attached a certification of insurance coverage indicating there was a
    life insurance policy, but plaintiff did not own it.
    The parties had three children; two sons and a daughter, all of whom were
    adults and emancipated. During the marriage, plaintiff was employed as an
    executive until he became disabled and retired; defendant was employed as a
    librarian and later retired. In 2013, plaintiff executed a will leaving his estate
    to the children and naming the eldest son executor.
    In November 2020, plaintiff filed a Case Information Statement (CIS),
    which listed a life insurance policy, but stated he did not own it. In January
    2021, defendant filed an answer and counterclaim and subsequently filed her
    CIS in April 2021. Through counsel, the parties negotiated an MSA, which
    plaintiff and defendant signed on November 24 and November 27, 2021,
    respectively. Their attorneys signed the document as witnesses to their clients'
    signatures.
    Notably, the MSA contained a provision stating the agreement became
    effective "upon the date that the last party executes this [a]greement . . . ." There
    was also a provision that acknowledged the parties' right to a trial and waived
    the right given the settlement. The parties acknowledged they were "fully and
    adequately informed of the financial structure of the marriage including their
    incomes, assets, liabilities and expenses" and waived their right to complete
    A-2522-21
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    formal discovery. They also waived their rights of inheritance. The MSA stated
    the parties read the agreement before signing it and entered it "voluntarily,
    without threat, force, coercion or duress . . . ." They further acknowledged the
    agreement was "fair and equitable . . . under all of the circumstances."
    The MSA required defendant to pay plaintiff open durational alimony
    totaling $7,500 per year. The agreement acknowledged neither party could
    afford to maintain the marital standard of living.
    The MSA divided the marital assets equally, save for defendant's pension,
    which she kept and would use in part to pay alimony. The parties agreed
    plaintiff would purchase defendant's interest in the former marital residence for
    $380,000 and assume the expenses associated with the residence. They divided
    the bank and retirement accounts subject to equitable distribution equally. This
    meant defendant owed plaintiff approximately $9,409 from the bank accounts
    and $119,892 from the non-pension retirement assets. Defendant retained her
    inherited bank and retirement accounts.
    The parties agreed the MSA would be incorporated into a judgment of
    divorce. The MSA also contained the following language: "In any event,
    whether the [c]ourt allows this [a]greement to be incorporated into said
    [j]udgment, this [a]greement and all of its terms and provisions shall survive the
    judgment and shall be valid and enforceable forever." The agreement also noted
    A-2522-21
    4
    it was binding upon the parties' estates, heirs, executors, administrators, assigns
    and legal representatives.
    On November 29, 2021, defendant's counsel emailed the court seeking an
    uncontested divorce hearing date in January 2022. The court scheduled an
    uncontested hearing for January 11, 2022. Beginning December 16, 2021, an
    email discussion ensued between the parties, the eldest son, and the daughter,
    regarding the uncontested divorce hearing. The daughter urged defendant to opt
    into a divorce "on the papers" rather than pay two attorneys to attend a virtual
    uncontested hearing on Zoom. She stated it did not "make sense to wait until
    [the Zoom hearing date] . . . if you both want things finalized sooner. It's not
    right that neither of you were given the option to handle it through a faster and
    cheaper route than . . . [Z]oom." Defendant responded she had no information
    about the hearing and asked: "Wasn't that arranged two months ago?"
    On December 23, 2021, defendant sent plaintiff the following email: "My
    lawyer says it is more expensive to do paperwork rather than Zoom." That
    afternoon she emailed the following message: "My lawyer says it would take
    an hour and a [half] to [two] hours to prepare. Zoom would take only [half an]
    hour."
    On December 25, 2021, plaintiff signed a certification in support of a
    judgment of divorce on the papers. He died on December 29, 2021.
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    On January 19, 2022, the eldest son, as executor of plaintiff's estate,
    moved: to substitute the estate as the real party in interest; enforce the MSA;
    for a constructive trust; or alternatively to intervene in the divorce litigation; and
    for other relief not pertinent to this appeal. Defendant opposed the motion and
    filed a cross-motion for other relief, including to dismiss the divorce.
    Defendant certified she knew about plaintiff's will when he executed it in
    2013. She knew plaintiff "was in ill health for [a] variety of reasons for a very
    long time" but denied purposely delaying the divorce until plaintiff died.
    Instead, she claimed the children were orchestrating the divorce to reap the
    benefits of plaintiff's estate as his beneficiaries. Enforcing the MSA's provisions
    would "impoverish her for the remainder of her retirement" and leave her
    without a residence.
    Notably, defendant certified as follows: "The desire to get divorced in a
    hearing, as opposed to the papers, had nothing to do with delaying the process.
    The associate I worked with over the summer, and with whom I was very fond,
    wanted to be able to voir dire me during the uncontested hearing."
    Defendant also certified she knew plaintiff "had a life insurance policy
    with American General – United States Life Insurance Company, on which he
    was making payments, the death benefit of which was $750,000." She claimed
    she "recently learned that perhaps as early as 2011" plaintiff transferred
    A-2522-21
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    ownership of the policy to the eldest son and changed the beneficiary
    designation from defendant to someone else. "At some point after that, . . .
    [defendant] became aware that [the] son . . . bought out or pre-paid the remainder
    of the payments on that life insurance policy." Defendant's certification attached
    a March 29, 2011 letter from the insurance carrier enclosing change of
    beneficiary and change of owner forms. The letter contained a handwritten
    notation stating: "$40,000 prepaid by son[.] $750,000 policy." Defendant
    certified the transfer of the policy's owner was "borne out on [plaintiff's] CIS[;]
    it lists a life insurance policy on his life, with the notation '[p]laintiff does not
    own [a] life insurance policy.'"
    The eldest son's reply certification noted defendant conceded she knew
    plaintiff no longer owned the life insurance policy because it was disclosed on
    the CIS. The policy was disclosed and "was never outside the realm of discovery
    [because plaintiff] provided a statement to [d]efendant's attorney through his
    attorney during the divorce." The son took over the policy at plaintiff's request
    because plaintiff could no longer afford the premiums.
    Following oral argument, the trial court issued a detailed written opinion
    denying the motion and granting the cross-motion. After surveying the extant
    case law, the judge concluded there were no
    unusual or exceptional circumstances to abatement of
    the divorce proceeding . . . present[ed] in this matter
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    7
    [because defendant] did not intentionally cause
    [plaintiff's] death. There was no adjudication of facts
    during the lifetime of the parties[,] justifying entry of
    the final judgment of divorce. There was no court
    ordered disposition of any property prior to [plaintiff's]
    death. Nor was there any pendente lite agreement to
    sell or divide marital assets.
    The judge concluded he could not enforce the MSA because there was no
    way of discerning, by voir dire, the parties' mutual intent, and whether they
    knowingly and voluntarily entered their agreement.             The judge cited
    Administrative Office of the Courts Directive #18-20, which promulgated the
    form "Certification in Support of Judgment of Divorce" required fo r a divorce
    on the papers. However, he found "[e]ven if the parties proceeded with a divorce
    on the papers, which they didn't, such a procedure does not relieve the court of
    its obligations to find the parties knowingly and voluntarily entered the MSA."
    The judge concluded he could not grant the motion because
    while the MSA reflects electronic signatures of the
    parties witnessed by their respective attorneys, at no
    time prior to [plaintiff's] death did the court make
    findings as required pursuant to Rule 1:7-4 to establish
    that the parties knowingly and voluntarily entered the
    MSA without coercion or duress, a precondition to
    enforcement of the MSA. . . . Further, the MSA was
    never made part of a [f]inal [j]udgment of [d]ivorce,
    either through an [u]ncontested [d]issolution [h]earing
    or divorce on the papers, and hence, the MSA is not
    enforceable as a court order.
    A-2522-21
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    The estate was not entitled to a constructive trust because there was no
    evidence of wrongdoing by defendant showing she would be unjustly enriched.
    She owned the marital residence with plaintiff as tenants by the entirety and
    would receive the residence by operation of law.          And the estate's claim
    defendant delayed the divorce proceedings lacked merit.
    II.
    On appeal, the estate argues the judge erred because the existence of a
    signed MSA demonstrated unusual and exceptional circumstances warranting
    substitution of the estate as the real party in interest in the divorce proceeding.
    The court should have enforced the MSA to avoid a windfall to defendant. Also,
    the parties and their attorneys indicated their desire to proceed to an uncontested
    hearing, and multiple provisions of the MSA prove the parties contemplated the
    agreement was final and irrevocable, even in the event of death. The estate urges
    us to remand to a different judge.
    Following the initial briefing and before oral argument, A. 2351/S. 2991
    (2022) were introduced proposing to amend our intestacy and equitable
    distribution statutes to close the black hole by permitting the court to make an
    equitable distribution where a party died pending a divorce proceeding. We
    requested counsel address the relevancy of the proposed legislation at oral
    argument and whether the legislation could be retroactively applied by courts if
    A-2522-21
    9
    it became law. Following oral argument, the legislation passed the Assembly
    and Senate by unanimous vote, and we directed counsel to file supplemental
    briefs on the retroactivity issue. Governor Murphy signed the new legislation
    into law on January 8, 2024, which we will discuss in greater detail below.
    III.
    Although we typically defer to a trial judge's factfinding when "supported
    by adequate, substantial, credible evidence," Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    ,
    411-12 (1998), we do "not accord the same deference to a . . . judge's legal
    determinations." Ricci v. Ricci, 
    448 N.J. Super. 546
    , 565 (App. Div. 2017).
    "[T]he trial judge's legal conclusions, and the application of those conclusions
    to the facts, are subject to our plenary review. . . . Our review of a trial court's
    legal conclusions is always de novo." Reese v. Weis, 
    430 N.J. Super. 552
    , 568
    (App. Div. 2013) (internal citation omitted).
    IV.
    We, like the trial judge, have canvassed our case law and are unable to
    find circumstances like those presented here. Indeed, in Olen v. Olen, the trial
    court tried a divorce matter to conclusion but entered a judgment of divorce only
    memorializing the court's decision on the cause of action. 
    124 N.J. Super. 373
    ,
    374-75 (App. Div. 1973).       Subsequently, one of the parties died, and the
    surviving spouse argued an amended judgment of divorce bearing the trial
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    court's rulings regarding the parties' assets could not be entered. 
    Id. at 376
    . We
    held the amended judgment could be entered, nunc pro tunc, as of the date of
    the trial court's ruling because it had adjudicated the facts during the parties'
    lifetimes. 
    Id. at 377
    . In Witt v. Witt, a court enforced the parties' pendente lite
    agreement to sell the marital home where one party subsequently went missing.
    
    165 N.J. Super. 463
    , 464-66 (Ch. Div. 1979).
    Olen and Witt are clearly inapposite.       The former case involved an
    adjudication of facts whereby only the ministerial act of entering the judgment
    memorializing the disposition of the issues remained. The latter case did not
    involve the death of a spouse and turned more so on the court's equitable
    authority to preserve the marital estate pendente lite, a power of the Family Part,
    without question, possesses. Randazzo v. Randazzo, 
    184 N.J. 101
    , 113 (2005).
    Carr stands for the proposition that the court can exercise its equitable
    powers where a party dies during a divorce and can neither receive equitable
    distribution because the divorce has abated nor a spousal elective share from the
    deceased spouse's estate because a divorce was initiated. 
    120 N.J. at 345-46
    .
    There, following a protracted pendente lite litigation and discovery, the
    supporting spouse failed to appear for trial and was subsequently hospitalized.
    
    Id. at 340
    . During his hospitalization, he disinherited the supported spouse,
    leaving his entire estate to his children and subsequently died. 
    Id. at 340-41
    .
    A-2522-21
    11
    Our Supreme Court held the trial court correctly found the supported spouse was
    not entitled to equitable distribution because there were no "circumstances that
    ma[d]e [the] surviving spouse's claim unusual or exceptional" to overcome "the
    general rule[ that] equitable distribution is conditioned on the termination of
    marriage by divorce." 
    Id. at 343
    . The statutory spousal elective share was
    likewise unavailable to the supported spouse, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 3B:8 -1,
    because of the divorce filing and the parties' separation. 
    Id. at 344
    . However,
    the Court concluded, notwithstanding the lack of statutory right to the marital
    assets, the equitable remedy of a constructive trust may be invoked to prevent
    an unjust enrichment or fraud. 
    Id. at 351
    .
    In Kay, we applied the holding in Carr and overturned the trial court's
    denial of a constructive trust on behalf of the deceased spouse's estate. 
    405 N.J. Super. 278
    , 280-81 (App. Div. 2009). There, the surviving spouse, and her
    daughter (not decedent's daughter) charged expenses to the decedent's credit
    card prior to his death, titled family assets in her name and the daughter's name,
    and following decedent's death attempted to withdraw escrowed funds from the
    sale of the former marital residence. 
    Id. at 281-82
    . We concluded the fact the
    estate sought the constructive trust rather than the surviving spouse, did not bar
    the estate's ability to assert equitable claims against the marital estate because
    "[t]he equities that warrant an equitable remedy arise from 'facts which call for
    A-2522-21
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    relief from the strict legal effects of given situations.'" 
    Id. at 284
     (quoting Carr,
    120 at 351). "A blanket prohibition against equitable claims pressed by the
    estate would have the inherent potential to disserve public policy by encouraging
    spouses contemplating divorce to deal unfairly with one another." 
    Id. at 285
    .
    In Kay, the public policy issue was the prevention of the dissipation of marital
    assets by the surviving spouse; a statutory consideration in equitable
    distribution, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23.1(i). 
    Ibid.
    Like the trial judge here, we discern no basis to invoke the equitable
    remedy of a constructive trust because the facts do not support a finding
    defendant engaged in untoward conduct of the sort in Carr and Kay. That,
    however, does not end the inquiry. Indeed, the duty of spouses to deal fairly
    with one another is a general obligation not limited to instances where an unjust
    enrichment is alleged. Fattore v. Fattore, 
    458 N.J. Super. 75
    , 88 (App. Div.
    2019).
    There are other public policy considerations at play here because the
    parties had a signed MSA. "An agreement that resolves a matrimonial dispute
    is no less a contract than an agreement to resolve a business dispute." Quinn v.
    Quinn, 
    225 N.J. 34
    , 45 (2016) (citing Sachau v. Sachau, 
    206 N.J. 1
    , 5 (2011)).
    Public policy favors the enforcement of such agreements "as the parties
    intended." 
    Id. at 47
    . However, the court must find the parties knowingly and
    A-2522-21
    13
    voluntarily entered into the provisions of the agreement for it to be enforceable.
    
    Id. at 39
    . "Family Part judges possess a broad supervisory role in determining
    the fairness of agreements between spouses." Fattore, 
    458 N.J. Super. at 87
    .
    With these principles in mind, we turn to the facts and evidence presented
    to the trial judge. At the outset, we note although the judge cited extensively
    from Directive #18-20, including the fact that it "change[d the] procedure [for
    an uncontested divorce,] such that only the filing party must complete and
    submit the [c]ertification when requesting a dissolution judgment without a
    personal appearance" he overlooked the fact that plaintiff had filed such a
    certification in support of judgment. The certification contained sufficient
    information for the judge to evaluate whether plaintiff had entered the MSA
    voluntarily. Although there was no evidentiary objection asserted to the court's
    ability to consider the certification, if there was, it would be admissible under
    N.J.R.E. 804(b)(6) (the hearsay exception for trustworthy statements by
    deceased declarants).
    Even without the certification, the MSA expressed the parties' mutual
    intent and belief the MSA was fair and equitable, and they wished to be bound
    by it. The record is devoid of evidence to the contrary or any evidence defendant
    considered the agreement to be unfair. Defendant's reasons for wanting a Zoom
    divorce proceeding were based on her understanding it would be more cost
    A-2522-21
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    effective than filing documents for a divorce on the papers. Her decision was
    also borne seemingly of a desire to give the associate representing her some
    courtroom experience. In other words, defendant did not plan on objecting to
    either the entry of a judgment or the MSA.
    Furthermore, defendant knew about the life insurance policy, and
    nonetheless settled the case. And the MSA's equitable distribution provisions
    were otherwise unremarkable and worked to defendant's advantage as she no
    longer had an alimony obligation once plaintiff died. Her assertion she would
    be without the home was also unpersuasive because she agreed plaintiff could
    buy out her interest.
    The overwhelming evidence showed a final judgment would have been
    entered, but for the scheduling delay of the divorce hearing. The equities,
    therefore, did not support discarding the MSA and dismissing the matter.
    For these reasons, we reverse and remand the matter to the trial judge and
    direct him to grant the estate's request to substitute as the real party in interest
    and enter a judgment incorporating the MSA. In doing so, we do not undermine
    the potential value of the solemnity of an uncontested divorce proceeding when
    it is desired by the parties, or Directive #18-20's requirements for a divorce on
    the papers. Our ruling is based on the discrete circumstances of this fact pattern.
    V.
    A-2522-21
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    At oral argument and in its supplemental brief, the estate argued we must
    apply the newly passed statutes retroactively. Defendant's submissions assert
    the new law took effect on the day the Governor signed it and is prospective and
    therefore inapplicable here. We examine the text of the new statutes.
    The Legislature created N.J.S.A. 3B:5-3(d), which states:
    "Surviving spouse, partner in a civil union, or domestic
    partner" shall not include: an individual who has filed
    a complaint not dismissed pursuant to [Rule] 4:6-2 . . .
    or against whom a complaint not dismissed pursuant to
    [Rule] 4:6-2 . . . has been filed for: divorce, dissolution
    of civil union, termination of domestic partnership, or
    divorce from bed and board.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    The Legislature amended N.J.S.A. 3B:8-1 governing the spousal elective
    share to read as follows:
    If a married person, partner in a civil union, or person
    in a domestic partnership dies domiciled in this State
    the surviving spouse, partner in a civil union, or
    domestic partner has a right of election to take an
    elective share of one-third of the augmented estate
    under the limitations and conditions hereinafter stated,
    unless either the decedent or the surviving spouse,
    partner in a civil union, or domestic partner had filed a
    complaint not dismissed pursuant to [Rule] 4:6-2 . . .
    for divorce, dissolution of civil union, termination of
    domestic partnership or divorce from bed and board.
    [(Emphasis added).]
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    16
    And the Legislature amended the equitable distribution statute to read as
    follows:
    If a complaint not dismissed pursuant to [Rule] 4:6-
    2 . . . has been filed for [divorce, dissolution of civil
    union, or divorce from bed and board] and either party
    to the litigation dies prior to the entry of the final
    judgment, the court's authority to effectuate an
    equitable distribution of the property shall not abate.
    [N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(h)(2) (emphasis added).]
    Furthermore, the Legislature created N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(h)(3), which reads as
    follows:   "The court may not make an award concerning the equitable
    distribution of property on behalf of a party barred from inheriting under
    [N.J.S.A. 3B:8-1]." As we noted, the Legislature made the new laws effective
    immediately.
    The legislative statement accompanying the new law, in part, states:
    This bill provides that if a complaint has been filed for
    divorce, dissolution of a civil union, or divorce from
    bed and board, and either party to the litigation dies
    prior to the entry of the final judgment, the court has
    authority to effectuate an equitable distribution of the
    property. In addition, the bill expands the laws of
    intestate succession and elective share to include
    partners in a civil union and also provides that a
    surviving spouse, partner in a civil union, or domestic
    partner who has filed a complaint or against a complaint
    has been filed for divorce, dissolution of civil union,
    termination of domestic partnership, or divorce from
    bed and board, would not receive an intestate share of
    the decedent's estate and has no right of election to take
    an elective share of the estate. This bill is intended to
    A-2522-21
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    eliminate what has been known as the "black hole" that
    exists when a surviving spouse is excluded from
    receiving his/her share of equitable distribution when a
    spouse dies prior to a final judgment of divorce being
    issued and the surviving spouse is therefore left without
    a remedy.
    [Sponsors' Statement to A. 2351 (February 7, 2022).]
    As a general proposition "the law favors prospective, rather than
    retroactive, application of new legislation unless a recognized exception
    applies." Ardan v. Bd. of Rev., 
    444 N.J. Super. 576
    , 587 (App. Div. 2016).
    "Courts must apply a two-part test to determine whether a statute should be
    applied retroactively: (1) whether the Legislature intended to give the statute
    retroactive application; and [if so] (2) whether retroactive application 'will result
    in either an unconstitutional interference with vested rights or a manifest
    injustice.'" 
    Id. at 587
     (quoting James v. N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Co., 
    216 N.J. 552
    , 563
    (2014)).   The presumption against retroactivity "can be overcome by an
    indication of contrary legislative intent, either expressed in the language of the
    statute itself, or implied in its purpose." State v. Bey, 
    112 N.J. 45
    , 103 (1988).
    If we determine that retroactive legislative intent exists, we must "apply the
    statute in effect at the time of [our] decision . . . to effectuate the current policy
    declared by the legislative body." 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Kruvant v. Mayor & Council
    of Twp. of Cedar Grove, 
    82 N.J. 435
    , 440 (1980)).
    A-2522-21
    18
    The exceptions to the general rule of prospective application are where:
    (1) when the Legislature intended retroactive application of the statute either
    expressly, as "stated in the language of the statute or in the pertinent legislative
    history," or implicitly, required retroactive application to "make the statute
    workable or to give it the most sensible interpretation"; (2) when the statute is
    "ameliorative or curative"; or (3) when the "expectations of the parties may
    warrant retroactive application . . . ." Gibbons v. Gibbons, 
    86 N.J. 515
    , 522-23
    (1981). "Under the second exception to the general rule, the term 'ameliorative'
    refers only to criminal laws that effect a reduction in a criminal penalty." Street
    v. Universal Mar., 
    300 N.J. Super. 578
    , 582 (App. Div. 1997) (quoting Kendall
    v. Snedeker, 
    219 N.J. Super. 283
    , 286 (App. Div. 1987)).
    There is also pipeline retroactivity whereby a new rule of law applies
    retroactively to a certain type of case. "In the civil context, pipeline retroactivity
    of a new rule of law contemplates that three classes of litigants will be
    beneficiaries: those in all future cases, those in matters that are still pending,
    and the particular successful litigant in the decided case." N.H. v. H.H., 
    418 N.J. Super. 262
    , 285 (App. Div. 2011).
    The degree of retroactivity "depends largely on the court's view of what
    is just and consonant with public policy in the particular situation presented."
    Primmer v. Harrison, 
    472 N.J. Super. 173
    , 189 (App. Div. 2022) (quoting
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    19
    Beltran v. DeLima, 
    379 N.J. Super. 169
    , 174 (App. Div. 2005)). Relevant
    considerations include "(1) 'justifiable reliance by the parties and the community
    as a whole on prior decisions,' (2) whether the purpose of the new rule will be
    advanced by retroactive application, and (3) any adverse effect retrospectivity
    may have on the administration of justice." 
    Ibid.
    Pursuant to these principles and our reading of the plain language of the
    new laws and the legislative statement, we conclude the new statutory provisions
    should apply retroactively to pending cases that were not dismissed prior to the
    effective date of the new statutes.     The revised statutes and the statement
    ostensibly create pipeline retroactivity because the new law applies to pending
    complaints, which have not been dismissed under Rule 4:6-2(e) for failure to
    state a claim. As we highlighted above, the revised statutes speak in the past
    tense and apply to cases where a party "had" filed a complaint or where a
    complaint "has been" or "had been" filed.
    The revised statutes are clearly curative, which also supports their
    retroactive application to cases in the pipeline.     The legislative statement
    expressly says the new laws were designed to close the Carr black hole.
    Applying the new laws to cases in the pipeline advances the purpose of the law
    and does not frustrate the administration, but instead provide trial courts
    grappling with this issue a means to resolve cases in accordance with the law.
    A-2522-21
    20
    VI.
    Finally, we decline to assign the matter to a different judge. The trial
    judge made no credibility findings and, although we have concluded he
    misapprehended the court's equitable powers, his opinion reflects a
    conscientious effort to apply the law to the facts presented. In short, we are
    unconvinced the judge was so committed to his findings to warrant his
    disqualification on remand. Div. of Youth & Fam. Servs. v. A.W., 
    103 N.J. 591
    ,
    617-18 (1986).
    Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-2522-21
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-2522-21

Filed Date: 1/18/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/23/2024