J.P. v. Gregory J. Smith , 444 N.J. Super. 507 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •                       RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0055-15T1
    J.P.,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Appellant/
    Cross-Respondent,                     March 7, 2016
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    GREGORY J. SMITH, COUNTY OF OCEAN,
    CITY OF MANAHAWKIN, TOWNSHIP OF
    STAFFORD, and STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Defendants,
    and
    SOUTHERN REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL and
    SOUTHERN REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL BOARD
    OF EDUCATION,
    Defendants-Respondents/
    Cross-Appellants.
    Argued January 25, 2016 - Decided March 7, 2016
    Before Judges Messano, Carroll, and Sumners.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Law Division, Ocean County, Docket
    No. L-2831-14.
    Robert R. Fuggi, Jr., argued the cause for
    appellant/cross-respondent (Fuggi Law Firm,
    P.C., attorneys; Mr. Fuggi and Ronald A.
    Rosa, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Jerald J. Howarth argued the cause           for
    respondents/cross-appellants (Howarth          &
    Associates, LLC, attorneys; Mr. Howarth and
    Purnima D. Ramlakhan, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    CARROLL, J.A.D.
    In this appeal we address claims of sexual abuse brought by
    plaintiff J.P. against defendants Southern Regional High School
    and    Southern       Regional        High       School      Board     of     Education
    (collectively,       "the     School").          In    her    complaint,      filed    in
    September     2014,    plaintiff       alleged        that,    in    2004,    she     was
    subjected to repeated sexual abuse by the School's assistant
    band   director,      defendant      Gregory       Smith.      The   acts     of    abuse
    allegedly occurred (1) at the School, where plaintiff was a
    student; (2) during two School-organized overnight trips; and
    (3) in plaintiff's home.              Plaintiff sought damages pursuant to
    the Child Sexual Abuse Act (CSAA), N.J.S.A. 2A:61B-1, and under
    various common law theories of tort liability.
    The   trial     court        granted      summary      judgment       dismissing
    plaintiff's       complaint    against       the   School.       The    motion      judge
    concluded that (1) the School did not qualify as a "household"
    within the meaning of the CSAA; and (2) plaintiff's claims were
    barred by the statute of limitations and her failure to comply
    with the notice provisions of the New Jersey Tort Claims Act
    (TCA), N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to 12-3.                  On reconsideration, the judge
    declined     to   disturb     the    dismissal        of   plaintiff's      CSAA    claim
    2                                 A-0055-15T1
    against the School.       However, the judge reinstated the common
    law causes of action and ordered a Lopez1 hearing to determine
    the accrual date of those claims.
    Pursuant to leave granted, both sides appeal.                   Because we
    are not persuaded that, under the facts presented, the School
    falls within the ambit of the CSAA, we affirm the dismissal of
    that claim.       However, we part company with the trial court's
    determination that a Lopez hearing is necessary to establish the
    accrual date of plaintiff's common law causes of action.                    Since
    we conclude that those claims accrued no later than July 2013,
    and plaintiff failed to file a timely tort claim notice under
    the TCA, we reverse the order reinstating those claims.
    I.
    The underlying facts of this appeal are largely undisputed.
    Plaintiff   was   a   member   of   the    color   guard   for    the    School's
    marching band, which was directed by plaintiff's father.                  In her
    complaint, filed on September 30, 2014, plaintiff alleged that
    during   her   junior   year   of   high    school,   Smith      began    instant
    messaging her on a personal level and making "off-color" sexual
    jokes and comments.       Over time, Smith's messages to plaintiff
    1
    Lopez v. Swyer, 
    62 N.J. 267
    , 272 (1973) (requiring a hearing
    when "a plaintiff claims a right to relief from the bar of the
    statute of limitations by virtue of the so-called 'discovery'
    rule").
    3                                  A-0055-15T1
    became more frequent and sexually explicit in nature.                        At some
    point, Smith obtained permission from plaintiff's father to stay
    at their house for the weekend.              Plaintiff alleged that Smith
    raped her the first night he stayed at her home.                       Smith told
    plaintiff not to worry, that he would marry her when she turned
    eighteen,    and    that    her     father     would     approve        of      their
    relationship because he liked Smith enough to have hired him as
    assistant band director.
    The complaint further alleged that:
    After the initial incident, [] Smith
    began to stay at [plaintiff]'s house often
    during the summer. [] Smith sexually abused
    plaintiff [] every time he stayed over in
    various   locations   of  the   house   while
    plaintiff's     parents    were     sleeping.
    Defendant [] would also abuse plaintiff once
    or twice during the week at school or while
    traveling at competitions by isolating her
    during walks together.     Methods of abuse
    included, but were not limited to, vaginal
    penetration and oral sex.
    At some point later on, plaintiff
    fainted during [] drum corps. It turned out
    that plaintiff was pregnant.    Subsequent to
    that notice, plaintiff had an abortion.
    Pertinent      to    this    appeal,     plaintiff       asserted    a      claim
    against   the   School   seeking    compensatory       and    punitive       damages
    under the CSAA (count two).         Plaintiff also asserted claims for
    delayed   discovery/equitable       estoppel    (count       seven);    negligent
    hiring,   supervision,     and    retention     (count       eight);    negligent
    4                                      A-0055-15T1
    entrustment and breach of fiduciary duty (count nine); breach of
    the statutory duty to report a reasonable suspicion of abuse
    (count    ten);     and   endangering      the    welfare    of    children    (count
    eleven)    (collectively,        the   "common     law"     claims).     In     counts
    seven through eleven, plaintiff further alleged that, prior to
    September 11, 2014, she could not have reasonably ascertained
    the identity of the School as a party responsible for Smith's
    sexual abuse, or the harm that resulted from it.
    Plaintiff's expert report, submitted in opposition to the
    School's    motion        for    summary       judgment,    provides    additional
    detail.    In a September 11, 2014 report, psychologist Christine
    Hatchard indicated that she evaluated plaintiff at the request
    of her attorney on June 17 and 24, 2014.                      The purpose of the
    evaluation was "to determine when [plaintiff] realized that she
    was a victim of sexual abuse and how the trauma has affected her
    life."     Dr. Hatchard noted that plaintiff had been seeing a
    psychotherapist since July 2011, and "that she finds therapy
    helpful and that her therapist knows of her abuse history and is
    supportive."
    Plaintiff, then age thirty-one, told Dr. Hatchard that she
    was   abused   by    Smith      at   age   sixteen   while     a   student    at    the
    School.     Dr. Hatchard described plaintiff's recounting of the
    facts underlying the sexual abuse allegations as follows:
    5                                  A-0055-15T1
    [Smith] . . . was hired for drumline
    and then was promoted to assistant band
    director, working directly under and closely
    with [plaintiff's] father . . . .
    As   percussion   drum   corps   leader,
    [Smith]   would   chaperone    band   events,
    competitions, and trips, which [plaintiff]
    often attended as a member of the Color
    Guard . . . . [Smith] would instant message
    [plaintiff] . . . on a more personal level
    [by] making "off-color" sexual jokes and
    comments, frequently calling her "cutie,"
    "hon," and other terms of endearment.
    . . . .
    In April, [Smith] asked [plaintiff's]
    father if he could stay at their house for a
    weekend and her father agreed . . . .     On
    the first night that he was at her house, he
    led her to the first floor guest room where
    he was staying.   She reports . . . that he
    pinned her beneath him and raped her. After
    the weekend was over, [Smith] emailed her
    saying "don't worry," "this will be okay,
    we'll get married when you're [eighteen],"
    and promising that her father would approve
    of the relationship since he liked [Smith]
    enough to hire him to teach for the marching
    band program.
    After this initial incident, [Smith]
    stayed   at   [plaintiff's]  house   several
    weekends over the summer.       He sexually
    abused her every time he stayed over in
    various locations of the house while her
    parents were sleeping or not at home.     He
    would also abuse her once or twice during
    the week at school or while traveling at
    competitions by isolating her during walks
    together . . . . She noted all of the times
    that they engaged in sexual behavior in her
    journal/planner with a symbol, which the
    police   allegedly  made   a  copy  of   and
    subsequently lost.
    6                         A-0055-15T1
    In August, [plaintiff] fainted during a
    school performance and suspected she might
    be pregnant . . . .
    In late August or early September,
    [plaintiff] told her mother that she was
    pregnant.   Her mother verbally went through
    a list of names of potential fathers until
    she came to [Smith] and [plaintiff] nodded.
    Her mother took her back to the women's
    clinic for an abortion and would not pay
    extra   money    for   [plaintiff]   to   be
    anesthesized during the procedure.
    Afterward, . . . her father had a
    "staff meeting" with [Smith] in their house
    during which [plaintiff] . . . believed that
    [Smith] was encouraged to quit his job at
    her school.
    [Plaintiff] went to the police with her
    parents, spoke to them about the sexual
    relationship     and     gave     them     her
    journal/planner where she had detailed the
    incidents of abuse.     She reports that she
    returned one other time to the police
    department but that charges were never filed
    against [Smith].   Her parents also notified
    the school board.    [Smith] insisted that he
    had   nothing   to   do   with   [plaintiff's]
    pregnancy and her father believed him,
    accusing [plaintiff] of becoming pregnant
    from having sex with someone her own age.
    Dr. Hatchard identified a number of negative consequences
    plaintiff    experienced   following   the   sexual   abuse.      These
    included: a decline in her grades; having to live in various
    locations including her car after her parents locked her out of
    their family home when she turned eighteen; a drug addiction
    fueled by numerous unhealthy relationships she maintained during
    7                            A-0055-15T1
    this period; impaired sexual relations; an inability to maintain
    a relationship with her step-son, her parents, or her sister;
    receipt of psychiatric treatment, which included detoxification
    from her opioid addiction; and individual psychotherapy once a
    week beginning in July 2011.
    Dr.   Hatchard   noted   that   plaintiff   "became   tearful   when
    discussing the aftermath of her sexual abuse, especially her
    parents' disbelief."   The doctor explained:
    [Plaintiff] remembers feeling like she
    "just wanted [her] parents to believe [her]
    and acknowledge that [the sexual abuse]
    wasn't [her] fault," but they were silent
    about the abuse and no one talked about it
    again.   [Plaintiff] felt like her "life was
    over," and she "didn't understand what she
    had done wrong."
    . . . .   [I]n the summer of 2012, her
    father stated "I still don't believe you"
    [and] . . . her husband "freaked out". . . .
    Seeing her husband's anger provided her
    validation that she had not received from
    others in her life, and she began to have
    the   thoughts   that   maybe   the   sexual
    relationship may have been abusive and not
    her fault, despite what she perceived as her
    parents' punishment.
    In 2013, [plaintiff] . . . spoke to a
    prosecutor who initiated a recorded phone
    call to [Smith] who confessed to the abuse
    around the week of July 4, 2013 . . . . Her
    parents only began to believe that she had
    been abused when they learned that he had
    confessed . . . .
    Several factors likely contributed to
    [plaintiff's] delay in fully understanding
    8                          A-0055-15T1
    that she was being sexually abused by
    [Smith] . . . .     [Smith] was allowed into
    her home on a regular basis by her parents,
    who she trusted to protect her, which
    increased her confusion about experiencing
    abuse from a "safe" person.
    Dr.     Hatchard    diagnosed   plaintiff     as    suffering     from   (1)
    post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (delayed expression); (2)
    persistent depressive disorder (with persistent major depressive
    episodes,    moderate    severity);       and   (3)    opioid   use   disorder
    (severe).    Dr. Hatchard ultimately concluded that:
    [Plaintiff]       experienced        significant
    difficulty identifying the abuse due to the
    manipulation and grooming behaviors by []
    Smith who presented the abuse as a romantic
    relationship,   and    her    parents   repeated
    denial of the abuse and punishment of
    [plaintiff].    She was only able to fully
    understand that the sexual relationship was
    abuse and that it had severe consequences,
    when [Smith] confessed to the crime in July
    [] 2013 and she finally received validation
    from the police as well as her parents
    . . . . This new insight was marked by her
    development of [PTSD] in July [] 2013, which
    is when she began to directly acknowledge
    and confront the abuse.        She . . . will
    require     long-term      psychiatric     care,
    especially due to the delay in her healing
    process and the reinforced shame and guilt
    that she experienced as an adolescent and
    throughout her adulthood.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    On June 2, 2014, prior to her first interview with Dr.
    Hatchard, plaintiff filed a notice of tort claim.                   The notice
    named the School, Smith, and others as responsible parties.                    It
    9                                A-0055-15T1
    specified that, from April 2000 through September 2000, Smith
    "systematically engaged in sexual acts with [plaintiff] . . .
    resulting in [her] pregnancy which was terminated when she was
    [seventeen] years old."
    In February 2015, the School moved for summary judgment.
    It argued that the CSAA did not apply because the School was not
    in   the   same   "household"     as    the    plaintiff.     It   also    sought
    dismissal of the common law claims as barred by the statute of
    limitations and the notice provisions of the TCA.
    Plaintiff    opposed   the       motion,   contending   that     the     CSAA
    applied because the School could be deemed a person standing in
    loco parentis within plaintiff's household.                 Plaintiff further
    argued that none of her claims accrued until September 11, 2014,
    the date of Dr. Hatchard's report.                 Plaintiff contended that
    this represented the date "when she was able to establish the
    causal relationship between the . . . sexual abuse perpetrated
    by [] Smith and the various mental and emotional harms she had
    and continues to suffer."          Plaintiff argued that her tort claim
    notice was timely because it was submitted before the running of
    the statutory ninety-day limit.               N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.     She further
    argued     that   the   statute    of    limitations    was   tolled      by    the
    discovery doctrine, and that the duress imposed upon her delayed
    her discovery of the sexual abuse and the common law claims.
    10                                A-0055-15T1
    The judge heard oral argument on March 20, 2015.                         In his
    oral opinion, the judge concluded that the CSAA did not apply to
    the School because the School did not fit the CSAA's definition
    of   "within    the   household."              The   judge    also      found    that
    plaintiff's     remaining    claims       were   barred      by   the   statute   of
    limitations and the notice provisions of the TCA.                    The same day,
    the judge entered a memorializing order granting the School's
    motion and dismissing all claims against it with prejudice.
    In a telephone conference initiated sua sponte by the court
    on March 23, the judge expressed reservations with respect to
    his ruling on when plaintiff's claims accrued, and whether a
    Lopez   hearing    was    needed     to    determine      their     accrual     date.
    Plaintiff then timely moved for reconsideration, accompanied by
    an affidavit that was not previously submitted in opposition to
    the summary judgment motion.
    In   her     April     1,     2015    affidavit,        plaintiff     provided
    additional details intended to establish that the School was
    "within the household" so as to trigger applicability of the
    CSAA.     She   averred     that    her    father,     who    was    the   School's
    director of the marching band, drumline, and color guard, held a
    number of meetings and other activities at their family home
    where much of the sexual abuse had occurred.
    11                               A-0055-15T1
    Plaintiff further recounted that, in 2000, she attended a
    four-day drumline/color guard competition in Dayton, Ohio.                                       In
    route, Smith intentionally chaperoned her bus and proceeded to
    touch    her    leg    for     long    periods       of     time.         While    in    Dayton,
    despite the requirement that girls and boys sleep in separate
    rooms, Smith awakened plaintiff in the middle of the night and
    informed       her    that    her     father    wanted        to    see     her.         He    then
    sexually assaulted her in a hallway.                             Plaintiff subsequently
    attended       another       trip    to     Canada,       this     time    for     a    one-week
    period.         On    this     trip,      chaperones         placed       tape     across       the
    students'      dorm    rooms        after    curfew.          Smith       ripped       the    tape,
    brought plaintiff to his room, and sexually assaulted her.
    In addition to assaulting her in her home and on overnight
    competitions,         plaintiff's         affidavit         averred       that     Smith       also
    sexually       assaulted       her     on    school         grounds       either       prior    to
    competitions or after practices.                      When she became pregnant in
    August    or    September       of     2000,        Smith    told     her    to        obtain    an
    abortion, which she did in early September 2000.                              At some point
    thereafter, in compliance with school requirements, her father
    took her to file a police report.                     However, the police response
    was that "we couldn't ever prove it happened and my name and
    face would be smeared all over the newspapers."                               When asked if
    12                                        A-0055-15T1
    she wanted to continue filing a report, plaintiff answered "no."
    She then dropped out of the color guard in November 2000.
    The court heard argument on the reconsideration motion on
    June   26,    2015.     Prior   to   the       argument,    plaintiff's     counsel
    prepared and submitted a "time line" that he asked the court to
    accept and attach to plaintiff's reply brief.                      The judge again
    ruled that the CSAA did not apply.               The judge found that many of
    the acts of sexual abuse occurred in plaintiff's own home, and
    that the "temporary and short-term [band and color guard] trips"
    were not "substantial enough to impart a 'household' status" to
    the School so as to bring it within the purview of the CSAA.
    The judge then proceeded to reconsider the accrual issue
    with   respect   to    plaintiff's    remaining       claims.        Although     the
    judge found that plaintiff "knew what was going on" back in 2000
    when she became pregnant, and upon alerting the police in 2013,
    he nevertheless decided to conduct "a Lopez hearing to determine
    the tolling issue."         On July 14, the court entered an order
    denying   plaintiff's     motion     to    reinstate       count    two,   the   CSAA
    claim.       However, the order reinstated the common law claims
    asserted in counts seven through eleven, and directed that a
    Lopez hearing be scheduled to determine the accrual date of
    those claims.         Both parties sought leave to appeal, which we
    granted on September 3, 2015.
    13                                A-0055-15T1
    II.
    On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in
    finding that she was not entitled to the protection of the CSAA
    because the School did not qualify under the statutory language
    as a "person . . . within the household."                     Plaintiff also argues
    that all of her claims are entitled to the more liberal CSAA
    tolling provisions, and therefore none of them are time-barred
    by the TCA or the statute of limitations.
    The   School     contends       that,    on    reconsideration,            the   court
    erred   in    reinstating         plaintiff's        common    law    claims,       and    in
    relying upon documentary evidence not presented in opposition to
    the initial summary judgment motion.                      The School submits that a
    Lopez hearing is unnecessary, as the record already establishes
    that plaintiff's common law claims are time-barred by either:
    (1) her failure to file a timely tort claim notice; or (2) the
    two-year      statute      of    limitations     applicable        to      tort    actions.
    Finally, the School urges us to affirm the trial court's finding
    that    it    was    not        "within   the    household"          for    purposes       of
    establishing its liability as a passive abuser under the CSAA.
    III.
    We    begin   with       the   standard       of   review     that    governs      our
    analysis.      "An appellate court reviews an order granting summary
    judgment in accordance with the same standard as the motion
    14                                       A-0055-15T1
    judge."     Bhagat v. Bhagat, 
    217 N.J. 22
    , 38 (2014) (citing W.J.A.
    v. D.A., 
    210 N.J. 229
    , 237-38 (2012); Henry v. N.J. Dep't of
    Human Servs., 
    204 N.J. 320
    , 330 (2010)).        We "identify whether
    there are genuine issues of material fact and, if not, whether
    the moving party is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of
    law."     
    Ibid.
     (citing Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 540 (1995); R. 4:46-2(c)).
    [A] determination whether there exists a
    "genuine   issue"   of   material   fact  that
    precludes summary judgment requires the
    motion   judge   to    consider   whether  the
    competent evidential materials presented,
    when viewed in the light most favorable to
    the non-moving party, are sufficient to
    permit a rational factfinder to resolve the
    alleged disputed issue in favor of the non-
    moving party.
    [Brill, supra, 
    142 N.J. at 540
    .]
    We then decide "whether the motion judge's application of
    the law was correct."     Atl. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Hillside Bottling
    Co., 
    387 N.J. Super. 224
    , 231 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    189 N.J. 104
     (2006).     In this regard, "[w]e review the law de novo
    and owe no deference to the trial court . . . if [it has]
    wrongly interpreted a statute."        Zabilowicz v. Kelsey, 
    200 N.J. 507
    , 512 (2009).     Similarly, determining the date upon which a
    statute of limitations begins to run is an issue of law, subject
    to plenary review.     Town of Kearny v. Brandt, 
    214 N.J. 76
    , 91
    (2013).
    15                         A-0055-15T1
    With respect to plaintiff's reconsideration motion, we note
    the grounds for reconsideration are limited.                   State v. Puryear,
    
    441 N.J. Super. 280
    , 294 (App. Div. 2015).                     Reconsideration is
    appropriate only when "1) the [c]ourt has expressed its decision
    based upon a palpably incorrect or irrational basis, or 2) it is
    obvious that the [c]ourt either did not consider, or failed to
    appreciate the significance of probative, competent evidence."
    
    Ibid.
     (alterations in original) (quoting Palombi v. Palombi, 
    414 N.J. Super. 274
    , 288 (App. Div. 2010)).                  Reconsideration is not
    appropriate   as    a   vehicle      to    bring    to   the   court's     attention
    evidence    that    was      not    presented,       but     was   available,       in
    connection with the initial argument.                Fusco v. Bd. of Educ. of
    City of Newark, 
    349 N.J. Super. 455
    , 463 (App. Div.), certif.
    denied, 
    174 N.J. 544
     (2002).
    "[A] trial court's reconsideration decision will be left
    undisturbed unless it represents a clear abuse of discretion."
    Pitney Bowes Bank, Inc. v. ABC Caging Fulfillment, 
    440 N.J. Super. 378
    , 382 (App. Div. 2015).               A court abuses its discretion
    "when   a   decision      is   made       without    a   rational       explanation,
    inexplicably departed from established policies, or rested on an
    impermissible      basis."         
    Ibid.
        (quoting       Flagg   v.    Essex   Cty.
    Prosecutor, 
    171 N.J. 561
    , 571 (2002)).
    16                               A-0055-15T1
    IV.
    We first address the issue of whether the School qualifies
    as a "passive abuser" under the CSAA.                The CSAA defines "sexual
    abuse"   as   "an   act   of     sexual    contact      or   sexual       penetration
    between a child under the age of [eighteen] years and an adult.
    A . . . person standing in loco parentis within the household
    who knowingly permits or acquiesces in sexual abuse by any other
    person also commits sexual abuse . . . ."                          N.J.S.A. 2A:61B-
    1a(1).   Thus, the statute imposes liability on both "active" and
    "passive" sexual abusers.          Hardwicke v. Am. Boychoir Sch., 
    188 N.J. 69
    , 86 (2006).
    In    Hardwicke,      the    Supreme        Court   held       that   a   private
    boarding school could be liable as a passive abuser under the
    CSAA.    
    Id. at 94
    .       There, the plaintiff alleged the Musical
    Director of the school abused him over the course of two years,
    and the school itself knew or should have known of the abuse.
    
    Id. at 74
    .      The Court noted that in order to hold a passive
    sexual   abuser     liable      under     the    statute,      a    plaintiff     must
    demonstrate the defendant is: "(1) a person (2) standing in loco
    parentis (3) within the household."               
    Id. at 86
    .        The Court first
    found the boarding school was a "person" under the statute.                         
    Id. at 91
    .   It next determined the school satisfied the role of "in
    loco parentis" because it
    17                                  A-0055-15T1
    regulated the students' personal hygiene,
    monitored the cleanliness of their rooms,
    dictated the amount of money each student
    could have on campus, required students to
    write two weekly letters to friends or
    family,   expected    students    to   attend
    religious services when on campus during the
    weekend,    provided    transportation    for
    recreational activities off school grounds,
    and disciplined students who violated those
    policies.
    [Id. at 91-92.]
    Finally, the Court considered whether the boarding school was a
    "household" under the statute.     
    Id. at 93
    .    The Court stated:
    [T]he   School   provides    food,   shelter,
    educational     instruction,     recreational
    activities and emotional support to its
    full-time boarders - in other words, housing
    with the amenities characteristic of both a
    school and a home.
    [Id. at 94.]
    The Court thus concluded "the School [was] a 'person' standing
    'in loco parentis' within a 'household.'"        
    Ibid.
    We   reached   a   different   result   in   D.M.    v.   River   Dell
    Regional High School, 
    373 N.J. Super. 639
     (App. Div. 2004),
    certif. denied, 
    188 N.J. 356
     (2006).         There, we affirmed the
    grant of summary judgment dismissing claims against a public
    18                            A-0055-15T1
    high school under the CSAA because the school did not qualify as
    "in loco parentis within the household."              Id. at 649.2
    In Bryson v. Diocese of Camden, N.J., 
    909 F. Supp. 2d 364
    (D.N.J. 2012), the United States District Court was called upon
    to   interpret    the   applicability      of    the     CSAA    in   light     of
    controlling   New   Jersey   case   law.        The    court    concluded     that
    defendant,    a   private    Catholic      school,      "[did]     not    fit     a
    reasonable definition of 'within the household'" for purposes of
    the CSAA.     Id. at 369.    In distinguishing Hardwicke, the court
    explained:
    If, as Plaintiff argues, neither a
    single roof nor a familial relationship is
    required to be "within the household," the
    Hardwicke decision suggests that a closely
    analogous,    intimate   relationship   is
    required.
    In Hardwicke, the court found the boarding
    school to be "within the household" only
    after noting that the students were "full-
    time boarders" and depended on the school,
    in the absence of their parents or other
    care givers, for "amenities characteristic
    of . . . a home," including the basic
    necessities of life, such as food and
    shelter.     For  practical  purposes,  the
    boarding school was "the household" of the
    plaintiff victim.   Here, Plaintiff resided
    2
    We note that D.M. was decided shortly before Hardwicke and thus
    the panel in D.M. did not explain the application of the
    Hardwicke factors as they had not yet been announced.          We
    further note that shortly after Hardwicke was decided on August
    8, 2006, the Court denied certification in D.M. on September 21,
    2006, 
    188 N.J. 356
    , thus leaving the ruling in D.M. intact.
    19                                   A-0055-15T1
    at all times with his parents, who provided
    him with home amenities, including food and
    shelter; he did not reside at the school as
    the plaintiff did in Hardwicke.      Defendant
    educated and provided religious counseling
    to Plaintiff through [the active abuser] and
    others, and cared for Plaintiff a few hours
    per week after school.          In doing so,
    Defendant provided services and amenities
    normally associated with those of a typical
    after-school program of a school or a
    church, not those of a home. Defendant did
    not function as a parent to Plaintiff in the
    same   way   the  boarding   school    did  in
    Hardwicke to the plaintiff in that case.
    [The active abuser] was not a member of the
    household, nor had he visited Plaintiff's
    home on more than one occasion.            The
    qualities    and   characteristics    of   the
    relationship   here   are   not   sufficiently
    strong to establish that Defendant was
    within the Plaintiff's household.
    [Bryson, supra, 909 F. Supp. 2d at 369-70
    (internal citation omitted).]
    In the present case, plaintiff argues that the motion judge
    erred when he held that the School was not liable for passive
    abuse under the CSAA because it was not "within the household."
    Plaintiff points to the overnight trips she took to Ohio and
    Canada,   where     the   School   provided   meals,   lodging,    and
    supervision.      She contends that the School provided her with
    food, shelter, educational instruction, recreational activities
    and emotional support, the same five elements that were deemed
    sufficient in Hardwicke to establish the School as a household
    under the CSAA.    See Hardwicke, 
    supra,
     
    188 N.J. at 94
    .
    20                        A-0055-15T1
    We are not persuaded.           Plaintiff's arguments overlook the
    fact that in Hardwicke the school provided those amenities and
    services to "its full-time boarders."                 
    Ibid.
     (emphasis added).
    That crucial element is lacking here.                 The Court in Hardwicke
    was clearly concerned not only with the role of the school as a
    parental substitute, but also with its role as the provider of
    amenities    normally   associated       with     a    home     environment      for
    students who resided there full-time.                 Ibid.; see also J.H. v.
    Mercer Cnty. Youth Det. Ctr., 
    396 N.J. Super. 1
    , 14-15 (App.
    Div. 2007) (finding a youth detention center a household for the
    purposes of the CSAA).         We are therefore satisfied that the term
    "within     the   household"    connotes      a   degree      of    "residential"
    custody that is more than fleeting and temporary in nature and
    is simply not present in this case.
    We are also satisfied the result we reach comports with
    basic principles of statutory construction.                     In construing a
    statute, "[o]ur task [] is to discern and give effect to the
    Legislature's     intent."      State    v.   Munafo,     
    222 N.J. 480
    ,   488
    (2015) (quoting State v. O'Driscoll, 
    215 N.J. 461
    , 474 (2013)).
    We first examine the "plain language of the statute."                         
    Ibid.
    (citing State v. Frye, 
    217 N.J. 566
    , 575 (2014); DiProspero v.
    Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492 (2005)).              "When that language clearly
    reveals the meaning of the statute, the court's sole function is
    21                                 A-0055-15T1
    to enforce the statute in accordance with those terms."                       State
    v. Olivero, 
    221 N.J. 632
    , 639 (2015) (quoting McCann v. Clerk of
    Jersey City, 
    167 N.J. 311
    , 320 (2001)).
    Had the legislature wished to include a public day school
    within the scope of the CSAA, it could very easily have used the
    terminology     "school   or   household."         Also,    "[t]he    legislature
    could    have   omitted    the    phrase     [within       the   household]    and
    extended potential liability to all persons who stood in loco
    parentis of the victim.           The legislature chose not to do so."
    Bryson, supra, 909 F. Supp. 2d at 370.
    Summarizing, the CSAA's definition of passive sexual abuse
    limits the class of persons who are potentially liable to those
    "within the household."           Because the School does not fit that
    definition, we affirm the dismissal of plaintiff's CSAA claim
    against the School.
    V.
    We next address the issue of whether plaintiff's remaining
    claims are barred by either the statute of limitations or the
    notice   provisions   of    the    TCA.      Our    analysis     of   this    issue
    compels us to also determine whether a Lopez hearing is needed
    to establish the date that these common law claims accrued.
    The    School   argues       that   plaintiff's    claims      "accrued"     in
    August or September, 2000, when she terminated her pregnancy and
    22                               A-0055-15T1
    reported Smith's sexual abuse to her parents, the police, and
    School authorities.        In that event, her claims are barred by the
    two-year statute of limitations in N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2, and the
    notice provisions of the TCA, N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.                    Even if the
    "discovery rule" applies, plaintiff's own expert concluded that
    plaintiff was aware of the abuse and its consequences by June or
    July, 2013.       Accordingly, her tort claim notice, filed in June
    2014, exceeded the ninety-day period within which notice must be
    given pursuant to N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.              Since the record is clear,
    the School maintains there is no need to conduct a hearing to
    determine the accrual date of plaintiff's claims.
    As noted, in her complaint and her argument before the
    trial court, plaintiff contended that all her claims accrued on
    September   11,    2014,    the   date    her   expert   report   was   issued.
    Plaintiff argues that the CSAA's more liberal accrual provision3
    tolls the limitations period for her related common law claims.
    Additionally, plaintiff argues that "[t]he question of whether
    or not the statute of limitations is tolled is determined by the
    existence of either equitable grounds, duress and/or whether or
    3
    See N.J.S.A. 2A:61B-1b ("In any civil action for injury or
    illness based on sexual abuse, the cause of action shall accrue
    at the time of reasonable discovery of the injury and its causal
    relationship to the act of sexual abuse.").
    23                             A-0055-15T1
    not [p]laintiff has 'repressed the memories' of [her] sexual
    abuse."    N.J.S.A. 2A:14-21 (emphasis omitted).
    Ordinarily, a cause of action accrues on the date upon
    which a wrongful act or omission producing the harm occurs.
    Beauchamp v. Amedio, 
    164 N.J. 111
    , 116 (2000).                        The pertinent
    statute of limitations, therefore, presumptively begins to run
    from the time of that wrongful conduct.                      Our courts have long
    recognized, however, that "in an appropriate case a cause of
    action    will    be     held    not     to   accrue    until   the   injured     party
    discovers,       or    by   an     exercise        of   reasonable    diligence     and
    intelligence should have discovered[,] that he [or she] may have
    a basis for an actionable claim."                  Lopez, 
    supra,
     
    62 N.J. at 272
    .
    This equitable principle, commonly known as the discovery rule,
    operates to "prevent the sometimes harsh result of a mechanical
    application of the statute of limitations."                     Martinez v. Cooper
    Hosp.-Univ. Med. Ctr., 
    163 N.J. 45
    , 52 (2000).
    The discovery rule applies not only to situations where the
    injury has not been discovered, but also to situations where the
    injury is apparent, but it is not known "that it is attributable
    to the fault of another."                
    Id. at 53
    .      The cause of action does
    not   accrue     until      both    of    these     elements    are   known   to    the
    plaintiff.       
    Ibid.
          In determining the date of a claim's accrual
    under the discovery rule, the court must assess "whether the
    24                              A-0055-15T1
    facts    presented      would     alert    a    reasonable        person      exercising
    ordinary diligence that he or she was injured due to the fault
    of another."         
    Id. at 52
    .
    "The discovery rule is essentially a rule of equity.                               It
    has been said that in equity lies its genesis."                        Lopez, 
    supra,
    62 N.J. at 273
    .         Courts must balance the desire to give innocent
    injured parties their day in court against the fairness to those
    who must defend stale claims.             
    Id. at 274
    .        With this balance in
    mind,    the    Supreme     Court   has    held      that,   "[t]he      decision     [on
    accrual] requires more than a simple factual determination; it
    should be made by a judge . . . conscious of the equitable
    nature   of     the    issue   before     him."       
    Id. at 275
    .        Among   the
    equitable factors that may be relevant under Lopez are:                               (1)
    "the nature of the alleged injury," (2) "the availability of
    witnesses and [] evidence," (3) "the length of time that has
    elapsed,"      (4)    the   "deliberate        or   intentional"      nature     of   the
    delay,    and    (5)    whether     the    delay      "peculiarly        or    unusually
    prejudiced the defendant."           
    Id. at 276
    .
    "Although the discovery rule does not require knowledge of
    a specific basis for legal liability or a provable cause of
    action, it does require knowledge not only of the injury but
    also that another is at fault."                     Guichardo v. Rubinfeld, 
    177 N.J. 45
    , 51 (2003) (quoting Martinez, 
    supra,
     
    163 N.J. at 52
    ).
    25                                    A-0055-15T1
    "Once a person knows or has reason to know of this information,
    his or her claim has accrued since, at that point, he or she is
    actually or constructively aware of that state of facts which
    may equate in law with a cause of action."                    Abboud v. Viscomi,
    
    111 N.J. 56
    , 63 (1988) (quoting Burd v. N.J. Tel. Co., 
    76 N.J. 284
    , 291 (1978)).       The fundamental question in a discovery rule
    case, therefore, is "whether the facts presented would alert a
    reasonable person, exercising ordinary diligence, that he or she
    was    injured   due   to   the   fault      of   another."       Caravaggio    v.
    D'Agostini, 
    166 N.J. 237
    , 246 (2001).
    Here, plaintiff was undoubtedly aware of the abuse, Smith's
    identity as her abuser, and Smith's affiliation with the School,
    when she became pregnant in 2000.             However, viewing the facts in
    the light most favorable to plaintiff as the non-moving party,
    as we must,4 plaintiff arguably was unaware of the emotional
    effects of the sexual abuse at that time.                     In any event, the
    competent    evidence   before    the     court    at   the    summary   judgment
    stage,5 as demonstrated by plaintiff's own expert psychologist,
    Dr. Hatchard, clearly establishes that by July 2013, plaintiff
    4
    See R. 4:46-2(c); Brill, 
    supra,
     
    142 N.J. at 540
    .
    5
    See Ji v. Palmer, 
    333 N.J. Super. 451
    , 463-64 (App. Div. 2000)
    (limiting appellate review of the grant of summary judgment to
    the record that existed before the motion judge).
    26                               A-0055-15T1
    was "able to fully understand that the sexual relationship was
    abuse and that it had severe consequences."
    The motion judge originally dismissed plaintiff's claims as
    barred by the statute of limitations and the notice provisions
    of the TCA.         On reconsideration, the judge determined that a
    Lopez hearing was necessary to establish the accrual date of
    plaintiff's common law claims.                  We conclude that the judge erred
    in determining that a Lopez hearing was necessary.                           A plaintiff
    who   invokes   the    discovery      rule       is    not   always     entitled     to   a
    hearing.       "A   Lopez      hearing     is    only    required     when    the   facts
    concerning the date of the discovery are in dispute."                               Henry,
    supra,   
    204 N.J. at
       336   n.    6     (citing     Dunn    v.     Borough      of
    Mountainside, 
    301 N.J. Super. 262
    , 274 (App. Div. 1997), certif.
    denied, 
    153 N.J. 402
     (1998)).                   Here, it is undisputed that, no
    later than July 2013, plaintiff fully understood that she was
    abused and the consequences of that abuse.
    Affording plaintiff the benefit of the discovery rule, we
    conclude that, no later than July 2013, a reasonable person,
    possessing plaintiff's knowledge, could have discovered a basis
    for a cause of action with the exercise of ordinary diligence.
    Using July 2013 as the accrual date of her claims, we further
    conclude   that     her     September      2014       complaint   was      timely   filed
    within the two-year statute of limitations.
    27                                  A-0055-15T1
    We    reach   a    different    result,     however,    with     respect     to
    plaintiff's failure to comply with the TCA.                   Claims against the
    School are governed by the TCA, which "defines the extent of the
    Legislature's waiver of sovereign immunity and establishes the
    procedures by which claims may be brought[.]"                  D.D. v. Univ. of
    Med. & Dentistry of N.J., 
    213 N.J. 130
    , 146 (2013) (alteration
    in original)(quoting Beauchamp, 
    supra,
     
    164 N.J. at 116
    ).                        Under
    the TCA, a claimant must file a notice of claim within ninety
    days of the accrual of the cause of action.                        N.J.S.A. 59:8-8.
    N.J.S.A. 59:8-9 somewhat alleviates the rigidity of the ninety-
    day    requirement        by   allowing     a    claimant     to     seek    judicial
    permission to file late notice within one year after the accrual
    of the claim upon a showing of "extraordinary circumstances."
    In N.J.S.A. 59:8-1, the TCA clarifies that, for purposes of
    the statute's notice and filing limitations, "[a]ccrual shall
    mean   the    date   on    which    the    claim   accrued    and    shall    not   be
    affected by the notice provisions contained herein."                        Under the
    TCA, "the discovery rule is part and parcel" of determining when
    a   claim    accrued     "because     it   can   toll   the   date    of    accrual."
    Beauchamp, supra, 
    164 N.J. at 118
    .                 "Until the existence of an
    injury (or, knowledge of the fact that a third party has caused
    it) is ascertained, the discovery rule will toll accrual."                          
    Id. at 122
    .       "However, once an injury is known, even a minor one,
    28                                A-0055-15T1
    the ninety day notice is triggered."                       
    Ibid.
     (emphasis added).
    "Worsening of that injury does not extend the time [to serve a
    notice] or otherwise alter the party's obligation."                         Ibid.; see
    also Maher v. Cnty. of Mercer, 
    384 N.J. Super. 182
    , 186 (App.
    Div. 2006).
    Because we have concluded that plaintiff's claims accrued
    no later than July 2013, she was required to file her tort claim
    notice within ninety days of that time.                      She failed to do so.
    She also failed to seek permission to file a late claim within
    one year of the accrual of her claim.                       Plaintiff's failure to
    comply    with        the     time    requirement       of     N.J.S.A.      59:8-8(a)
    constitutes      an    absolute      bar   to     recovery    against      the   School.
    Karczewski      v.    Nowicki,       
    188 N.J. Super. 355
    ,    357    (App.     Div.
    1982).
    We briefly comment on the evidence submitted in support of
    plaintiff's motion for reconsideration.                     Plaintiff's affidavit,
    dated April 1, 2015, contained no new information that could not
    have    been    submitted       in    opposition      to     the    School's     summary
    judgment motion.            Accordingly, its submission on reconsideration
    was inappropriate.            Fusco, 
    supra,
     
    349 N.J. Super. at 463
    .                      In
    any event, it centered on plaintiff's claim under the CSAA that
    the    School   was     "within      the   household,"       and    provided     no    new
    29                                   A-0055-15T1
    detail that could form the basis for reconsideration of when her
    claims accrued.
    After her reply brief was filed, plaintiff's counsel also
    prepared and submitted a "time line" in support of her argument
    that her tort claim notice and her complaint were both timely
    filed.    This    submission    suffers   from    the   same   infirmity    as
    plaintiff's affidavit, as it contains information that could and
    should have been presented on the initial motion.               Moreover, it
    was newly filed after plaintiff's reply brief and, as such, did
    not afford the School a meaningful opportunity to respond to it.
    Additionally,     it   was    not   accompanied    by    an    affidavit    or
    certification    based   on    personal   knowledge     attesting    to    the
    accuracy of the information it contained, as required by Rule
    1:6-6.   Accordingly, the "time line," to the extent it may have
    been considered by the court, did not provide proper evidential
    support for plaintiff's reconsideration motion.
    For these reasons, we conclude that plaintiff's failure to
    comply with the notice provisions of the TCA bars her common law
    claims against the School.          No Lopez hearing was necessary to
    determine the date those claims accrued.            We therefore reverse
    the order reinstating counts seven through eleven of plaintiff's
    complaint, which were properly dismissed on summary judgment.
    30                             A-0055-15T1
    The portion of the July 14, 2015 order dismissing the CSAA
    claim is affirmed.   The portion of the order that reinstated the
    common law counts and ordered a Lopez hearing is reversed.
    31                       A-0055-15T1