NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-3154-18
A-4480-18
DIAJEWELS OF NY, INC.,
RAJWARAH JEWELLERS PVT.,
LTD., and RENU SHARMA,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
THE GREAT JEWEL FACTORY,
INC., J.M.D. ALL STAR IMPORT
EXPORT, INC., J.M.D. ALL STAR
IMPEX, INC., ANITA KHANNA,
AJAY SARIN, RANA PRATAP,
LAVEENA RASTOGI, 1 TRILOKI
BATRA, CHIRAG BATRA, and
NYCB TRADING, LLC,
Defendants-Respondents.
_____________________________
Argued December 9, 2020 – Decided March 12, 2021
Before Judges Whipple, Rose, and Firko.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Middlesex County, Docket No. L-5788-16.
1
Laveena Rastogi is not a party to this appeal.
Jae H. Cho argued the cause for appellants (Cho Legal
Group, LLC, attorneys; Kristen M. Logar, on the brief).
Elliot D. Ostrove argued the cause for respondents
Great Jewel Factory, Inc., J.M.D. All Star Import
Export, Inc., J.M.D. All Star Impex, Inc., Anita
Khanna, Ajay Sarin, and Rana Pratap (Epstein Ostrove,
LLC, attorneys; Elliot D. Ostrove and Vahbiz P.
Karanjia, on the brief).
Susheela Verma argued the cause for respondents
Chirag Batra, Trilocki Batra, and NYCB Trading, LLC.
PER CURIAM
In these consolidated matters, plaintiffs Diajewels of NY, Inc.
(Diajewels), Rajwarah Jewellers, Pvt. Ltd. (Rajwarah), and Renu Sharma appeal
from: (1) a February 15, 2019 Law Division order dismissing their amended
complaint with prejudice against defendants The Great Jewel Factory, Inc.
(Great Jewel), J.M.D. All Star Import Export, Inc. (J.M.D.), Anita Khanna, Ajay
Sarin, and Rana Pratap (collectively, Sarin defendants), and Triloki Batra,
Chirag Batra, and NYCB Trading LLC (collectively, Batra defendants) 2; and (2)
a May 10, 2019 default judgment for $271,857.61 entered in favor of the Sarin
defendants on their counterclaims against plaintiffs. The February 15, 2019
2
The order was amended on March 11, 2019 to correct a clerical error omitting
J.M.D. All Star Impex, Inc. as a party.
A-3154-18
2
order dismissed plaintiffs' complaint, and struck their answer and defenses to
the Sarin defendants' counterclaims for: Sharma's failure to appear for
deposition under Rule 4:23-2(b)(3); plaintiffs' failure to furnish "full responsive
discovery" under Rule 4:23-5(a)(2); and plaintiffs' failure to comply with prior
orders of the court under Rule 4:37-2(a). We affirm.
I.
The course of the four-year litigation in this matter can only be described
as tortured. During the 1107-day discovery period, the trial court held near-
weekly case management conferences, extended the discovery end date seven
times, and rescheduled the trial date five times. Although all parties were
delinquent in responding to discovery demands at one time or another, the Sarin
and Batra defendants cured their deficiencies. Plaintiffs, however, engaged in a
course of abject failures to fully comply with discovery requests, appear for
depositions, and participate in mandatory mediation.
We describe the relevant procedural history at length to lend context to
the motion judge's decision. By way of background, Diajewels is a New York
corporation and subsidiary of Rajwarah, a private, limited liability company
incorporated in India. Diajewels purchases jewelry manufactured and designed
A-3154-18
3
by Rajwarah for worldwide distribution. Sharma, a resident citizen of India, is
the president of Diajewels and director of Rajwarah.
Great Jewel is a New Jersey corporation established by Khanna, who
resides in New Jersey with her husband, Sarin. In February 2013, Sharma met
Sarin in India; thereafter their families became "close friends." The following
year, Sharma, Sarin and Khanna agreed to operate a retail jewelry store located
in Iselin. As part of their agreement, the store sold jewelry shipped by Rajwarah
from India. The store opened on August 29, 2014; the business venture lasted
six weeks.
On December 2, 2014, plaintiffs filed a verified complaint and order to
show cause against the Sarin defendants. Plaintiffs sought return of Diajewels'
inventory and the proceeds of jewelry that had been sold. The Sarin defendants
filed a verified answer, and asserted counterclaims against plaintiffs and third-
party claims against Sharma's husband, JK Sharma, and daughter, Prerna
Sharma.3 After plaintiffs' initial attorneys were granted leave to withdraw as
counsel, plaintiffs retained another law firm, which filed an answer and assert ed
3
It is unclear from the record whether JK Sharma and Prerna Sharma answered
the third party-complaint; they are not parties to this appeal.
A-3154-18
4
defenses to the Sarin defendants' counterclaims. Less than one year later,
Genova Burns LLC was substituted as counsel for plaintiffs.
Seventeen months later, on May 2, 2016, plaintiffs filed the nine-count
amended complaint at issue, adding the Batra defendants. Plaintiffs sought
injunctive relief and damages, primarily asserting violations of the Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:41-1 to -6.2, common
law fraud, replevin, conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract and
quantum meruit. The Sarin and Batra defendants filed separate answers. The
Sarin defendants reasserted their counterclaims and third-party claims,
demanding damages for various causes of action, including breach of contract,
unjust enrichment, fraud, conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, and civil
conspiracy.
During the first year of litigation, the parties exchanged copious discovery
requests, resulting in extensive motion practice and orders to compel discovery.
Apparently, on February 16, 2018, the answer filed by the Batra defendants was
suppressed for failure to respond to discovery.
Thereafter, the matter was assigned to the present motion judge, who
managed the case for one year before dismissing plaintiffs' pleadings with
prejudice. In separate March 29, 2018 orders, the judge restored the Batra
A-3154-18
5
defendants' answer, extended the discovery end date to June 29, 2018,
"accelerated" the trial date from December 17, 2018, to a peremptory date of
October 15, 2018, and ordered that all further discovery motions must be filed
by leave of court.
Following a case management conference in May 2018, the motion judge
entered a May 9, 2018 order, permitting the Batra defendants to depose
"[p]laintiffs"4 provided the Batra defendants satisfied their outstanding
discovery obligations prior to May 14, 2018. The judge permitted the deposition
to be conducted by videoconference at plaintiffs' convenience, but ordered that
the deposition occur by May 25, 2018. The Sarin defendants were permitted to
participate, provided their depositions were reopened. The dates for the end of
discovery and trial remained in full force and effect.
For reasons that are not stated in the record, plaintiffs failed to produce
Sharma for deposition by the Batra defendants. In June 2018, the Batra
defendants moved to compel Sharma's deposition, and other delinquent
discovery. The Sarin defendants moved to compel plaintiffs to produce more
responsive documents to their outstanding requests.
4
We glean from the record that Sharma, the only individual plaintiff, had been
previously deposed by the Sarin defendants.
A-3154-18
6
By order entered June 28, 2018, the motion judge extended the discovery
end date to July 30, 2018. Among other things, the judge also ordered the parties
to participate in mandatory non-binding mediation. The parties' motions and
cross-motions were not explicitly addressed in the order.
On July 27, 2018, the motion judge again extended the discovery end date
to September 14, 2018, for "all fact and expert discovery (inclusive of witness
depositions . . . )." The order required the parties to "exchange redacted
financial records, with privilege logs" by August 15, 2018. Those records
included: demands made by the Sarin defendants to plaintiffs from January 1,
2014 to the present; certain records reviewed in camera by the court demanded
by plaintiffs of the Sarin and Batra defendants; and certain bank records
demanded by the Batra defendants. The trial date was rescheduled for October
29, 2018, and the mediation dates were adjusted accordingly.
In the meantime, the Sarin defendants provided plaintiffs supplemental
financial documents from 2014 to the present. Plaintiffs, however, produced
heavily redacted financial documents to the Sarin defendants. Asserting
plaintiffs' production was made in bad faith, the Sarin defendants moved for
leave to file a motion directing plaintiffs to comply with the court's July 27,
2018 order.
A-3154-18
7
On August 17, 2018, the motion judge sua sponte amended the July 27,
2018 order, once more extending the discovery end date to December 14, 2018,
and setting new dates for the service of expert reports, and the completion of
fact discovery and expert depositions. The trial date was rescheduled for
January 22, 2019; the mediation dates were adjourned.
In a detailed August 29, 2018 order, the motion judge compelled plaintiffs
to produce to the Sarin and Batra defendants "any and all [f]inancial [r]ecords
from 2014 to the present, including but not limited to [t]ax [r]eturns, [b]ank
statements, [p]rofit and [l]oss [s]tatements, [c]ash [f]low [s]tatements, [g]eneral
[l]edgers, [b]alance [s]heets, and [b]usiness [r]egistration documents" and
documents responsive to nine outstanding requests by the Sarin defendants and
three outstanding requests by the Batra defendants.
The order further compelled plaintiffs to: produce financial records
responsive to the Batra defendants' subpoenas served on certain financial
institutions; limit redactions to "personal identifiers, and/or attorney-client/work
product privilege"; provide a privilege log for any redactions; and provide a
power of attorney or other written authorization to the Batra defendants.
Plaintiffs thereafter filed a motion to strike the Batra defendants'
discovery requests; the Batra defendants cross-moved, claiming plaintiffs
A-3154-18
8
engaged in "oppressive and abusive" discovery practices throughout the
litigation. On September 7, 2018, plaintiffs produced to all defendants redacted
financial records, with a corresponding privilege log, and apparently moved for
a protective order. The Sarin defendants cross-moved to compel various
financial records that remained outstanding and were necessary to "continue the
depositions of [p]laintiffs and/or their accountant" in a "meaningful way."
On September 21, 2018, the motion judge issued an order, directing
plaintiffs to: (1) "provide responses to [the] Batra [d]efendants' [d]emand for
[a]dmissions"; "provide full and complete financial, export and other records
that are outstanding to . . . [d]efendants pursuant to the [c]ourt's [o]rders of July
17, 2018 and August 29, 2018 within [seven] days of this [o]rder"; "immediately
execute authorizations and power[s] of attorney[]"; "authorize [their]
[a]ccountant . . . to release all records in his possession"; and produce Sharma
for video conference deposition "as set forth in the [c]ourt's [o]rders of July 17,
2018 and August 29, 2018, within [ten] days." In another order issued on the
same date, the judge awarded the Sarin defendants $5000 in fees and costs.
Despite the assistance of the motion judge during a conference call, who
emphasized the parties "c[ould] not engage in meaningful mediation" without
plaintiffs' fully responsive financial documents, and a follow-up letter from
A-3154-18
9
counsel for the Sarin defendants, plaintiffs failed to produce the requested
documents. Instead, Genova Burns moved for leave to withdraw as plaintiffs'
counsel. There is no indication in the record that plaintiffs opposed the motion.
The Sarin defendants cross-moved to dismiss plaintiffs' amended
complaint without prejudice and strike plaintiffs' answers and affirmative
defenses to their crossclaim pursuant to Rule 4:23-2(b)(3), Rule 4:23-5(a)(1),
and Rule 4:37-2(a). The Batra defendants simultaneously cross-moved to
dismiss plaintiffs' amended complaint pursuant to Rule 4:23-5(a)(1). Genova
Burns filed a reply to both motions.
Following argument on November 9, 2018, the motion judge granted the
relief sought by all movants. 5 The judge dismissed plaintiff's complaint and
struck their answer and defenses to the Sarin defendants' counterclaim without
prejudice pursuant to Rules 4:23-2(b)(3) (failure to be deposed); 4:23-5(a)(1)
(failure to provide discovery): and 4:37-2(a) (involuntary dismissal for failure
to comply with court orders).
The judge determined plaintiffs "failed and/or refused to comply" with
eight provisions of the July 27, 2018, August 17, 2018, August 29, 2018 and
5
Plaintiffs do not appeal from the November 9, 2018 order; the parties have not
provided the transcript of the hearing on appeal.
A-3154-18
10
September 21, 2018 orders: (1) provide a power of attorney pursuant to the
August 29, 2018 order; (2) provide "full and complete financial, export and other
records" pursuant to the August 17, 2018 and August 29, 2018 orders; (3)
authorize their accountant "to release all records in his possession" as required
by the September 21, 2018 order; (4) produce Sharma for her deposition as
required by the August 17, 2018 and August 29, 2018 orders; (5) engage in
mandatory non-binding mediation as required by the July 27, 2018 and August
17, 2018 orders; (6) serve expert reports pursuant to the August 17, 2018 o rder;
(7) "provide a complete production of their [f]inancial [r]ecords" under the
August 29, 2018 and September 21, 2018 orders "and a follow-up [o]rder issued
by the [c]ourt in a telephonic conference held on October 12, 2018"; and (8) pay
the $5000 fee awarded to the Sarin defendants under the July 27, 2018 6 and
September 21, 2018 orders. The order also stayed prosecution of the Sarin
defendants' counterclaims for seventy-five days, until January 24, 2019, to
afford plaintiffs the opportunity to retain new counsel.
As a condition of permitting Genova Burns to withdraw as plaintiffs'
counsel, the judge required the firm to furnish a copy of the November 9, 2018
6
The record on appeal does not contain the July 27, 2018 fee awarded to the
Sarin defendants.
A-3154-18
11
order to plaintiffs and explain the procedure to vacate the order. In a two -page
rider annexed to the order, the judge delineated that procedure. Plaintiffs were
permitted until January 24, 2019, to retain substitute counsel and simultaneously
move to vacate the November 9, 2018 order. Plaintiffs were required to certify
"compliance with their outstanding discovery deficiencies," and provide proof
of payment of the Sarin defendants' fee award. Failure to do so "w[ould] operate
to automatically convert the without-prejudice dismissal of [their pleadings] to
a dismissal . . . with prejudice."
Three days later, on November 12, 2018, Genova Burns filed a
certification of counsel confirming the November 9, 2018 order was served on
each plaintiff and their Indian counsel, at separate addresses in India and New
York. The certification attached Genova Burns's November 12, 2018 letter to
all plaintiffs, setting forth all requirements necessary to restore the dismissed
pleadings.
On November 19, 2018, Vivek Suri, Esq. filed a "notice of appearance"
on behalf of plaintiffs. Suri did not contact counsel for the Sarin defendants or
the Batra defendants to arrange for Sharma's videotaped deposition, discuss
mediation dates, or clarify the outstanding discovery requests.
A-3154-18
12
Instead, on January 24, 2019 – the final day permitted under the November
9, 2018 order – plaintiffs moved to restore their complaint and answer. Sharma
certified plaintiffs' discovery obligations were complete, and attached as
exhibits: a DVD containing 2181 documents, described as "additional discovery
to the defendants" and financial documents pertaining to Sharma's husband and
daughter; a copy of one expert report; authorizations to obtain documents from
plaintiffs' accountant; authorizations to obtain documents from two financial
institutions; and a copy of a $5000 check payable from Suri's account to the
Sarin defendants. Sharma further certified she was willing to be deposed and
plaintiffs would engage in mediation "right after" the court restored plaintiffs'
pleadings.
On February 7, 2019, the Sarin defendants opposed plaintiffs' motion and
cross-moved to dismiss their complaint and strike their answer and affirmative
defenses with prejudice. Sarin defense counsel certified: "Approximately [forty
percent] of [p]laintiffs' January 24, 2019 production was duplicative of
documents that had been produced multiple times by . . . Genova Burns."
Specifically, plaintiffs produced only twelve of "the fifty-six documents
required."
A-3154-18
13
On the same day, the Batra defendants opposed plaintiffs' motion. In her
accompanying certification, Batra defense counsel sought to convert the
dismissal order to a "dismissal with prejudice." Among other things, Batra
defense counsel certified that because the document production contained on the
DVD was not organized or enumerated, it took her staff "an entire day" to print
and Bates stamp each document. Because the production was marked, attorneys'
eyes only, Batra defense counsel was required to expend "more than [fiftee n]
hours" to review four binders of documents. Counsel annexed to her
certification a list of 127 categories of documents, most of which were
previously provided by Genova Burns. Batra defense counsel also certified that
plaintiffs failed to produce Sharma for deposition or propose dates on which to
do so.
On the motion return date, the judge initially determined plaintiffs failed
to comply with Rule 1:11-2 because Suri's substitution of counsel, although
signed by Sharma, lacked a certification from Genova Burns and Suri that the
substitution would not cause delay. However, the judge considered plaintiffs'
motion and permitted Suri to represent plaintiffs at the hearing "in the interest
of justice." Plaintiffs were not present at the hearing nor does the record reflect
plaintiffs' request for Sharma to appear remotely from India.
A-3154-18
14
Suri argued plaintiffs satisfied the mandates of the November 9, 2018
order and, as such, their pleadings should be restored. He contended they
produced all documents they had in their custody and control. Suri told the
judge that other than "a small box of files," he was unable to obtain any other
documents from Genova Burns because "there's litigation between them and my
clients." Accordingly, Suri suggested he was unable to determine whether, for
example, Genova Burns had retained plaintiffs' reports from the seven experts
identified in plaintiffs' June 8, 2018 correspondence to counsel. Suri also
contended Genova Burns would not turn over documents that had been produced
to plaintiffs by defendants because Suri was "not technically attorney of record"
and the documents that were produced were for "attorneys' eyes only."
The Sarin and Batra defendants vehemently argued against reinstatement
of plaintiffs' pleadings. Sarin defense counsel emphasized plaintiffs' "woefully
deficient document production" failed to include financial documents that went
"to the very heart of . . . plaintiffs' claims." Those claims included plaintiffs'
assertions that they were "subject to fines and penalties in India," and had
suffered a "loss as a result of allegedly stolen jewelry." And the Sarin
defendants required plaintiffs' documents so they could depose Sharma.
A-3154-18
15
Batra defense counsel echoed that plaintiffs' January 24, 2019 production
failed to include "critical documents" that "pertained to [her] clients' defenses,"
including requests for admission and tax documents. Batra defense counsel
further criticized the purported bank authorizations provided by Sharma, which
included a provision seeking to hold the bank responsible should "anything go[]
wrong with the privacy of [her] accounts or if [the Batra defendants or their
attorney] review [Sharma's] accounts."
Following argument, the judge rendered a thorough oral decision –
spanning nearly thirty transcript pages – that accompanied a detailed February
15, 2019 order. The judge summarized the protracted history of the case,
including plaintiffs' repeated failures to comply with prior court orders and
defendants' compliance with plaintiffs' requests for the same financial
information. The judge found plaintiffs' repeated refusals to comply with their
discovery obligations were "willful, deliberate, and egregious."
To support his conclusion, the judge found the "2181 . . . pages of
documents" produced in disorganized and duplicate folders on the DVD was not
"a meaningful production of discovery." The judge noted the DVD contained a
multitude of duplicate documents that had been previously produced by Genova
Burns. Nor did plaintiffs reference the corresponding court order or outstanding
A-3154-18
16
discovery demands in their production. Without the assistance of defense
counsel, who Bates stamped and categorized the documents, the judge would
not have been able to determine whether the production was fully responsive to
defendants' discovery demands under Rule 4:23-5(a).
Citing Abtrax Pharmaceuticals. v. Elkins-Sinn, 139 N.J. 499 (1995), and
Fik-Rymarkiewicz v. University of Medicine & Dentistry of N.J., 430 N.J.
Super. 469 (App. Div. 2013), the "two-step process for dismissal with prejudice"
under Rule 4:23-2(b), and the dismissal process under Rule 4:23-2, the judge
denied the motion to reinstate plaintiffs' pleadings and dismissed their claims
with prejudice. In reaching his decision, the judge concluded plaintiffs – "not
their counsel" – failed to make a good faith effort "to provide the demanded and
fully responsive discovery." Plaintiffs "caused undue delay and unnecessarily"
caused defendants' legal fees to increase in their attempts to obtain discovery
from plaintiffs. The judge elaborated:
[B]y reason of . . . [p]laintiff[s]' deliberate,
contumacious conduct, and habitually inadequate
discovery responses; . . . [p]laintiffs' multiple willful,
deliberate, and egregious productions of heavily
redacted tax returns and deficient financial records and
repeated violation of, especially, the [c]ourt's orders of
July 27[, 2018], August 29[, 2018], and September
21[,] 2018; consistent and continuous disregard for
their discovery obligations; . . . [p]laintiff[s]' failure
and/or refusal to provide the B[]atra defendants and the
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17
Sarin defendants with court-ordered discovery and to
otherwise comply with the clear, unambiguous, and
explicit terms of the [c]ourt's orders of July 27[, 2018],
August 17[, 2018], August 29[, 2018], and September
21[,] 2018; . . . [p]laintiff[s]' failure to provide
demanded and fully responsive discovery with no
exceptional circumstances having been demonstrated
by . . . [p]laintiffs in this application pursuant to the
[c]ourt's November 9[, 2018] order, and deliberate non-
compliance with the November 9[, 2018] order . . . .
Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy and comply with the
conditions set forth . . . in the rider attached to the
November 9[, 2018] order.
....
However, I also find that by reason of . . .
[p]laintiff[s]' continued and uncured defaults, as
evinced and reflected in the moving papers and
especially detailed in the Sarin cross-motion papers and
the B[]atra opposition papers, which included four
binders of over 2181 pages of cross-checked and Bates
stamped documents of [p]laintiffs['] purported
discovery compliance that were submitted by the
B[]atra defendants for the [c]ourt's in camera review,
which was conducted; that the reinstatement motion of
. . . [p]laintiffs will be denied.
I also find that by reason of . . . [p]laintiff[s]'
continued and uncured defaults . . . the Sarin cross-
motion to convert this matter to a dismissal with
prejudice pursuant to Rule 4:23-2(b)(3), Rule 4:23-
5(a)(1), and Rule 4:37-2(a) is granted.
And more specifically, that . . . [p]laintiffs[']
amended complaint against the Sarin defendants
therefore is hereby dismissed with prejudice. That . . .
A-3154-18
18
[p]laintiffs['] answer and defenses to the Sarin
defendants' counterclaims are hereby stricken with
prejudice.
Following a proof hearing on May 10, 2019, the motion judge entered
default judgment for $271,857.61 against plaintiffs on the Sarin defendants'
counterclaims. Plaintiffs were represented at the hearing by another law firm.
The judge denied plaintiffs' request to cross-examine Sarin, the only witness
produced at the hearing. In doing so the judge concluded there was no authority
to support plaintiffs' position. This appeal followed.
On appeal, plaintiffs raise several overlapping arguments. For the first
time on appeal, plaintiffs purportedly challenge the November 9, 2018 dismissal
without prejudice order, asserting they "timely supplied all discovery responses
to . . . Genova Burns[,]" blaming the firm for any late or non-responsive
documents and for failing to provide their experts' reports to defendants.
Plaintiffs argue the motion judge should have imposed sanctions in lieu of
forever dismissing their claims. Plaintiffs further assert the judge imposed
"unrealistic requirements beyond Rule 4:23-5," requiring new counsel to
simultaneously file a substitution of attorney and a motion to vacate the
November 9, 2018 order. They also claim the automatic conversion provision
of the without prejudice order to a dismissal with prejudice was "equivalent to
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19
an ex parte motion." Plaintiffs contend the judge failed to cite any prejudice to
defendants and claim the financial documents sought by defendants have no
bearing on their claims. Finally, they claim the judge penalized them for Suri's
actions.
Plaintiffs raise no challenges to the entry of default judgment on the Sarin
defendants' counterclaim, including the judge's decision, precluding cross -
examination of Sarin. 7
II.
Our scope of review of a dismissal of a complaint with prejudice for
failure to make discovery is limited to whether the trial court abused its
discretion. Abtrax Pharms., 139 N.J. at 517. A trial court abuses its discretion
7
Because the issue was not raised on appeal, we will not address the judge's
decision. "[A]n issue not briefed is deemed waived." Pressler & Verneiro,
Current N.J. Court Rules, cmt. 5 on R. 2:6-2 (2021). See also Telebright Corp.
v. Dir., N.J. Div. of Tax'n, 424 N.J. Super. 384, 393 (App. Div. 2012) (deeming
a contention waived when the party failed to include any arguments supporting
the contention in its brief).
We take this opportunity, however, to instruct the trial court that cross -
examination of witnesses has long been permitted. See Jugan v. Pollen, 253 N.J.
Super. 123, 129 (App. Div. 1992) (reiterating the well-established principle that
"whether a defaulting party may cross-examine liability witnesses against him
is a matter of judicial discretion," but generally is favored); see also Chakravarti
v. Pegasus Consulting Grp., Inc., 393 N.J. Super. 203, 211 (App. Div. 2007)
(recognizing "the right to challenge a plaintiff's showings in a proof hearing by
way of cross-examination and argument should not ordinarily be precluded").
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20
when the "decision [was] made without a rational explanation, inexplicably
departed from established policies, or rested on an impermissible basis." United
States v. Scurry, 193 N.J. 492, 504 (2008) (alteration in original) (quoting Flagg
v. Essex Cty. Prosecutor, 171 N.J. 561, 571 (2002)).
"The dismissal of a party's cause of action, with prejudice, is drastic and
is generally not to be invoked except in those cases in which the order for
discovery goes to the very foundation of the cause of action, or where the refusal
to comply is deliberate and contumacious." Abtrax Pharms, 139 N.J. at 514
(citation omitted). "Since dismissal with prejudice is the ultimate sanction, it
will normally be ordered only when no lesser sanction will suffice to erase the
prejudice suffered by the non-delinquent party, or when the litigant rather than
the attorney was at fault." Ibid. (citation omitted).
Although the motion judge's February 15, 2019 decision and order cites
Rules 4:23-2(b)(3), 4:23-5(a)(2) and 4:37-2(a), his primary reason for
dismissing plaintiffs' pleadings was their failure to produce fully responsive
documents under Rule 4:23-5. Because we conclude the judge properly
exercised his discretion to dismiss plaintiffs' pleadings under Rule 4:23-5, we
confine our review to that Rule.
A-3154-18
21
Rule 4:23-5 has dual objectives: to compel discovery, thereby promoting
resolution of disputes on the merits; and granting aggrieved parties the
opportunity "to seek final resolution through a dismissal process." St. James
AME Dev. Corp. v. City of Jersey City, 403 N.J. Super. 480, 484 (App. Div.
2008). Toward that end, to succeed on a motion to dismiss with prejudice under
Rule 4:23-5 for failure to make discovery, the moving party must strictly comply
with the requirements of the Rule, Zimmerman v. United Services Automobile
Ass'n, 260 N.J. Super. 368, 373 (App. Div. 1992), which "involves a two-step
process." Sullivan v. Coverings & Installation, Inc., 403 N.J. Super. 86, 93
(App. Div. 2008).
"First, the aggrieved party may move for dismissal for non-compliance
with discovery obligations" under paragraph (a)(1) of the Rule, and "if the
motion is granted, the complaint is dismissed without prejudice." Ibid. Rule
4:23-5(a)(1) dismissals expressly apply to non-compliance with discovery
pursuant to Rule 4:17, pertaining to interrogatories, Rule 4:18, pertaining to
demands for production of documents, and Rule 4:19, pertaining to demands for
medical examinations. Rule 4:23-5(a)(1) also requires the attorney for the
delinquent party to serve the client a copy of the without-prejudice order,
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22
"specifically explaining the consequences of the failure to comply with [its]
discovery obligation" in the manner set forth in the Rule.
Next:
[i]f an order of dismissal . . . without prejudice has been
entered pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this rule and not
thereafter vacated, the party entitled to the discovery
may, after the expiration of [sixty] days from the date
of the order, move on notice for an order of dismissal
. . . with prejudice. The attorney for the delinquent
party shall, not later than [seven] days prior to the
return date of the motion, file and serve an affidavit
reciting that the client was previously served as
required by subparagraph (a)(1) and has been served
with an additional notification, in the form prescribed
by Appendix II-B, of the pendency of the motion to
dismiss . . . with prejudice . . . . Appearance on the
return date of the motion shall be mandatory for the
attorney for the delinquent party or the delinquent pro
se party. The motion to dismiss . . . with prejudice shall
be granted unless a motion to vacate the previously
entered order of dismissal . . . without prejudice has
been filed by the delinquent party and either the
demanded and fully responsive discovery has been
provided or exceptional circumstances are
demonstrated.
[R. 4:23-5(a)(2).]
In the present matter, it is undisputed that Genova Burns duly served each
plaintiff – and their Indian counsel – with a copy of the without-prejudice order,
explaining the consequences for failure to cure plaintiffs' delinquencies.
Because the order granted Genova Burns's motion to withdraw as counsel, the
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judge afforded plaintiffs fifteen days beyond the sixty-day deadline prescribed
in Rule 4:23-5(a)(2) to provide fully responsive discovery requests. Plaintiffs
neither sought reconsideration of the November 9, 2018 order nor an extension
in which to provide fully responsive discovery.
During oral argument, Suri blamed Genova Burns for withholding
documents, such as expert reports, that could have been responsive to
defendants' demands. However, the certifications of Suri and Sharma in support
of plaintiffs' motion to reinstate their pleadings are silent in that regard. Nor did
Suri contend he had insufficient time to comply with the November 9, 2018
order, which plaintiffs now claim imposed an "unrealistic requirement[]."
Notably, Suri never sought additional time to respond to the mandates of the
November 9, 2018 – from the court or counsel.
We agree, however, with one aspect of plaintiffs' belated procedural
argument. The automatic conversion provision set forth in the November 9,
2018, was improper. Contrary to plaintiffs' newly-minted contentions, however,
the provision was not "equivalent to an ex parte motion" here, where the Sarin
defendants expressly did not proceed ex parte but instead moved to dismiss
plaintiffs' pleadings and the Batra defendants sought conversion of the
November 9, 2018 order to a with-prejudice order. Plaintiffs were duly noticed
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and appeared, through counsel, at the hearing. The judge's error therefore was
not "clearly capable of producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2. Accordingly, we
discern no plain error. Ibid.
Additionally – although not raised by plaintiff before the trial court or this
court – we note the motion judge misapplied Rule 1:11-2(a)(2) to Suri's
substitution of counsel. Pursuant to the Rule, after a civil trial date is set, "an
attorney may withdraw without leave of court only upon" filing: (1) the "client's
written consent[] [and] a substitution of attorney" signed by both the
withdrawing and entering attorneys; (2) "a written waiver by all other parties of
notice and the right to be heard"; and (3) "a certification by both the withdrawing
attorney and the substituted attorney that the withdrawal and substitution will
not cause or result in delay." Ibid.
By its plain language, the mandates of the Rule apply to the withdrawing
attorney, and only without leave of court. Here, neither Genova Burns – whose
motion to withdraw as counsel was granted on leave of court, nor Suri – as
plaintiffs' substituting counsel – was required to satisfy the conditions of the
Rule. Nonetheless, the judge considered Suri's motion to reinstate plaintiffs'
pleadings and his argument on the return date. And Suri's appearance on
plaintiffs' behalf satisfied the requirement under Rule 4:23-5(a)(2) that either
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"attorney for the delinquent party or the delinquent party pro se" must appear on
the return date.
We are therefore satisfied that the procedural safeguards set forth in Rule
4:23-5 were fulfilled here. Genova Burns properly noticed plaintiffs of their
discovery delinquencies, furnished a copy of the November 9, 2018 order to all
plaintiffs, and explained the necessary procedures for reinstatement of their
pleadings. Within nine days of receiving the order, plaintiffs retained Suri, who
moved to reinstate plaintiffs' pleadings and represented them on the return date
of the motions.
We turn to the sufficiency of the discovery produced in response to the
November 9, 2018 order. A trial court must carefully scrutinize discovery
responses submitted on the eve of a motion to dismiss with prejudice. Adedoyin
v. Arc of Morris Cty. Chapter, Inc., 325 N.J. Super. 173, 181 (App. Div. 1999).
"[I]ncomplete answers cannot be automatically considered as a failure to answer
under R[ule] 4:23-5." Id. at 180. If the court determines there is a "bona fide
dispute over responsiveness or insufficiency of interrogatory answers, the judge
should first identify those questions[,]" and if more complete answers are
needed, the court should adjourn the motion to allow such answers, rather than
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dismiss with prejudice. St. James AME Dev. Corp., 403 N.J. Super. at 486-87
(emphasis added).
Here, with the assistance of defense counsel, the motion judge engaged in
a "painstaking review" of plaintiffs' January 24, 2019 document production.
Among other things, the judge concluded most of the documents were
duplicative of prior documents provided by Genova Burns, and plaintiffs
produced only "twenty-one percent" of the documents owed to the Sarin
defendants. The judge also noted the authorizations provided by Sharma for her
financial institutions were unlikely to be honored in view of the restrictions she
set forth. We conclude there was no "bona fide dispute" warranting an
adjournment to provide further answers, especially in view of plaintiffs' history
of noncompliance.
Notably, plaintiffs' argument that the financial documents are not relevant
to their claims appears to be raised for the first time on appeal. As such, we
need not address it. See Selective Ins. Co. of Am. v. Rothman, 208 N.J. 580,
586 (2012). Nonetheless, we have considered the contention in the interests of
justice, and conclude it is unavailing. Indeed, plaintiffs' amended complaint
alleged financial loss, including "loss of current and future business revenue"
and "lost profits." Accordingly, this was "not a situation where plaintiff failed
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to produce discovery on a minor issue." Fik-Rymarkiewicz, 430 N.J. Super. at
482; see also Abtrax Pharms, 139 N.J. at 514 (recognizing under a trial court's
inherent power, a dismissal with prejudice may be invoked as a discovery
sanction where "'the order for discovery goes to the very foundation of the cause
of action'") (citation omitted).
Finally, we described the history of discovery in detail because it
demonstrates how a dispute over a six-week business venture between friends
can devolve into a litigation nightmare that taxes judicial resources beyond what
is necessary and required for a just determination of the merits of the complaint.
See Abtrax Pharms., 139 N.J. at 518 (quoting Jansson v. Fairleigh Dickinson
Univ., 198 N.J. Super. 190, 196 (App. Div. 1985)) (recognizing "if our discovery
rules are to have any meaningful impact upon our civil dockets they must be
strictly enforced"). Such delays occasioned by a party's conduct result in
inherent prejudice to the opposing party.
We conclude plaintiffs' history of noncompliance therefore justifies the
ultimate sanction of dismissal with prejudice. See, e.g., Fik-Rymarkiewicz, 430
N.J. Super. at 482-83 (holding that "under the totality of the circumstances . . .
the sanctions imposed [including dismissal with prejudice] were not unjust or
unreasonable"); Glass v. Suburban Restoration Co., 317 N.J. Super. 574, 578-
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80 (App. Div. 1998) (upholding dismissal with prejudice when the defendant
failed to comply with multiple orders over a three-year discovery period).
Affirmed.
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