SYLLABUS
This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office
of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor
approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.
Carol Ann Conforti v. County of Ocean (A-1-22) (086206)
Argued January 30, 2023 -- Decided August 10, 2023
WAINER APTER, J., writing for the Court.
The Court considers whether the Ocean County defendants are immune from
liability by provisions of the New Jersey Tort Claims Act (TCA) in a negligence suit
brought by plaintiff Carol Ann Conforti, whose husband, Kenneth Conforti, hung
himself while incarcerated at the Ocean County Jail (OCJ).
In summer 2010, plaintiff obtained a restraining order against her husband.
On September 8, he was arrested for violating the restraining order by returning to
the marital home to see his son. Conforti was taken to the OCJ, where he was
evaluated by a staff member of Correctional Health Services (CHS). A CHS staff
member wrote on the “Intake Receiving and Screening” form that Conforti reported
(1) drinking half a gallon of vodka each day; (2) major surgery that left him with
rods and screws in his back; (3) feeling “hopeless or helpless”; and (4) the “[r]ecent
significant loss” of his marriage. A physician prescribed him one extra mattress and
medicine for back pain and alcohol dependence, and instructed that he not be
assigned work or a top bunk. After 27 days, Conforti was released.
Just over a week later, Conforti was arrested for again returning to the marital
home to see his son. He arrived at OCJ on October 13, 2010. During his intake, a
CHS nurse, Kelly Clough, filled out the same form that had been filled out in
September, but noted this time that Conforti reported no major surgical history, did
not “feel helpless or hopeless,” had no “[r]ecent significant loss,” and was only a
“social” drinker. A document from Conforti’s file acknowledged his previous
incarceration and history of binge drinking but stated he had “[n]o current mental
health issues/concerns” and was cleared for OCJ’s general population.
Initially assigned to a cell in which he had a bunk, Conforti was transferred to
a cell in which he had to sleep on the floor. On October 16, he requested medical
attention for back pain. Two days later, Clough said he could purchase Motrin or
Tylenol. On October 20, Conforti wrote a suicide note to his parents, closed the
door to his cell, covered the cell door window with a sheet, and hung himself.
1
Testimony at trial established that an inmate closing a cell door would cause
the door to lock automatically and trigger a light to alert staff. Surveillance footage
of areas outside Conforti’s cell existed and was preserved after his death, but an OCJ
warden testified that it subsequently became unviewable for technological reasons.
The OCJ Suicide Prevention Policy states that officers “should make unsystematic
patrols of the housing area” to “hinder the inmate’s efforts” of timing the patrols and
to “increase the possibility of successful intervention.” Yet the logbook indicates
checks on Conforti’s cell block on October 20 at 8:03 a.m., 9:02 a.m., 9:56 a.m.,
11:02 a.m., and 12:03 p.m. Any change in the logbook was supposed to be initialed,
with a reason provided. Despite that, the time of the entry that followed the 12:03
p.m. health and welfare check was overwritten or obliterated with a 12:55 p.m.
notation for “[p]ossible [s]uicide.” There was no reason provided, and no initials.
During discovery, plaintiff submitted an expert report from Martin Horn, who
opined that defendants acted negligently by failing to adequately train and supervise
OCJ staff to prevent inmate suicide; failing to adopt and implement an adequate
suicide prevention policy; failing to follow OCJ’s existing Suicide Prevention
Policy; failing to conduct mortality reviews and revise policies after inmate suicides;
failing to “recognize Mr. Conforti presented a risk of suicide”; housing Conforti in
an occupied single-bunk cell, ensuring he had no bunk to sleep on; “[f]ailing to
recognize or appreciate the danger of a closed and locked cell door with a towel
covering the door”; and “[e]ngaging in predictable and easily timed and anticipated
patrols of the cell block when the . . . Policy prohibited systematic patrols.”
The County defendants moved for summary judgment, maintaining in part
that OCJ was a medical facility under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 and was therefore immune
from liability under provisions of the TCA, N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. The trial
court refused to dismiss plaintiff’s negligence claim, saying nothing about the TCA.
At trial, the parties presented competing fact and expert testimony regarding
negligence and causation. The jury found defendants negligent and apportioned
liability 60% against the County defendants and 40% against CHS. Defendants
moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), in part reasserting their
medical-facility-immunity argument. The judge denied the motion. Defendants
appealed, contending for the first time that the immunities granted in 6-4, -5, and -6
were not limited to medical facilities. The Appellate Division affirmed. The Court
granted defendants’ petition for certification, 252 N.J. 53 (2022), and denied
plaintiff’s cross-petition, 252 N.J. 25 (2022).
HELD: The definition of “medical facility” under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 does not restrict
the substantive immunities granted in N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6, which are also not
“superseded in the jail suicide context.” However, there was evidence presented in
this case, both at the summary judgment stage and at trial, that falls outside of any
immunities granted by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. The jury could reasonably have
2
concluded from that evidence that the County defendants were negligent. The trial
court was therefore correct to refuse to dismiss plaintiff’s negligence count at the
summary judgment stage and to refuse to overturn the jury’s verdict after trial. The
Court accordingly affirms the judgment of the Appellate Division, as modified.
1. The guiding principle of the TCA is that immunity from tort liability is the
general rule and liability is the exception. N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 defines “medical facility”
as “a hospital, infirmary, clinic, dispensary, mental institution, or similar facility.”
The County defendants argue that, despite that definition their conduct was
immunized by three separate substantive provisions of Chapter Six: N.J.S.A. 59:6-4,
which grants absolute immunity for a public entity or public employee’s failure to
perform an adequate examination to determine whether a person has a physical or
mental condition which would be hazardous to that person or others, unless the
examination is for the purpose of treatment; N.J.S.A. 59:6-5, which grants immunity
to public entities and employees for diagnosing or failing to diagnose “that a person
has a mental illness” or drug use disorder, and from failing to prescribe treatment for
a mental illness or drug use disorder; and N.J.S.A. 59:6-6, which grants immunity
for decisions regarding whether to confine a person for mental illness or drug
dependence, and the terms and conditions of such confinement or release. N.J.S.A.
59:6-1’s definitions section does not limit the substantive immunities provided by
59:6-4, -5, or -6 to “medical facilities,” and the immunities set forth in 59:6-4, -5,
and -6 are not “inapplicable in jail suicide cases” or “superseded in the jail suicide
context.” In theory, therefore, defendants could be immunized from liability for
specific conduct under 59:6-4, -5, and -6. (pp. 25-29)
2. However, because there was evidence here from which the jury could have
concluded that the County defendants were negligent beyond any immunities
possibly granted by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6, the trial court was correct to refuse
to dismiss plaintiff’s negligence count at the summary judgment stage and to refuse
to overturn the jury’s verdict after trial. Reviewing the grounds on which Horn’s
report opined that the County defendants were negligent, the Court finds that, even
though the trial court was wrong in failing to address defendants’ arguments under
the TCA at the summary judgment stage, it did not err in refusing to dismiss the
negligence count because there was evidence from which a jury could find
negligence without reference to any immunized conduct. And at trial, the jury heard
voluminous testimony about the County defendants’ negligence that was unrelated to
any conduct immunized under 59:6-4, -5, and -6, including testimony from Horn.
While defendants’ expert refuted Horn’s testimony, it was up to the jury to decide
which expert to believe. The jury was also free to rely on the existing OCJ Suicide
Prevention Policy, admitted at trial, which provides that an “officer should make
unsystematic patrols of the housing areas,” and to infer culpability against the
County defendants from the “conveniently overwritten log entry and unavailable
security footage.” (pp. 29-32)
3
3. The Court addresses arguments about the specific procedural history of this case.
(pp. 32-37)
4. Because the jury’s verdict here is supported by non-immunized conduct
introduced at trial, this case is not like others in which a claim against a public entity
or public employee was held immunized by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6, and the Court
does not reach the contours of immunity under those provisions. The Court does
note, however, that the Appellate Division erred when it stated that defendants had
no immunity under 59:6-4 “regarding [Conforti]’s medical intake, which was done
to assess his OCJ confinement and not conducted for treatment purposes.” That is
the opposite of what 59:6-4 actually says. N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 applies only to exams
that are not conducted “for the purpose of treatment” and explicitly denies immunity
when examinations are conducted for treatment purposes. (pp. 37-39)
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
JUSTICE FASCIALE, concurring in part and dissenting in part, agrees
that the definition of “medical facility” does not restrict the substantive immunities
granted in N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6; that the immunities granted by those statutes to
public entities and public employees are not superseded in the jail suicide context;
and that the trial judge correctly denied summary judgment as to that part of the
negligence count alleging damages premised on evidence that falls outside of any
immunities granted. In Justice Fasciale’s view, however, the trial judge should have
granted summary judgment to the extent that plaintiff’s negligence claim is derived
from conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and possibly -6. Because the
court denied the motion in its entirety, Justice Fasciale explains, plaintiff was able to
present evidence that was immunized under the TCA and to make arguments based
in part on immunized conduct. The cumulative effect of those combined mistakes
denied the County defendants a fair trial, Justice Fasciale writes.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES SOLOMON and PIERRE-LOUIS
join in JUSTICE WAINER APTER’s opinion. JUSTICE FASCIALE filed an
opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which JUSTICE
PATTERSON joins. JUDGE SABATINO (temporarily assigned) did not
participate.
4
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-1 September Term 2022
086206
Carol Ann Conforti,
individually and as administratrix
ad prosequendum of the Estate of
Kenneth Conforti and as parent
natural guardian and guardian ad
litem of A.C., a minor,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
County of Ocean, Ocean
County Board of Chosen
Freeholders, in their
individual and official capacities,
Ocean County Department
of Corrections, Warden
Theodore J. Hutler, in his
individual and official capacity,
and Corporal Petrizzo,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
Correctional Health
Services, LLC, Prison
Health Services, Inc.,
and Kelly Clough,
Defendants.
1
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division .
Argued Decided
January 30, 2023 August 10, 2023
Vito A. Gagliardi, Jr., argued the cause for appellants
(Porzio, Bromberg & Newman, attorneys; Vito A.
Gagliardi, Jr., of counsel and on the briefs, and Eliyahu
S. Scheiman and Thomas J. Reilly, on the briefs).
Donald F. Burke, Jr., argued the cause for respondent
(Law Office of Donald F. Burke, attorneys; Donald F.
Burke, on the brief).
Michael J. Epstein argued the cause for amicus curiae
New Jersey Association for Justice (The Epstein Law
Firm, attorneys; Michael J. Epstein, of counsel and on the
brief, and Michael A. Rabasca, on the brief).
Karen Thompson argued the cause for amicus curiae
American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (American
Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey Foundation,
attorneys; Karen Thompson, Alexander Shalom, and
Jeanne LoCicero, on the brief).
JUSTICE WAINER APTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
On October 20, 2010, Kenneth Conforti wrote a suicide note, closed the
door to his cell at the Ocean County Jail (OCJ), and covered the cell door
window with a sheet. He then tied bedsheets together and hung himself from a
ceiling light fixture over the toilet.
2
Plaintiff, Kenneth Conforti’s wife, sued Ocean County, the Ocean
County Board of Chosen Freeholders, the Ocean County Department of
Corrections, retired OCJ Warden Theodore Hutler, and OCJ Corporal Peter
Petrizzo (collectively, County defendants or defendants) for negligence and a
violation of the New Jersey Civil Rights Act (NJCRA). After a trial, the jury
found defendants negligent and awarded damages to plaintiff.
Defendants claim they are immune from liability for negligence by
provisions of the New Jersey Tort Claims Act (TCA), N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and
-6, and the jury’s verdict against them must therefore be overturned. We agree
with defendants that the definition of “medical facility” under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1
does not restrict the substantive immunities granted in N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5,
or -6. As defendants point out, none of those three provisions are limited to
medical facilities. Instead, they grant immunities to public entities and public
employees. We also agree with defendants that the immunities set forth in
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 are not “superseded in the jail suicide context.”
However, there was evidence presented in this case, both at the summary
judgment stage and at trial, that falls outside of any immunities granted by
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. The jury could reasonably have concluded from
that evidence that the County defendants were negligent. The trial court was
therefore correct to refuse to dismiss plaintiff’s negligence count at the
3
summary judgment stage and to refuse to overturn the jury’s verdict after trial .
We accordingly affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division, as modified.
I.
A.
Kenneth Conforti (Conforti) became totally disabled due to a workplace
injury to his back. After unsuccessful surgery, he was left in chronic pain. He
initially obtained medical treatment through worker’s compensation, but after
treatment terminated, he began self-medicating with alcohol. In the summer of
2010, his wife, plaintiff Carol Ann Conforti, obtained a restraining order
against him, and he moved in with his sister. On September 8, 2010, Conforti
was arrested for violating the restraining order by returning to the marital
home to see his then-nine-year-old son, A.C. A.C. has Down syndrome and is
deaf and non-verbal.
Conforti was taken to the OCJ, where he was evaluated by a staff
member of defendant Correctional Health Services (CHS). Pursuant to a
contract with the Ocean County Department of Corrections (DOC), CHS
provided all medical and mental health services to OCJ inmates, including
intake evaluations, examinations, screenings, and treatment. A CHS staff
member wrote on the “Intake Receiving and Screening” form that Conforti
reported (1) drinking half a gallon of vodka each day; (2) major surgery that
4
left him with rods and screws in his back; (3) feeling “hopeless or helpless”;
and (4) the “[r]ecent significant loss” of his marriage. The form indicated that
Conforti denied use of any pain or psychotropic medication, any history of
anxiety or depression or any other mental health disorder, and any history of
suicide attempts or suicidal thoughts.
Because of his reported alcohol abuse, Conforti was admitted to OCJ’s
medical unit for observation. He also underwent a psychiatric evaluation,
during which he reported no psychiatric symptoms and denied any psychiatric
history, anxiety or depression, suicidal ideations, or history of suicide
attempts. After exhibiting no symptoms of alcohol withdrawal, Conforti was
cleared to enter OCJ’s general population on September 10. A physician
prescribed him one extra mattress and 600 mg of Motrin for chronic back pain,
and instructed that he not be assigned work or a top bunk. For alcohol
dependence, Conforti was given a multi-vitamin and the medication Librium.
After twenty-seven days in jail, Conforti was released on October 4, 2010.
Just over a week later, Conforti was arrested for again violating the
restraining order by returning to the marital home to see A.C. He arrived at
OCJ on October 13, 2010. During his intake with a CHS nurse, Kelly Clough,
Conforti indicated he had never previously been incarcerated at OCJ. Clough
took Conforti at his word and filled out the same “Intake Receiving and
5
Screening” form that had been filled out by a CHS staff member in September.
This time, though, Clough marked on the form that Conforti reported no major
surgical history, did not “feel helpless or hopeless,” had no “[r]ecent
significant loss,” and was only a “social” drinker. Although Conforti was
admitted to the jail with the same inmate number he had in September, and
records from his earlier incarceration were thus available to her, Clough did
not review them.
However, a document from Conforti’s file titled “Progress Notes,”
written on October 14 by CHS mental health staff, indicated that Conforti was
seen “upon his return to OC jail” and had been previously incarcerated in the
jail on September 10 for the same offense. The note reported that Conforti had
a “[history] of binge drinking” but denied recent use, denied current suicidal
thoughts, had no psychological history, and had “[n]o current mental health
issues/concerns.” It therefore indicated he was cleared for OCJ’s general
population.
Conforti was initially assigned to a cell with two beds, but was then
transferred to a cell with one bed, which was already occupied by another
inmate. Conforti thus had to sleep on the floor. On October 16, Conforti
requested medical attention for back pain. Two days later, Clough responded
that he could purchase Motrin or Tylenol from the commissary.
6
On October 20, 2010, Conforti wrote a suicide note to his parents,
stating that death was “the only way for [him] to stop” -- otherwise, he “would
have continued to drink and get locked up.” He dated the note “10/20/10,
9:32 am.” At some point thereafter, Conforti closed the door to his cell,
causing it to lock automatically, and covered the cell door window with a
sheet. He then tied bedsheets together and hung himself from a ceiling light
fixture over the toilet.
Testimony at trial established that an inmate closing a cell door would
cause the door to lock automatically and trigger a light in the control tower to
alert staff that the door was locked. An officer was stationed in the control
tower -- a raised glass enclosure -- at all times to monitor such alerts and to
supervise the inmates both through the glass and through video surveillance.
Surveillance footage of the hallways, general housing areas outside Conforti’s
cell, and the outside of cell doors existed and was preserved after Conforti’s
death. However, Warden Sandra Mueller testified that it subsequently became
unviewable for technological reasons.
Corporal Peter Petrizzo, filling in as a floor officer in Conforti’s housing
unit on October 20, testified that he was required to walk the 130-inmate unit
once per hour for health and welfare checks, to ensure the inmates were safe
7
and abiding by OCJ policies. That included OCJ rules that “[c]ell doors will
remain unobstructed with no items hung on or over the door.”
According to Corporal Petrizzo, the checks had to be conducted hourly,
and he switched the order of the cell blocks so that he would not check the
same cell block at the same time each hour. The OCJ Suicide Prevention
Policy specifically states that officers “should make unsystematic patrols of
the housing area” to “hinder the inmate’s efforts” of timing the patrols and to
“increase the possibility of successful intervention” if an inmate were to
attempt suicide. Yet the health and welfare logbook indicates that Corporal
Petrizzo checked Conforti’s cell block on October 20 at 8:03 a.m., 9:02 a.m.,
9:56 a.m., 11:02 a.m., and 12:03 p.m.
It is not clear exactly when DOC staff first responded to a “possible
suicide” in Conforti’s housing unit. The logbook was maintained by the tower
officer, and any change was supposed to be initialed, with a reason provided
for the change. Despite that, the time of the entry that followed the 12:03 p.m.
health and welfare check was overwritten or obliterated with a 12:55 p.m.
notation for “[p]ossible [s]uicide.” There was no reason provided, and no
initials.
8
After Conforti was discovered and his cell door unlocked, officers
performed CPR. An autopsy eventually confirmed that Conforti died of
asphyxiation by hanging.
B.
On August 20, 2015, plaintiff, as administratrix ad prosequendum of
Conforti’s estate, sued the County defendants and Correctional Health
Services, LLC, its successor-in-interest Prison Health Services, Inc., and Kelly
Clough (collectively, CHS defendants), in the Ocean County Law Division.
Plaintiff’s complaint raised two counts against the County defendants:
(1) negligence and (2) violations of the New Jersey Civil Rights Act. The
CHS defendants settled with plaintiff prior to trial.
During discovery, plaintiff submitted an expert report from Martin Horn,
former Secretary of Corrections for the State of Pennsylvania, and former
Commissioner of the New York City Department of Correction. Horn opined
that the County defendants acted unreasonably, negligently, or with deliberate
indifference by failing to adequately train and supervise OCJ staff to prevent
inmate suicide; failing to adopt and implement an adequate suicide prevention
policy; failing to follow OCJ’s existing Suicide Prevention Policy; failing to
conduct mortality reviews and revise policies accordingly after inmate
suicides; failing to “recognize Mr. Conforti presented a risk of suicide”;
9
“[h]ousing Mr. Conforti in a single [bunk cell] already occupied by an inmate
(ensuring he had no bunk to sleep on)”; “[f]ailing to recognize or appreciate
the danger of a closed and locked cell door with a towel covering the door
either through patrols or video surveillance”; and “[e]ngaging in predictable
and easily timed and anticipated patrols of the cell block when the Suicide
Prevention Policy prohibited systematic patrols.”
The County defendants moved for summary judgment seeking to dismiss
both the negligence and NJCRA counts.
They argued the NJCRA claim must be dismissed because plaintiff could
not establish: (1) an unconstitutional policy under Monell v. Dep’t. of Soc.
Servs., 436 U.S. 658 (1978); (2) that prison officials knew or should have
known that Conforti had a “particular vulnerability to suicide”; or (3) that they
acted with “reckless indifference.”
The County defendants contended the negligence count must be
dismissed because: (1) plaintiff could not establish that they breached any
duty owed to Conforti; (2) intake and mental health evaluations were
completed by CHS, not by them; (3) Conforti himself denied feelings of
helplessness or hopelessness and denied any mental health history; (4) no one
at OCJ “could reasonably have foreseen that Mr. Conforti would take his own
life”; and (5) no medical or mental health information was passed by CHS to
10
the County defendants because of Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) regulations.
Defendants also maintained that OCJ was a medical facility under
N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 and was therefore immune from liability under provisions of
Chapter Six of the TCA, “Medical, Hospital and Public Health Activities,”
codified at N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. Defendants reasoned that because OCJ
“provides medical services in its medical unit, or infirmary, for all prison
inmates,” and “provides dental care for the inmates,” it should be deemed a
“medical facility” under 59:6-1 and therefore entitled to immunity under 59:6-
4, -5, and -6. N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 defines “medical facility” as “a hospital,
infirmary, clinic, dispensary, mental institution, or similar facility.”
In support of this point, defendants quoted the text of 59:6-4 (“[f]ailure
to make physical or mental examination or to make adequate physical or
mental examination”), 59:6-5 (“failure to diagnose certain conditions”), and
59:6-6 (determination of terms of confinement). They also discussed
Charpentier v. Godsil, 937 F.2d 859 (3d Cir. 1991). 1 They then reiterated: “It
1
Charpentier did not hold that N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 apply only to
medical facilities, or that a jail is a medical facility under the TCA. In
Charpentier, a person with bipolar manic-depressive psychosis was
incarcerated in the Monmouth County Correctional Institution (MCCI) and
sustained injuries during a psychotic episode. 937 F.2d at 861. He sued a
physician employed by MCCI for prescribing him a tranquilizer injection but
11
is clear from the foregoing case that a county correctional facility is considered
a medical facility under New Jersey law and that, therefore, Defendants in this
matter are entitled to the applicable immunities contained in chapter six of the
TCA.”2 (emphasis added).
Plaintiff interpreted defendants to be arguing that they were entitled to
immunity under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 because OCJ was a medical facility
failing to personally examine him, failing to make any diagnosis, and failing to
prescribe any other treatment, including transfer to a psychiatric or medical
facility. Id. at 862. The Third Circuit held that the doctor was not immune
under 59:6-5 for the allegedly wrongful injection of the tranquilizer, because
6-5(a) specifically provides “nothing in this subsection exonerates a public
entity or a public employee who has undertaken to prescribe for mental illness
. . . from liability for injury proximately caused by [] negligence or by [a]
wrongful act in so prescribing.” Id. at 864 (quoting N.J.S.A. 59:6-5(a)).
However, the court found the doctor was immune under 59:6-5 for failure to
prescribe any other treatment for mental illness, including transfer to a
psychiatric or medical facility. Id. at 866-67.
2
The dissent focuses on the two lines in defendants’ summary judgment brief
that arguably broadened their argument to go beyond medical facilities. The
first is: “Nevertheless, any alleged failure to recognize Mr. Conforti’s mental
state or suicidal inclination is immunized by the plain language of both
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and 6-5.” The second is: “The foregoing notwithstanding, . . .
to the extent Plaintiff alleges that [the County defendants] failed to properly
diagnose Mr. Conforti’s mental state, they are entitled to the immunities
provided under the [TCA] for medical and public health activities.” However,
both of those sentences appeared after the sentence in which defendants made
clear they believed they were entitled to immunity under 6-4 and 6-5 only
because OCJ was a medical facility under 6-1: “It is clear from the foregoing
. . . that a county correctional facility is considered a medical facility under
New Jersey law and that, therefore, Defendants in this matter are entitled to the
applicable immunities contained in chapter six of the TCA.” (emphasis
added).
12
under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1. In opposition, plaintiff responded that OCJ did not fall
within the definition of a “medical facility” in 59:6-1 and was therefore not
entitled to immunity under 59:6-4, -5, or -6. Defendants’ reply brief did not
mention the TCA.
At oral argument on defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the trial
court unsuccessfully tried to elicit additional information about defendants’
TCA arguments. Counsel for defendants initially sought to “rely on the
argument in the brief” for TCA immunities. The trial court then asked: “with
respect to those . . . tort claims, what, if any, immunities come into play?”
Counsel reiterated that Conforti’s mental health assessment was conducted by
CHS, not OCJ; Conforti did not report any mental health history and denied
thoughts of suicide; and Conforti did not tell Nurse Clough that he had
previously been incarcerated at OCJ. The court interrupted:
The court: I know, but I’m speaking to the enumerated
--
Counsel for defendants: Well, with regard --
The court: -- tort claim immunities. Are you going to
cite anything out of Title [5]9 then? . . . I mean if you
haven’t, that’s fine. But I just, you know --
Counsel for defendants: Well, I think, I think primarily
we addressed the provision with regard to the, the
mental health itself for failure to, I guess, recognize that
he was suicidal, and I cited the case that -- where they
13
had applied it in the context of the, I believe it was
Monmouth County Correctional Facility with regard to
that [Charpentier v. Godsil, 937 F.2d 859 (3d Cir.
1991)]. Off the, off the top of my head I don’t know
that there are any other specific tort claim immunities .
. . with regard to this specific allegation.
The court: I want to make sure I didn’t miss anything.
Okay.
Counsel for defendants: I don’t think so.
The court: If you didn’t brief it, that’s fine.
In a written opinion, the trial court granted summary judgment to
defendants dismissing plaintiff’s Civil Rights Act claim, refused to dismiss
plaintiff’s negligence claim, and said nothing about the TCA.
On the NJCRA claim, the trial court concluded that “[t]he evidence [did]
not support the level of culpability required” for a constitutional violation. As
to the negligence claim, the court held that Horn’s expert report raised a
genuine issue of material fact as to whether Conforti’s “suicide was
foreseeable and the Ocean County Defendants negligent.” The court said
nothing about defendant’s arguments regarding TCA immunity.
Defendants did not move for reconsideration of the court’s failure to
respond to their motion as to the TCA.
Before trial, defendants filed a motion in limine about allocating liability
with the settled CHS defendants. The motion did not seek to prevent the jury
14
from hearing evidence of any conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or
-6, and did not mention the TCA. The motion was eventually withdrawn.
C.
At trial, the parties presented competing fact and expert testimony
regarding negligence and causation.
Retired OCJ Warden Theodore Hutler highlighted that OCJ was
accredited by the National Commission on Correctional Health Care
(NCCHC), met all American Correctional Association (ACA) standards, and
was nearly 100% compliant with the hundreds of standards on the State
Department of Corrections inspection. He affirmed that corrections officers
were trained in suicide prevention each year. After a suicide, Warden Hutler
stated, he would do a “total review” with his senior staff to determine what, if
anything, they could have done differently, and what policies, if any, should be
changed. He testified that the jail relied on CHS for all inmate medical and
mental health screenings; that the nurses determined whether an inmate was
suicidal during intake; and that CHS did not share inmates’ medical or mental
health information with corrections officers because they believed it was
prohibited by HIPAA. He also testified that health and welfare checks were
performed in accordance with the State Administrative Code, which required
15
checks to be made once per hour during waking hours. According to Warden
Hutler, there was no requirement that the checks be irregularly timed.
Horn testified that OCJ was negligent in failing to maintain accurate
records such that they could not even “say with certainty how many suicides
there were” at the jail between 2005 and 2010: Warden Mueller testified there
were seven; retired Warden Hutler testified there were three to four; and an
OCJ document listed eight names, with three crossed out, for a total of five.
According to Horn, while the New York City Department of Correction had
0.16 suicides per thousand inmates between 2005 and 2010, OCJ had two per
thousand inmates, assuming that the five-suicides figure was correct.
Defendants were negligent, Horn testified, by failing to conduct
comprehensive mortality reviews or revise OCJ’s Suicide Prevention Policy --
which had been promulgated in 1985 and last amended in 1999 -- after the five
suicides and the additional fifty-eight suicide or self-injury attempts that
occurred at OCJ between 2005 and 2010.
Horn further testified that the County defendants were negligent by
providing inadequate training to OCJ staff on preventing inmate suicide and by
failing to follow OCJ’s existing suicide prevention policies and general
correctional standards by: (1) failing to respond when Conforti closed his cell
door, which would have immediately notified the control tower officer, and
16
obstructed his cell door window; and (2) completing “systematic and
predictable” health checks of the housing units that were easily timed by
inmates. Had OCJ staff followed its existing policies, Horn concluded, the
“chances of [Conforti] succeeding in committing suicide would have been
substantially lowered.”
Defendants’ expert Jeff Eiser, the former deputy director of the
Cincinnati, Ohio jail system, countered that jail staff at OCJ at all times
complied with the standards of care established by the New Jersey
Administrative Code, ACA, and NCCHC. He testified that OCJ’s health and
welfare checks were adequate and complied with New Jersey law, and the
checks conducted by Corporal Petrizzo on the day of Conforti’s death “were
irregular” and consistent with OCJ policy. According to Eiser, OCJ had
adequate policies, procedures, and practices regarding suicide prevention; its
training on suicide prevention complied with ACA standards and was “very
current, very up to date”; and no evidence suggested that any lack of training
contributed to Conforti’s death. Eiser also concluded that Conforti’s intake
screening complied with ACA standards, was adequate, and did not raise any
“red flags”; OCJ staff did not disregard any risk regarding Conforti’s safety or
mental health; and Conforti was housed appropriately during his October
incarceration. An inmate could commit suicide, Eiser emphasized, even when
17
jail staff followed all applicable policies. While Conforti’s suicide was tragic,
Eiser testified, it was also unforeseeable.
At the close of plaintiff’s case, the County defendants moved for a
directed verdict. The court denied the motion.
The jury found defendants negligent and apportioned liability 60%
against the County defendants and 40% against CHS. The jury awarded
plaintiff a total of $150,000 in damages under the Wrongful Death Act, and
$1,400,000 for pain and suffering under the Survival Act.
D.
Defendants moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), or,
in the alternative, for a new trial and remittitur. Among their many
contentions, defendants asserted that plaintiff introduced insufficient evidence
for a jury to conclude that Conforti’s suicide was reasonably foreseeable or
that defendants were a proximate cause of Conforti’s death. Renewing their
summary judgment argument, defendants also maintained that because OCJ
was a medical facility under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1, they were entitled to immunity
under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. Defendants’ JNOV brief copied, verbatim,
the entire TCA argument from their summary judgment brief.
Applying the correct JNOV standard, the judge denied the motion. On
the first point, the trial court reasoned that there was sufficient evidence in
18
Horn’s testimony from which a jury could conclude that Conforti’s suicide was
“reasonably foreseeable to the County Defendants and that the County
Defendants’ actions were a proximate cause of Mr. Conforti’s death.” On the
second point, the court held that OCJ was not a “medical facility” under
N.J.S.A. 59:6-1, and Charpentier v. Godsil “does not stand for the proposition
that the Ocean County Jail is a ‘medical facility.’”
The court also denied defendants’ motion for a new trial and remittitur,
finding there was no “manifest denial of justice under the law on liability or
damages.”
E.
Defendants appealed. Whereas they earlier contended that OCJ was a
“medical facility” under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 and therefore immune under
59:6-4, -5, and -6, they contended for the first time before the Appellate
Division that the immunities granted in 6-4, -5, and -6 were not limited to
medical facilities and applied instead to certain “activities,” regardless of
which public entity performed them. According to defendants, 6-4, -5, and -6
immunized “public entit[ies]” and “public employee[s]” for injuries caused by
specific activities -- “[n]one of these immunities is limited to a ‘medical
facility’” under 59:6-1’s “general definitions section.” The trial court
19
therefore plainly erred in failing to apply TCA immunity, and the “jury’s
verdict should be set aside and the case dismissed with prejudice.”
Plaintiff responded that the jury’s verdict “was not based on the Ocean
County Defendants’ ‘failure to make a physical or mental examination,’
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4; ‘failing to [properly] diagnose,’ N.J.S.A. 59:6-5; or failing to
‘confine a person for mental illness or drug dependence.’ N.J.S.A. 59:6 -6.”
(alteration in original).
The Appellate Division affirmed. Without discussing the text of 59:6-4,
-5, or -6, the Appellate Division found “County defendants’ arguments
misconstrue plaintiff’s claims against them,” because “[t]he thrust of
plaintiff’s claims” was that defendants “failed to follow DOC policies and
rules for the prevention of inmate suicide.” The Appellate Division also noted
that because the jury assessed 40% liability against “the CHS defendants who
conducted [Conforti’s] jail intake, the County defendants’ contention that the
jury verdict should be set aside because they are not liable for a failure to
diagnose is without support. Seemingly, the jury held the CHS defendants
were liable for misdiagnosing [Conforti]’s mental condition, not the County
defendants.”
Detailing the testimony at trial, the Appellate Division concluded that
the “conveniently overwritten log entry and unavailable security footage
20
allowed the jury to infer culpability [against the County defendants] from the
actual timing of the welfare checks; the amount of time [Conforti]’s cell door
was closed, locked, and obstructed; and the time it took DOC staff to respond
to the hanging.”
F.
We granted defendants’ petition for certification, limited to the question
of whether defendants were entitled to immunity under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or
-6. 252 N.J. 53 (2022). We denied plaintiff’s cross petition. 252 N.J. 25
(2022). We also granted leave to the New Jersey Association for Justice
(NJAJ) and the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (ACLU) to
participate as amici curiae.
II.
Defendants maintain they are entitled to absolute immunity under
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6, for plaintiff’s claims that defendants failed to
properly diagnose or address Conforti’s psychiatric and medical conditions.
Citing the plain language of the statutory provisions, they argue that the trial
court and Appellate Division erred in holding that immunity under 59:6-4, -5,
and -6 applies exclusively to “medical facilities” defined in 59:6-1. According
to the County defendants, nothing in Chapter Six of the TCA constricts the
scope of 6-4, -5, or -6 to “medical facilities”; instead, the provisions grant
21
immunity to certain activities performed by public entities and public
employees. Citing Bernstein v. State, 411 N.J. Super. 316, 334-35 (App. Div.
2010), Perona v. Township of Mullica, 270 N.J. Super. 19, 27 (App. Div.
1994), and Parsons ex rel. Parsons v. Mullica Twp. Bd. of Educ., 226 N.J. 297
(2016), defendants argue they were entitled to TCA immunity and the “jury’s
verdict” should therefore “be set aside and the case dismissed with prejudice.”
Plaintiff endorses the Appellate Division’s holding that her claims
against defendants focused on defendants’ failure to follow and implement
suicide prevention policies and procedures, which is not immunized under
59:6-4, -5, or -6. Additionally, plaintiff asserts, 59:6-4 could not help the
County defendants because the CHS defendants, who are not entitled to
immunity under the Act because they are not public entities or public
employees, were largely responsible for “intake and mental health screening
evaluations” and “identifying and addressing [Conforti]’s particular medical
needs during his OCJ confinement.” Likewise for 59:6-5, plaintiff contends,
the jury’s 40% liability finding against CHS demonstrates that it held CHS
“liable for misdiagnosing [Conforti]’s mental condition, not the County
defendants.”
NJAJ supports plaintiff and makes several additional points on why
there is no immunity for County defendants under 59:6-4, -5, or -6. The
22
ACLU maintains that N.J.S.A. 59:2-2 should be used to strengthen the duty of
care owed by jailers to incarcerated people in recognition of defendants’
“outstanding duty to preserve and protect individual lives in their care and to
pursue that care over and beyond any underlying fear of civil suit.”
III.
A.
We review motions for summary judgment under the same standard as
the trial court. Statewide Ins. Fund v. Star Ins. Co., 253 N.J. 119, 124-25
(2023). In so doing, we “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.” Id. at 125 (quoting Brill v. Guardian
Life Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520, 540 (1995)).
After the jury has reached a verdict, we review a decision on a JNOV
motion pursuant to Rule 4:40-2 under the same standard applied by the trial
court. Smith v. Millville Rescue Squad, 225 N.J. 373, 397 (2016). Thus, we
consider whether the evidence presented at trial, “‘together with the legitimate
inferences therefrom, could sustain a judgment in . . . favor’ of the party ” that
prevailed at trial. Sons of Thunder, Inc. v. Borden, Inc., 148 N.J. 396, 415
(1997) (omission in original) (quoting Dolson v. Anastasia, 55 N.J. 2, 5
23
(1969)). If, “accepting as true all the evidence which supports the position of
the party defending against the motion and according [that party] the benefit of
all inferences which can reasonably and legitimately be deduced therefrom,
reasonable minds could differ,” the motion for JNOV “must be denied.” Ibid.
(quoting Dolson, 55 N.J. at 5). The judicial role in ruling on or reviewing such
a motion is therefore “mechanical”: the court “is not concerned with the
worth, nature or extent (beyond a scintilla) of the evidence, but only with its
existence, viewed most favorably to the party opposing the motion.” Ibid.
(quoting Dolson, 55 N.J. at 5-6). In sum, a motion for JNOV may “only ‘be
granted where no rational juror could conclude that the plaintiff marshaled
sufficient evidence to satisfy each prima facie element of a cause of action.’”
Smith, 225 N.J. at 397 (quoting Godfrey v. Princeton Theological Seminary,
196 N.J. 178, 197 (2008)).
The difference between review of a summary judgment motion and a
JNOV motion “is that summary judgment motions are generally decided on
documentary-evidential materials, while the directed verdicts are based on
evidence presented during a trial.” Tomeo v. Thomas Whitesell Constr. Co.,
176 N.J. 366, 370 (2003).
We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. W.S. v.
Hildreth, 252 N.J. 506, 518 (2023). When interpreting statutory language,
24
“this Court aims to effectuate the Legislature’s intent.” Ibid. As this Court
has repeatedly explained, “[t]here is no more persuasive evidence of legislative
intent than the words by which the Legislature undertook to express its
purpose,” and we thus “first look to the plain language of the statute.” Perez v.
Zagami, LLC, 218 N.J. 202, 209-10 (2014). We “ascribe[] to the statutory
words their ordinary meaning and significance and read[] them in context with
related provisions so as to give sense to the legislation as a whole.” Hildreth,
252 N.J. at 518 (quoting DiProspero v. Penn, 183 N.J. 477, 492 (2005)). If the
plain language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, our task is complete.
Ibid.
B.
“[T]he ‘guiding principle’ of the Tort Claims Act is ‘that immunity from
tort liability is the general rule and liability is the exception.’” D.D. v. Univ.
of Med. & Dentistry of N.J., 213 N.J. 130, 134 (2013) (quoting Coyne v. State
Dep’t of Transp., 182 N.J. 481, 488 (2005)).
Chapter Six of the TCA is entitled “Medical, Hospital and Public Health
Activities.” The chapter begins with a “Definitions” section, N.J.S.A. 59:6-1.
Included in that section is a definition of “medical facility” as “a hospital,
infirmary, clinic, dispensary, mental institution, or similar facility.” Ibid. The
County defendants argue that, despite that definition -- and the trial court’s
25
finding that OCJ did not meet it -- their conduct was immunized by three
separate substantive provisions of Chapter Six: N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6.
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, “Failure to make physical or mental examination or to
make adequate physical or mental examination,” grants immunity for certain
physical and mental examinations. It reads in relevant part:
Except for an examination or diagnosis for the purpose
of treatment, neither a public entity nor a public
employee is liable for injury caused by the failure to
make a physical or mental examination, or to make an
adequate physical or mental examination, of any person
for the purpose of determining whether such person has
a disease or physical or mental condition that would
constitute a hazard to the health or safety of himself or
others.
The section thus grants “absolute immunity” for a public entity or public
employee’s “failure to perform an adequate examination” to determine whether
a person has a physical or mental condition which would be hazardous to that
person or others, and then “establishes an exception to the general rule of
absolute immunity if the examination is ‘for the purpose of treatment.’” Kemp
by Wright v. State, 147 N.J. 294, 300 (1997) (quoting N.J.S.A. 59:6-4); see
also Parsons, 226 N.J. at 310 (finding that “a visual acuity test” by an
elementary school nurse “is a ‘physical examination’ administered to further
the public health of students pursuant to N.J.S.A. 59:6-4” and is not
26
undertaken “for the purpose of treatment” because it is a “merely preventative
screening[]”).
N.J.S.A. 59:6-5, “Immunity from liability for failure to diagnose certain
conditions,” grants immunity for diagnosing or failing to diagnose a mental
illness or a substance abuse disorder involving drugs, and for failing to
prescribe treatment for such conditions. It provides:
a. Neither a public entity nor a public employee is
liable for injury resulting from diagnosing or failing to
diagnose that a person has a mental illness or is a person
with a substance use disorder involving drugs or from
failing to prescribe for mental illness or a substance use
disorder involving drugs; provided, however, that
nothing in this subsection exonerates a public entity or
a public employee who has undertaken to prescribe for
a mental illness or a substance use disorder involving
drugs from liability for injury proximately caused by
negligence or by a wrongful act in so prescribing.
The provision thus grants immunity to public entities and employees for
diagnosing or failing to diagnose “that a person has a mental illness” or drug
use disorder, and from failing to prescribe treatment for a mental illness or
drug use disorder.
Lastly, N.J.S.A. 59:6-6, “Determinations in accordance with applicable
enactments,” grants immunity for decisions regarding whether to confine a
person for mental illness or drug dependence, and the terms and conditions of
such confinement or release. It prescribes that
27
a. Neither a public entity nor a public employee is
liable for any injury resulting from determining in
accordance with any applicable enactment:
(1) whether to confine a person for mental
illness or drug dependence;
(2) the terms and conditions of confinement for
mental illness or drug dependence;
(3) whether to parole, grant a leave of absence
to, or release a person from confinement for
mental illness or drug dependence.
This last section thus grants immunity to public entities and public employees
for “determining in accordance with any applicable enactment,” “whether to
confine a person for mental illness or drug dependence,” the terms and
conditions of such confinement, and whether to release a person from such
confinement.
Significantly, the words “medical facility” cannot be found in N.J.S.A.
59:6-4, -5, or -6. The text of all three provisions is clear. All three grant
immunity to a “public entity” or “public employee” in particular
circumstances. None grants immunity only to “medical facilities” or public
entities or public employees that qualify as medical facilities.
At the summary judgment stage, defendants asserted they were immune
under 59:6-4, -5, and -6, because OCJ was a “medical facility” within the
meaning of 59:6-1. Plaintiff opposed immunity, arguing OCJ was not a
28
medical facility under 59:6-1. Defendants now correctly maintain that 59:6-
1’s definitions section does not limit the substantive immunities provided by
59:6-4, -5, or -6 to “medical facilities.” Cf. Allen v. V & A Bros., Inc., 208
N.J. 114, 130-31 (2011) (noting that the operative section of a statute, not its
definitional section, determines liability). We also agree with defendants that
the immunities set forth in 59:6-4, -5, and -6 are not “inapplicable in jail
suicide cases” or “superseded in the jail suicide context.”
In theory, therefore, defendants could be immunized from liability for
specific conduct under 59:6-4, -5, and -6.
C.
However, because there was evidence here both at the summary
judgment stage and during trial from which the jury could have concluded that
the County defendants were negligent beyond any immunities possibly granted
by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6, the trial court was correct to refuse to dismiss
plaintiff’s negligence count at the summary judgment stage and to refuse to
overturn the jury’s verdict after trial.
At the summary judgment stage, Horn’s report opined that the County
defendants were negligent by failing to adequately train OCJ staff on
preventing inmate suicide; failing to adopt and implement an adequate suicide
prevention policy; failing to follow OCJ’s existing Suicide Prevention Policy;
29
failing to conduct mortality reviews after inmate suicides and to revise policies
accordingly; “[f]ailing to recognize or appreciate the danger of a closed and
locked cell door with a towel covering the door either through patrols or video
surveillance”; and “[e]ngaging in predictable and easily timed and anticipated
patrols of the cell block” for all inmates, when OCJ’s Suicide Prevention
Policy specifically prohibited easily timed patrols. None of that conduct
would be immune under 59:6-4, -5, or -6, which immunize injuries caused by
failing to make an adequate physical or mental examination that is not for
purposes of treatment, failing to diagnose that a person has a mental illness or
drug use disorder or to treat that disorder, and failing to confine a person “for
mental illness or drug dependence,” and the terms and conditions of such
confinement.
Therefore, even though the trial court was wrong in failing to address
defendants’ arguments under the TCA at the summary judgment stage, it did
not err in refusing to dismiss count one of plaintiff’s complaint because there
was evidence from which a jury could find negligence without reference to any
immunized conduct. See, e.g., Chiofalo v. State, 238 N.J. 527, 545 (2019)
(noting that “[t]he trial court’s focus was on the facts presented, and on that
basis we cannot say that the denial of summary judgment . . . was in error” and
30
it is “unfair to reassess the summary judgment record based on arguments that
were not advanced”).
At trial, the jury then heard voluminous testimony about the County
defendants’ negligence that was unrelated to any failure to examine, failure to
diagnose or treat, or failure to “confine a person for mental illness or drug
dependence,” or the terms and conditions of such confinement, under 59:6 -4, -
5, and -6. This included testimony from Horn that OCJ was negligent in
failing to be able to “say with certainty how many suicides there were” at the
jail between 2005 and 2010; failing to conduct comprehensive mortality
reviews or to revise OCJ’s Suicide Prevention Policy -- which had been
promulgated in 1985 and last amended in 1999 -- after at least five suicides
and fifty-eight suicide or self-injury attempts between 2005 and 2010;
providing inadequate training to OCJ staff on preventing inmate suicide;
failing to respond when Conforti closed his cell door, which would have
immediately notified the control tower, and obstructed his cell door window;
and failing to follow OCJ’s policies and general correctional standards by
completing “systematic and predictable” health checks that were easily timed
by inmates.
While defendants’ expert, Jeff Eiser, refuted Horn’s testimony, it was up
to the jury to decide which expert to believe. The jury was also free to rely on
31
the existing OCJ Suicide Prevention Policy, admitted at trial, which provides:
“An inmate who is serious about committing suicide will try to estimate a time
to carry out his plan when the likelihood of being discovered by someone [is]
small. For this reason the officer should make unsystematic patrols of the
housing areas.” And as the Appellate Division noted, the testimony about the
“conveniently overwritten log entry and unavailable security footage”
“allowed the jury to infer culpability” against the County defendants for
conduct that was unrelated to anything immunized by 59:6-4, -5, or -6.
1.
County defendants claim that “because the case was mishandled by the
trial court, the jury was never given an opportunity to distinguish between the
sort of negligence we assert would be immunized and the sort of negligence
which might not have been.” In the County defendants’ telling, they were
“prejudiced” because “there was no distinction made in terms of what was
submitted to the jury.”
But that ignores what actually happened both before and during trial.
The County defendants moved for summary judgment before trial not to keep
specific evidence of immunized conduct away from the jury, but to dismiss
count one of plaintiff’s complaint: negligence. A fair reading of their
summary judgment brief reveals that they argued they were immune from
32
liability for negligence under 59:6-4, -5, and -6 because they were a “medical
facility” under 59:6-1. As earlier noted, the trial court erred in failing to
respond to that contention. But it did not err in failing to dismiss count one of
plaintiff’s complaint under 59:6-4, -5, and -6, because the negligence claim
was supported by conduct that was not immunized by those sections of the
TCA.
Because the trial court’s written decision on their motion for summary
judgment said nothing about the TCA at all, defendants could have filed a
motion for reconsideration. See Rule 4:49-2 (requiring that a motion for
reconsideration shall “state with specificity the basis on which it is made,
including a statement of the matters or controlling decisions that counsel
believes the court has overlooked”) (emphasis added). We concur with our
dissenting colleagues that a motion for reconsideration is not a means for
“defendants to get a second bite at the apple.” Post at ___ (slip op. at 31). But
if the trial court did not consider TCA immunities in the first instance, even
though they were raised by defendants, defendants would not be attempting to
relitigate or refine their arguments; rather, they would be requesting that the
court review an otherwise overlooked argument that was properly raised in the
initial motion. Indeed, “a motion for reconsideration provides the court, and
not the litigant, with an opportunity to take a second bite at the apple to correct
33
errors inherent in a prior ruling.” Medina v. Pitta, 442 N.J. Super. 1, 18 (App.
Div. 2015); see also James H. Walzer, N.J. Practice, Civil Practice Forms §
105:47 (6th ed. 2023) (“[I]n practice the motion [for reconsideration] requires
a showing of law or facts presented in the motion papers that were overlooked
or misapprehended and would result in a different result.”).
Then, although defendants filed a motion in limine about allocating
liability with the settled CHS defendants, they did not seek to prevent the jury
from hearing evidence of conduct arguably immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4,
-5, and -6, including failing to screen Conforti, completing an inaccurate or
incomplete screening, or failing to correctly house or place Conforti at OCJ.
At the time defendants filed their motion in limine, the trial court had not
rejected immunity under those sections; it had simply passed over it.
We agree with our dissenting colleagues that “[a] motion in limine is ‘[a]
pretrial request that certain inadmissible evidence not be referred to or offered
at trial.’” Post at ___ (slip op. at 34) (citing Black’s Law Dictionary 1109 (9th
ed. 2009)). We concur that a motion regarding the “admissibility of
evidence,” must be one that “if granted, would not have a dispositive impact
on a litigant’s case.” Post at ___ (slip op. at 34) (quoting Jeter v. Sam’s Club,
250 N.J. 240, 250 (2022)). We thus agree that granting a motion in limine
should not “result in the dismissal of a plaintiff’s case.” Jeter, 250 N.J. at 250.
34
That is precisely why a motion in limine would have been proper here.
As we have already explained, defendants wrongly sought to dismiss
plaintiff’s entire negligence count on the ground that (as they later articulated
clearly to this Court), some of the facts supporting that count concerned
conduct that was immunized by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. A motion to
exclude evidence of conduct immunized by 59:6-4, -5, and -6, therefore, could
have been brought as a motion in limine exactly because, if properly granted, it
“would not have [had] a dispositive impact on a litigant’s case.” Ibid.
By definition, a “dispositive motion,” “if granted, results in a judgment
on the case as a whole, as with a motion for summary judgment or a motion to
dismiss.” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). Here, a motion to exclude
evidence of immunized conduct, properly decided, would not have led to the
dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint, or even the dismissal of count one of
plaintiff’s complaint, because plaintiff’s negligence count was supported by
evidence that is not immunized under any reading of 59:6-4, -5, and -6. A
motion in limine requesting that evidence of conduct immunized by 59:6-4, -5,
and -6 not be referred to or offered at trial would therefore not have been
dispositive. We continue to warn attorneys against filing motions in limine
that would “result in the dismissal of a plaintiff’s case.” Jeter, 250 N.J. at 250.
35
2.
On appeal, defendants maintained that the trial court erred when it
“bunched more than a half-dozen disparate theories of negligence against the
Jail into a single [jury] charge and question on the verdict sheet, obfuscating
any understanding of the basis” of the jury’s verdict. They continue that
objection here, faulting the trial court for not using a “jury verdict form . . .
that would have allowed the jury to distinguish between the sort of negligence
in the screening and in the confinement that we assert were immunized from
liability and the sort of conduct . . . that might not have been.”
But defendants did not request a jury charge that would distinguish
between evidence of immunized and non-immunized conduct. Nor did they
request a special verdict form or special interrogatory to “pars[e] out the
different types of negligence” and ensure that the jury’s verdict was based only
on non-immunized conduct. Instead, defendants consented to the trial court’s
charge to the jury and to the jury verdict sheet.
3.
Finally, the County defendants assert they are at least entitled to a new
trial because there is “no way of knowing” whether the jury held them liable
for immunized or non-immunized conduct.
36
Defendants’ argument that “we don’t know what was in the jury’s mind”
overlooks the standard of review on a JNOV motion. In reviewing a motion
for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, a court does not attempt to discern
how the jury reached its verdict or what evidence the jury credited versus what
evidence it discounted. Instead, the inquiry is only “whether ‘the evidence
[presented at trial], together with the legitimate inferences therefrom, could
sustain a judgment in . . . favor’” of the party that prevailed at trial. Sons of
Thunder, 148 N.J. at 415 (omission in original) (emphasis added) (quoting
Dolson, 55 N.J. at 5). Here, the evidence presented at trial, along with all
legitimate inferences therefrom, could sustain a judgment in favor of plaintiff
without reference to any immunized conduct. The trial court was therefore
correct to deny defendants’ JNOV motion.
4.
We address two other points only briefly. First, because the jury’s
verdict is supported by non-immunized conduct introduced at trial, this case is
simply not like others in which a claim against a public entity or public
employee was held immunized by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6. See, e.g.,
Bernstein, 411 N.J. Super. at 327, 332-35 (holding that “[e]ven if [the]
defendants’ treatment or diagnosis” of an inmate who had “suffered from
psychological problems and had a history of violent behavior” was negligent,
37
failing to “order[] his segregation from the general prison population” was
immune pursuant to N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6); Perona, 270 N.J. Super. at
26-28 (concluding that police officers were immune under N.J.S.A. 59:6-6 for
failing to confine a person whose husband believed she was suicidal); Parsons,
226 N.J. at 299-301 (finding that a school district and school nurse were
immune from liability under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 for failing to timely notify
parents that their daughter failed a visual acuity test); Charpentier, 937 F.2d at
861, 867 (determining that N.J.S.A. 59:6-5 immunized a physician’s alleged
negligent failure to transfer an arrestee from a county correctional institution
to a medical or psychiatric facility); Predoti v. Bergen Pines Cnty. Hosp., 190
N.J. Super. 344, 345-47 (App. Div. 1983) (holding that N.J.S.A. 59:6-6
immunized a psychiatric hospital’s decision to move a patient who suffered
from schizophrenia from the “closed ward” to the “open ward,” which allowed
him to walk the hospital grounds).
Second, because there was non-immunized conduct introduced at trial
sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict on plaintiff’s negligence count under any
construction of 59:6-4, -5, and -6, we need not respond to the parties’ or
amici’s specific arguments about the precise contours of immunity under those
38
provisions.3 We do, however, note that defendants are correct that the
Appellate Division erred when it stated that defendants had no immunity under
59:6-4 “regarding [Conforti]’s medical intake, which was done to assess his
OCJ confinement and not conducted for treatment purposes.” That is the
opposite of what 59:6-4 actually says. N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 applies only to exams
that are not conducted “for the purpose of treatment” and explicitly denies
immunity when examinations are conducted for treatment purposes. See also
Kemp by Wright, 147 N.J. at 300 (noting that N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 “establishes an
exception to the general rule of absolute immunity if the examination is ‘for
the purpose of treatment’”).
IV.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Appellate Division is
affirmed as modified.
3
This includes plaintiff’s assertion that Conforti was “detained on criminal
charges” and not “confined for mental illness” under N.J.S.A. 59:6-6; NJAJ’s
claim that N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 would not apply because all CHS medical intake
evaluations and screenings were “for the purpose of treatment,” and thus fall
under 6-4’s “treatment exception”; NJAJ’s position that 59:6-5 applies only to
physicians or people otherwise authorized to diagnose mental illness or drug
dependence; NJAJ’s assertion that alcoholism does not fall within 59:6-1’s
definition of “drug dependence” and there is therefore no immunity under 6 -5
or -6; and NJAJ’s argument that 6-6 is inapplicable because neither CHS nor
the County defendants undertook any process to determine whether to confine
Conforti “in accordance with any applicable enactment” and because
confinement for violating a restraining order does not constitute “confinement
for the care and treatment of mental illness.”
39
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES SOLOMON and PIERRE-
LOUIS join in JUSTICE WAINER APTER’s opinion. JUSTICE FASCIALE
filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which JUSTICE
PATTERSON joins. JUDGE SABATINO (temporarily assigned) did not
participate.
40
Carol Ann Conforti,
individually and as administratrix
ad prosequendum of the Estate of
Kenneth Conforti and as parent
natural guardian and guardian ad
litem of A.C., a minor,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
County of Ocean, Ocean
County Board of Chosen
Freeholders, in their
individual and official capacities,
Ocean County Department
of Corrections, Warden
Theodore J. Hutler, in his
individual and official capacity,
and Corporal Petrizzo,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
Correctional Health
Services, LLC, Prison
Health Services, Inc.,
and Kelly Clough,
Defendants.
JUSTICE FASCIALE, concurring in part, dissenting in part.
1
I entirely concur with four important, well-reasoned conclusions reached
by the majority. First, the definition of “medical facility” under N.J.S.A.
59:6-1 “does not restrict the substantive immunities granted in N.J.S.A. 59:6-4,
-5, or -6” because “none of those three provisions are limited to medical
facilities.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 3). Second, N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6
“grant immunities to public entities and public employees.” Ante at ___ (slip
op. at 3). Third, “the immunities set forth in N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 are not
‘superseded in the jail suicide context.’” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 3). And
fourth, the trial judge correctly denied the County defendants’1 motion for
summary judgment as to that part of the negligence count alleging damages
premised on evidence “that falls outside of any immunities granted by N.J.S.A.
59:6-4, -5, and -6.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 3). In other words, the jury
correctly considered that part of plaintiff’s negligence claim -- plaintiff had the
right to proceed with that theory of the case. I therefore concur with those
important determinations reached by my colleagues in the majority.
But to the extent that plaintiff’s negligence claim is derived from
conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and possibly -6, the trial judge
1
The “County defendants” are the County of Ocean; Ocean County Board of
Chosen Freeholders (in their individual and official capacities); Ocean County
Department of Corrections; Warden Theodore J. Hutler (in his individual and
official capacity); and Corporal Petrizzo.
2
should have granted the County defendants’ summary judgment motion in part,
which would have barred such evidence at trial. Such a negligence theory
cannot survive the liability immunity granted under the New Jersey Tort
Claims Act (TCA), N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to :12-3. Instead, the judge erroneously
denied, in its entirety, their motion for summary judgment seeking to dismiss
the negligence count. At trial, the opening statement by plaintiff’s counsel set
the stage for introducing evidence of negligence against the County defendants
derived from conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and possibly -6.
Plaintiff’s counsel then introduced at trial evidence against the County
defendants that was immunized under the TCA, and in closing, made
statements expressly predicating plaintiff’s claim in part on immunized
conduct. The cumulative effect of those combined mistakes tainted the jury,
was clearly capable of leading to an unjust result, and denied the County
defendants a fair trial.
Moreover, I disagree with the notion that trial counsel for the County
defendants are at fault for failing to move for reconsideration. For the reasons
that I later explain, reconsideration would have been futile. I also dispute the
contention that rather than filing a motion for summary judgment seeking to
dismiss that part of plaintiff’s negligence claim premised on immunized
conduct, they should have raised the immunity issue on the eve of trial in
3
limine. The other possible options recognized by my colleagues, such as a
special jury charge or verdict sheet, respectfully, were not viable solutions for
the County defendants to mitigate the improper introduction of evidence of
negligence premised on immunized conduct.
For those reasons, I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part.
I.
It is well-settled “that the ‘guiding principle’ of the [TCA] is ‘that
“immunity from tort liability is the general rule and liability is the
exception.”’” D.D. v. Univ. of Med. & Dentistry of N.J., 213 N.J. 130, 134
(2013) (quoting Coyne v. State Dep’t of Transp., 182 N.J. 481, 488 (2005)).
This broad immunity applies to a negligence theory derived in part by conduct
immunized under the TCA. Accordingly, “a public entity is ‘immune from tort
liability unless there is a specific statutory provision’ that makes it answerable
for a negligent act or omission.” Polzo v. County of Essex, 209 N.J. 51, 65
(2012) (quoting Kahrar v. Borough of Wallington, 171 N.J. 3, 10 (2002)).
Those principles are well settled.
Importantly, when reviewing an order denying a request to dismiss a
negligence claim against a public entity, we must bear in mind that public
entities are liable “only . . . within the limitations of [the TCA] and in
accordance with the fair and uniform principles established [t]herein.”
4
N.J.S.A. 59:1-2. The TCA was “designed to reestablish the immunity of
public entities while relieving some of the harsh results of the doctrine of
sovereign immunity.” Alston v. City of Camden, 168 N.J. 170, 176 (2001)
(quotation omitted). In general, “the approach of the [TCA] is to broadly limit
public entity liability.” Ibid. (quoting Harry A. Margolis & Robert Novack,
Claims Against Public Entities, cmt. to N.J.S.A. 59:1-2 (2001)).
In this case, the County defendants filed a summary judgment motion
seeking dismissal of plaintiff’s entire complaint. In addition to a third count
against only non-public entities -- collectively referred to here as “CHS” or
“the CHS defendants” -- that have since settled with plaintiff and left the case,
the complaint asserted two causes of action against the County defendants:
negligence (count one) and violations of the New Jersey Civil Rights Act
(count two). The judge granted summary judgment in favor of the County
defendants as to count two but denied the County defendants’ motion for
summary judgment as to count one, the negligence claim. The judge did not
address in writing the immunities that the County defendants raised.
Plaintiff’s negligence claim, however, included multiple allegedly
negligent acts or omissions. Count one included allegations that the County
defendants lacked training, considering prior jail suicides; failed to adopt an
adequate suicide prevention policy; failed to provide mortality reviews;
5
engaged in predictable patrols that were prohibited by the then-existing
Suicide Prevention Policy; and failed to recognize or appreciate the danger of a
closed cell door with a towel obstructing view inside the cell. Those
allegations are not immunized under the TCA. Some of plaintiff’s other
allegations, however, assert that the County defendants acted negligently by
engaging in conduct that was arguably immunized by at least N.J.S.A. 59:6-4
and -5.
Thus, count one of plaintiff’s complaint combined allegations that
support theories of negligence based on immunized and non-immunized
conduct. The County defendants sought summary judgment dismissing all
negligence claims. The trial judge erred by failing to grant that part of the
motion seeking to dismiss the negligence claim premised on immunized
conduct. Fact issues precluded summary judgment as to the County
defendants’ non-immunized acts.
Although my colleagues point out that plaintiff “interpreted [the County]
defendants to be arguing [at the summary judgment stage] that they were
entitled to immunity under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 because OCJ was a
medical facility under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1,” ---
ante at ___ (slip op. at 12-13), that
interpretation of the County defendants’ argument is incomplete. Instead of
6
making only that contention, the County defendants also relied at the summary
judgment stage on the plain language of N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and -5.
Therefore, the trial judge was obligated to apply N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and -5.
Even if the County defendants’ trial counsel argued that they were entitled to
immunity under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 specifically because the OCJ was a
“medical facility” as defined by N.J.S.A. 59:6-1, the trial judge should have
recognized upon analyzing the text of the statutes that N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and
-6 grant immunity to any “public entity” or “public employee.” -------
See ante at
___ (slip op. at 28). The words “medical facility” cannot be found in N.J.S.A.
59:6-4, -5, or -6.
A.
1.
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, “Failure to make physical or mental examination or to
make adequate physical or mental examination,” grants immunity for certain
physical and mental examinations. It reads in relevant part that
[e]xcept for an examination or diagnosis for the
purpose of treatment, neither a public entity nor a
public employee is liable for injury caused by the
failure to make a physical or mental examination, or to
make an adequate physical or mental examination, of
any person for the purpose of determining whether such
person has a disease or physical or mental condition
that would constitute a hazard to the health or safety of
himself or others.
7
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 grants “absolute immunity,” therefore, for a public entity or
public employee’s alleged failure to “make an adequate examination” to
determine whether a person has a physical or mental condition which would be
hazardous to that person or others. Ante at ___ (slip op. at 26). The County
defendants are immune from liability for alleged negligent conduct that falls
under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4.
Without quoting every allegation in the complaint that arguably fits
within the immunity contemplated under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, I refer to some
allegations that, taken together, demonstrate plaintiff’s negligence theory was
based in part on the County defendants’ alleged “failure to . . . make an
adequate . . . examination” to determine whether Mr. Conforti had a physical
or mental health condition that would be hazardous to himself.
97. Notwithstanding the inadequacy of the Ocean
County Department of Corrections Suicide Prevention
policy, adherence to [that policy] would have identified
Mr. Conforti as a suicide risk.
98. This is because, as a result of the first intake
evaluation of Mr. Conforti conducted in September of
2010, the jail intake personnel and other jail staff had
actual knowledge of Mr. Conforti’s alcohol abuse; of
his alcohol addiction; of his prior spinal surgery and
resulting pain and impairment and of the recent
significant deterioration of his marriage.
99. Mr. Conforti faced a “crisis situation” as identified
by the Ocean County Department of Corrections
8
Suicide Prevention policy because of the following
factors: 1) the deterioration of Mr. Conforti’s family
life; 2) Mr. Conforti’s feelings of hopelessness and
helplessness; and 3) Mr. Conforti’s chronic pain.
100. . . . [A]gents, servants and employees of [the
County defendants listed in this paragraph] had actual
knowledge of this as a result of the intake evaluation of
Mr. Conforti in September of 2010 but these problems
were ignored in October of 2010.
101. Notwithstanding the presence of factors identified
by the Ocean County Department of Corrections
Suicide Prevention policy as presenting a risk of
suicide, Mr. Conforti was never referred to Medical
Staff as being a suicide risk during his October 2010
incarceration.
....
112. . . . [A]gents, servants and employees of [the
County defendants] took a “pro forma” approach to the
process of assessing this inmate and overlooked serious
issues that would have led to a different outcome.
....
116. [The County defendants’] . . . failure to recognize
Mr. Conforti presented a risk of suicide based on the
first intake evaluation of Mr. Conforti conducted in
September of 2010 . . . shows a deliberate indifference
toward Mr. Conforti’s well-being and was clearly
unreasonable and therefore negligent.
[(emphases added).]
9
Plaintiff’s opposition to the County defendants’ summary judgment
motion demonstrates further that plaintiff’s negligence theory derives in part
from acts immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and -5. Consistent with the
allegations in the complaint, and pertinent to N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, plaintiff pointed
to the County defendants’ alleged “failure to . . . make an adequate . . .
examination” to determine whether Mr. Conforti had a physical or mental
health condition that would be hazardous to himself, as several of plaintiff’s
responses to the County defendants’ statement of material facts reveal:
11. During the [October] intake screening . . . Mr.
Conforti denied feeling hopeless or helpless.
ADMITTED but see . . . the . . . discrepancy between
the first admission in September 2010 and the
subsequent admission in October of 20[10].
....
13. During both mental health screenings Mr. Conforti
denied being diagnosed with major depression.
DENIED. The defendants’ records speak for
themselves but, a jury may reject the proposition that
they reflect what Conforti said.
14. Mr. Conforti was released to the general population
without any special doctor’s orders.
ADMITTED but . . . [t]he reasons for Mr. Conforti
receiving “special doctor’s orders” in September 2010
did not change up to the time of the October 2010
incarceration and defendants w[ere] negligent in not
reviewing the records pertaining to Mr. Conforti’s
10
September 2010 incarceration and inquiring why Mr.
Conforti was not providing the same responses and
taking appropriate action.
....
19. During the initial booking process medical and
mental health screenings and assessments were
contracted by the medical provider.
ADMITTED but the medical provider was operating
pursuant to contract with and under the supervision of
[the County defendants]. Further, [the County
defendants] are responsible for negligence of CHS and
were responsible for making sure communications
between CHS and other jail personnel was adequate to
apprise jail personnel of medical and mental health
status of inmates in custody such as Conforti.
20. The nurse and/or mental health [personnel] made
the determination as to whether an inmate is suicidal.
DENIED as stated. [The County defendants’] staff also
played a role in intake evaluation and assessment of
inmates.
21. The corrections officers are not provided with
mental health or medical information related to the
inmates because of HIPAA regulations.
DENIED as stated. Defendant Hutler testified “I mean,
if there was anything that staff . . . needed to know,
medical would tell them.” . . . Neither CHS nor the
County checked the September medical records of Mr.
Conforti which would have disclosed he was
withholding information and should have led to further
inquiry and scrutiny of Mr. Conforti during his October
2010 incarceration.
[(emphases added).]
11
Plaintiff’s additional statement of disputed material facts similarly relies
on the County defendants’ alleged “failure to . . . make an adequate . . .
examination,” which is arguably immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4:
37. . . . [A] jury issue . . . exists as to whether adherence
to the Ocean County Department of Corrections Suicide
Prevention policy would have readily identified Mr.
Conforti as a suicide risk. This is because, as a result
of the first intake evaluation of Mr. Conforti conducted
in September of 2010, the jail intake personnel and
other jail staff had actual knowledge of Mr. Conforti’s
alcohol abuse; of his alcohol addiction; of his prior
spinal surgery and resulting pain and impairment[;] and
of the recent “significant loss” resulting from the
deterioration of his marriage.
....
39. Importantly, [the County defendants] had actual
knowledge of this as a result of the intake evaluation of
Mr. Conforti in September of 2010 and notwithstanding
the presence of factors identified by the Ocean County
Department of Corrections Suicide Prevention policy as
presenting a risk of suicide, the records provided by
[the County defendants] . . . reveal Mr. Conforti was
never referred to Medical Staff as being a suicide risk
during his October 2010 incarceration.
[(emphases added).]
2.
N.J.S.A. 59:6-5 is entitled “Diagnosing or failing to diagnose mental
illness or substance use disorder involving drugs.” Subsection (a) of N.J.S.A.
59:6-5 provides that
12
[n]either a public entity nor a public employee is liable
for injury resulting from diagnosing or failing to
diagnose that a person has a mental illness or is a person
with a substance use disorder involving drugs or from
failing to prescribe for mental illness or a substance use
disorder involving drugs; provided, however, that
nothing in this subsection exonerates a public entity or
a public employee who has undertaken to prescribe for
a mental illness or a substance use disorder involving
drugs from liability for injury proximately caused by
negligence or by a wrongful act in so prescribing.
[(emphasis added).]
N.J.S.A. 59:6-5(a) thus grants immunity to public entities and employees for
diagnosing or failing to diagnose “that a person has a mental illness” and from
“failing to prescribe for mental illness,” such as by ordering a transfer out of a
single-bunk cell. The County defendants are immune from liability for alleged
negligent conduct that falls under N.J.S.A. 59:6-5.
Without quoting every allegation in the complaint that arguably fits
within N.J.S.A. 59:6-5 immunity, I highlight some that, taken together,
demonstrate plaintiff’s negligence theory was based in part on the County
defendants’ alleged failure to “prescribe for mental illness,” such as Mr.
Conforti’s transfer out of a single-bunk cell.
102. . . . [O]n September 10, 2010, by Order of the
Jail’s Physician, Mr. Conforti was to be provided with
an extra mattress, pain medication and “no work, no top
bunk.”
13
103. This is to be contrasted with Mr. Conforti’s
treatment during his October 20210 incarceration
where he was housed in a single[-bunk cell] already
occupied by an inmate (assuring he would sleep on the
floor) and his complaints of back pain and need for
medication were essentially ignored.
....
116. . . . Housing Mr. Conforti in a single[-bunk cell]
already occupied by an inmate (ensuring he had no
bunk to sleep on) when the officials knew or should
have known of Mr. Conforti’s severe back pain and
limitations based upon his September 2010
incarceration and his risk factors for suicide was
deliberately indifferent and certainly unreasonable . . . .
[(emphases added).]
Moreover, consistent with the allegations in the complaint and pertinent
to N.J.S.A. 59:6-5, in opposition to the County defendants’ motion for
summary judgment, plaintiff asserted that “[in September 2010], by Order of
the Jail’s Physician, Mr. Conforti was to be provided with an extra mattress[,]
pain medication and ‘no work, no top bunk.’” The submission explained
further -- under a heading titled “Mr. Conforti’s Excruciating Back Pain and
Physical Limitations Were Addressed in September of 2010 But Ignored by
[the County defendants] in October 2010” -- that
41. The treatment of Mr. Conforti in September of
2010 starkly contrasts with Mr. Conforti’s treatment
during his October of 2010 incarceration. In October
14
of 2010 Mr. Conforti was housed in a single[-bunk cell]
already occupied by an inmate and his complaints of
medication for back pain were essentially ignored.
[(emphasis added).]
Those facts presented to the trial judge fit within immunity contemplated
under N.J.S.A. 59:6-5’s “failure to prescribe.”
B.
The County defendants recognized correctly that several of plaintiff’s
allegations touched upon potentially immunized conduct. In response to the
allegations set forth in the complaint -- including additional allegations that
arguably pertain to immunity granted under N.J.S.A. 59:6-6 -- the County
defendants pled the affirmative defense of TCA immunity. Pertinent here are
their thirtieth, thirty-first, and thirty-second affirmative defenses asserting the
applicability of N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. They recognized at the pleading
stage they had immunity, and they asserted such immunity.
In moving for summary judgment and in oral argument on the motion,
counsel for the County defendants again raised the legal immunity issue for the
judge to resolve. Counsel argued that the Ocean County Jail (OCJ) is a
“medical facility,” as defined under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1, and is therefore
immunized under “Title 59” of the TCA. The County defendants contended
that “any alleged failure to recognize Mr. Conforti’s mental state or suicidal
15
inclination is immunized by the plain language of both N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and 6-
5.” (emphasis added). They added, “[t]he foregoing notwithstanding, . . . to
the extent that [plaintiff alleges that the County defendants] failed to properly
diagnose Mr. Conforti’s mental state, they are entitled to the immunities
provided under the [TCA].” The County defendants contended that they were
entitled to summary judgment and a dismissal of the negligence case that was
premised on conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6, regardless
of whether the OCJ was deemed a “medical facility.”
C.
Immunity is the default rule under the TCA, and claims based on
multiple alleged acts or omissions may touch in part on immunized conduct .
Courts must therefore thoroughly analyze immunity issues to ensure that only
actionable conduct is raised before the jury. See R. 4:46-2(c) (“A summary
judgment or order, interlocutory in character, may be rendered on any issue in
the action (including the issue of liability) although there is a genuine factual
dispute as to any other issue.”). The County defendants should have been held
immune from liability for the conduct that clearly falls within N.J.S.A. 59:6-4
and N.J.S.A. 59:6-5.
The majority correctly concluded that the Appellate Division
erroneously interpreted N.J.S.A. 59:6-4. Ante at ___ (slip op. at 39). The
16
appellate court erred when it determined that the County defendants had no
immunity under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 “regarding [Mr. Conforti]’s medical intake,
which was done to assess his OCJ confinement and not conducted for
treatment purposes.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 39) (alteration in original).
Under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, the County defendants’ alleged failure to conduct an
adequate examination to determine whether Mr. Conforti had a physical or
mental health condition that would be hazardous to himself is immunized. The
County defendants were therefore entitled to summary judgment dismissing
that part of plaintiff’s negligence count to the extent that plaintiff’s theory is
based on immunized conduct under this provision. 2
Under N.J.S.A. 59:6-5, plaintiff’s negligence theory -- based on the
County defendants’ alleged failure to “prescribe for mental illness,” such as a
transfer out of a single-bunk cell -- is also immunized. See Charpentier v.
Godsil, 937 F.2d 859, 865, 866 (3d Cir. 1991) (explaining that a “natural
interpretation” of N.J.S.A. 59:6-5(a) indicates that injury resulting from a
failure to prescribe a transfer to a medical or psychiatric facility is immunized,
2
The majority declined to address arguments about “the precise contours of
immunity under [N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6].” See ante at ___ & n.3 (slip op.
at 39 & n.3). But it cannot be disputed that the County defendants are
immunized for a purported failure to “make an adequate examination” to
determine whether Mr. Conforti was a danger to himself or others, under
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4.
17
but injury resulting from the affirmative act of prescribing is not). Plaintiff
alleged the County defendants were negligent for essentially “failing to
prescribe” because they housed Mr. Conforti in a single-bunk cell that was
already occupied by an inmate. The County defendants are therefore entitled
to summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s negligence count to the extent that
it is based on immunized conduct under N.J.S.A. 59:6-5.
However, without differentiating between the County defendants’
alleged negligence derived from non-immunized conduct and their alleged
negligence derived solely from conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5,
and possibly -6,3 the trial judge denied the County defendants’ motion on the
3
I would remand to develop the record more fully. The decision to house Mr.
Conforti in a single-bunk cell rather than confine him in some other way may
constitute a “determination in accordance with any applicable enactment” as to
“whether to confine a person for mental illness,” or setting “the terms and
conditions of confinement for mental illness,” pursuant to N.J.S.A. 59:6-
6(a)(1), (2). Though they do not point to any “applicable enactments,” the
County defendants had authority to make the determination as to whether to
confine Mr. Conforti under N.J.A.C. 10A:16-12.2, which enumerates various
factors to consider when “determining whether to place an inmate on suicide
watch or to release an inmate from suicide watch.” Thus, because plaintiff
alleges that the County defendants were negligent for housing Mr. Conforti in
a single-bunk cell “when the officials knew or should have known of
Conforti’s severe back pain and limitations based upon his September 2010
incarceration and his risk factors for suicide,” the County defendants are at
least arguably immune under N.J.S.A. 59:6-6(a)(1) or (2) for the decision not
to confine Mr. Conforti elsewhere or under different terms or conditions. I
would permit counsel to raise relevant arguments as to N.J.S.A. 59:6-6 on
remand. Remanding highlights the legal complexity of interpreting at least
18
entire negligence count (count one). That decision was error. The judge
should have granted the motion in part and denied it in part.
D.
By virtue of the trial court’s erroneous denial of the County defendants’
summary judgment motion as to the entire negligence claim, plaintiff was
permitted to predicate the negligence claim substantially on conduct that was
immunized by the TCA and to present to the jury evidence of immunized
conduct along with evidence of non-immunized conduct. In my view, the
County defendants were therefore not afforded a fair trial.
Granting partial summary judgment dismissing the portion of plaintiff’s
negligence claim that was predicated on immunized conduct would have had a
dispositive impact on plaintiff’s case. Had the trial court partially dismissed
the negligence claim, that decision would have barred evidence of immunized
conduct at the trial, and limited plaintiff’s negligence claim to evidence
properly presented to the jury.
The majority states “defendants wrongly sought to dismiss plaintiff’s
entire negligence count on the ground that (as they later articulated clearly to
this Court), some of the facts supporting that count concerned conduct that was
N.J.S.A. 59:6-6, which provides further support for why resorting to an in
limine motion would be impracticable.
19
immunized by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 35)
(emphases added). Respectfully, the County defendants presented reasons to
dismiss the negligence count as a whole (including that plaintiff failed to
establish they breached a duty or proximately caused damage); and they
argued for dismissal of the negligence count to the extent that it was premised
on conduct immunized by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. They proceeded in that
fashion because plaintiff alleged in count one of the complaint that County
defendants acted negligently, based on both immunized conduct and on non-
immunized conduct. Plaintiff’s negligence claim was not an all-or-nothing
proposition.
Under the Court Rules, trial judges have the discretion to grant in part
and deny in part summary judgment motions. See Applestein v. United Board
& Carton Corp., 35 N.J. 343, 351 (1961) (explaining that under the
predecessor to Rule 4:46-2, “partial summary judgment . . . may encompass
less than all the issues arising from a single claim; or it may encompass less
than all the claims joined in a single action. In either case, it removes the
determined matter from the trial of the case.” (citing 6 Moore’s Federal
Practice P 56.20(3.-2) (2d ed. 1976) (explaining “it is clear that [Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure 56] authorizes a summary adjudication that will often fall
short of a final determination, even of a single claim; [and] that the term
20
partial summary judgment as applied to an interlocutory summary adjudication
is often a misnomer” (emphasis added) (quotation omitted))); see also R.
4:46-2 (“The judgment or order sought shall be rendered . . . if the pleadings . .
. show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact . . . . A summary
judgment or order . . . may be rendered on any issue in the action . . . although
there is a genuine factual dispute as to any other issue . . . .” (emphases
added)); R. 4:46-3 (“If . . . under this rule judgment is not rendered upon the
whole action . . . and a trial is necessary,” the trial court, “by examining the
pleadings . . . shall, if practicable, ascertain what material facts[] . . . exist
without substantial controversy and shall thereupon make an order . . .
directing such further proceedings in the action as are appropriate.”).
Plaintiff was entitled to a jury trial on the portion of the negligence
claim that was premised on genuinely disputed issues of non-immunized acts.
The judge, therefore, correctly denied that part of the motion. But the County
defendants were entitled to summary judgment dismissing the part of
plaintiff’s negligence claim derived from immunized conduct under the TCA.
The judge should have granted that part of the motion as a matter of law.
Despite my colleagues’ contention that the County defendants “believed
they were entitled to immunity under 6-4 and 6-5 only because OCJ was a
medical facility under 6-1,” ante at ___ n.2 (slip op. at 12 n.2), the County
21
defendants’ submission that immunity was inextricably tied to the OCJ being a
“medical facility” cannot relieve the judge’s obligation to read N.J.S.A. 59:6-
4, -5, and -6 -- the very provisions that the County defendants brought to his
attention. Just as an appellate court may affirm a trial court order for reasons
different from those espoused by the trial court in issuing the order, see Hayes
v. Delamotte, 231 N.J. 373, 387, 175 (2018), a trial court’s legal
determinations are similarly not constrained by the parties’ arguments on
matters of statutory interpretation. Indeed, it is legislative intent -- not parties’
arguments -- that is the “overriding goal” of statutory interpretation. See
Young v. Schering Corp., 141 N.J. 16, 25 (1995).
Had the judge interpreted 6-4 and 6-5 correctly, he would have seen that
the County defendants were entitled to immunity regardless of whether OCJ
was a “medical facility.” The majority acknowledges that the trial judge was
“wrong in failing to address defendants’ arguments under the TCA at the
summary judgment stage.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 30, 33). I add that the
judge was wrong in failing to address the County defendants’ arguments that
they were entitled to immunity under the plain text of the TCA at the JNOV
stage as well. The predicament in which the County defendants found
themselves at trial was completely avoidable had the judge granted the motion
in part.
22
E.
Instead, immunized conduct was admitted into evidence at trial.
Introducing evidence of conduct immunized under the TCA to prove
negligence against the County defendants is reversible error, which is error
“clearly capable of producing an unjust result.” R. 2:10-2. Under the facts of
this case, the error was not harmless. An error cannot be harmless if there is
“‘some degree of possibility that [the error] led to an unjust result.’ For an
error to be reversible under the harmless error standard, ‘[t]he possibility must
be real, one sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether [the error] led
the jury to a verdict it otherwise might not have reached.’” Willner v. Vertical
Reality, Inc., 235 N.J. 65, 79 (2018) (alterations in original) (quoting State v.
Lazo, 209 N.J. 9, 26 (2012)).
The opening and closing remarks by plaintiff’s counsel, together with
the totality of evidence adduced at trial pertaining to immunized conduct under
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and -5, tainted the jury and requires a new trial.
For example, plaintiff’s counsel opened to the jury by addressing the
County defendants’ alleged failure to determine whether Mr. Conforti had a
physical or mental condition that would be hazardous to himself. He asserted
that “jail staff” failed to “compare[] . . . [the] treatment records, [and] the
medication records” and asserted that, had they done so, the “suicide could
23
have been prevented.” Counsel explained “there was a lack of an appropriate
level of communication between medical staff and corrections officers” and
that there was a lack of “heightened evaluation” by the County defendants. He
added that the County defendants were “responsible for monitoring,
supervising, and overseeing” CHS, an entity that had been “hired to provide
medical services” in the OCJ. The strong implication of those remarks is that
the County defendants engaged in immunized conduct under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4
by failing to “make an adequate examination” to determine whether Mr.
Conforti was a danger to himself or others.
Along those lines, plaintiff’s corrections liability expert, Martin Horn,
testified that during the intake process, the OCJ “check[s] [a prisoner’s]
physical and mental condition” and “screen[s] for mental illness.” He
explained, “You want to make sure the person is not acutely mentally ill, that
they’re not psychotic,” and “you want to screen for suicide.” He opined that
the County defendants “negligently failed to identify” Mr. Conforti as a
suicide risk. Again, the County defendants’ failure to “make an adequate
examination” to determine whether Mr. Conforti was a danger to himself is
immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and should not have been part of plaintiff’s
negligence theory against the County defendants.
24
Plaintiff’s evidentiary focus should have been on non-immunized
conduct, particularly because plaintiff had settled with CHS on the separate
claim against the non-immunized CHS defendants for improperly evaluating
Mr. Conforti for suicidal ideation. Allowing evidence of and arguments as to
immunized conduct alongside those properly focused on non-immunized
conduct unfairly enlarged the scope of admissible evidence of negligence and
could well have swayed the jury.
And contrary to the Appellate Division’s suggestion, the jury’s partial
allocation of liability to the CHS defendants does not tend to show that the
improper admission of evidence, and arguments related to immunized conduct,
were harmless. The Appellate Division, which did not address the plain text of
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6, affirmed the trial court’s judgment. It noted that the
jury assessed forty percent liability against “the CHS defendants who
conducted [Mr. Conforti’s] jail intake” and speculated that “[s]eemingly, the
jury held the CHS defendants were liable for misdiagnosing [Mr. Conforti]’s
mental condition, not the County defendants.”
Respectfully, even if that conjecture were true, plaintiff introduced
evidence that resulted in a fundamentally unfair trial, including that the County
defendants, not CHS, “negligently failed to identify” Mr. Conforti as a suicide
risk. Failure to “make an adequate examination” to determine whether Mr.
25
Conforti was a danger to himself is immunized and therefore should not have
been a part of plaintiff’s negligence theory against the County defendants. The
opening and closing statements and the totality of the evidence of immunized
conduct admitted at trial significantly tainted the verdict, which cannot be
saved by the forty percent allocation to CHS.
II.
The majority references options that the County defendants had after the
judge denied their summary judgment motion. But none of those options can
offset the damage done through the erroneous admission of evidence and
arguments relating to immunized conduct.
A.
My colleagues explain, for example, that the County defendants could
have moved for reconsideration, or they could have filed an in limine motion
seeking to bar at trial admission of conduct immunized under the TCA. ----
Ante
at ___ (slip op. at 33-35). That begs the question of whether immunized
conduct should have been precluded at the summary judgment stage, but I
respectfully disagree with the proposition that those possibilities were viable,
or that they would have ensured a fair trial based on evidence properly before
the jury.
26
To be sure, immunized conduct could and should have been precluded at
the summary judgment stage. At oral argument before the trial judge, counsel
for the County defendants relied on her brief “as to the [TCA] for the mental
health assessment.” Her brief quoted N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6, and argued
that the County defendants were immunized under the “plain language of both
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and 6-5.” (emphasis added). At oral argument, the judge
asked counsel “what, if any, immunities come into play?” The judge added,
“Are you going to cite anything out of Title [59] then?” Counsel repeated her
argument pertaining to “the mental health itself for failure to . . . recognize that
[Mr. Conforti] was suicidal,” then she stated, “I don’t know that there [is ] any
other specific tort claim immunities [other than those briefed.]” The judge
responded, “If you didn’t brief it, that’s fine.” Of course, counsel briefed
N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6, including independent reliance on the plain text of
6-4 and 6-5, but the judge nonetheless denied the motion.
Respectfully, the exchange between counsel for the County defendants
and the trial judge highlights the futility of the majority’s alternative
suggestions, such as moving for reconsideration. Rule 4:49-2 governs motions
for reconsideration. “The rule applies when the court’s decision represents a
clear abuse of discretion based on plainly incorrect reasoning or failure to
consider evidence or a good reason for the court to reconsider new
27
information.” Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J. Court Rules, cmt. 2 on R.
4:49-2 (2022). And when considering whether to file such a motion, we are
mindful that
a reconsideration motion is primarily an opportunity to
seek to convince the court that either 1) it has expressed
its decision based upon a palpably incorrect or
irrational basis, or 2) it is obvious that the court either
did not consider, or failed to appreciate the significance
of probative, competent evidence.
[Kornbleuth v. Westover, 241 N.J. 289, 301 (2020)
(emphasis added) (quoting Guido v. Duane Morris
LLP, 202 N.J. 79, 87-88 (2010)).]
The majority points out that trial counsel for the County defendants should
have filed a motion for reconsideration after the judge, in his written decision,
did not address their claim that they are entitled to immunity for all allegedly
negligent acts that fall under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. See ante at ___ (slip
op. at 33-34) (“[I]n practice the motion [for reconsideration] requires a
showing of law or facts presented in the motion papers that were overlooked or
misapprehended and would result in a different result.” (quoting James H.
Walzer, N.J. Practice, Civil Practice Forms § 105:47 (6th ed. 2023))).
However, the majority also notes that the County defendants’ “JNOV brief
copied, verbatim, the entire TCA argument from their summary judgment
brief.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 18). The trial judge explicitly rejected the
County defendants’ immunity argument that time. Since the trial judge later
28
expressly addressed and rejected the immunity claim, the County defendants
could not have avoided the prejudice of admission of evidence of immunized
conduct at trial by moving for reconsideration of the summary judgment
decision.
The majority also appears to state that the trial judge failed to address
the immunity issue at the summary judgment stage, and then erroneously
determined at the JNOV stage that N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6 immunity does
not apply, in part because the County defendants’ verbatim argument mi ssed
the mark. The majority recounted that the trial judge “unsuccessfully tried to
elicit additional information about [the County] defendants’ TCA arguments,”
ante at ___ (slip op. at 13-14), which suggests to me that my colleagues view
the County defendants’ contentions at the summary judgment stage as lacking
in some regard. Along those lines, my colleagues point out that County
defendants argued “for the first time before the Appellate Division that the
immunities granted in 6-4, -5, and -6 were not limited to medical facilities and
applied instead to certain ‘activities,’ regardless of which public entity
performed them.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 19). Although I highlighted the
County defendants’ arguments at the summary judgment stage that they relied
on the plain text of N.J.S.A. 59:6-4 and -5, ante at ___ (slip op. at 21-22), the
majority stated that those contentions of immunity were dependent on the
29
premise that “OCJ was a medical facility under 6-1,” ante at ___ n.2 (slip op.
at 12 n.2).
Motions for reconsideration are ordinarily made to correct a mistake
made by the trial court. Rule 4:49-2’s purpose is not to afford a party the
opportunity to write a better brief, to introduce new evidence, or to introduce a
new argument. See, e.g., Capital Fin. Co. of Del. Valley, Inc. v. Asterbadi,
398 N.J. Super. 299, 310 (App. Div. 2008) (“Reconsideration cannot be used
to expand the record and reargue a motion. . . . A motion for reconsideration
is . . . not [designed] to serve as a vehicle to introduce new evidence in order
to cure an inadequacy in the motion record.”).
A decision to file for reconsideration necessarily involves judgment on
the part of counsel that the trial court abused its discretion. An abuse of
discretion “arises when a decision is ‘made without a rational explanation,
inexplicably departed from established policies, or rested on an impermissible
basis.’” Flagg v. Essex Cnty. Prosecutor, 171 N.J. 561, 571 (2002) (quoting
Achacoso-Sanchez v. INS, 779 F.2d 1260, 1265 (7th Cir. 1985)). Thus, the
impetus for filing a reconsideration motion is that counsel seeks to correct a
trial court mistake.
In my view, the trial judge indeed erroneously denied summary
judgment insofar as plaintiff’s negligence theory was based on immunized
30
conduct. To the extent that the majority finds that the County defendants’
arguments on the immunity issue were deficient, it would not have been proper
for the County defendants to get a second bite at the apple, so to speak, by
refining their immunity arguments via a motion for reconsideration. The trial
court’s error should have been corrected on appeal, not on a motion for
reconsideration.
Even if the County defendants argued on their summary judgment
motion that they were “immune from liability for negligence under N.J.S.A.
59:6-4, -5, and -6 because they were a ‘medical facility’ under N.J.S.A. 59:6-
1,” - - - at ___ (slip op. at 32-33), the trial judge’s analysis should not have
ante
stopped there. The judge should have rejected that contention, like the
majority and I do now, and then proceeded to analyze whether the plain
language of those provisions grants immunity and requires summary judgment
dismissing the negligence count to the extent that it is based on that
immunized conduct. As the record makes clear, the County defendants’
immunity argument was based on more than whether the OCJ was a “medical
facility.” Counsel contended the plain language of (at least N.J.S.A. 59:6-4
and -5) immunized the County defendants for “fail[ing] to recognize
Conforti’s mental state or suicidal inclination.” The trial judge erred as a
matter of law.
31
Most likely, the County defendants did not move for reconsideration for
a simple reason: any such motion would have been futile. That became
obvious when they moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV)
and reargued essentially the same position that they raised at the summary
judgment stage, namely that they were entitled to dismissal of that part of the
negligence case based on immunized conduct. The trial judge denied the
JNOV motion and concluded correctly that the OCJ was not a “medical
facility.” But the definition of “medical facility” under N.J.S.A. 59:6-1 does
not restrict the substantive immunities granted in N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6,
because none of those three provisions are limited to medical facilities. At that
post-trial stage, the trial court maintained its erroneous view of the question of
immunity.
Thus, even though the OCJ is not a “medical facility,” on the JNOV
motion the judge should have analyzed whether plaintiff’s negligence claim is
derived in part from conduct immunized under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. In
failing to do so, the judge failed to do precisely what the majority suggests the
County defendants could have argued for on reconsideration. The fact that the
County defendants lost at the JNOV stage supports the conclusion that moving
for reconsideration of the order denying summary judgment would have been
unavailing.
32
The majority correctly recites the standard for reviewing JNOV motions.
The question ordinarily is only “whether ‘the evidence [presented at trial],
together with the legitimate inferences therefrom, could sustain a judgment in
. . . favor’” of the party that prevailed at trial. Sons of Thunder v. Borden,
Inc., 148 N.J. 396, 415 (1997) (omission in original) (quoting Dolson v.
Anastasia, 55 N.J. 2, 5 (1969)). But this was far from an ordinary case where
we apply that standard. Although the majority states that “the evidence
presented at trial, along with all legitimate inferences therefrom, could sustain
a judgment in favor of plaintiff without reference to any immunized conduct ,”
ante at ___ (slip op. at 37), application of that standard does not account for
the cumulative mistakes that were clearly capable of leading to an unjust
result, which denied the County defendants a fair trial. While the majority
correctly observes that the jury properly heard evidence of non-immunized
conduct sufficient to sustain a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, the question on
review of the trial errors, including the order denying summary judgment in
part and the order denying JNOV, is whether the improper admission of
evidence of immunized conduct under the TCA was “clearly capable of
producing an unjust result.” R. 2:10-2.
Regarding the motion in limine that the majority, in hindsight, opines
that the County defendants should have filed, the County defendants followed
33
our common law and Court Rules by not moving to bar evidence immunized
by N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, and -6. A motion in limine is “[a] pretrial request that
certain inadmissible evidence not be referred to or offered at trial.” Black’s
Law Dictionary 1109 (9th ed. 2009). More specifically, under our Court
Rules, it is “an application returnable at trial for a ruling regarding the conduct
of the trial, including admissibility of evidence, which motion, if granted,
would not have a dispositive impact on a litigant’s case.” Jeter v. Sam’s Club,
250 N.J. 240, 250 (2022) (first and second emphases added) (quoting R. 4:25-
8(a)(1)). “A motion in limine is not a summary judgment motion that happens
to be filed on the eve of trial.” Ibid. (quotation omitted). A motion that results
in the dismissal of a plaintiff’s case is instead subject to Rule 4:46, which
governs summary judgment motions. Ibid. Here, granting a motion in limine
would have been improper because it would have resulted in dismissal of
plaintiff’s negligence claim based on immunized conduct, which would have a
dispositive impact on plaintiff’s case.
At any rate, a motion seeking a determination of complicated legal
immunity principles under the TCA, respectfully, should be made well before
trial and under Rule 4:46. Indeed, a purely legal question, such as whether
TCA immunity applies, should be resolved at an early stage of the litigation.
See Rivera v. Gerner, 89 N.J. 526, 536 (1982) (noting that resolving issues
34
involving the TCA at the pretrial stage “is to be encouraged”). Furthermore,
this Court has observed that “for purposes of judicial economy, a public entity
. . . should assert [TCA] immunity in a pre-trial motion for summary judgment,
which, if successful, will bring the litigation to an end,” and that “delay in
raising several claims of immunity until the time of trial” causes concern. See
Maison v. N.J. Transit Corp., 245 N.J. 270, 298 (2021). From a practical
perspective, it would be unreasonably burdensome for the trial judge to
manage such an in limine motion, especially given that here plaintiff’s counsel
filed at least seven other in limine motions on the eve of trial.
Waiting until an in limine motion to address the complicated and
substantial immunity-related legal questions, which require statutory
interpretation, will add unnecessary distractions on the eve of trial. The
lawyers will have to wait until right before the trial begins to see how the
ruling will affect their opening statements; the trial judge will have to juggle a
complicated legal question at the last minute, read the legal briefs, and
entertain oral argument; jurors will be waiting in the jury assembly room; there
might be an emergent application seeking permission to file a motion on short
notice challenging the ruling; witnesses lined up to testify might be dismissed;
plaintiff’s counsel will have to spend time opposing such in limine motions
rather than devoting their time to trial; and so on.
35
My colleagues correctly continue to “warn attorneys against filing
motions in limine that would ‘result in the dismissal of a plaintiff’s case.’ ”
Ante at ___ (slip op. at 36) (quoting Jeter, 250 N.J. at 250). Clearly, the
rationale behind TCA immunity is not to permit a negligence suit against a
public entity premised on evidence of immunized conduct; allow the case to
proceed through the rigors of pre-trial discovery, including obtaining expert
reports addressing the immunized conduct; then, on the eve of trial, file a
motion in limine to bar evidence of such immunized conduct. See Polzo, 209
N.J. Super. at 51, 56 (“[A] public entity is ‘immune from tort liability unless
there is a specific statutory provision’ that makes it answerable for a negligent
act or omission.” (quoting Kahrar, 171 N.J. at 10)).
Hypothetically, had plaintiff separated the negligence claims into two
counts, one premised on immunized conduct and one premised on non-
immunized conduct, then my colleagues and I would no doubt agree that the
County defendants should file a motion for summary judgment dismissing the
negligence count premised on immunized conduct, rather than waiting until the
trial to bar evidence of immunized conduct. The fact that plaintiff elected to
include both theories of negligence in one count does not change the analysis.
The County defendants were clearly entitled to dismissal of that part of the
36
negligence count premised on conduct immunized under the TCA. That ruling
would have barred evidence of immunized conduct at trial.
We granted defendants’ petition for certification, as my colleagues have
said, “limited to the question of whether defendants were entitled to immunity
under N.J.S.A. 59:6-4, -5, or -6. 252 N.J. 53 (2022).” Ante at ___ (slip op. at
21). I respectfully submit that when a public entity is immune from tort
liability, like here, for all the reasons that I have articulated, the public entity
should bring that part of the litigation premised on immunized conduct to an
end under Rule 4:46.
I therefore disagree with the majority’s contention that the trial court’s
erroneous interpretation of the TCA could have been corrected if the
defendants had filed a motion in limine.
B.
My colleagues in the majority suggest other possible options beyond
motion practice that the County defendants could have employed during the
trial to address evidence that, in my view, should have been barred by a partial
dismissal of the negligence count that pled immunized conduct. My
colleagues suggest that the County defendants could have requested a jury
charge distinguishing between immunized and non-immunized conduct, and
that they could have proposed a verdict sheet that parsed out different types of
37
negligence to ensure the verdict was based on non-immunized conduct. Ante
at ___ (slip op. at 36). I respectfully disagree that those options were viable.
Preliminarily, I note as to CHS, the County defendants sought allocation
of liability under Young v. Latta, 123 N.J. 584, 591 (1991) (permitting “a non-
settling defendant’s right to a credit reflecting the settler’s fair share of the
amount of the verdict -- regardless of the actual settlement -- [which]
represents the judicial implementation of the statutory right to contribution”).
Plaintiff filed a motion to preclude the County defendants from contending
CHS was liable. Plaintiff argued to the trial judge that defendants should be
prevented from pointing the finger at the “empty chair” and arguing to the jury
“that this is all [CHS’s] fault.” Counsel for plaintiff contended “none of the
settling defendants should be on the verdict sheet.” Nevertheless, CHS was
correctly listed on the verdict sheet.
With that in mind, requesting a special jury charge that would
“distinguish between evidence of immunized and non-immunized conduct”
could well have done more harm than good. Here, the trial judge denied the
County defendants’ motion for summary judgment seeking to dismiss the
negligence count, at least to the extent that the negligence theory was derived
from immunized conduct. The consequence of that ruling permitted plaintiff
to utilize immunized conduct to show the County defendants were partly
38
negligent. In that context, a jury charge distinguishing between immunized
and non-immunized conduct would have tainted the jury further by focusing
them on the County defendants’ immunized conduct. Drawing the jurors’
attention to immunized conduct erroneously admitted into evidence would
frustrate the Legislature’s intent. See D.D., 213 N.J. at 133-34 (explaining the
longstanding principle that the overall approach of the TCA is to broadly limit
public entity liability). In other words, allowing into evidence immunized
conduct against the County defendants to prove they were negligent, and then
instructing jurors not to consider it, would be prejudicial and inconsistent with
immunity principles under the TCA. See Priolo v. Compacker, Inc., 321 N.J.
Super. 21, 29-30 (App. Div. 1999) (“It is wrong to suggest that anything a jury
hears can be remedied by a curative instruction. Trial management is difficult
enough in dealing with the unforeseen or inadvertent comment or answer. A
trial judge’s responsibility is to minimize such errors.”). Here, introducing
immunized conduct as evidence of negligence, respectfully, could not be
remedied by a special jury charge or curative instruction.
The same logic applies to the suggestion that the County defendants
could have asked for a special verdict sheet to “‘pars[e] out the different types
of negligence’” and to ensure further that the jury’s verdict was “based only on
non-immunized conduct.” Ante at ___ (slip op. at 36). Respectfully, doing so
39
would have exacerbated the situation. It would have tainted the jury further by
focusing them on plaintiff’s theory that the County defendants were liable
based on immunized conduct.
The majority points out that counsel for the County defendants
consented to the charge and verdict sheet. This is not a situation, however,
where a party ignored a trial error. Denying in full their summary judgment
motion constituted the error, and defendants’ position was preserved for
appeal. Denial of the motion presented opportunities for plaintiff to admit
evidence that simply should not have been presented to the jury. The fact that
the County defendants thereafter consented to the charge and verdict sheet
does not mean, given this record, that they waived the argument that they were
entitled to summary judgment to the extent plaintiff’s negligence theory
derives from immunized conduct. And certainly it would not prevent them
from arguing on appeal that they received an unfair trial that requires a do-
over.
Regardless, none of the procedural and substantive options suggested by
the majority were necessary to preserve the immunity issue for appeal. The
County defendants did that by raising affirmative defenses, filing a motion for
summary judgment, and renewing those arguments after trial on their JNOV
motion.
40
III.
In my view, the trial court erred when it denied the County defendants’
motion for summary judgment to dismiss plaintiff’s negligence claim in its
entirety and did not recognize that the claim was predicated in part on
immunized conduct. That error denied the County defendants a fair trial. I
would reverse the Appellate Division’s judgment and remand this matter for a
retrial in which plaintiff would be permitted to present only evidence of non-
immunized conduct in support of the negligence claim. I therefore respectfully
concur in part and dissent in part.
41