Muntz v. Newark City Hospital
Decision Date | 25 June 1971 |
Citation | 279 A.2d 135,115 N.J.Super. 273 |
Parties | Olga MUNTZ, Administratrix ad Prosequendum of the Estate of Orvell Muntz and Olga Muntz, General Administratrix of the Estate of Orvell Muntz and Olga Muntz, Individually, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. NEWARK CITY HOSPITAL and the City of Newark, Defendant-Respondent, Cross-Appellant. |
Court | New Jersey Superior Court — Appellate Division |
Jerry M. Finn, Newark, for appellants (Goldberger, Siegel & Finn, Newark, attorneys; Sheldon A. Siegel, Newark, on the brief).
Marvin A. Sachs, Newark, for respondent cross-appellant (Feuerstein, Sachs & Maitlin, Newark, attorneys; Leonard Rosenstein, Newark, on the brief).
Before Judges KILKENNY, HALPERN and LANE.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
HALPERN, J.A.D.
The narrow issue on plaintiff's appeal is whether the trial court erred in reducing the jury's verdict from $35,000 to $10,000. In view of our determination that no error existed, we do not reach defendant's cross-appeal.
The facts are not disputed. Plaintiff's decedent committed suicide while a patient at the Newark City Hospital. Plaintiff individually, and in her representative capacity, sought money damages from the hospital, the City of Newark and from Dr. Morton Kurland, charging them with negligence and malpractice. The jury absolved Dr. Kurland from liability and returned its verdict thusly: The verdict made no mention of the City of Newark for the obvious reason that the case was tried on the theory that the hospital was an agency of the city, and the city's liability was derivative. For the purposes of the trial and for our purposes on appeal, the hospital and the city are one and the same entity.
As soon as the verdict was received, defense counsel moved to reduce the verdict to $10,000 in accordance with the stipulation in the pretrial order limiting the hospital's liability to $10,000 pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A--8. When the court asked plaintiff's attorney if he objected to the motion, he responded Judgment was ultimately entered against the hospital and the city for $10,000. Plaintiff's application to have judgment entered against the hospital and the city for $35,000 was denied. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.
We consider first the issue of whether the stipulations in the pretrial order, and the manner in which the case was tried, foreclose this appeal. We find they do. The city was a party to the suit in name only. This is evidenced by the following: (a) the pretrial order mentions the city only in the caption of the case; (b) the city was not referred to during the entire trial; (c) the jury's verdict was only against the hospital; (d) the parties stipulated in the pretrial order, as a matter of law, that under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A--8 the limit of liability was $10,000, although no limitation was placed on Dr. Kurland's liability, and (e) the case was tried on that basis, as evidenced by defense counsel's consent to the reduction of the verdict.
R. 4:25--1 makes it crystal clear that trials must be held within the framework of the pretrial order. The rule, in relevant part, requires the pretrial order to be dictated in open court, signed by counsel and the court, and it must recite: the admissions or stipulations of the parties; the factual and legal contentions of the parties; 'all claims as to damages * * * and admissions or stipulations with respect thereto, and this shall limit the claims thereto at the trial * * *,' and a specification of the legal issues to be determined at trial. The rule then provides:
When entered, the pretrial order becomes part of the record, supersedes the pleadings where inconsistent therewith, and controls the subsequent course of action unless modified at or before the trial or pursuant to R. 4:9--2 to prevent manifest injustice.
The philosophy of the rule as expressed in Lertch v. McLean, 18 N.J. 68, 112 A.2d 735 (1955), is applicable in the instant case, and worth repeating:
The pretrial order is a cornerstone in the building of our practice in the trial of cases under the new judicial system. One of the purposes of the Rule, R.R. 4:29--1 (now 4:25--1), is to allow great liberality in forming and amending pretrial orders so that all phases of the controversy may be finally and justly determined between the parties but as we said in Schlossberg v. Jersey City Sewerage Authority, 15 N.J. 360, 370, 104 A.2d 662 (1954):
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