Wednesday, June 30, 2021

ACCIDENT ATTORNEY - HACKENSACK NEW JERSEY 201-646-3333

THIS IS A SAMPLE OF HOW SOME ACCIDENT CASES ARE DECIDED BY THE NJ COURTS. OUR FIRM DID NOT PARTICIPATE AS COUNSEL IN THIS CASE. THIS IS MERELY A SAMPLE SUMMARY FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES


SHARAD YAGNIK, ET AL. VS. PREMIUM OUTLET PARTNERS, LP, ET AL. (L-2601-18, MERCER COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)


In this construction site accident case, the court addresses an unresolved question of New Jersey law: When is an Affidavit of Merit ("AOM") under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27, supporting claims against a licensed professional, due in situations where a plaintiff’s original complaint is later amended and additional answers or other pleadings are filed?

Plaintiffs served AOMs (one from an engineer and another from an architect) more than 120 days after the defendant engineering firm filed its answer to the original complaint, but before that firm answered an amended complaint naming another defendant.

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Relying in part on several federal decisions interpreting New Jersey law, the motion judge ruled the deadline for an AOM "does not come into play until the pleadings are [all] settled." Based on that reasoning, the judge deemed timely the two AOMs tendered by plaintiffs more than a year after the engineering firm had filed its original answer and first amended answer.

Declining to adopt the federal approach, this court holds the AOM statute's text and legislative purposes require the affidavit to be served within 60 days (extendable for good cause to 120 days) from the date when the licensed professional files its answer, regardless of whether the pleadings are subsequently amended to name other defendants or assert additional claims. That deadline is subject, however, to the long established AOM exceptions for (1) substantial compliance or (2) extraordinary circumstances.

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The court concludes extraordinary circumstances to justify the delayed AOMs exist here, based on events stemming from the initial negotiated voluntary dismissal of plaintiffs’ claims against the engineering firm and the restoration of those claims the following year after discovery shed more light on the firm’s role in the project.

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