NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5534-00T5
MARIA NOLAN, as Executrix
of the Estate of GUY NOLAN,
and MARIA NOLAN, individually,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
FIRST COLONY LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
PORTAMEDIC SERVICES, INC.,
DOMENIC SCHIRALDI, D.P.M.,
CLARA MAASS MEDICAL CENTER
and EDUARDO MONTEAGUDO, M.D.,
Defendants.
___________________________________
Argued October 9, 2001 - Decided November 13,
2001
Before Judges Petrella, Kestin and Alley.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Monmouth County, MON-L-
5709-98.
William Levinson argued the cause for
appellant (Eichen, Levinson, Cahn & Parra,
attorneys; Mr. Levinson, on the brief).
George J. Kenny of Connell Foley argued the
cause for respondent (Connell Foley and Blank
Rome Comisky & McCauley, attorneys; Mr. Kenny
and Jonathan M. Korn of Blank Rome Comisky &
McCauley, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PETRELLA, P.J.A.D.
This is an appeal by plaintiffs Maria Nolan, as Executrix of
the Estate of Guy Nolan, and Maria Nolan, individually, from
summary judgment in favor of First Colony Life Insurance Company
(First Colony) and dismissal of the second amended complaint
sounding in negligence, and originally malpractice.
In connection with his application for a $200,000 life
insurance policy from First Colony, Guy Nolan underwent a pre-
insurance screening and blood and urine test by Portamedic
Services, Inc. (Portamedic), an agency designated by First
Colony. Nolan was subsequently diagnosed with and died of liver
cancer two years later. PlaintiffSee footnote 11 claims that First Colony
violated its duty to the decedent by failing to disclose the
results of a blood test, which indicated elevated levels of two
liver enzymes. The issue on appeal is whether New Jersey case
law requires an insurance company to disclose the results of
blood test results above the "normal ranges" to the applicant for
insurance.See footnote 22 Plaintiff also contends that the denial of First
Colony's F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) motion by the federal district court,
where the case was initially heard, has res judicata effect,
precluding First Colony from denying its duty to disclose the
blood test results.
Plaintiff filed a complaint against First Colony, a John
Doe, an unknown paramedic, and a James Doe, M.D., an unknown
physician, on November 13, 1998. The case was removed to the
federal district court for the District of New Jersey based on
diversity of citizenship jurisdiction. Defendants moved to
dismiss the complaint pursuant to F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6). In denying
the motion, the judge examined New Jersey case law and concluded
that the physician and the paramedic (factually it developed that
no physician or paramedic was involved) may have had a duty of
care to the decedent and that a patient-physician relationship
could arise based on the alleged factual contentions of the
complaint.
Plaintiff amended her complaint to include defendants
Domenic Schiraldi (Schiraldi) and Portamedic, thus vitiating
federal diversity jurisdiction. The case was remanded to the
Superior Court and plaintiff again amended the complaint to add
as defendants Clara Maass Medical Center and Eduardo Monteagudo,
M.D.See footnote 33
Both sides moved for summary judgment. The judge granted
summary judgment in favor of First Colony, Schiraldi and
Portamedic, and denied plaintiff's motion. In so ruling, the
judge found that First Colony was not vicariously liable for
medical malpractice because no medical doctor examined the
decedent; First Colony did not have a duty to disclose the test
results to the decedent; and the New Jersey Legislature never
imposed such a duty.
Plaintiff's motion for leave to appeal was granted as to the
dismissal of the complaint against First Colony. Leave to appeal
the dismissal of the complaints against Schiraldi and Portamedic
was denied. On January 23, 2001, our Supreme Court decided Reed
v. Bojarski,
166 N.J. 89 (2001), and we remanded for
reconsideration in light of Reed. The motion judge concluded
that Reed did not apply and reaffirmed summary judgment in favor
of First Colony. Plaintiff again sought and was granted leave to
appeal. We now affirm.
In October 1996, Guy Nolan, born on May 19, 1961, applied
for a $200,000 life insurance policy through First Colony. Part
of the application process required Nolan to undergo a physical
examination. The examination was administered by defendant
Portamedic, a company not affiliated with First Colony, on
November 11, 1996.See footnote 44 Portamedic's business involved performing
such examinations for insurance companies. Portamedic's employee
Schiraldi conducted the examination. Though Schiraldi graduated
from podiatric school, he was not a licensed medical doctor. The
examination involved having the decedent complete a
questionnaire,See footnote 55 taking measurements of height, weight, blood
pressure, heart rate and pulse, and taking blood and urine
samples.
The blood sample was sent to an independent laboratory and
the results, without medical analysis or conclusions, were sent
to First Colony. No medical doctor ever looked at the findings
of the lab prior to the issuance of the insurance policy. The
report indicated the decedent had low cholesterol and normal GGTP
levels, but that his SGOT, SGPT and triglyceride levels were
above normal. The SGOT and the SGPT levels were approximately
1.1 and 1.3 times the normal range, respectively.See footnote 66
Mary Dellinger had been employed by First Colony for eight
years, and was the underwriter who screened decedent's
application. She had no medical training, but reviewed the
laboratory report and compared the raw data to First Colony's
underwriting manual. She gave the elevated levels a rating of
zero. The file indicated that this would not result in an
adverse underwriting decision.See footnote 77 Dellinger approved the
application and First Colony issued the decedent a "Preferred"
policy around December 1, 1996. First Colony also had a "Best
Preferred," a "Standard" policy and rated policies. Nolan was
not issued a "Best Preferred" policy because Dellinger marked off
"medical reasons."See footnote 88
About two years later, in mid-1998, Guy Nolan was diagnosed
with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the liver. About October 8,
1998, Nolan requested and received a copy of the blood test
result conducted in association with his life insurance
application. Apparently, blood test results from a 1993
hospitalization for surgery were also requested and received.
Despite treatment of his condition, Nolan died on November 10,
1998. First Colony paid the full proceeds of the $200,000 policy
to the plaintiff, the policy's beneficiary.
I.
In considering the grant of summary judgment we apply the
same standard of review as the trial court. Pinkowski v.
Township of Montclair,
299 N.J. Super. 557, 566 (App. Div. 1997).
Summary judgment should be granted where there is a genuine issue
of material fact. Brill v. Guardian Life Insurance Company of
America,
142 N.J. 520, 541 (1995).
Plaintiff contends that insurance companies should be
obligated, under New Jersey law, to disclose to clients the
results of blood tests done in order to determine the rating for
the insurance, when such tests show an "abnormal" result or
reveal a life threatening illness. In support of this
contention, plaintiff relies on Reed v. Bojarski, supra (
166 N.J. 89).
Reed was decided after the trial court granted summary
judgment for the defendants in December 2000. It dealt with the
obligation of a physician to disclose to a patient a potentially
life threatening illness discovered in the course of a pre-
employment physical examination. Reed, supra (166 N.J. at 91).
The employer contracted with an outside medical group to conduct
the tests. Dr. Bojarski performed the examination and during the
examination took an X-ray of Reed's chest which was considered
abnormal and revealed a widened mediastinum, which "among men in
their twenties ... may be an indicator of lymphoma, including
Hodgkin's disease," and an unusually large heart. Id. at 92.
However, Dr. Bojarski did not mention the widened mediastinum in
his comments about the X-ray, which he described as normal. Six
months later, after an X-ray revealed a large mass in his
mediastinum, Reed was diagnosed with Stage IIB Hodgkin's disease.
Id. at 92-93.
After examining New Jersey case law, the Reed Court
concluded that when a doctor examines a patient for a pre-
employment physical, a limited physician-patient relationship is
created, resulting in a duty to perform a reasonable and
competent examination. Id. at 105. This obligation was held to
include the requirement that a physician make potentially life
threatening conditions known to the patient. Id. at 105-106
(quoting Ranier v. Frieman,
294 N.J. Super. 182, 191 (App. Div.
1996)). In so holding, Reed announced that a patient is entitled
to rely on the physician to reveal any serious medical condition.
Id. at 106.
The case before us is clearly distinguishable, and the
motion judge correctly so ruled. First, Reed dealt with the
obligations of physicians. No physician examined Nolan for First
Colony and no doctor ever reviewed the laboratory findings. The
individual who conducted the pre-insurance examination, including
the drawing of blood, was not a physician. In his deposition, he
stated that he did not introduce himself to the decedent as
"Doctor," but merely gave his first and last name. The
laboratory conducted the tests, and the results were forwarded to
First Colony without comment. The only person at First Colony to
review the results was Dellinger, the underwriter whose function
was not to evaluate Nolan's physical condition, but to determine
his eligibility for life insurance and determine the type of
policy to issue. The motion judge noted that she had no medical
training or expertise and merely followed the manual.
Another factual difference between the present case and Reed
is that the examination revealed no abnormalities under the
standards applied. There were two slightly elevated liver enzyme
levels, but other enzyme levels and liver function tests were
within normal range. After examining the decedent's test
results, Dellinger gave him a risk rating of zero, indicating he
was a good candidate for insurance. She then approved issuance
of a "Preferred" policy, declining to issue Nolan a "Best
Preferred" policy. It seems improbable that First Colony would
have issued even a "Preferred" policy if a life threatening or
serious condition or disease was noted or found present.
The plaintiff would have the rule of Reed apply to insurance
companies, even where no medical personal reviewed the results of
the pre-insurance physical reports. Plaintiff relies on Reed's
statement of a non-delegable duty to disclose the results of pre-
employment physical examinations. Reed, supra (166 N.J. at 96).
However, Reed was clear that this was a non-delegable duty of
physicians based on the trust a patient places in the doctor.
Although the pre-employment physical clearly
does not establish a traditional physician-
patient relationship, that is of no moment.
The exact nature of the relationship is
simply a factor to be considered in
determining what duty exists. What is
crucial is that a relationship is created in
which a physician is expected to exercise
reasonable care commensurate with his
expertise and training, both in conducting
the examination and in communicating the
results to the examinee. [Id. at 106.]
Thus, despite the argument to the contrary, as we view it, Reed
was based on the duty of physicians and does not now extend to
insurance companies where there is neither a physician who finds
a life threatening condition nor an indication of a life
threatening condition in the information received. Clearly in
this commercial setting there is no similar trust or reliance by
a patient in the seller of an insurance product as to medical
condition.
Moreover, Reed did not change New Jersey law. Reed relied
on prior holdings to reach the conclusion that physicians have a
duty to disclose test results. In Beadling v. Sirota,
41 N.J. 555, 561 (1964), the Court articulated the duty of a physician to
act with reasonable care when examining a patient in the context
of a pre-employment physical examination. Beadling was followed
by Ranier v. Friedman, supra (
294 N.J. Super. 182), where we
affirmed the duty of doctors to disclose results in non-
traditional physician-patient relationships based on traditional
notions of negligence. Id. at 188. The motion judge in the
instant case analyzed these cases and properly found that they
did not apply to insurance companies. Simply stated, Reed merely
restated the law as to physicians and added little new to the
analysis. See also McIntosh v. Milano,
168 N.J. Super. 466, 489
(Law Div. 1979) (duty of psychiatrist to warn of death threat to
victim by patient in course of therapy).
It is true that in Carter Lincoln-Mercury, Inc. v. EMAR
Group, Inc.,
135 N.J. 182, 196 (1994), the Court stated that in
deciding whether to impose a duty, there must be "foreseeability
and fairness." However, no duty is imposed on First Colony in
the present case because under the circumstances it was not
foreseeable that the decedent would expect a medical diagnosis on
a pre-insurance physical examination where he was not even turned
down for insurance. An individual might well expect medical
advise from a professional health care provider. Petrosky v.
Brasner,
718 N.Y.S.2d 340, 343 (A.D. 1 Dept.), leave to appeal
denied,
751 N.E.2d 945 (N.Y. 2001).
Plaintiff cites no authority establishing an insurance
company's duty to provide blood test results in the absence of a
request. Other jurisdictions have declined to create such a
duty. For example, in Petrosky, an insurance company ordered a
physical examination preliminary to issuing an insurance policy.
Id. at 342. The insurance company offered the decedent a special
tobacco-user's policy. However, it did not reveal the results of
an electrocardiogram, which indicated the applicant had a heart
condition. The decedent died from a heart attack two months
after the test was conducted. Ibid. The New York court affirmed
the dismissal of the plaintiff's case on the ground that the
decedent could not have relied on the insurance company to give a
medical diagnosis, but could only have expected an insurance
policy. The court observed that the Legislature could create
such a duty. Id. at 343. We agree. Any such change is best
left to the Legislature, which is traditionally the policy making
branch of government.
The New Jersey Legislature has imposed a limited duty on
insurance companies to make certain prescribed disclosures.
Under N.J.S.A. 17:23A-13.1, an insurance company is obligated to
disclose any communicable diseases discovered during an
examination due to the obvious public health risks involved. The
Legislature did not mandate an absolute duty to make disclosures
in other circumstances. It is not the function of a court to
expand legislation as a court might think more desirable.
Hence, the motion judge correctly concluded that the case
did not alter New Jersey law that no duty exists requiring
insurance companies to disclose all pre-insurance examination
results or even blood test results outside the "normal range" to
potential insured parties.
II.
The plaintiff argues that the federal district court's
denial of First Colony's F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) motion, similar to a
R. 4:6-2(e) motion, should be given a res judicata effect on the
litigation to prevent First Colony from relitigating the issue of
its liability.
Res judicata is a doctrine that declares that once a matter
has been fully litigated and resolved, it cannot be relitigated.
Lubliner v. Board of Alcoholic Beverage Control,
33 N.J. 428, 435
(1960). In order for res judicata to have effect, there must be
a valid, final judgment on the merits in the prior action; the
parties in the second action must be identical to, or in privity
with those in the first action; and the claim in the later action
must arise out of the same transaction or occurrence as the claim
in the first action. Watkins v. Resorts International Hotel and
Casino, Inc.,
124 N.J. 398, 412 (1991).
Plaintiff relies on Velasquez v. Franz,
123 N.J. 498 (1991),
which held that the grant of an F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) motion in the
federal court bars subsequent litigation in the state court
system. In Velasquez, the plaintiff lost part of his right hand
while operating machinery. He brought claims in the United
States District Court for the District of New Jersey on diversity
of citizenship jurisdiction. The defendants moved under 12(b)(6)
to dismiss plaintiff's cause of action for failing to state a
claim. The court granted the defendants' motion. Id. at 501-
502. The plaintiff did not appeal the dismissal, but instead
filed a virtually identical claim in the Superior Court, Law
Division. Defendants again moved to dismiss, relying also on res
judicata as a bar to the complaint. The Law Division dismissed
the complaint and we affirmed. The Supreme Court likewise
affirmed the dismissal of plaintiff's complaint, reasoning that
under federal procedural law a dismissal based on 12(b)(6) is an
adjudication on the merits. Unless the judge specifies that the
complaint is dismissed without prejudice, a 12(b)(6) motion has
res judicata effect on the cause of action. Id. at 507-508.
In the instant case, the plaintiff argues that denial of
First Colony's 12(b)(6) motion should have the same preclusive
effect against it as would apply if the motion had been granted,
as in Velasquez. However, a 12(b)(6) motion is decided on the
pleadings alone, and assumes the existence of the facts alleged
in the complaint. The federal judge merely said that if certain
of the facts alleged could be proven then it may be possible for
First Colony to be found liable. The subsequent development of
the factual record demonstrates that the federal case did not
decide the law of the case, but merely allowed plaintiffs to
proceed with their claim.
The federal judge relied on the allegations in plaintiff's
complaint that a physician, James Doe, M.D., had conducted the
examination and reviewed the results, and that a paramedic, John
Doe, obtained the blood sample. As noted above, it was later
established that Schiraldi, a graduate of a podiatry school, but
not a licensed physician, conducted the examination and drew the
blood. Plaintiff's theory was that the alleged unknown, but in
reality non-existent physician and paramedic, breached a duty to
the decedent. If First Colony was liable, it would be through
the actions of its agents. The stated basis of the federal
judge's holding turned on the involvement of a physician when he
said:
Thus, this case presents the issue of the
scope of the duty a physician retained by an
insurance company owes to someone who is sent
to this physician by the insurance company
for a pre-insurance examination. More
generally, the issue is the scope of a
physician's duty in the absence of a
traditional physician-patient relationship.
This case requires the Court to predict what
the New Jersey Supreme Court would do in an
area where the law is unclear.
The federal court judge relied on Beadling, supra (
41 N.J. 555), to attempt to predict that the New Jersey Supreme Court
would impose a duty on an unknown doctor, and possibly an unknown
paramedic, to have acted reasonably in the pre-insurance
examination. The judge concluded by stating that the only way to
hold First Colony liable would be through the breach of duty of
the physician and perhaps the paramedic. The judge recognized
that First Colony had no direct knowledge of any life threatening
condition because a policy was in fact issued.
In sum, unlike Velasquez, denial of the 12(b)(6) motion here
does not have res judicata effect because no final judgment was
entered. After looking at the pleadings alone, the judge merely
decided that at that posture a sufficient claim had been stated
to allow the case to proceed to discovery. No final judgment was
ever entered in the federal case because it was returned to the
Superior Court when diversity of citizenship was destroyed by
plaintiff's addition of defendants Schiraldi and Portamedic.
Subsequent discovery disclosed that the factual basis of the
pleadings, and thus the underpinning of the 12(b)(6) motion
denial, was erroneous. Therefore, the denial of the 12(b)(6)
motion neither established First Colony's liability nor had a
preclusive effect.
III.
At the argument on April 12, 2001, after the initial remand
by this court, plaintiff attempted to present a cryptic one page
certification of a Dr. Bell which only stated that there was a
"reasonable degree of medical probability" that the blood test
revealed "a potentially life threatening condition" warranting
further evaluation. Dr. Bell referred to no facts or basis for
his conclusory statement. The motion judge refused to consider
it.
We agree with First Colony that the motion judge properly
declined to consider Dr. Bell's certification. There was no
mistaken exercise of discretion by the motion judge in refusing
to consider the certification because it was little more than a
net opinion unsupported by any factual predicates or explanation.
Affirmed.
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5534-00T5
MARIA NOLAN, as Executrix
of the Estate of GUY NOLAN,
and MARIA NOLAN, individually,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
FIRST COLONY LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
PORTAMEDIC SERVICES, INC.,
DOMENIC SCHIRALDI, D.P.M.,
CLARA MAASS MEDICAL CENTER
and EDUARDO MONTEAGUDO, M.D.,
Defendants.
________________________________________________
KESTIN, J.A.D. (concurring)
While I concur in the result my colleagues have reached, I
respectfully disagree with their view that an insurance company
has no duty to disclose abnormal blood test results to a policy
applicant. We seem to have different understandings of the
meaning of Reed v. Bojarski,
166 N.J. 89 (2001). I take the
Supreme Court's language quoted by my colleagues as a conclusion
flowing from a general principle, not a statement of the
principle itself. In the quoted passage, the Court undeniably
determined that, in the circumstances presented, no traditional
physician-patient relationship existed, but it also stated that
the existence of that relationship was of "no moment" because
"[t]he exact nature of the relationship is simply a factor to be
considered in determining what duty exists." Id. at 106. The
full meaning of that declaration can be understood only in the
light of the preceding paragraph:
As we have often said, "'whether a duty
exists is ultimately a question of fairness.
The inquiry involves a weighing of the
relationship of the parties, the nature of
the risk, and the public interest in the
proposed solution.'" Kelly v. Gwinnell,
96 N.J. 538, 544,
476 A.2d 1219 (1984) (quoting
Goldberg v. Housing Auth.,
38 N.J. 578, 583,
186 A.2d 291 (1962)). A duty is said to
arise out of the existence of a relationship
between the "parties such that social policy
justifies" its imposition. W. Page Keeton et
al., Prosser & Keeton on the Law of Torts, §
56, at 374 (5th ed. 1984).
[Ibid.]
Clearly, the Supreme Court continues to be of the view that tort
duties arise from the qualities of a relationship not the status
of the parties.
I disagree also that resolution of the question at issue
should be left to the Legislature. In the common law, the
development of tort jurisprudence has always been a judicial
function subject, of course, to legislative oversight. See
Thomas v. Romeis,
234 N.J. Super. 364, 370-72 (App. Div. 1989)
(stressing the courts' role in defining the limits of tort
liability and quoting from Kelly v. Gwinnell,
96 N.J. 538, 547
(1984) that "the duty involved is a common law duty, not one
arising from . . . statute and regulation"); Ritchie-Gamester v.
City of Berkley,
597 N.W.2d 517, 523 (Mich. 1999) (noting that in
the absence of legislative action, "the development of [the
common law of torts] is up to the courts"); Saunders v. Alford,
607 So.2d 1214, 1219 (Miss. 1992) (stating "[t]he common law is
not static" and rejecting the argument that abolition of a common
law tort can only be accomplished by the legislature); Russo v.
Sutton,
422 S.E.2d 750, 753 (S.C. 1992) (same). The Supreme
Court does not shrink from that role, and neither should we.
In order to reach a sensible result in this case, it is not
necessary to depart from the general rule that no tort duty
exists requiring every person who becomes aware of a danger to
another to take steps to warn the person at risk of the existence
of the threat. See Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 314 (1965
and pertinent appendices); 2 Dan B. Dobbs, The Law of Torts, §
314 (2001); see also Praet v. Borough of Sayreville,
218 N.J.
Super. 218, 223-24 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
108 N.J. 681
(1987). Here, we are not dealing with general duties, but rather
with those arising from a special relationship, see generally
Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 314A (1965 and pertinent
appendices); see also Safer v. Estate of Pack,
291 N.J. Super. 619, 625-26 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
146 N.J. 568 (1996); cf.
McIntosh v. Milano,
168 N.J. Super. 466, 483-84 (Law Div. 1979)
(citing Restatement (Second) of Torts, §§ 314, 314A, 315 (1965)),
which came to exist when plaintiff's decedent applied for life
insurance and defendant carrier undertook to process that
application. It may well be untenable, as a general matter, to
hold an insurance carrier in such circumstances to a duty beyond
simple disclosure of a discovered potential threat to life or
health, but requiring only that step hardly seems onerous. The
duty of disclosure could be fully discharged by the simple
expedient of sending all blood test results to all policy
applicants with a form letter suggesting that they should consult
their physicians regarding any readings outside of normal ranges.
I concur rather than dissent, however, because of
plaintiff's failure to make an adequate prima facie showing on
summary judgment befitting the nature of this case. Plaintiff's
claim, at bottom, is one for increased risk of harm, see, e.g.,
Scafidi v. Seiler,
119 N.J. 93, 101-09 (1990); Evers v.
Dollinger,
95 N.J. 399, 412-17 (1984), occasioned by defendant's
failure to disclose information which plaintiff contends raised
some question about her decedent's health. Although the concept
of increased risk of harm has developed primarily in the context
of medical malpractice claims, there is no logical reason why it
should not also be applied where other types of special
relationship exist. See, e.g., Snyder v. American Ass'n of Blood
Banks,
144 N.J. 269, 292-98 (1996); Restatement (Second) of
Torts, § 323 (1965 and pertinent appendices). Nevertheless, this
plaintiff has made no adequate showing that the information which
defendant failed to disseminate signified so patent a deviation
from good-health norms that it would likely have led her decedent
to consult a physician and that, in turn, the physician would
likely have been led to take diagnostic steps that would probably
have resulted in discovery of the condition that, if promptly
treated, would have forestalled or prevented the decedent's
death. I agree with the majority that Dr. Bell's certification
was properly excluded as net opinion. It was clearly inadequate
to satisfy the prima facie showing plaintiff was required to make
to defeat defendant's motion for summary judgment. The fact that
the policy issued to plaintiff's decedent was a level lower than
"best preferred" for "medical reasons," i.e., the slightly
"elevated LFT's" indicated, is no surrogate for plaintiff's
responsibility to make an adequate prima facie showing.
Footnote: 1 1 Although we recognize that Maria Nolan sues in both a
representative and individual capacity, for simplicity we refer
to plaintiffs in the singular hereinafter.
Footnote: 2 2 Nolan's cholesterol level was reported as "low." As to
the deviation and significance of such ranges see Merck Manual,
p. 1374 (Home ed. 1997).
Footnote: 3 3 These defendants were involved in decedent's medical
treatment in 1994, but are not involved as respondents in this
appeal. The complaint, as amended, alleged that decedent's prior
medical records revealed "abnormal blood test results which were
not disclosed to plaintiff's decedent."
Footnote: 4 4 The blood chemistry report indicated that Nolan last had a
meal at 9:11 a.m. on November 11, 1996, and the specimen was
collected at 5:22 p.m. that date. The report also indicated:
"Date Recd: 96/11/16 Date Rptd: 11/14/96" and "Serum: Normal."
Footnote: 5 5 In his application Nolan answered in the affirmative
question 1 on a medical history questionnaire which asked if he
had "a regular care provider or treatment facility" and listed
his doctor's name and address. He also checked "yes" in response
to question 3f which asked if he had been treated for "hepatitis,
internal bleeding, ulcer, colitis, diverticula, or disorder of
the stomach, esophagus, liver, pancreas, spleen, intestines,
colon, rectum, or anus." He specifically wrote what appears to
be "Cholecystectomy" in 1993 at Clara Maass Memorial Center. See
note 2 supra. He also noted under a family history section that
his father died of kidney failure at age sixty-two.
Footnote: 6 6 The underwriting guidelines identified the normal range
for SGOT (AST) (glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase) as 0 U/L to 41
U/L (usually measured in Karmen units per liter). Nolan's
reading was a 45. This was 1.098 times the maximum in the normal
range, which can also be expressed as 9.8% above the normal
range. The normal range for SGPT (ALT) was 0 to 45 and Nolan
tested as 58. This was 1.289 times the maximum in the normal
range, or it can be expressed as 28.9% above the normal range.
GGT (GGTP) results showed 51 U/L with the normal range being 0 to
65 U/L. Alkaline Phosphatase was within the normal range.
Footnote: 7 7 The underwriting guidelines stated that heightened liver
enzyme levels could indicate alcohol abuse or special medical
conditions, such as diabetes. Dellinger concluded from the
questionnaire that decedent did not have either condition.
Having reached that conclusion, the manual directed that if the
GGTP levels were normal and the SGOT and/or SGPT levels were
normal or less than two times above normal, there should be a
risk rating of zero.
Footnote: 8 8 A note in First Colony's file stated: "CASE APPROVED PREF
NS COLLO 200k - NOT BEST DUE TO ELEVATED LFT'S."