                        NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                      APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
     This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
      Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
        parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.




                                       SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                       APPELLATE DIVISION
                                       DOCKET NO. A-1200-15T2

RICHARD J. MANGONE, JR.,
Administrator of the Estate
of KATHLEEN ANN MANGONE, and
RICHARD J. MANGONE, JR.,
Individually,

        Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

MORRIS COUNTY SURGICAL CENTER,
and JOHN G. SORIANO, M.D.,

        Defendants,

and

VADIM BARG, M.D.,

     Defendant-Respondent.
_______________________________

              Argued March 22, 2017 – Decided October 17, 2017

              Before Judges Simonelli, Carroll and Gooden
              Brown.

              On appeal from the Superior Court of New
              Jersey, Law Division, Morris County, Docket
              No. L-2661-14.

              Thomas D. Flinn argued the cause for appellant
              (Garrity, Graham, Murphy, Garofalo & Flinn,
              PC, attorneys; Mr. Flinn, on the briefs).
           Sam Rosenberg argued the cause for respondent
           Vadim Barg, M.D. (Rosenberg Jacobs & Heller,
           PC, attorneys; Mr. Rosenberg, of counsel;
           Jayne E. Turner and Douglas F. Ciolek, on the
           brief).

     The opinion of the court was delivered by

GOODEN BROWN, J.A.D.

     In this medical malpractice case, plaintiff appeals from

companion orders entered on June 15, 2015, which denied his motion

to be relieved from the requirements of N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27, and

dismissed his complaint with prejudice against defendant Vadim

Barg, M.D.    The trial court dismissed the complaint because

plaintiff failed to file an affidavit of merit (AOM) as required

by N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27.    The court denied plaintiff's application

for relief from the statutory requirement because he failed to

establish grounds for filing a sworn statement in lieu of an AOM

(SIL) under N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28.   Plaintiff argues the court should

have permitted him to file a SIL.      We disagree and affirm.

                                      I.

     A motion to dismiss for failure to provide an AOM or SIL is

equivalent to a motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of

action.   N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-29.   As a result, we recite the facts in

the light most favorable to plaintiff.     Nostrame v. Santiago, 213

N.J. 109, 113 (2013).    Kathleen Ann Mangone stopped breathing and



                                  2                              A-1200-15T2
developed   bradycardia1    and   pulseless   asystole2   during    an

esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD)3 procedure at defendant, Morris

County Surgical Center (MCSC), on June 24, 2013.     She was rushed

to the hospital and placed on life support, where she remained

until her death on July 1, 2013.       Defendant, John G. Soriano,

M.D., was the gastroenterologist, and defendant Vadim Barg, M.D.,

was the anesthesiologist.   On October 27, 2014, Kathleen Mangone's

husband, plaintiff Richard Mangone, Jr., individually and in his

capacity as administrator of the estate, filed this action alleging

medical malpractice by defendants.



1
  Bradycardia "is a slower than normal heart rate." Mayo Clinic
Staff, Diseases and Conditions, Bradycardia, Definition, MAYO
CLINIC (Aug. 23, 2017), http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-
conditions/bradycardia/basics/definition/con-20028373.
2
 Asystole "is a state of cardiac standstill with no cardiac output
and no ventricular depolarization, . . . [and] eventually occurs
in all dying patients." Sandy N. Shah, Asystole, MEDSCAPE (Dec.
26, 2015) http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/757257-overview.
3
  An EGD "is a procedure to diagnose and treat problems in [the]
upper GI (gastrointestinal) tract[,]" which "includes [the] food
pipe (esophagus), stomach, and the first part of [the] small
intestine (the duodenum)." The procedure is performed "using a
long, flexible tube called an endoscope[,]" which contains "a tiny
light and video camera on one end." The tube is inserted "into
[the] mouth and throat[,] . . . slowly pushed through [the]
esophagus and stomach, . . . and into [the] duodenum." Upper GI
Endoscopy,            JOHN            HOPKINS            MEDICINE,
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/healthlibrary/test_procedures/gas
troenterology/esophagogastroduodenoscopy_92,P07717.



                                  3                          A-1200-15T2
       Prior to filing suit, plaintiff requested medical records

from MCSC related to his wife's procedure.            Plaintiff received

some, but not all, of the requested documents.             On May 22, 2014,

and again on June 18, 2014, plaintiff's counsel requested that

MCSC   produce    the   oxygen   saturation   monitoring    and   anesthesia

records.     MCSC responded that the records previously provided

"included the manual record of monitored oxygen saturation."             MCSC

also provided Dr. Barg's anesthesia records and a transcription

of his handwritten notes.

       On October 27, 2014, plaintiff filed suit against MCSC, Barg,

and Soriano.       Defendants filed separate answers.             Barg's and

Soriano's answers each demanded an AOM.4          On December 15, 2014,

plaintiff served a subpoena duces tecum and ad testificandum as

well as deposition notices on four MCSC employees, "who were

present before, during and/or after the procedure[,]" demanding

that they appear and produce "[a]ny notes in [their] possession

in connection with the medical treatment of [the decedent] on June

24, 2013."       Plaintiff explained that he wanted to depose these

witnesses to determine whether they had information about the



4
  On May 13, 2015, the court dismissed plaintiff's complaint
against Soriano with prejudice for failure to comply with the AOM
statute, and a voluntary stipulation of dismissal with prejudice
was entered on October 8, 2015, against MCSC. Plaintiff's appeal
pertains solely to Barg.

                                      4                              A-1200-15T2
decedent's heart rate and oxygen saturation levels, particularly

whether     the    decedent's       pulse       oxygen   was     depressed     before

bradycardia set in.

     Over    the    next    three    months,       the   four    depositions      were

completed.       Through the depositions, plaintiff learned there was

an EKG machine monitoring oxygen saturation during the procedure

that was capable of producing a print out or strip.                          However,

according to one of MCSC's attending nurses, EKG strips were not

generated during the decedent's procedure.                Further, MCSC's former

director of nursing testified during her deposition that when she

returned    to    the   operating     room      after    the    decedent   had    been

transported to the hospital, she could not print out a monitoring

strip from the EKG machine because the machine had already been

"cleaned" and "shut off," and "there was nothing that [she] could

see to retrieve at that point."

     By then, the initial sixty-day period for filing an AOM was

about to expire.        On February 4, 2015, the court entered a consent

order giving plaintiff an additional sixty days to serve an AOM,

thereby extending the filing deadline to April 8, 2015 as to Barg.

On February 6, 2015, plaintiff served a deposition notice for Barg

to be deposed on February 19, 2015.                In response, Barg's counsel

requested that the deposition be postponed because of scheduling

issues and the fact that plaintiff had yet to be deposed.                    Instead

                                            5                                 A-1200-15T2
of postponing, on February 18, 2015, plaintiff filed a motion to

compel Barg's deposition pursuant to Rule 4:23-5(c).                  Plaintiff

asserted that Barg's counsel's "preference that the plaintiff be

the first to be deposed has no basis in the rules or the caselaw."

     In    a    February    25,   2015   letter    to   the   court   opposing

plaintiff's motion, Barg's counsel asserted "it is patently unfair

for Dr. Barg to appear for his deposition without the requisite

discovery responses, [AOM] and complete medical records in this

matter."       In a March 2, 2015 letter to the court replying to

defendant's opposition, plaintiff asserted for the first time that

his expert "advised that he will be unable to prepare an [AOM]

until after Dr. Barg is deposed, due to the unique circumstances

of this case."

     On March 25, 2015, plaintiff filed a motion for permission

to serve a SIL5 or, alternatively, for an extension of time to

serve an AOM.        Plaintiff attributed its predicament to defendants'

dilatory tactics and obstruction in failing to timely produce

witnesses      for    deposition.    In      support,   plaintiff's     counsel

certified that "[b]y failing to appear for deposition, . . . Dr.


5
  The statute does not expressly require that a plaintiff first
seek leave from the court to file a SIL. However, to avoid the
uncertainty that the SIL may be rejected, a plaintiff may
reasonably seek advance approval of a SIL, so that alternative
steps can be taken if the SIL is rejected.


                                         6                              A-1200-15T2
Barg has failed to provide the plaintiff[] with information having

a substantial bearing on the preparation of an [AOM]."                According

to plaintiff's counsel, because Barg's testimony "will be of vital

import to determining the cause of [decedent's] death and have a

substantial bearing on preparation of an [AOM,]" the court should

"deem it unnecessary" for plaintiff to file an AOM "since at least

forty-five days have elapsed since . . . Barg was served with a

deposition notice," and "failed to appear for deposition[.]"

       On April 7, 2015, plaintiff filed a SIL with the court 6 in

which plaintiff's counsel essentially reiterated the certification

accompanying the earlier motion.             Plaintiff's counsel averred that

their expert "could not prepare an [AOM] based on the medical

records alone" because "the records were missing documentation

pertaining to [the decedent's] heart rate and oxygen saturation

levels during the procedure."            According to plaintiff's counsel,

"an affidavit of merit [was] not required pursuant to N.J.S.A.

2A:53A-27."     Barg opposed the motion, confirming that the records

at issue were previously provided to plaintiff, including Barg's

transcription of his notations in the chart.

       On   April   13,   2015,   Barg   filed    a   motion   to   dismiss   the

complaint with prejudice for failure to serve an AOM.               On June 15,



6
    The SIL was sent to defense counsel on March 31, 2015.

                                         7                              A-1200-15T2
2015, the court denied plaintiff's motions and granted Barg's

motion, concluding that "not providing an [AOM] results in a

failure to state a cause of action" pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-

29.      The court rejected plaintiff's SIL and determined that

plaintiff failed to make a written request for the discovery, as

required by N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28 and Scaffidi v. Horvitz, 343 N.J.

Super.    552   (App.   Div.   2001).       The   court    explained      that    in

plaintiff’s various discovery demands, no mention was made to the

opposing party that the information was necessary to complete an

AOM.    The court observed that plaintiff's March 2, 2015 letter to

the court was the first time plaintiff notified defendant that

their    expert   was   unable   to     prepare    an     AOM   without     Barg's

deposition.

       According to the court,

            Scaffidi stands for the proposition that if a
            plaintiff   is   propounding   discovery   for
            purposes of gathering information . . . in
            order to assist -- or upon which an expert
            would base an affidavit of merit, there has
            to be notice of the need for the demanded
            information . . . by discovery request. There
            . . . must be notification to the . . .
            deponent or to counsel, to whomever it is that
            the information is required for purposes of
            preparation of an affidavit of merit . . . .

                 Now here the earliest that Dr. Barg could
            have known anything about the need for his
            deposition relative to an affidavit of merit
            was the letter, reply letter of March 2nd
            filed in connection with . . . the effort to

                                        8                                  A-1200-15T2
            compel his deposition. But that is not a sworn
            statement . . . and it doesn’t comply with the
            statute.

The court noted that even if the March 2, 2015 letter could be

construed   as   the   required   demand   for   the   information,        "the

recipient has to get 45 days under the statute[,]"             which would

expire on April 16, 2015, beyond the April 8, 2015 AOM filing

deadline.    In addition, the court observed

                 [T]he reply letter brief of March 2nd was
            addressed only to the need for Dr. Barg’s
            testimony and not to the need for any medical
            records to be provided by Morris County
            Surgical Center. So there . . . was no clear
            statement throughout discovery that the
            information sought was crucial or important
            or significant to the preparation of the
            . . . affidavit of merit.

In denying plaintiff's request for another extension of the AOM

filing deadline, the court relied on Douglass v. Obade, 359 N.J.

Super. 159 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 177 N.J. 575 (2003), and

determined it lacked authority to grant such a request.                    This

appeal followed.

                                    II.

     We   exercise     plenary   review   of   the   trial   court's     order

dismissing plaintiff's complaint.         Rezem Family Assocs., L.P. v.

Borough of Millstone, 423 N.J. Super. 103, 114 (App. Div.), certif.

denied, 208 N.J. 366 (2011); R. 4:6-2(e).               Because statutory

construction is a legal issue subject to de novo review, Perez v.

                                     9                                 A-1200-15T2
Zagami, LLC, 218 N.J. 202, 209 (2014), we review de novo the

court's   interpretation   of   N.J.S.A.   2A:53A-28,      and    its

determination that plaintiff was not entitled to avail himself of

a SIL.

     An AOM is "an affidavit of an appropriate licensed person

that there exists a reasonable probability that the care, skill

or knowledge exercised or exhibited in the treatment, practice or

work that is the subject of the complaint, fell outside acceptable

professional or occupational standards or treatment practices."

N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27.   It must be filed within sixty days after a

defendant files an answer, which the court may extend one time for

no more than another sixty-day period.   Ibid.   The AOM statute is

designed to require plaintiffs in a professional negligence action

to show that their claims have merit, so that those that do not

can be dismissed at an early stage of the litigation.       Buck v.

Henry, 207 N.J. 377, 393 (2011).     However, the statute is not

intended to create "hidden pitfalls" for meritorious claims.      Id.

at 383.

     To that end, the statute provides a safety valve in the form

of the SIL as follows:

          An affidavit shall not be required . . . if
          the plaintiff provides a sworn statement in
          lieu of the affidavit setting forth that: the
          defendant has failed to provide plaintiff with
          medical   records   or    other   records   or

                                10                           A-1200-15T2
          information having a substantial bearing on
          preparation of the affidavit; a written
          request therefor along with, if necessary, a
          signed authorization by the plaintiff for
          release of the medical records or other
          records or information requested, has been
          made by certified mail or personal service;
          and at least 45 days have elapsed since the
          defendant received the request.

          [N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28.]

     "N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28 reflects a legislative recognition that

a plaintiff may be prevented from making [a threshold showing that

the claims asserted are meritorious] if a defendant fails to

produce   essential   medical   records   or    other   information."

Scaffidi, supra, 343 N.J. Super. at 558.       However, a defendant's

failure to timely respond to a document request does not invariably

relieve a plaintiff from complying with the AOM statute.        Ibid.

Rather,

          N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28 applies only to "medical
          records or other records having a substantial
          bearing on preparation of the affidavit[.]" A
          plaintiff may request a great variety of
          documents to assist in the preparation of a
          case   that   are   not   essential   for   the
          preparation   of   an   affidavit   of   merit.
          Moreover, it generally would be difficult, if
          not impossible, for a defendant to distinguish
          between documents that have "a substantial
          bearing on preparation of the affidavit [of
          merit]" and documents that may simply aid the
          plaintiff in the eventual proof of a case at
          trial. Therefore, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28 must be
          construed to require a plaintiff to identify
          with specificity any medical records or other
          information he believes are needed to prepare

                                11                            A-1200-15T2
          an affidavit of merit, in order to trigger the
          forty-five day period for a response.

          [Id. at 558-59.]

In Scaffidi, we affirmed the dismissal of the complaint after

concluding that the plaintiff could not resort to a SIL because

he failed to specify that logs, which were requested among numerous

other documents sought in a notice to produce, were needed to

prepare the AOM.   Ibid.

     Similarly, in Guzman v. Jersey City Medical Center, 356 N.J.

Super. 37, 39-40 (App. Div. 2002), we held a plaintiff was not

entitled to file a SIL where (1) the records or information did

not exist because they were never created in the first place, and

(2) they played no role in preparing an AOM.   There, the plaintiff

claimed the defendant-hospital was negligent when its emergency

room personnel failed to admit and treat him in a timely manner.

Id. at 39. After the ER staff allegedly ignored him, the plaintiff

left and sought treatment elsewhere.   Ibid.   We held the plaintiff

could not excuse his failure to file an AOM on the ground that the

hospital failed to produce medical records when the plaintiff was

never treated.   Id. at 42.   "[A] plaintiff cannot avoid the [AOM]

requirement . . . by requesting documents he or she does not

reasonably believe to exist and be necessary for 'preparation of

the affidavit.'"   Id. at 40 (quoting N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-28).


                                 12                          A-1200-15T2
       However, when a defendant engages in a wholesale refusal to

produce the medical records that it concededly possesses, "it

should be presumed" that the withheld records have "a substantial

bearing on preparation of the affidavit" as required by N.J.S.A.

2A:53A-28.   Aster ex rel. Garofalo v. Shoreline Behavioral Health,

346 N.J. Super. 536, 543 (App. Div. 2002).     In such a case, the

defendant bears the burden to demonstrate that the withheld records

are not pertinent to an AOM.    Id. at 549.   Furthermore, the SIL

shall be deemed to have been filed as of the plaintiff's initial

request for the never-furnished documents or information.    Id. at

546.    Otherwise, it is subject to the same sixty-day period set

forth in N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-27.   Id. at 550.

       We recognized in Balthazar v. Atlantic City Medical Center,

358 N.J. Super. 13, 22 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 177 N.J. 221

(2003), that acts of negligence will often be unrecorded; however,

a plaintiff must still show that the absence of such records

impedes preparation of an AOM. In Balthazar, the plaintiff claimed

that in the course of a hysterectomy, her physician negligently

sutured and transected her left ureter.   Id. at 16-17.   After the

surgeon could not find her dictated post-operative report in the

chart, she dictated a second one, labeled "redictation."    Id. at

20.    None of the various versions of this report mentioned the

suturing or transection and the physician testified she was unaware

                                13                          A-1200-15T2
the damage occurred.        Ibid.      However, evidence of the damage

appeared in later studies, as well as in the report of another

physician's reparative surgery.          Ibid.

    The plaintiff contended that a SIL was permitted because it

was "impossible to provide an [AOM] when no authentic medical

record exists[,]" alleging that the initial surgeon fraudulently

altered her report when she prepared the redictation.            Id. at 21.

We disagreed and held that the absence of any reference to the

suturing and transection in the initial surgeon's report did not

justify a SIL, even if one assumed the initial surgeon tampered

with her report.       Id. at 22.   We explained:

             [E]ven if we were to acknowledge fraud in what
             appears to us to have been an innocent re-
             dictation, we can find no causal relationship
             between that fraud and any inability on
             plaintiff's part to determine the nature of
             her injury and prepare an affidavit of merit.
             In this case, like many others, defendants
             claim that the damage that was inflicted was
             unknown to them and thus was unrepaired and
             unrecorded. This asserted lack of knowledge
             on defendants' part provides a factual
             foundation   for   [plaintiff's]   malpractice
             claim.    It does not provide grounds for
             avoidance of the requirements of the affidavit
             of merit.

             [Ibid.]

    Applying these principles here, plaintiff has fallen far

short   of   establishing    grounds   for   filing   a   SIL.   We    reject

plaintiff's assertion that "Scaffidi was wrongly decided, and

                                    14                                A-1200-15T2
should not be relied upon by this [c]ourt[.]"      As a threshold

matter, plaintiff is procedurally barred from utilizing a SIL.

Although a SIL may relate back to the date records were requested,

plaintiff has presented no written request for "medical records

or other records or information[,]" particularly one served by

certified mail or personal service, forty-five days in advance of

the SIL. We are not persuaded that the February 6, 2015 deposition

notice served on Barg satisfies the required request contemplated

under the statute.    As a substantive matter, plaintiff did not

file a sworn statement that specifically identified the records

he needed from Barg, and there is no claim that Barg failed to

turn over requested records.     Again, we are unpersuaded that

plaintiff's counsel's reference in her sworn statement to Barg's

"fail[ure] to appear for deposition" sufficed to permit plaintiff

to resort to a SIL.

     Affirmed.




                               15                          A-1200-15T2
