JUSTICE PATTERSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this appeal, the Court considers an employee's agreement at the inception of his employment to prospectively waive third-party claims against his employer's customers, in the event that he were to sustain injuries in a workplace accident at a customer's facility.
Plaintiff Philip Vitale was hired by Allied Barton Security Services (Allied Barton) as a security guard. When it hired Vitale, Allied Barton required him to execute an agreement entitled "Worker's Comp Disclaimer" (Disclaimer) as a condition of his employment. In the Disclaimer, Vitale agreed to "waive and forever release any and all rights" that he may have had to assert a claim "against any customer... of Allied Security to which [Vitale] may be assigned, arising from or related to injuries which are covered under the Workers' Compensation statutes."
Allied Barton assigned Vitale to provide security services at a facility operated by its customer, defendant Schering-Plough Corporation (Schering-Plough). While on duty at that facility, Vitale was seriously injured in an accident. After recovering benefits under the Workers' Compensation Act, N.J.S.A. 34:15-1 to-146, Vitale filed a third-party action, alleging that Schering-Plough negligently maintained its premises and that its negligence caused his injuries. Schering-Plough moved for summary judgment, asserting that Vitale waived his negligence claims against Schering-Plough when he executed the Disclaimer. The trial court held that the Disclaimer was void as contrary to public policy and denied Schering-Plough's motion; the matter proceeded to trial. A jury returned a verdict in Vitale's favor and awarded substantial damages.
An Appellate Division panel affirmed the trial court's denial of summary judgment
We hold that the Disclaimer contravenes public policy as expressed in two provisions of the Workers' Compensation Act. First, N.J.S.A. 34:15-40 (section 40) provides that an employee's right to workers' compensation benefits does not preclude his or her assertion of common-law personal-injury or wrongful-death claims against a liable third party, and that the employer's workers' compensation carrier may be granted a lien against the employee's recovery in the third-party claim. By virtue of its waiver of any third-party action, the Disclaimer would alter the balancing of interests of the employer, the employee, and a potentially liable party that the Legislature envisioned when it enacted that provision.
Second, subject to an exception that is inapplicable here, N.J.S.A. 34:15-39 (section 39) expressly declares any "agreement, composition, or release of damages made before the happening of any accident" to be contrary to public policy. Section 39 is not limited to agreements to waive workers' compensation benefits; it governs Vitale's pre-accident agreement to forego any third-party claim against Schering-Plough in the event that he sustained a workplace injury on its premises. Section 39's plain language voids the Disclaimer in this case.
Accordingly, we affirm as modified the Appellate Division's judgment, and remand to the trial court for a new trial on the issue of liability.
We derive our account of the facts from the summary judgment record presented to the trial court.
Pursuant to the terms of a Master Vendor Agreement between Allied Barton and Schering-Plough, effective July 27, 2002, Allied Barton agreed to assign supervisory and general security officers to provide security services at Schering-Plough facilities. Under that agreement, the security officers would be Allied Barton employees but would report to work at Schering-Plough.
In August or September 2005, Allied Barton hired Vitale to work as a security officer. On September 27, 2005, Vitale signed the Disclaimer, which provided:
One of Vitale's responsibilities as a field manager was to ensure that the security officers under his supervision had appropriate uniforms. Beginning in 2008, the security officers' uniforms were stored in the basement of the main guardhouse of the Kenilworth facility. On ten to fifteen occasions, Vitale descended the stairs to retrieve uniforms for the officers.
While on duty on August 31, 2009, Vitale fell down the stairs that led to the guardhouse basement. Another security officer turned on the light in the stairwell and saw Vitale "laid out at the bottom of the stairs." The officer who found Vitale attributed his fall to the "cluttered" condition of the entrance to the stairwell. Vitale sustained injuries to his head, neck, shoulder, and lower back as a result of the accident.
Vitale filed a claim pursuant to the Workers' Compensation Act in the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development, Division of Workers' Compensation. In a settlement agreement incorporated in an Order Approving Settlement dated March 7, 2011, Vitale and Allied Barton resolved the workers' compensation claim. Vitale, who had received temporary disability benefits at a rate of $549.92 per week for thirty weeks, was awarded "30% of partial total [disability]," allocated among lower back, shoulder, and neurological injuries, for 180 weeks at a rate of $252.90 per week. Vitale did not return to his employment with Allied Barton.
Vitale then filed this action. He asserted that Schering-Plough owed him a duty of care as a business invitee working on its premises, that he was injured because Schering-Plough had negligently maintained its facility and failed to warn him of a dangerous condition, and that he was entitled to compensatory damages.
After obtaining a copy of the Disclaimer in discovery, Schering-Plough moved before the trial court for summary judgment pursuant to
The case was tried before a jury. The trial court granted Vitale's motion for a directed verdict on the question of his comparative negligence. The court did not permit the jury to consider whether Vitale was negligent in descending the stairs without turning on the stairwell light, or to allocate fault to him pursuant to the Comparative Negligence Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.8. The jury determined that Schering-Plough was negligent and that its negligence was a proximate cause of Vitale's injuries and awarded $900,000 in compensatory damages. The trial court denied Schering-Plough's motion for a new trial.
Schering-Plough appealed. An Appellate Division panel affirmed in part and reversed in part the trial court's judgment.
The panel, however, held that because of evidence admitted at trial that Vitale descended the stairs without turning on the stairwell light, the trial court should have instructed the jury to consider whether Vitale's negligence was a proximate cause of his accident and to decide whether a percentage of fault should be allocated to him.
We granted Schering-Plough's petition for certification, in which Schering-Plough raised only the question of whether it was entitled to summary judgment by virtue of the Disclaimer. 228 N.J. 421, 157 A.3d 842 (2016). We denied Vitale's cross-petition for certification, in which he challenged the Appellate Division's grant of a new trial as to liability. 228 N.J. 430, 157 A.3d 847 (2016).
Schering-Plough urges the Court to reverse the Appellate Division's judgment and enter summary judgment in its favor. It argues that because New Jersey courts routinely enforce contracts limiting an employee's rights if they are clear and unambiguous, the Disclaimer should bar Vitale's claim. Schering-Plough asserts that the Disclaimer does not adversely affect the public interest because Vitale had ample notice that his employment as a security guard for Allied Barton's customers entailed a risk of injury. It also contends that the Disclaimer is consonant with the objectives of the Workers' Compensation Act because it preserves the remedies against the employer prescribed by that statute.
Vitale asserts that because the Disclaimer is a contract of adhesion and an exculpatory contract, it must be scrutinized to determine whether it is contrary to public policy. He argues that the Disclaimer contravenes both the deterrent objective of tort law and the protective policies of the Workers' Compensation Act, as expressed in section 39, section 40, and other provisions of the Act.
Amicus curiae Allied Barton contends that the Disclaimer serves the legitimate business objective of shielding Allied Barton's clients from litigation, and notes that the Disclaimer had no impact on Vitale's right to recover the benefits to which he was entitled under the Workers' Compensation Act.
Amicus curiae New Jersey Civil Justice Institute argues that because the Disclaimer protects Allied Barton's clients and ensures that Vitale receives appropriate workers' compensation benefits, it strikes an appropriate balance in the employer-employee-client business relationship. New Jersey Civil Justice Institute contends that the Disclaimer does not create a disincentive to a client company's maintenance of a safe premises because Allied Barton's clients will in any event be motivated to ensure a safe workplace for their own employees.
Amici curiae National Employment Lawyers Association of New Jersey and New Jersey Industrial Union Council assert that Vitale received no valid consideration for his execution of the Disclaimer. They contend that the Disclaimer is void
Amicus curiae New Jersey Association for Justice notes that the Workers' Compensation Act is remedial social legislation and should therefore be liberally construed. It argues that the Disclaimer violates public policy because it encourages Allied Barton's clients to perpetuate inadequate health and safety practices and affords to Allied Barton an unfair competitive advantage over companies that do not compel their employees to enter into exculpatory contracts.
The trial court premised its denial of Schering-Plough's motion for summary judgment on its conclusion that the Disclaimer was contrary to public policy, and thus unenforceable. We review that legal determination de novo, affording "no deference to an interpretation of law that flows from established facts."
The agreement at the center of this appeal is a private contract, subject to the general principle that parties "are afforded the liberty to bind themselves as they see fit."
In this appeal, Vitale contends that the Disclaimer is unenforceable on two closely-related grounds: that it is a contract of adhesion that is unconscionable because it offends public policy, and that it is an exculpatory contract that is contrary to public policy. We consider these arguments in turn.
"[T]he essential nature of a contract of adhesion is that it is presented on a take-it-or-leave-it basis, commonly in a standardized printed form, without opportunity for the `adhering' party to negotiate except perhaps on a few particulars."
In evaluating a claim that an adhesion contract is unconscionable, courts consider four factors that "focus on procedural and substantive aspects of the contract `to determine whether the contract is so oppressive, or inconsistent with the vindication of public policy, that it would be unconscionable to permit its enforcement.'"
Vitale makes no claim on appeal that the Disclaimer is procedurally unconscionable.
Exculpatory agreements "violate the aims underlying our tort law: deterrence of careless behavior and compensation by the wrongdoer for injuries sustained by victims."
Our law "does not demand a per se ban against enforcement of an exculpatory agreement based on the mere existence of a duty recognized in the common law in respect of premises liability."
"To the extent that any contract of adhesion also would require review to determine whether its enforcement implicates a matter of public interest, that test overlaps, and is subsumed by the more precise analysis employed when assessing whether to enforce an exculpatory agreement."
In the contrasting settings of
We affirmed the determination of the trial court and Appellate Division that the disputed provision was enforceable to bar the negligence claim asserted by the plaintiff,
In
We reversed the determination of the Appellate Division, which had affirmed the trial court's dismissal of the employee's action based on the six-month limitations period prescribed by the agreement.
As we did in
For more than a century, the Workers' Compensation Act has provided employees injured in the workplace "medical treatment and limited compensation `without regard to the negligence of the employer.'"
If the employee's "injury or death is compensable" pursuant to the Act, "a person shall not be liable to anyone at common law or otherwise on account of such injury or death for any act or omission occurring while such person was in the same employ as the [employee who was] injured or killed, except for intentional wrong." N.J.S.A. 34:15-8;
The compensation scheme presented "in article 2 of the [A]ct, enters by operation of law into every contract of hiring made in this state unless there be an affirmative rejection of the plan for the alternative common law liability for negligence as modified by the provisions of
In section 40 of the Workers' Compensation Act, the Legislature addressed the employee's right to file a tort action against potentially liable third parties:
In enacting section 40, the Legislature did not express a policy in favor of an employee's recovery of damages based on his or her tort claims, or otherwise address the merits of the third-party common-law claim that the statute preserves.
"Section 40 permits a workers' compensation insurance carrier to seek reimbursement of benefits it pays when a third[]party, other than the employer, caused the employee's injury."
Thus, "the legislative scheme which emerges is a plan to permit an injured worker to collect worker[s'] compensation benefits and pursue his common law remedy against the third-party tortfeasor."
In section 39, the Legislature declared a public policy regarding certain agreements entered into in advance of a workplace accident:
That provision addressing pre-accident agreements has been a component of the Workers' Compensation Act since 1913, when section 39's similarly-worded predecessor statute was enacted as an amendment to the Act.
The Legislature, however, did not restrict section 39 or its predecessor statute to the waiver of workers' compensation benefits through pre-accident agreements, as it could have by means of a simple modification of the statutory language. Instead, the Legislature chose expansive terminology in section 39. It provided that no pre-accident "agreement, composition, or release of damages," other than an agreement authorized by N.J.S.A. 34:15-7, would bar a claim for "damages" — the same term that appears in section 40 to describe the remedy that an employee would pursue in a third-party claim.
Our interpretation of section 39 is consistent with a decision construing section 39's predecessor statute, section 23, shortly after the provision was enacted. In
In sum, we view sections 39 and 40 of the Workers' Compensation Act to state public policy governing this appeal. Under section 40, the Act does not bar or limit common-law premises liability claims against potentially liable third parties, but provides for a lien on the employee's recovery that may relieve the financial burden of a compensation award on the employer's workers' compensation carrier. N.J.S.A. 34:15-40(b) and (f). To ensure that the statutory scheme properly balances the interests of the employee, the employer, the employer's workers' compensation carrier and any potentially liable third party, the Legislature declared in section 39 that any pre-accident "agreement, composition or release of damages" other than that defined in N.J.S.A. 34:15-7, is contrary to public policy. N.J.S.A. 34:15-39.
Applying the contract principles set forth in
The Disclaimer, by which Vitale waived "any claims arising from or related to injuries which are covered under the Workers' Compensation statutes," constitutes an "agreement, composition or release of damages made before the happening of any accident." N.J.S.A. 34:15-39. It is not an agreement authorized by N.J.S.A. 34:15-7, and is therefore not within the sole exception identified in section 39.
Moreover, were the Disclaimer to be enforced, it would undermine the Legislature's purpose when it enacted section 40 of the Workers' Compensation Act. It would not only deprive Vitale of the opportunity to pursue a common-law action against a potentially culpable third party, but would eliminate Allied Barton's workers' compensation carrier's lien on any damages awarded to Vitale in his third-party action. The Disclaimer would disrupt the balancing of interests that the Legislature sought to achieve when it incorporated section 40 into the statutory scheme.
Accordingly, we concur with the trial court's determination that the Disclaimer is unenforceable because it contravenes public policy. We hold that the trial court properly denied Schering-Plough's motion for summary judgment under
We affirm as modified the judgment of the Appellate Division, and remand for a new trial on the issue of liability.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE PATTERSON's opinion.