The New Jersey Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday about whether a New York health care lawyer and a California chiropractor can be held liable for violating the state’s Insurance Fraud Prevention Act by helping a New Jersey chiropractor set up a multidisciplinary practice in violation of state regulations.
At stake is whether the attorney, Robert Borsody, and the California chiropractor, Daniel Dahan, can be held liable for nearly $4 million in damages for violating the fraud prevention act when they helped a New Jersey chiropractor, J. Scott Neuner, in 1996, set up a practice, Northfield Medical Center, in which a series of medical doctors were listed as the directors, while Neuner, in fact, was the sole owner.
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