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Local
Lawyer Who Beat Charge of Scamming
Widow Now Trying to Escape Punitives
By Michael Booth
New Jersey Law Journal
New York Lawyer
October 17, 2007
A New Jersey attorney and his client, who last May escaped
conviction on charges they unduly pressured an elderly widow to name
them as executor and beneficiary of her multimillion dollar estate,
now are trying to avoid punitive damages.
A New Jersey appeals court
ruled last December that although Ronald Casale and his client, Dr.
Ronald Sollitto, could not be forced to pay attorney fees to the
beneficiary they effectively disinherited, a jury could still assess
punitive damages against them.
Last week, Casale and a
lawyer for Sollitto argued to the state Supreme Court that to allow
such a remedy would clog the courts and drastically alter the law of
trusts and estates.
The case, In the Matter
of the Estate of Madeline Stockdale, A-121-06, stems from a
challenge to a 2000 will drafted by Casale that named Sollitto, his
friend and longtime client, as the chief beneficiary of Madeline
Stockdale's estate and Casale the sole executor. The challenger was
the Spring Lake First Aid Squad, which under an earlier will would
have received most of the estate.
Casale drafted the later
will for Stockdale, a nonagenarian, while she was in a
rehabilitation facility recovering from a hip fracture. It was
executed on Jan. 3, 2000, a day before she had throat surgery.
The same day, Stockdale
also signed a real estate contract -- drawn up by Spring Lake, N.J.,
solo Thomas Foley on instructions from Sollitto -- by which she
agreed to sell Sollitto her Spring Lake home for $1.3 million. The
contract required only a $1,000 initial deposit, followed by a
second deposit of $56,000, with Stockdale taking back a purchase
money mortgage for the rest. The will drafted by Casale excused
Sollitto's obligation to pay off the mortgage, since as residuary
beneficiary the money would go to him anyway.
Stockdale also gave
Sollitto power of attorney over her affairs. Stockdale died three
months later.
Superior Court Judge Ronald
Reisner of Monmouth County, N.J., refused to admit the 2000 will to
probate, saying it appeared to be the product of "sharp dealing" by
Casale and Sollitto. He also refused to enforce the sale of the
house.
Reisner denied the squad's
claim for punitive damages but awarded it $1,193,726 in counsel fees
against Sollitto and Casale, relying on In the Matter of the
Niles Trust, 176 N.J. 282 (2003). That case held that an estate
executor or trustee who benefits from undue influence to the
detriment of the estate may be required to pay counsel fees.
The Appellate Division
reversed, holding Niles did not apply because Sollitto was not an
executor or fiduciary, neither he nor Casale had depleted the estate
and there was no attorney-client relationship between the squad and
Casale.
However, the court remanded
for reconsideration of punitive damages, finding Reisner apparently
had mistakenly thought the fee award was the equivalent of a
punitive award. Casale and Sollitto appealed.
On Oct. 9, Sollitto's
lawyer, Frederick Dennehy, urged the state supreme court to reject
the squad's claim for punitive damages and counsel fees.
"The question of fee
shifting hovers like a ghost over all settlement negotiations" in
disputes over wills and estates, said Dennehy, of Woodbridge, N.J.'s
Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer.
"Punitive damages are a
much larger issue," he added. "We have the possibility that in ...
virtually every will contest, there will be an application and a
claim to entitlement for punitive damages."
The result, said Dennehy,
would be to clog the courts with estates that cannot be settled
because of the possibility of fee shifting and punitive damages.
"Why are you so fearful?"
asked Justice Roberto Rivera-Soto.
"This would be a seismic
change in the law of estates and trusts," Dennehy replied.
Rivera-Soto wasn't
convinced, asking Dennehy why rules concerning fee shifting and
punitive damages should not apply in will contests the way they do
in tort claims.
Dennehy said those rules
could apply if there were clear indications of fraud, but not of
undue influence.
"Undue influence covers a
very wide spectrum," Dennehy said.
Casale, arguing pro se,
said Niles did not apply here because there was no diminution
of the estate as in Niles. "In Niles, the Court had to send a
message out," said Casale, a former head of the New Jersey State Bar
Association's Real Property and Probate section.
Rivera-Soto asked about the
circumstances under which punitive damages might be awarded. Casale
said they could be available if there were compensatory damages, but
since there were none in this case, punitive damages cannot be
awarded, he said.
Casale added that there is
no evidence he exerted influence over Stockdale.
"There was not a single
finding that I exercised any undue influence," he said. "I couldn't
have. I didn't know the woman long enough." On May 11, a Monmouth
County jury hung on conspiracy and theft-by-deception charges
against Casale and Sollitto for allegedly bilking Stockdale out of
her fortune.
Casale told the justices
they would send a bad signal to the bar by ruling in favor of the
rescue squad.
"I know a lot of
practitioners who will stop doing wills and estates," he said. "It
will just be too risky."
The rescue squad's lawyer,
Spring Lake solo William Gearty, said the two did exert undue
influence over an elderly woman in ill health.
"They were the 'driving
force,'" said Gearty, quoting Reisner, even though Sollitto was not
a fiduciary. By persuading Stockdale to change her will, they
engaged in a "pernicious tort."
Several justices suggested
it may not be possible to rule in the rescue squad's favor because
there is no indication it suffered financially.
Gearty disagreed. "It's
difficult for the squad to accept the fact that it was not harmed at
all," he said. Stockdale's property is now worth about $5 million
and, under the terms of her original will, the rescue squad was to
be given the property after she died.
"They still don't have
title to the property seven years after Mrs. Stockdale died," Gearty
said.
Justice Virginia Long asked
Gearty to respond to Dennehy's assertion that a ruling in the rescue
squad's favor would jam up the Chancery Division with contested
claims.
The court's ruling in Niles
has not led to that result, said Gearty, and there is no reason to
believe it would happen if the court ruled in the rescue squad's
favor. "I don't see the floodgates opening in any fashion," he said.
"This case is identical to Niles."
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