|

"Sickened" Local Judge Reversed in Spat
Between Local Ex-Law Partners
New Jersey Law Journal
New York Lawyer
September 8, 2008
Judge Who Scoffed at Dispute Between Former Law Partners Is Reversed
By Mary Pat Gallagher A trial judge had an obligation to hold a
plenary hearing on disputed issues in a suit between two former law
firm partners, even if he thought the matter petty and unworthy of
the lawyers involved, an appeals court ruled on Tuesday.
The panel reversed Monmouth
County Superior Court Judge Alexander Lehrer, who decided
motions to enforce litigants' rights based on conflicting
certifications, after calling the dispute "the most ridiculous thing
I've ever seen" and questioning whether the amount at issue
justified the cost of a hearing.
Appellate Division
Judges Edwin Stern and Christine Miniman said that although they
had "great respect for [Lehrer's] belief that the litigation might
be more costly than the amount in dispute . . . , the court has an
obligation to decide the dispute when one exists."
The case, Goldman v.
Rubin, A-0297-07, arose from the dissolution of Hayt, Hayt &
Landau more than five years ago. Russell Goldman and
Martin Rubin were partners at the Eatontown collections firm for
more than 10 years. They were the only equity partners when Goldman
left around 2003. They were also co-owners of First National
Acceptance Co., or FNAC, which bought up delinquent consumer
accounts for collection.
Goldman sued Rubin, the
firm and FNAC on Oct. 31, 2003, over his share of the practice and
business. They resolved the FNAC claims on May 28, 2004, by agreeing
to split FNAC into two entities: Sycamore Financial Services, owned
by Goldman, and First American Acceptance Co., owned by Rubin.
Sycamore was to pay the cost for the hundreds of substitutions of
counsel needed.
On Oct. 6, 2004, Goldman
and Rubin struck a deal on the claims over the firm's dissolution.
Rubin was to pay Goldman $57,000 by Jan. 5, 2005, and another
$120,000 in five equal installments, starting Nov. 1, 2005. Rubin
missed the $57,000 payment and the first installment but paid after
Goldman obtained court orders.
On Nov. 1, 2006, an
installment of $24,000 plus $5,280 in interest was due, but Rubin
paid only $6,025.31. He arrived at that amount by deducting $10,000
for half the deductible in connection with two malpractice claims;
$826.73 for fees advanced by the firm to out-of-state counsel;
$8,090.63 for half the alleged cost of transferring the FNAC
accounts; and $3,125 for preparing 297 substitutions of counsel.
Rubin deducted $7,012.50 for exporting and converting file data to
Excel format and reduced the interest to $4,067.
Goldman again asked the
court to enforce the settlement, though he and Rubin resolved some
differences by the time the motion was argued on March 16, 2007. On
that date, Goldman asked Lehrer for the rest of the money, copies of
the substitutions of attorney, a certification that Rubin had not
removed documents from files transferred to Sycamore and a three-day
deadline for Rubin to turn over payments on transferred files.
Rubin cross-moved for a
ruling that he had complied with the settlement and Goldman was in
breach and a declaration that all data had been transfered.
During oral argument,
Lehrer expressed frustration over "two very good, very competent
professionals, engaged in a divorce that never ends." He remarked
about the cross-motion that it "makes me sick even to read this" and
threatened to appoint a receiver.
He was skeptical about
whether the parties really wanted an evidentiary hearing: "Let's
spend $60,000 in legal fees for me to determine whether or not one
lawyer owes another lawyer $24,000." He also referred sarcastically
to "the magnificent issue of whether or not one is entitled to
copies of files or the originals of files."
On July 6, 2007, without a
hearing, Lehrer found Rubin in compliance with the settlement and
the deductions proper, and denied Goldman's requests. Saying the
only amount in dispute was $826.73, Lehrer called it "bizarre that
these lawyers would spend tens of thousands of dollars to argue"
over so little.
On appeal, Goldman argued
that it was not just the $826 that was in dispute. He also contended
that Lehrer should not have resolved contested factual issues based
on conflicting certifications.
The appeals panel agreed.
The setoffs claimed by Rubin required Lehrer to construe the
agreement and if it was ambiguous, to consider parol evidence of the
parties' intent, the panel said. There also must be a detailed line
item bill for the legal services deducted by Rubin and a finding of
reasonableness.
On remand, the case should
be assigned to another judge "out of an excess of caution" because
Lehrer's cracks about the lawsuit could be construed as expressing
an opinion on credibility, the panel said.
That issue is moot as
Lehrer has retired. Now the chief risk officer for Meridian Health
in Neptune, he says, "I felt that it was my obligation to make the
best decision I could on the papers to spare them further acrimony,
loss of time in court and legal expenses."
Goldman's lawyer,
Michael DiCicco of Bathgate Wegener & Wolf in Lakewood,
says Rubin still owes about $70,000, with the final installment due
Nov. 1, 2009.
Rubin's lawyer, Robert
Feinberg of Giordano Halleran & Ciesla in Middletown,
calls the case "typical hard-core litigation between former
partners."
[Index
to Articles]
|