NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1098-01T2
ANGELA DISTEFANO,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
Cross-Appellant,
v.
WAYNE GREENSTONE, ESQ.
and GREENSTONE & GREENSTONE,
a Professional Corporation,
Defendants-Appellants,
Cross-Respondents.
_______________________________
Argued: December 11, 2002 - Decided:
February 7, 2003
Before Judges King, Wefing and Fuentes.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Union County, UNN-L-
4753-99.
Michael D. Mezzacca argued the cause for
appellant-cross-respondent (Fitzpatrick,
Reilly, Supple & Gaul, attorneys; Mr.
Mezzacca, on the brief).
Richard P. Flaum argued the cause for
respondent-cross-appellant (DiFrancesco,
Bateman, Coley, Yospin, Kunzman, Davis &
Lehrer, attorneys; Mr. Flaum, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KING, P.J.A.D.
This case presents the problem of how to deal with the "dual
contingency" fee aspect of a malpractice claim against an attorney
who has mishandled a personal injury action. Here, defendants
Wayne Greenstone and Greenstone & Greenstone (defendant or
Greenstone), original counsel for plaintiff, Angela DiStefano, did
not timely pursue plaintiff's claim and the statute of limitations
barred her personal injury action. The plaintiff's malpractice
claim against defendants was partially settled for $90,000
representing compensatory damages and interest, leaving for
adjudication the disposition of the contingent fee aspect of her
damages for legal malpractice. We now follow the expression of our
Supreme Court in Saffer v. Willoughby,
143 N.J. 256 (1996), as we
understand it, and rule that plaintiff is entitled to recover the
entire $90,000 without reduction for the original one-third
contingent fee, or $30,000, and is also entitled to recover as
consequential damages in the malpractice case against Greenstone
her agreed upon fee with her present attorney, now pursuing this
action, also one-third of the total recovery or $30,000. Although
this process leads to a duplicate recovery, we glean this result
from the principles expressed by the Supreme Court in Saffer and
follow its lead.
In addition to arguing against a duplicate recovery of the
dual contingent fee, defendant contends that one of plaintiff's
expert's fee was unreasonable. We agree on this point and reduce
the expert's fee award accordingly.
On the cross-appeal, plaintiff's present attorneys claim that
the attorneys' fee should be calculated on the "lodestar" method,
essentially at an hourly rate, or $48,250 (193 hours x $250 per
hour), rather than the $30,000 contingency fee. We disagree and
adhere to the standard one-third contingent fee compensation
contemplated by the plaintiff's retainer agreement with both her
original and present attorney.
I
On September 13, 1991 during a visit to Italy, plaintiff
Angela DiStefano was injured in an automobile accident while she
was a passenger in a vehicle struck by a truck. She sustained
injuries requiring several weeks of hospitalization in Italy and
surgery to her arm when she returned to the United States. The
truck driver's liability was not seriously disputed.
Plaintiff retained defendant Greenstone to pursue a claim for
damages on February 4, 1993. The retainer agreement provided that
defendant would receive a contingency fee of 33 1/3% of the "first
$250,000 net recovery."
See R. 1:21-7. During his initial
consultation, defendant allegedly represented that he "had
significant experience with international personal injury claims"
and he was able to make contacts with Italian attorneys to act as
liaison representing plaintiff's interests. Defendant did attempt
to secure representation in Italy by attorney Renato Schifani
through the New York law offices of Sandro Paterno. Because
defendant failed to sustain contact with the Italian attorney and
to pursue plaintiff's claim to finality, the claim eventually
became time-barred in Italy. Plaintiff then retained the law
offices of Bivona and Cohen (predecessor firm for plaintiff in this
action), also on a standard 33 1/3% contingency basis. That firm
filed this complaint against Greenstone for legal malpractice,
seeking compensatory damages, attorney's fees and costs.
During the pendency of this action, plaintiff submitted
reports by two Italian legal experts: (1) a report by Elena
Berlucchi concerning liability under Italian law, in which she
concluded that defendant failed "to undertake the steps . . .
necessary to ensure a recovery of damages," and (2) a report by
Domenico Cantavenera, in which he concluded that plaintiff suffered
a 55% disability according to the Italian system of compensation
for personal injury, a claim worth about $266,304. The Italian
tortfeasor's representative submitted a report by an Italian
physician, Dr. Massimo Forgeschi who concluded that under the
Italian compensation scheme plaintiff suffered a disability ranging
between 15% and 20%, a claim worth about $51,000.
On May 25, 2001, based upon the liability opinion in the
expert's reports, plaintiff filed a motion for partial summary
judgment with respect to liability only. On June 12, 2001 Judge
Pisansky granted plaintiff's motion. He also ruled that Italian
law applied to the issue of damages and New Jersey law applied to
the legal malpractice claim. At a
R. 4:21A arbitration the
personal injury claim was valued at $225,000. On June 15, 2001 the
parties agreed to a conditional release in which defendant agreed
to pay damages of a minimum of $60,000 and a maximum of $90,000
"subject to the Court's determination of counsel fees due and owing
from defendant Greenstone." The parties seemingly agreed on a
damage amount of $90,000 for the value of the entire claim, under
Italian law, representing about 25% disability under the Italian
automobile compensation system. Thus, the ultimate settlement sum
depended on the disposition of the legal dispute over how to treat
the attorneys' fee issue arising from in the malpractice context.
Plaintiff filed a motion on August 3, 2001 originally seeking
$60,840.50 in legal fees and $23,531.33 for costs in addition to
the $90,000 personal injury settlement sum. Judge Pisansky awarded
plaintiff $30,000 in counsel fees in addition to the $90,000
settlement and $18,189.24 in costs. The judge explained that the
$30,000 attorneys' fee award was appropriate because the original
retainer agreement called for a fee of one-third of the full
recovery. The judge also reduced the amount requested in
additional fees for experts and costs to $18,189.24, reflecting
what he concluded was a reasonable amount after deducting "usual
and customary law office overhead expenses," pursuant to the
original retainer agreement. This allowed for the reasonable costs
and the fees of plaintiff's experts.
Defendant now argues that an award of $30,000 for counsel
fees, in addition to the $90,000 settlement amount agreed upon
between the parties, was beyond the amount necessary to make the
plaintiff whole as required under our case law. Defendant asserts
that plaintiff should subtract her current attorney's fee from the
$90,000 settlement sum as would have occurred had defendant pursued
her case to resolution and secured a $90,000 settlement. Defendant
also claims that the fees for plaintiff's expert witnesses' reports
are excessive.
Plaintiff cross-appeals arguing that the $30,000 award of
attorney's fees representing one-third of the $90,000 settlement
amount is not appropriate and should instead be calculated under a
"lodestar analysis" by multiplying the number of attorney hours
(193) spent by a reasonable hourly rate ($250), or $48,250.
Plaintiff argues that a fair lodestar fee amount should be awarded.
II
The principal issue is whether the plaintiff should receive
the $90,000 settlement without deduction of a $30,000 fee when she
also recovers this fee as damages in the malpractice action. We
think that under
Saffer she can recover both the $90,000 without
deduction or offset and the $30,000 fee as malpractice damages,
even though this leads to a duplicate recovery. Presumably, the
duplicate recovery, even though a windfall to the plaintiff, is
considered the lesser evil to crediting the attorney with an
undeserved fee where he has botched the job.
Three principles or general rules emerge from the
Saffer case:
(1) the negligent attorney is precluded from recovering his
attorney fee and the total amount of the malpractice claim recovery
goes to the plaintiff.
Saffer, 143
N.J. at 271-72; (2) ordinarily,
an attorney may not collect attorney fees for services negligently
performed,
id. at 272; and (3) "in addition, a negligent attorney
is responsible for legal expenses and attorney fees incurred by a
former client in prosecuting the legal malpractice action."
Ibid.
The seeming conundrum of a duplicate recovery is probably best
explained by the Supreme Court's reference to a text on attorney
malpractice on this point which states: "Thus, the client receives,
at least in the eyes of some, a windfall benefit which the courts
may feel is deserved by the client having to endure two lawsuits."
Saffer, 143
N.J. at 269, quoting David J. Meiselman,
Attorney
Malpractice: Law and Procedure § 4:3 (Lawyers' Co-op. 1980).
In
Saffer, the Supreme Court "adopt[ed] the reasoning and
result reached" in
Strauss v. Fost,
213 N.J. Super. 239 (App. Div.
1986) (
Strauss II), modifying our earlier opinion in
209 N.J.
Super. 490 (App. Div. 1986) (
Strauss I). In
Strauss the
plaintiff's first attorney negligently represented the client in a
property damage claim arising out of an automobile accident. In
Strauss I, we allowed a deduction of the one-third
fee from the
plaintiff's recovery against the attorney defendant.
209 N.J.
Super. 499. On rehearing, we modified our initial opinion and
rescinded the deduction of the one-third fee from the malpractice
award, citing Meiselman's above-noted "windfall benefit" comment.
213
N.J. Super. at 242. We stated in
Strauss II "that we prefer,
however, to rest our decision upon the proposition that a negligent
attorney in the appropriate case is not entitled to recover his
legal fees."
Id. This, of course, would prevent a recovery of the
attorney's fee by way of a credit or offset in the malpractice
recovery. As we have stated, the Supreme Court embraced
Strauss II
in
Saffer, 143
N.J. at 272, and there said: "
In addition, a
negligent attorney is responsible for the reasonable legal expenses
and attorney fees incurred by a former client in prosecuting the
legal malpractice action. Those are consequential damages that are
proximately related to the malpractice." (emphasis added.) We see
nothing "exceptional,"
ibid., about the case before us to deviate
from this general rule announced by our Supreme Court in
Saffer,
adopting
Strauss II. Indeed, the case before us is analytically
identical to
Strauss II, and is also a run-of-the-mill contingency
tort claim with a one-third fee arrangement. The Supreme Court
recently reaffirmed
Saffer and extended the right to recover
attorney's fees to cases of attorney's intentional misconduct in
Packard-Bamberger & Co., Inc. v. Collier,
167 N.J. 427, 444 (2001).
In
Bailey v. Pocaro & Pocaro,
305 N.J. Super. 2, 5 (App. Div.
1997), we observed that "the Court in
Saffer went beyond
Strauss
[II]" in stating that "[i]n addition, a negligent attorney is
responsible for the reasonable legal expenses and attorneys fees"
incurred in pursuing a malpractice action which were an element of
damages in that action. Thus, our conclusions here are not
particularly original.
Some other jurisdictions have taken a different view, adopting
a rule allowing a credit for the contingent fee which the client
would have paid if the tort claim was handled properly, but
allowing as damages recovery in the malpractice case for legal
costs and attorneys' fees.
See cases collected in
Moores v.
Greenberg,
834 F.2d 1105, 1109-1113 (1st Cir. 1987) (specifically
rejecting the rule announced in
Strauss II).
See also Campagnola
v. Mulholland, Minion & Roe,
76 N.Y.2d 38,
555 N.E.2d 611,
556 N.Y.S.2d 239 (Ct. App. 1990) (4-3 opinion denying a credit or
offset but refusing to allow counsel fees as damages in the
malpractice case);
Schultheis v. Franke,
658 N.E.2d 932, 939-41
(Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (opting for
quantum meruit credit or setoff ..
a "middle-road" approach).
A successor 2000, Fifth Edition, to the 1980 Meiselman volume
cited in
Saffer, 143
N.J. at 269, summarizes and comments upon the
extant cases. Ronald E. Mallen and Jeffrey M. Smith, 3
Legal
Malpractice (West Group 2000 and Supp.) § 20.14 at 152; § 20.18 at
1616 (Mallen). As to "Consequential Damages .. Expense of the
Malpractice Action," Mallen states: "The prevailing rule is that a
plaintiff cannot recover attorneys' fees incurred in prosecuting
the malpractice action."
Id., § 20:14 at 152 n.3. Mallen has this
comment regarding
Saffer's ruling on the point:
New Jersey courts have created a common-law
exception to the, "American" rule, allowing
the recovery of attorneys' fees. In a 1996
decision, the New Jersey Supreme Court
permitted the recovery of the cost of
prosecuting a legal malpractice action.9 The
attorney could not recover legal fees. The
court said:
Ordinarily, an attorney may not
collect attorney fees for services
negligently performed. In addition,
a negligent attorney is responsible
for the reasonable legal expenses
and attorney fees incurred by a
former client in prosecuting the
legal malpractice action. These are
consequential damages that are
proximately related to the
malpractice. In the typical case,
unless the negligent attorney's fee
is determined to be part of the
damages recoverable by a plaintiff,
the plaintiff would incur legal fees
and expenses associated with
prosecuting the legal malpractice
suit.10
A subsequent New Jersey appellate decision
quoted this principle to allow recovery of
attorneys' fees and costs in prosecuting the
malpractice claim.11 Neither decision
discussed whether the corollary of the
exposure, entitled attorneys to recover their
cost of a successful defense.
________________
9. Saffer v. Willoughby,
143 N.J. 256,
670 A.2d 527 (1996).
10. Id. at 272, 670 A.
2d at 534-5.
11. Bailey v. Pocaro & Pocaro,
305 N.J.
Super. 1,
701 A.2d 916 (1997) (the court
allowed consideration of fees on appeal,
though remanding the issue to the trial
court).
Thus, New Jersey is described as an exception to the "prevailing
rule."
At § 20.18 at 161, Mallen further discusses the issue,
"Reduction of Damages .. the Attorneys Fees" and states: "A still
unsettled issue concerns whether a client's legal malpractice
recovery should be reduced by the amount of attorney's fees the
client would have paid for competent performance." Id. at § 20:18
at 161. Mallen mentions Strauss II as among the "decisions that
have not reduced damages by the attorney's probable fees." Ibid.
at n.5.
In any event, we follow our understanding of Saffer and we
affirm the judgment and allow the $30,000 fee plus costs and
expenses to the plaintiff in addition to the $90,000 recovery in
this malpractice without any credit or offset to the defendant for
his potential fee.
III
On the cross-appeal, plaintiff's counsel asserts that the fee
should not be $30,000 but should be a sum based on a $250 hourly
fee times the number of hours (193) worked on the case, or about
$48,250. We reject this contention. Plaintiff entered into two
contingent fee agreements in this matter, one with Greenstone, the
plaintiff's tort attorney, and one with her malpractice attorney.
Plaintiff herself never contemplated an hourly rate of compensation
and indeed specifically rejected such an arrangement in both
contingent fee agreements. Nor did counsel apply to the Assignment
Judge under
R. 1:21-7(f) for an enhanced contingent fee.
"The lodestar calculation is defined as the number of hours
reasonably expended by the attorney, multiplied by a reasonable
hourly rate."
Packard-Bamberger, 167
N.J. at 427, 445.
See
Rendine v. Pantzer,
141 N.J. 292, 316 (1995). Courts usually use
this method in setting fee awards in civil rights and
discrimination cases, or other fee shifting contexts.
Packard-
Bamberger, at 445. In this situation now before us, we see no
need to resort to a lodestar methodology when both plaintiff's
attorneys agreed to a one-third contingent fee, a standard
arrangement in tort and cognate actions. There is no sound reason
to tinker with this standard retainer agreement, which has insured
appropriate compensation in this case.
IV
The final issue is the award of costs to the plaintiff in the
amount of $18,189.24. As noted, this was trimmed by the judge from
a request for $23,531.33, an amount which the judge thought
included the "usual and customary law office overhead expenses" and
which were not chargeable to plaintiff under the retainer
agreement.
Defendant particularly objects to the $12,804.89 fee of
plaintiff's "second malpractice expert," Elena A. Berlucchi. Given
the routine nature of the tort and professional liability issues in
this case where original counsel missed the statute of limitations
.. two years in Italy, as in New Jersey .. the amount of this bill
for the services rendered strains our credulity. The original
expert who Berlucchi replaced because of personal exigencies had
charged $750 for quite similar services. Plaintiff's expert report
from Italy on the damage issue cost $3000. Defendant suggests that
an award of $3000 would be more than reasonable for Berlucchi's
services which culminated in a single-spaced seven-page report. We
conclude based on this record that an award of $5000 for
Berlucchi's fee is quite adequate indeed.
R. 1:10-5. The judgment
awarding $18,189.24 for fees and costs is modified to reflect this
reduction of $7,804.89 and is reduced to $10,384.35
As modified, we affirm on the appeal and the cross-appeal.