NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5887-99T5
BRACH, EICHLER, ROSENBERG,
SILVER, BERNSTEIN, HAMMER
& GLADSTONE, P.C.,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
IFEOMA EZEKWO, M.D.,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued September 17, 2001 - Decided October 22, 2001
Before Judges Petrella, Steinberg and Alley.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Essex County, ESX-L-53-
98.
Ifeoma Ezekwo, appellant, argued the cause
pro se.
David J. Klein argued the cause for
respondent (Brach, Eichler, Rosenberg,
Silver, Bernstein, Hammer & Gladstone,
attorneys; Mr. Klein, of counsel and on the
brief); Christopher J. Carey also argued the
cause for respondent (Graham, Curtin &
Sheridan, attorneys; Mr. Carey and Patrick B.
Minter, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
ALLEY, J.A.D.
This matter had its inception in January 1998, when
plaintiff, the Brach Eichler law firm, sued defendant, its former
client, Ifeoma Ezekwo, for unpaid legal fees she allegedly
incurred in connection with its representation of her. Defendant
appeals from the award of judgment against her in the amount of
$15,205 for those fees. She also appeals from an award of
attorney's fees to the plaintiff law firm, as attorneys acting
pro se, which the trial judge predicated on R. 4:58-2, the offer
of judgment rule. We affirm.
In July 1992, defendant retained plaintiff to represent her
in a number of unsuccessful attempts to obtain board
certification and in disputes with several insurance companies.
Plaintiff memorialized the hourly fee arrangement for its
services to defendant in a letter dated July 23, 1992. The
controversies were with Met Life Health Plan, Bronx Health Plan,
Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Montefiore Hospital, Manhattan Eye, Ear
and Throat Hospital, Our Lady of Mercy Hospital, Beth Israel
Hospital, and two medical certification boards, American Board of
Ophthalmology and American Board of Internal Medicine.
Briefly described, defendant's alleged claims against the
various parties, and the services allegedly rendered by the
plaintiff on her behalf, were these:
Beth Israel Hospital
Defendant sought privileges in internal medicine and in her
specialty of ophthalmology at Beth Israel Hospital and retained
plaintiff on July 22, 1992, to help her obtain these privileges.
Plaintiff met with officials of the hospital and attended
hearings for defendant. Defendant dismissed plaintiff as her
attorney on August 20, 1993.
Montefiore Hospital
After defendant applied for medical staff privileges in
internal medicine at Montefiore Hospital, the hospital suggested
that she had not given them all of the information they needed to
process her request. When she retained plaintiff, defendant
requested that a complaint be filed against the hospital and
later sent plaintiff a letter dated June 1, 1993, asking that
suit be filed immediately. Plaintiff consulted with defendant
and corresponded with counsel for the hospital, but defendant
dismissed plaintiff on August 20, 1993, and at that time
plaintiff had filed no complaint against Montefiore Hospital.
The hospital did not accept defendant.
Our Lady of Mercy Hospital
Defendant had privileges at a hospital named Pelham Bay that
Our Lady of Mercy purchased. Our Lady of Mercy had granted
defendant provisional privileges, but defendant was having
difficulty exercising her privileges. At the time she retained
plaintiff, defendant requested that a lawsuit be filed.
Plaintiff did not file a lawsuit but prepared a letter on behalf
of defendant. Defendant dismissed plaintiff on August 20, 1993.
Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital
Defendant sought admitting privileges for her patients at
MEETH but was granted only provisional privileges. Defendant
retained plaintiff on November 30, 1992, to help defendant gain
full admitting privileges for defendant's patients.
Plaintiff wrote a letter for defendant to the Public Health
Council complaining about the way defendant had been treated, and
it also prepared and filed a lawsuit on defendant's behalf. The
case was still pending at the time she dismissed plaintiff.
MetLife
After MetLife had not paid various claims for services
rendered by defendant to patients covered by MetLife, she
retained plaintiff to initiate a debt collection action against
MetLife. Plaintiff corresponded with MetLife regarding the
outstanding bills and termination. Despite many requests by
defendant to initiate a lawsuit, plaintiff did not. MetLife
canceled defendant as of May 6, 1993, based on the termination
clause in the contract. MetLife also supplied plaintiff with a
list of reasons why it had not paid certain bills of defendant.
Plaintiff never filed suit as instructed, and defendant
discharged plaintiff from representing her interests regarding
MetLife on August 20, 1993.
Blue Cross/Blue Shield
Defendant applied for admission as a medical provider in the
field of internal medicine and ophthalmology in the Blue
Cross/Blue Shield health plan. When her application was denied,
she retained plaintiff to challenge the denial. Defendant
further instructed plaintiff to initiate a debt collection
action. Plaintiff prepared letters, reviewed denial letters and
made telephone calls to Blue Cross/Blue Shield and later
consulted with plaintiff, but as of the date of its discharge by
defendants on August 20, 1993, it had filed no lawsuit as
defendant had requested.
Bronx Health Plan
Defendant applied for admission as a health care provider in
the Bronx Health Plan. After her application was denied, she
instructed plaintiff to initiate legal action against Bronx
Health Plan challenging the denial. Plaintiff consulted with
defendant and sent letters to Bronx Health Plan, but when
defendant dismissed plaintiff in August 1993 no lawsuit had been
filed. Defendant was not admitted to the plan.
American Board of Internal Medicine
Defendant applied for but was denied certification by the
American Board of Internal Medicine. Defendant was Board-
eligible but failed the Board's exam twice. Defendant contended
there was foul play on the last occasion and wanted to review
other candidates' tests. The Board agreed but wanted her to
waive her right to contest the final decision. The Board agreed
to reread the exam by hand and review it with defendant, but she
declined. This matter was still pending when defendant dismissed
plaintiff on August 20, 1993.
American Board of Ophthalmology ("ABO")
Defendant's efforts to obtain certification in ophthalmology
from the ABO were denied twice. Defendant was Board-eligible,
and felt that the program director treated her unfairly. A suit
was filed by plaintiff in state court and removed to U.S.
District Court, which remanded it to state court on motion. The
case was pending in state court when defendant dismissed
plaintiff.
Judge Harry Margolis held a four day bench trial and
rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $15,205. This was
about $6,000 less than the $21,599.61 sought by plaintiff. He
also granted plaintiff's application to amend the judgment to
include attorneys fees pursuant to R. 4:58, the "offer of
judgment" rule, and entered a final order on September 15, 2000,
in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $25,417.
I
Plaintiff asserts that "the trial court's findings are
unsupported by adequate, substantial and credible evidence
tendered during the trial of this matter." Specifically,
plaintiff argues that the evidence adduced by plaintiff at trial
does not support a fee of $15,205; the court failed to consider
evidence of earlier payments by defendant and to set them off
against plaintiff's claim at trial; and the findings of the trial
judge point to a different verdict.
Appellate review of the findings of a trial judge is
limited, and the reviewing court should not disturb the findings
unless "they are so manifestly unsupported by . . . credible
evidence as to offend the interests of justice."
Cesare v.
Cesare,
154 N.J. 394, 412 (1998) (citing
Rova Farms Resort v.
Investors Ins. Co.,
65 N.J. 474, 483-84 (1974)). A trial court's
findings generally are binding on appeal "when supported by
adequate, substantial, credible evidence." Ibid.
Defendant raises several arguments in support of her
contention that the evidence at trial did not support the award
of damages. Specifically, defendant argues that because some of
plaintiff's time sheets were missing, and because plaintiff could
not produce its long distance telephone bills from 1992-1993,
this justifies an inference that plaintiff did not do the work.
Plaintiff produced most of its time sheets, and one of its
attorneys testified that the work reflected on the firm's
billings was in fact done. Defendant did not testify as to any
instance where the work billed was not done or a telephone call
did not take place. The details of the work performed, moreover,
appears on the bills themselves.
Defendant also raises the issue of "double billing" by one
of plaintiff's attorneys, but the trial judge credited defendant
$895 representing the full amount of the "double billing."
Defendant's argument that the court was unable to determine
whether there was other "double billing" due to the missing time
sheets is insufficient to overcome the trial court's findings.
The bills themselves reflect the services rendered and would have
reflected any other conferences between two or more attorneys
from Brach, Eichler. Defendant has failed to identify any other
instances that would support any further credits.
Defendant also argues she should be given credit for
payments made in the amount of $2,281.60 and $2,072. She
remitted those amounts in payment of the June 1 and June 8, 1993
bills, however, and those charges were not included again in
later bills and were not part of the damages sought by plaintiff
or awarded by Judge Margolis. Accordingly, there are no
additional credits to which defendant is entitled.
Defendant repeatedly cites part of the trial court's
decision where defendant states that Judge Margolis found that
"the Brach firm did little, if anything, with respect to the
lawsuit against MetLife . . . ." The full sentence, which
represents only a portion of the judge's finding regarding
MetLife, reads as follows, however:
In sum and substance, the Brach firm did
little, if anything, with respect to a
lawsuit against MetLife except tell the
defendant that she had no case against
MetLife, but told the defendant to gather
information against MetLife.
Defendant attempts to use the quoted portion of the decision
regarding MetLife as an argument that plaintiff did no work on
the file and therefore was not entitled to the $1600 fee awarded
by the trial court. We reject that contention. The balance of
defendant's argument that the evidence did not support the
verdict, or that the court's findings supported a different
verdict, consists of defendant's argument that the court did not
specify the period covered by the fee award. The bills are in
evidence, however, and plaintiff only sought payment for the
unpaid portion of those bills. Accordingly, it is of no moment
that the judge did not make a specific recitation as to the
period for which he awarded the charges.
We are satisfied that there was adequate, substantial and
credible evidence in the record to support the trial court's
findings and, accordingly, we do not disturb its damage award.
II
Defendant next urges that a previous judge in the case ruled
that she could testify as her own damages expert, and that the
trial court consequently erred by not allowing her "calculation"
of damages into evidence.
Supporting data and facts are vital to
an expert's opinion "when the opinion is seeking to establish a
cause and effect relationship."
Rubanick v. Witco Chem. Corp.,
242 N.J. Super 36, 49 (App. Div. 1990),
modified on other
grounds,
125 N.J. 421 (1991). Conjecture and speculation cannot
be used as a basis for damages.
Lesniak v. County of Bergen,
117 N.J. 12, 21 (1989), (citing
Budden v. Goldstein,
43 N.J.Super 340, 347 (App. Div. 1957)).
The resultant prohibition against what is called a "net
opinion" bars expert testimony based on unfounded speculation or
mere possibilities.
Grzanka v. Pfeifer,
301 N.J. Super. 563, 580
(App. Div. 1997),
certif. denied,
154 N.J. 607 (1998). Here,
defendant sought to introduce a "calculation" of her alleged
damages in defense of plaintiff's damages claims. Defendant has
not furnished a copy of this "calculation," but the record
reveals that defendant attempted during the trial to read from
the calculation. Specifically, defendant wanted to read into
evidence the alleged damages she sustained when plaintiff failed
to file certain lawsuits. As appears from the record, however,
defendant did not have supporting data or facts for this estimate
and the trial court thus correctly excluded this "calculation" as
speculative and conjectural.
Defendant further contends that she was erroneously barred
from interposing the defense of malpractice. The only time the
issue arose was at the time of summation, when she attempted to
read part of her written summation dealing with her claim that
the firm had committed malpractice by failing to file, or in
delaying the filing of, lawsuits for her.
To prevail on a claim of legal malpractice, a plaintiff must
prove the existence of an attorney-client relationship that gives
rise to a duty of care, the breach of such duty, and proximate
causation.
See DeAngelis v. Rose,
320 N.J.Super. 263, 274 (App.
Div. 1999). Generally speaking, a lawyer is required to exercise
that "degree of reasonable knowledge and skill that lawyers of
ordinary ability and skill possess and exercise."
St. Pius X
House of Retreats v. Camden Dioc.,
88 N.J. 571, 588 (1982).
Furthermore, the party asserting malpractice must, under New
Jersey case law, present expert testimony that establishes the
standard of care against which the attorney's actions are to be
measured.
See Rosenberg v. Cahill,
99 N.J. 318, 325 (1985);
Sommers v. McKinney,
287 N.J. Super. 1, 10-11 (App. Div. 1996);
Aldrich v. Hawrylo,
281 N.J. Super 201, 214 (App. Div. 1995);
Brizak v. Needle,
239 N.J. Super. 415, 431-32 (App. Div. 1990).
It is true that exceptions to the expert testimony
requirement may be made where the questioned conduct presents
such an obvious breach of an equally obvious professional norm
that the fact-finder could resolve the dispute based on its own
ordinary knowledge and experience and without resort to technical
or esoteric information,
see Rosenberg,
supra, 99
N.J. at 325;
Sommers,
supra, 287
N.J. Super. at 10-11;
Aldrich,
supra, 281
N.J. Super. at 214;
Brizak,
supra, 239
N.J. Super. at 431-32.
This case, however, does not fall within that category of cases
that are so straightforward in nature that expert testimony is
not required. New Jersey courts have dispensed with the expert
testimony requirement in cases where attorneys have failed to
fulfill the most basic obligations.
See,
e.g.,
Sommers,
supra,
287
N.J. Super. at 8-12 (lawyer entirely failed to submit a legal
argument in client's defense);
Brizak,
supra, 239
N.J. Super. at
431-32 (attorney failed to protect client's claim against the
running of the statute of limitations);
Stewart v. Sbarro,
142 N.J. Super. 581, 591-92 (App. Div.)
cert. denied
72 N.J. 459
(1976) (lawyer sacrificed client's creditor priority by failing
to ensure that a bond and mortgage were properly recorded). A
common thread runs through these cases, namely none of them
required the trier of fact to evaluate an attorney's legal
judgment concerning a complex legal issue. Where a trier of fact
would be put in such a position, New Jersey courts have required
expert testimony to be presented.
See,
e.g.,
Aldrich, 281
N.J.
Super. at 214-15 (expert testimony was required where an attorney
told sellers of property that they did not need to disclose
zoning restriction to buyers because the attorney reasoned that
the restriction was invalid). We also note that it is beyond
legitimate dispute that no statutes of limitation barred
defendant from bringing any suits after discharging plaintiff,
and that the only suit that she brought after discharging the
firm was dismissed. As a result, defendant cannot say that
liability or causation could be matters of common knowledge.
Defendant patently failed to offer a legally sufficient
expert opinion, and this failure is fatal to her legal
malpractice claim. Accordingly, the trial court's refusal to
permit defendant to offer a summation on that defense for which
no evidence was presented was proper.
III
Defendant argues that the judge who presided over the trial
of plaintiff's fee claim was obligated to overrule the prior
order of another judge dismissing her legal malpractice claim.
This argument is without merit.
While defendant correctly points out that the trial court
has the inherent power to review, revise, reconsider or modify
its own interlocutory orders, such a review rests within the
sound discretion of the court and is to be exercised in the
"interest of justice."
R. 4:42-2. The earlier order clearly
dissatisfied defendant, but she has not articulated how or why
the interests of justice required the trial court to reconsider
the prior judge's ruling.
R. 4:42-2 requires that to "the extent possible, application
for reconsideration shall be made to the trial judge who entered
the order." We have observed that:
[w]e expressly disapprove the practice of so
called "lateral appeals" whereby litigants
dissatisfied with an interlocutory order
entered by one trial judge seek its overturn
or modification by motion to another trial
judge.
[
Lewis v. Preschel,
237 N.J. Super. 418, 422
(App. Div. 1989)].
Here, defendant has not presented any reason why she did not
seek, pursuant to the requirements of
R. 4:42-2, to apply again
for reconsideration.
Even if we were to construe defendant's submission as
requesting this court to review the March 3, 2000, order of the
other judge, and to consider it as such, the court properly
entered that order. Our Supreme Court has enunciated the
following standard for summary judgment:
We hold that when deciding a motion for
summary judgment under
R. 4:46-2, the
determination whether there exists a genuine
issue with respect to a material fact
challenged requires the motion judge to
consider whether the competent evidential
materials presented, when viewed in the light
most favorable to the non-moving party in
consideration of the applicable evidentiary
standard are sufficient to permit a rational
fact finder to resolve the alleged disputed
issue in favor of the non-moving party.
[
Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
142 N.J. 520, 523 (1995)].
On March 3, 2000, Judge Fast dismissed defendant's
counterclaim on the basis that she could not sustain her claims
of legal malpractice without an expert to testify or to opine as
to liability. The March 3, 2000, decision was appropriate and
supported by case law.
Defendant's counterclaim against plaintiff alleges
professional negligence regarding the firm's handling of various
matters for her. Specifically, defendant claims that plaintiff
committed legal malpractice when it failed to file some lawsuits
she requested. Because of this alleged negligence, defendant
claims that she has suffered damages. Defendant however,
produced no expert testimony to support her claim that the
damages she allegedly suffered were proximately related to
plaintiff's alleged negligent conduct.
Thus, after oral argument, the court determined that, absent
expert testimony, defendant could not establish the requisite
elements of a legal malpractice claim, mainly, breach of the
standard of care and proximate causation. As a result, it
dismissed the counterclaim.
As already noted, the trial court correctly dismissed
defendant's claim because she produced no competent expert
testimony to support her allegations. Another judge had
correctly analyzed the issues and the facts of this matter and
determined that this was a case in which expert testimony was
required to help the jury, holding:
There is no question in my mind that the
issues presented here on this claim of legal
malpractice, as presented in the counterclaim
by the defendant doctor, is a matter of
analysis, opinion, interpretation, as to
liability, against, as distinguished from
damages.
The court, after considering a full factual record, properly
applied the law in dismissing defendant's counterclaim for legal
malpractice. It recognized that defendant was not competent to
supply the requisite standard of care of an attorney in the
position of plaintiff. Defendant also had no expert testimony to
establish proximate causation between the alleged breach of duty
and damages. Absent expert testimony on these issues, as the law
requires, the court acted appropriately in dismissing defendant's
claims for professional negligence.
IV
Defendant further argues that the trial judge erred in
awarding counsel fees in reliance on Rule 4:58, the offer of
judgment rule. Plaintiff offered judgment in the amount of
$14,300, which was not only not accepted by plaintiff but was
actually "objected" to in a submission to the court by defendant.
The trial judge properly awarded fees pursuant to the offer of
judgment rule
R. 4:58-1,
et seq., since the trial damages award
of $15,205 exceeded the offer of judgment of $14,300.
The offer of judgment rule and, in particular,
R. 4:58-2,
"consequences of non-acceptance of claimant's offer," as in
effect at times relevant to plaintiff's claim, provided in
pertinent part:See footnote 11
If the offer of a claimant is not accepted
and the claimant obtains a verdict or
determination at least as favorable as the
rejected offer, the claimant shall be
allowed, in addition to costs of the suit,
eight percent interest on the amount of any
money recovery from the date of the offer or
the date of completion of discovery,
whichever is later, and also a reasonable
attorney's fee, which shall belong to the
client, for such subsequent services as are
compelled by the non-acceptance.
The offer-of-judgment rule is "designed particularly as a
mechanism to encourage, promote, and stimulate early out-of-court
settlement of negligence and unliquidated damages claims that in
justice and reason ought to be settled without trial."
Crudup v.
Marrero,
57 N.J. 353, 357 (1971). Consistent with this purpose,
the rule imposes financial consequences on a party who rejects a
settlement offer that turns out to be more favorable than the
ultimate judgment.
We have not been referred by the parties to any authority in
New Jersey that deals precisely with the issue of whether a
claimant that is a pro se law firm seeking to collect its fees
can be awarded fees under the offer of judgment rule against the
party who has rejected a settlement offer under circumstances
that would qualify the claimant to an award of an attorney's fee
if it had been represented by an attorney. There is, however,
authority on somewhat related issues that is useful.
First, we note that two New Jersey trial courts have
considered the right of an attorney representing himself pro se
to receive attorney's fees, not under the offer of judgment rule
but under the frivolous litigation statute and its provision for
awarding attorney's fees to the successful party.
N.J.S.A.
2A:15-59.1(c). These courts reached opposite conclusions. In
Asaadi v. Meltzer,
280 N.J. Super. 68 (Law Div. 1994), the court
held that an attorney representing himself pro se was not
entitled to attorney's fees. In
Deutch & Shur, P.C. v. Roth,
284 N.J. Super. 133 (Law Div. 1995), however, the court rejected the
Asaadi analysis and held that the prevailing pro se attorney was
entitled to recover reasonable attorney's fees.
In
Asaadi, the court interpreted the frivolous litigation
statute to require that monies actually be paid out to an
attorney in order for the pro se litigant to recover attorney's
fees. The court concluded that a pro se attorney who did not in
fact incur attorney's fees could not recover for the value of the
time spent by that attorney in defending a frivolous claim.
Deutch & Shur, in refusing to follow
Asaadi, concluded that
the purposes of the frivolous litigation statute militated in
favor of an award of attorney's fees to a pro se attorney. The
court there reasoned that the legislature had merely failed to
consider the possibility of a pro se attorney representing
himself in the litigation at the time that it drafted the
legislation. The
court appropriately pointed to the punitive
purpose of the statute to deter frivolous litigation and the
absence of any reason why the Legislature would distinguish
between pro se attorney litigants and those represented by
attorney.
We are persuaded that under the frivolous litigation
statute,
Deutch & Shur represents the sounder view. This does
not end our inquiry, however, since as we have observed, the
award appealed from was not made under that statute but under the
offer of judgment rule. In addition to referring to practice
under the frivolous litigation statute, it is also appropriate
for us to look elsewhere, namely to
R. 1:4-8. In the event of
frivolous litigation, that Rule makes a "pro se party"
responsible for certain sanctions.
R. 1:4-8(a);
see Pressler,
Current N.J. Court Rules, comment (g) to
R. 1:4-8 (2002).
We acknowledge that the purposes of frivolous litigation
sanctions and of the imposition of costs for failure to accept an
offer of judgment are not identical. Sanctionable frivolous
litigation has no justification, and the deterrent should be
strong. The need for a forceful deterrent for declining a
settlement offer, while considerable, is not as compelling. One
may act in complete good faith and with sound reasons when
rejecting a settlement offer, yet be surprised by a trial's
outcome and exposed to
R. 4:58-2 sanctions.
We observe further that one standard definition of an
"attorney" is, "[s]trictly, one who is designated to transact
business for another; a legal agent . . . ."
Black's Law
Dictionary (7th ed. 1999). Here, Brach Eichler was not acting
for another but for itself.
The source Rule was "intended as a procedural mechanism to
facilitate the settlement of cases." Pressler, Current N.J.
Court Rules, comment to
R. 4:58 (2002);
see also,
Crudup v.
Marrero,
supra, 57
N.J. at 361. The present form of the Rule has
carried forward that original purpose. In our view, the Rule's
purpose would best be fulfilled in these circumstances by
allowing the pro se attorney to recover attorney's fees under
R.
4:58-2. The provision in that rule that the fee award "shall
belong to the client . . ." does not preclude this result. All
it means is that Brach Eichler, which was it own client, as the
client gets to keep the fees awarded. Thus, when a pro se
litigant is a law firm earning its income from the private
practice of law, we see no reason why, for purposes of
R. 4:58-2,
that firm should not be entitled to the recovery of attorney's
fees under the offer of judgment rule for the reasonable value of
the time expended by the firm when it is compelled to proceed to
trial. We quote the rationale expressed in
Deutch & Shur,
supra:
An attorney representing himself expends
time. The old adage that "Time is money" has
no greater validity than in an attorney's
world. The time spent by an attorney
defending a frivolous claim could have been
spent working on a matter for a paying
client.
[284
N.J. Super. at 141-142.]
We conclude that this rationale likewise applies when the
attorney has had to spend time unnecessarily presenting a
meritorious claim that should have been settled under
R. 4:58-2
and that an award of counsel fees to the pro se law firm pursuant
to that Rule is clearly appropriate in the circumstances of this
case. We thus uphold the award of attorney's fees to plaintiff
for the reasonable value of the time the firm expended during
trial as a consequence of defendant's non-acceptance of the
settlement offer.
V
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1The Rule was thereafter amended effective September 5, 2000
in respects not pertinent to this appeal.