SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3509-95T2
GREGORY J. CZURA,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
CRAIG SIEGEL, JANET SIEGEL
and SHELLEY BALESTRIERI,
Defendants-Appellants.
_________________________________________________________________
Submitted November 25, 1996 - Decided January 8, 1997
Before Judges Brochin and Kestin
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Passaic County
Rutgers Law School Constitutional
Litigation Clinic, and Nashel, Kates,
Nussman, Rapone & Ellis, attorneys for
appellants (Frank Askin and Michael B.
Kates, on the brief).
Respondent Gregory J. Czura, Esq.,
submitted a pro se brief.
No other parties participated in this appeal.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
BROCHIN, J.A.D.
This defamation action was dismissed with prejudice by an order for summary judgment in defendants' favor that was filed April 27, 1995. By a notice of motion filed December 11, 1995, defendants moved "for an order awarding counsel fees and costs pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1, the New Jersey Frivolous Claims
Act." After oral argument of the motion, the motion judge
stated:
It is clear to this Court by reading the
[allegedly defamatory] article as written on
September 23rd, 1994 [that] someone trained
in the law would recognize that that article
was not slanderous, that it was an expression
of a First Amendment right involving a public
issue by parties who have been involved in a
public issue.
It is also clear to the Court that, Mr.
Czura, you filed that complaint in a manner
which was frivolous because you were trying
to put these people off. . . .
Nevertheless, based upon the time that
has elapsed between that filing of the motion
for summary judgment granted by this Court
and the application now made, I think that it
would not be appropriate at this time to
allow fees.
An order dated January 18, 1996 was entered in accordance
with this ruling denying counsel fees and costs "as being
untimely." Defendants have appealed. For the following reasons,
we affirm.
N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1, the Frivolous Litigation Statute, does
not state explicitly whether attorneys' fees can be awarded on an
application filed after the entry of a final judgment. The
statute mentions timing of the application only in subsections
a(1) and a(2). Both references condition eligibility for the
award of fees on a judicial determination made "at any time
during the proceedings or upon judgment . . . ." The reference
to "upon judgment," rather than, for example, upon or after
judgment, suggests that the fee application may not properly be
delayed until substantially after the time when judgment is
entered.
R. 1:4-8 in its present form, which became effective
September 1, 1996, prescribes the current motion procedure
applicable to fee applications under the statute. The occasion
for the adoption of the rule was the Supreme Court's decision in
McKeown-Brand v. Trump Castle Hotel & Casino,
132 N.J. 546
(1993), which restricted the applicability of N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1
to instances in which the parties themselves, and not their
lawyers, were factually responsible for frivolous claims or
defenses. However, R. 1:4-8 as amended governs the procedure for
fee applications both against parties under the statute and
against lawyers under the rule. See R. 1:4-8(b)(3) and -8(f);
Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment on R. 1:4-8 (1996).
R. 1:4-8(b)(2) expressly fixes the time for filing fee
applications to which it is applicable:
Time for Filing; Attorney's Fees. A motion
for sanctions shall be filed with the court
prior to the entry of final judgment,
notwithstanding the provisions of any other
rule of court.
Applications filed prior to September 1, 1996, like the one
at issue here, were governed by the procedure which R. 4:42-9
prescribes for "all cases where counsel fees are permitted by
statute." See R. 4:42-9(a)(8). R. 4:42-9(d), "Prohibiting
Separate Orders for Allowances of Fees," states:
An allowance of fees made on the
determination of a matter shall be included
in the judgment or order stating the
determination.
The necessary implication of R. 4:42-9(d) is that an application for the allowance of attorneys' fees in a case
governed by that rule has to be presented before the entry of the
final judgment or, possibly, at the latest, within ten days
thereafter by a motion to alter or amend the judgment. See R.
4:49-2; cf. Brennan v. Brennan,
187 N.J. Super. 351, 358 (App.
Div. 1982); Ramirez v. County of Hudson,
169 N.J. Super. 455,
458-59 (Ch. Div. 1979). In this respect, the procedure under R.
4:42-9 is consistent with the procedure under R. 1:4-8. Since
defendants in the present case did not make their application for
the award of attorneys' fees pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1
within the prescribed time period, their application was properly
denied.
The order appealed from is therefore affirmed.