SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-6781-94T3
RUNDLE V. HALLOWELL,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
AMERICAN HONDA MOTOR CO., INC.,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
ROGER NOVELLY; MARTIN MANAGEMENT CO., INC.;
M.J.R. MANAHAWKIN, INC.; THE ESTATE OF
MARTIN L. LUSTGARTEN, INC.; RAYMOND W.
HOVSEPIAN, STEVEN LISHNOFF, PAUL VOYNOW,
SCOTT LUSTGARTEN, and LINDA LUSTGARTEN, as
Executors of the Estate of Martin L.
Lustgarten, deceased; and JERRY BILLMYER,
individually, jointly, severally,
and/or in the alternative,
Defendants.
_____________________________________________________________
Submitted October 29, 1996 - Decided January 31, 1997
Before Judges D'Annunzio, Wefing and Newman
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Camden County.
Sarubbi & Sarubbi, attorneys for appellant
(Vincent P. Sarubbi, of counsel and on the brief).
McCarter & English, and David S. Foster and
Joseph A. Sullivan (Latham and Watkins) of
the Illinois bar, admitted pro hac vice,
attorneys for respondent (Therese M. Keeley and
David S. Foster, of counsel and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
D'ANNUNZIO, J.A.D.
Plaintiff Rundle V. Hallowell sued American Honda Motor Co.,
Inc. (Honda) and other defendants, alleging that Honda had
violated an agreement to grant a dealership franchise to an
entity in which plaintiff had an interest and that he had been
cheated out of an equity participation in a different entity to
which Honda had granted a franchise. The court entered summary
judgment in favor of Honda and its former executive, the
defendant Novelly.See footnote 1
The litigation was not concluded, however, with regard to
the other defendants. The trial court certified the summary
judgments in favor of Honda and Novelly as final judgments in
accordance with R. 4:42-2. Thereafter, plaintiff filed a notice
of appeal. Honda's motion to dismiss the appeal as untimely was
denied by this court in a one-judge order. Honda never moved to
dismiss this appeal on the ground that it was an appeal from an
interlocutory order for which leave had not been granted.
After this appeal was calendared, we informed counsel for
plaintiff and Honda that, in our view, the use in this case of
the R. 4:42-2 procedure for certifying interlocutory orders as
final judgments had been inappropriate. Counsel informed us that
plaintiff's claim against the other defendants was still pending.
We gave counsel leave to file letter briefs addressing the
improvident use of R. 4:42-2 and whether the appeal should be
dismissed as interlocutory. Honda filed a letter brief urging us
not to dismiss the appeal. Plaintiff did not file a brief.
R. 4:42-2 provides in relevant part:
If an order would be subject to process to
enforce a judgment pursuant to R. 4:59 if it
were final and if the trial court certifies
that there is no just reason for delay of
such enforcement, the trial court may direct
the entry of final judgment upon fewer than
all the claims as to all parties . . . .
[Emphasis added.]
This rule, by its terms, does not apply to the summary
judgments in favor of defendants Honda and Novelly because those
judgments would not "be subject to process to enforce" them. See
Taylor v. General Elec. Co.,
208 N.J. Super. 207, 211 (App.
Div.), certif. denied,
104 N.J. 379 (1986); Pressler, Current
N.J. Court Rules, comment on R. 4:42-2 (1997) (observing that "it
is only an order susceptible to enforcement as a final order
which is eligible for certification. This limited eligibility
excludes orders dismissing as to particular parties, denying
summary judgment, and indeed the whole panoply of orders which,
if final, would confer no enforcement rights under R. 4:59.").
We conclude, therefore, that the trial court's certification of
the summary judgments in this case was improvident. The summary
judgments remain interlocutory orders for which leave to appeal
must be granted.
Honda contends that leave to appeal should be granted nunc
pro tunc because the issues have been fully briefed by the
parties and more than a year and a half has elapsed since the
judgments were entered. Cf. Taylor, supra, 208 N.J. Super. at
211. We reject this contention. The parties should have known
that the use of R. 4:42-2 was inappropriate, and responsibility
for the ensuing delay rests at least partially with them.
Moreover, although R. 2:4-4(b)(2) authorizes the granting of
leave to appeal nunc pro tunc, the exercise of that authority
where a party has appealed from an interlocutory order as if it
were a final judgment is extraordinary relief. Frantzen v.
Howard,
132 N.J. Super. 226, 227-28 (App. Div. 1975). In that
case we made this observation:
We say again that the grant of leave to
appeal nunc pro tunc is most extraordinary
relief and that the haphazard employment of
it can have but a deleterious impact on
appellate practice and the overall
administration of justice. Piecemeal
reviews, ordinarily, are anathema to our
practice, as expressed in the rules which
require the final disposition of all issues
at one hearing on the trial level followed by
orderly appellate review. The interruption
of the litigation at the trial level, by the
taking, as here, of an unsanctioned "appeal",
disrupts the entire process and is wasteful
of judicial resources.
[Ibid.]
Counsel for Honda also relies on the one-judge order of this court denying Honda's motion to dismiss the appeal as untimely. The order recognized that the summary judgments were interlocutory rulings. The order noted, however, that the trial court had certified its orders as final. The propriety of the certification was not before us at that time. It is clear that Honda, by its motion to dismiss the appeal as untimely, was
seeking an adjudication of the appeal which would have had
preclusive effect. It was not seeking a dismissal of the appeal
as interlocutory, a result which would not have had preclusive
effect.
The trial court's order certifying the summary judgments as
final is vacated, leave to appeal is denied, and the appeal is
dismissed as interlocutory.
Footnote: 1Novelly has not participated in this appeal. It is alleged that plaintiff never served a copy of the notice of appeal on him.