Morganroth v. Norris McLaughlin ( 2003 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2003 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    6-19-2003
    Morganroth v. Norris McLaughlin
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 02-2087
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    Recommended Citation
    "Morganroth v. Norris McLaughlin" (2003). 2003 Decisions. Paper 410.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2003/410
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    Filed May 30, 2003
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 02-2087
    MORGANROTH & MORGANROTH, a
    Michigan partnership;
    MAYER MORGANROTH,
    Appellants
    v.
    NORRIS, MCLAUGHLIN & MARCUS, P.C.;
    VICTOR S. ELGORT; DANIEL R. GUADALUPE;
    CHARLES H. NEWMAN; DAVID C. ROBERTS;
    JOHN DOE(S), I-X
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    For the District of New Jersey
    D.C. No.: 00-cv-4139
    District Judge: Honorable Garrett E. Brown, Jr.
    Argued: April 10, 2003
    Before: BARRY and ROSENN, Circuit Judges, and
    POLLAK,* District Judge.
    (Filed May 30, 2003)
    * Honorable Louis H. Pollak, Senior District Judge, United States District
    Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Sitting by Designation.
    2
    Thomas S. Howard, Esq. (Argued)
    Heather W. Goldstein, Esq.
    Kirsch, Gartenberg & Howard
    Two University Plaza
    Suite 400
    Hackensack, NJ 07601
    Counsel For Appellants
    Wendy L. Mager, Esq. (Argued)
    William J. Brennan III, Esq.
    Smith, Stratton, Wise, Heher
    & Brennan, L.L.P.
    Suite 4200
    600 College Road East
    Princeton, NJ 08540
    Counsel For Appellees
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ROSENN, Circuit Judge.
    This appeal raises thorny questions relating to the
    bounds of legitimate legal advocacy and transgressive
    participation by attorneys at law in a client’s illegal
    conduct. The plaintiffs, Morganroth & Morganroth, a
    Michigan law firm, and Mayer Morganroth, Esq.
    (“Morganroths”), sued John Z. DeLorean in a federal court
    in Michigan for legal services rendered over approximately
    ten years. The jury returned a verdict in their favor against
    DeLorean and Ecclesiastes 9:10-11-12, Inc. (“Ecclesiastes”),
    a corporation controlled by him, in a sum exceeding six
    million dollars. The Michigan Court enjoined DeLorean from
    transferring his assets. It set aside a purported transfer to
    Genesis III, Inc. (“Genesis”) (another corporation DeLorean
    controlled) of DeLorean’s Lamington Farm in New Jersey as
    a fraudulent conveyance to hinder, delay, or defraud
    DeLorean’s creditors.
    The plaintiffs brought the instant suit against Norris,
    McLaughlin & Marcus, P.C. (Norris, McLaughlin), a New
    Jersey law firm, as well as Victor S. Elgort, Esq., and
    Daniel R. Guadalupe, Esq., its employees or affiliates. The
    3
    complaint alleges that they actively, knowingly, and
    intentionally participated in their client’s unlawful efforts to
    avoid execution on his property. The United States District
    Court for the District of New Jersey dismissed the action on
    the ground that the plaintiffs had not alleged all of
    the    elements    of    common      law     fraud,  including
    misrepresentations to the plaintiffs, detrimental reliance,
    and cognizable damages. The plaintiffs timely appealed. We
    vacate and remand.
    I.
    For the purposes of defendants’ motion to dismiss, we
    must accept as true the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint
    and make all reasonable inferences in their favor. Shaev v.
    Saper, 
    320 F.3d 373
    , 375 (3d Cir. 2003). The statements of
    fact in this opinion are drawn from the allegations in the
    complaint.
    The plaintiffs filed suit against DeLorean and Ecclesiastes
    in a federal district court in Michigan in February 1993,
    seeking a judgment for their legal services and also
    injunctive relief. Defendants Norris, McLaughlin and/or
    Elgort represented DeLorean in that action. In May 1994,
    DeLorean purported to convey his interests in his 430 acre
    Lamington Farm for a nominal sum to Genesis. Norris,
    McLaughlin assisted DeLorean in this transaction and in
    forming Genesis.
    On July 11, 1994, the Honorable Anna Diggs Taylor
    enjoined DeLorean from transferring any assets, including
    Lamington Farm. Judge Taylor set aside the purported
    transfer of the farm to Genesis on September 12, 1994, and
    declared that it was a fraudulent conveyance with intent to
    hinder, delay, or defraud DeLorean’s creditors, including
    the Morganroths. The Michigan jury found for the
    Morganroths and in February 1995 they obtained a
    judgment against DeLorean and Ecclesiastes, jointly and
    severally, in the sum of $6,228,235. A substantial amount
    of the judgment remains unpaid.
    The complaint alleges that after the Michigan trial,
    DeLorean continued to take steps to obstruct the
    Morganroths from recovering on the judgment. In February
    4
    1995, he delivered his shares of capital stock in a Nevada
    corporation called CRISTINA to the United States Marshals
    Service to facilitate execution of a judgment in favor of
    DeLorean Cadillac, Inc., an Ohio corporation controlled by
    his brother. The Morganroths allege that this action was a
    fraudulent effort to obstruct them from enforcing their
    judgment against DeLorean’s CRISTINA stock.
    In April 1995, Elgort and Norris, McLaughlin prepared a
    deed purporting to confirm the May 24, 1994 deed
    conveying DeLorean’s interests in Lamington Farm to
    Genesis. They recorded the deed with the Somerset County,
    New Jersey Clerk. The Morganroths allege that the
    defendants took this action “with the intent of defrauding
    [them] and aiding DeLorean in his efforts to hinder and
    delay [the Morganroths’] enforcement of the Michigan
    Judgment.”
    Two days after the defendants recorded the deed, the
    Morganroths sought to enforce the Michigan judgment in a
    supplementary     proceeding    against  DeLorean    and
    Ecclesiastes in the United States District Court for the
    District of New Jersey. Norris, McLaughlin and/or Elgort
    and/or     Guadalupe    represented   DeLorean   in   the
    supplementary action. The Morganroths registered the
    Michigan judgment in the United States District Court for
    the Southern District of New York and served DeLorean
    with a restraining order to prevent him from conveying
    property until their judgment against him had been
    satisfied.
    The complaint alleges that on or before June 2, 1995,
    Norris,     McLaughlin    and    Guadalupe      prepared    a
    Memorandum of Life Lease in which Genesis, the purported
    title holder of Lamington Farm, acknowledged a preexisting
    life lease created in September 1987 between DeLorean, as
    lessor, and DeLorean, as guardian for his children, as
    lessee. The Memorandum was created after the entry of the
    Michigan judgment. The purported lease concerned all or a
    portion of Lamington Farm, including a mansion house,
    several additional dwelling units, and other buildings. The
    Morganroths allege that the life lease was a fiction and that
    Norris, McLaughlin and Guadalupe knew it was; the
    defendants created the Memorandum in a fraudulent
    5
    attempt to obstruct plaintiffs’ enforcement of the Michigan
    judgment.
    Two weeks before DeLorean was to be deposed, Norris,
    McLaughlin recorded the purported life lease Memorandum
    with the Somerset County Clerk. Norris, McLaughlin
    subsequently prepared and recorded a corrective deed,
    again purporting to transfer DeLorean’s interest in
    Lamington Farm to Genesis. On August 3, 1995, Norris,
    McLaughlin wrote a letter to the Somerset County Clerk.
    The letter enclosed a copy of Judge Taylor’s November 3,
    1994 order dissolving the July 11, 1994 preliminary
    injunction order. According to the complaint, Norris,
    McLaughlin misrepresented to the Clerk that the November
    3, 1994 order had the effect of dissolving Judge Taylor’s
    September 12, 1994 order which had set aside DeLorean’s
    fraudulent conveyance of Lamington Farm to Genesis. The
    Clerk relied on this deceptive letter and entered into the
    public record erroneous marginal notations of the
    purported dissolution of Judge Taylor’s September 12, 1994
    order.
    In January 1996, the United States District Court for the
    District of New Jersey issued on the Morganroths’ behalf a
    writ of execution in the supplementary proceeding. This
    writ included in the execution, inter alia, Lamington Farm,
    certain personal property, and the CRISTINA shares. Elgort
    privately contacted the attorney representing DeLorean
    Cadillac, which was controlled by DeLorean’s brother.
    Elgort asked the attorney not to contact the Morganroths or
    the Marshal in connection with some furniture described in
    the writ of execution that was being removed by John
    DeLorean to a warehouse owned by DeLorean Cadillac for
    the purpose of escaping plaintiffs’ writ of execution. The
    instant defendants did not disclose to the District Court at
    the time they moved for and argued the motion to vacate
    the plaintiffs’ writ of execution that DeLorean had delivered
    the CRISTINA shares to the Marshal to facilitate the
    execution by DeLorean Cadillac on its writ.
    Based on the transfers, Norris, McLaughlin and
    Guadalupe argued that the CRISTINA shares and
    Lamington Farm were not subject to the plaintiffs’ writ of
    execution. Plaintiffs allege that Norris, McLaughlin and
    6
    Guadalupe knew, or should have known, that these
    transfers were made by DeLorean and others with the
    intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the plaintiffs. On
    October 3, 1996, the District Court denied the motion and
    found that Judge Taylor’s September 12, 1994 order setting
    aside DeLorean’s purported transfer of Lamington Farm to
    Genesis was a facially valid order that had not been
    vacated.
    On April 7, 1999, the District Court issued a further writ
    of execution (“Second Alias Writ”). This writ included
    DeLorean’s right to redeem Lamington Farm from Merrill
    Lynch Credit Corporation under an amended consent order
    in foreclosure proceedings brought by Merrill Lynch against
    DeLorean and others in the New Jersey Chancery Court
    (“the Redemption Rights”). Again, Norris, McLaughlin
    moved to vacate this writ, maintaining that DeLorean’s
    Redemption Rights were not subject to execution based
    upon the previous transfers and other transactions. The
    Morganroths allege that defendants knew or should have
    known that these transactions were entered into by
    DeLorean and others to hinder, delay, and/or defraud the
    Morganroths and also knew that the New Jersey Chancery
    Court had held that plaintiffs could execute their judgment
    against DeLorean’s Redemption Rights.
    The District Court held in July 1999 that plaintiffs could
    execute the New Jersey Chancery Court’s judgment against
    the Redemption Rights and ordered a U.S. Marshal’s sale of
    those rights. The Morganroths allege that the defendants
    made every effort to hinder the sale by making arguments
    based on transactions that the defendants knew to be
    fraudulent. Additionally, plaintiffs allege that in Chapter 11
    bankruptcy proceedings in the District of Maryland, Norris,
    McLaughlin maintained that the Redemption Rights were
    the property of DeLorean’s children and not subject to the
    Second Alias Writ, although it knew that the District Court
    had held they were John DeLorean’s property and subject
    to execution and sale to satisfy the New Jersey judgment.
    In the instant suit, the Morganroths sued only
    DeLorean’s lawyers in the United States District Court for
    the District of New Jersey.1 Count I of the complaint alleges
    1. The District Court had jurisdiction under a diversity theory. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . The controversy is between citizens of different states.
    7
    that defendants conspired to commit fraud. It alleges that
    defendants agreed to make misrepresentations and
    omissions to defraud the plaintiffs; they took tortious steps
    in furtherance of those agreements, causing actual and
    consequential damages including attorneys’ fees and
    expenses involved in recovering on the Michigan judgment.
    In Count II, the Morganroths claim that defendants
    knowingly aided and abetted DeLorean’s acts of fraud and
    concealment for the purpose of hindering plaintiffs’ efforts
    to enforce the judgment, causing actual and consequential
    damages. In Count III, plaintiffs assert that defendants
    themselves committed fraud through their knowing
    material misrepresentations, fraudulent concealment, and
    wrongful withholding of information, and that these acts
    and omissions proximately caused plaintiffs actual and
    consequential damages.
    Defendants moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim
    under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) and the
    District Court granted the motion.
    II.
    The District Court should only have dismissed the
    Morganroths’ claims if they failed to allege a set of facts
    that would entitle them to relief. See Conley v. Gibson, 
    355 U.S. 41
    , 45-46 (1957). The Court should have accepted all
    well-pleaded allegations in the complaint as true and
    should have viewed them in the light most favorable to the
    Morganroths. See Shaev, 
    320 F.3d at 375
    . This Court’s
    review of the District Court’s dismissal is plenary. See
    Board of Trustees of Bricklayers & Allied Craftsmen Local 6
    v. Wettlin Assocs., 
    237 F.3d 270
    , 272 (3d Cir. 2001).
    Morganroth & Morganroth is a Michigan partnership with its principal
    place of business in Michigan. Plaintiff Mayer Morganroth is a citizen of
    the state of Michigan and has a principal place of business in Michigan.
    All the defendants are from New Jersey. The amount in controversy
    substantially exceeds $75,000. The District Court’s March 19, 2002
    order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss is a final order for the
    purposes of 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    8
    In their motion to dismiss, defendants argued that the
    Morganroths’ complaint did not allege misrepresentations
    made by defendants or that plaintiffs relied upon any of
    defendants’ statements to their detriment. See Dist. Ct. op.
    at 8. Thus, defendants argued, the complaint does not
    allege all of the elements of actionable fraud. 
    Id.
     The
    District Court agreed, concluding that in the absence of
    allegations of material misrepresentations to the plaintiffs,
    reasonable reliance, and damages proximately caused by
    the misrepresentations, there could be no finding of
    common law fraud. See 
    id. at 9
    .
    Plaintiffs acknowledge that they have not stated a claim
    for common law fraud, but argue they did state a claim for
    creditor fraud under New Jersey law. They assert that they
    are not required to allege reliance upon statements made
    by the defendants to make out a cause of action for creditor
    fraud because New Jersey case law provides a cause of
    action against a judgment debtor who fraudulently
    obstructs enforcement of a judgment.
    The tort of creditor fraud, which does not require that the
    plaintiff plead all of the elements of common law fraud, has
    not yet been recognized by the New Jersey Supreme Court.
    Nevertheless, the New Jersey Superior Court has explained
    that “[i]t is not necessary for plaintiff to show a classic case
    of legal fraud in order to have a viable cause of action when
    it is otherwise demonstrated that actions have been taken
    for the purposes of defrauding a creditor.” Karo Marketing
    Corp. v. Playdrome Am., 
    752 A.2d 341
    , 346 (N.J. Super. Ct.
    App. Div. 2000). The District Court attempted to
    distinguish Karo on the ground that it did not recognize
    that “a judgment creditor will be able to maintain a cause
    of action against a debtor’s legal counsel.” Dist. Ct. op. at
    12 n.2. In Karo, a creditor won a judgment against a
    management company. The creditor then sued the
    management company’s parent corporation, subsidiaries,
    shareholders, and lawyers to recover for various actions
    they took to make the management company judgment
    proof. Karo held that the creditor had stated a separate and
    independent claim “sounding in creditor fraud,” 
    id. at 345
    ,
    even though the management company and its attorneys
    and affiliates had not made any misrepresentations to the
    judgment creditor.
    9
    Karo was based in part on Jugan v. Friedman, 
    646 A.2d 1112
     (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1994). In Jugan, a creditor
    won a tort judgment against a debtor. Seeking to enforce
    the judgment, the creditor sued the debtor and his wife and
    sons as the recipients of allegedly fraudulent conveyances.
    The court held that the creditor was entitled to void the
    fraudulent conveyances made for no consideration from the
    debtor to his family. Moreover, the debtor’s fraudulent
    interference with the creditor’s efforts to collect constituted
    an independent tort entitling the creditor to damages. 
    Id. at 1119
    ; Banco Popular North America v. Gandi, 
    2003 N.J. Super. LEXIS 151
    , at *13 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. April
    29, 2003) (“. . . we recognized [in Jugan] that [the debtor]’s
    efforts to interfere with Jugan’s attempt to collect on his
    judgment debt constituted a separate, cognizable tort.”). As
    in Karo, Jugan did not require that the plaintiff rely to his
    detriment on a false representation by the defendant.
    Jugan, 
    646 A.2d at 1119
    . The New Jersey Superior Court
    explained:
    Mr. Jugan did not undertake the present action
    because he was fooled by [the debtor]’s false
    representations. He sued to set the purported transfers
    aside because he knew they were false. Nonetheless,
    [the debtor]’s conduct was clearly unlawful and it is
    closely enough analogous to common law fraud that we
    have no hesitancy in ruling, as we do, that it was
    tortious and that Mr. Jugan is therefore entitled to
    recover for damage of which that tort was the
    proximate cause.
    
    Id. at 1119-20
     (emphasis in original). Additionally, Jugan
    was entitled to recover the attorney’s fees incurred in
    litigation with the debtor’s wife and sons that were made
    necessary by the debtor’s interference.
    The District Court in this case rejected the Morganroths’
    argument that they had stated a claim for creditor fraud.
    The Court reasoned that Karo and Jugan do not support a
    general cause of action against a debtor’s attorney when
    the plaintiffs do not allege reliance on the attorney’s
    misrepresentations. See Dist. Ct. op. at 11. The District
    Court acknowledged that one of the defendants in Karo was
    the debtor’s attorney, but reasoned that the Karo plaintiffs
    10
    alleged with greater specificity than the plaintiffs do here
    that the attorney was actively involved in creating and
    executing the scheme. The District Court characterized the
    Morganroths’ complaint as only making “general allegations
    that the defendants conspired with the debtors to deprive
    them of their enforcement of the judgment. There are no
    allegations that the defendants orchestrated or devised the
    debtor’s alleged scheme to defraud them, such as the
    claims against the attorney in Karo.” Id. at 10. We disagree.
    The Morganroths’ allegations amply satisfy Karo’s
    requirements.
    The Morganroths have alleged facts that, if proven, would
    establish that the defendants went beyond the bounds of
    permissible advocacy; they allege that defendants were
    active participants and planners in the scheme to obstruct
    the plaintiffs’ efforts to execute on their judgment. Plaintiffs
    allege that Norris, McLaughlin prepared a confirmatory
    deed that purported to transfer Lamington Farm from
    DeLorean to Genesis. The Morganroths assert that the
    defendants knew this deed to be false when they prepared
    it and that they did so with the intent of unlawfully aiding
    DeLorean in his efforts to defraud the Morganroths and to
    hinder and delay enforcement of the Michigan judgment.
    Moreover, plaintiffs allege that on or before June 2, 1995,
    Norris, McLaughlin knowingly and falsely prepared a sham
    Memorandum of Life Lease. The sham lease purported to
    acknowledge the existence of a fictional 1987 lessor-lessee
    relationship between DeLorean as owner and DeLorean as
    guardian of his children as lessee. Whether a bona fide
    lease actually existed as of 1987 is a factual question. If it
    did not, and if the defendants knew it did not, they
    transgressed the bounds of legal advocacy and committed
    creditor fraud.
    Plaintiffs specifically allege a number of other intentional
    acts in furtherance of the scam to hinder collection of
    plaintiffs’ judgment: the defendants recorded the sham
    lease with the Somerset County Clerk’s office; they
    prepared and recorded a corrective lease with the clerk’s
    office; they wrote a letter to the clerk’s office deliberately
    misrepresenting the effect of the September 12, 1994
    Michigan court order. The defendants took no action to
    11
    correct these misrepresentations, even after the District
    Court denied DeLorean’s motion to vacate the writ on
    October 3, 1996, and upheld the September 12, 1994
    Michigan order.
    Defendants’ responses to these arguments miss the
    mark. For example, they argue that whether or not the
    existence of a life lease harmed the plaintiffs, the recording
    of it had no adverse effect. The Morganroths’ claim is that
    no genuine life lease existed. Rather, it was merely a
    fictional invention of the defendants with the intent to
    hinder and defraud the plaintiffs of their judgment against
    DeLorean and Genesis, thereby encumbering the title to
    Lamington Farm. Defendants argue that the act of
    recording the lease did not have any effect on the plaintiffs
    because it merely asserted DeLorean’s legal position. The
    truth of this statement depends on two triable facts: (1)
    whether the 1987 lease actually existed; and (2) whether
    DeLorean’s lawyers knew that it did not and was merely a
    fiction.
    The plaintiffs also allege that Norris, McLaughlin assisted
    in the formation of Genesis for the sole purpose of
    obstructing plaintiffs’ efforts to enforce their judgment
    against DeLorean, and pursuant to such purpose
    engineered the conveyance of Lamington Farm to it. The
    defendants respond that this was done to facilitate the
    development of the property as a golf course. However, the
    transfer to Genesis was judicially determined to be a fraud
    by the Michigan court. Whether defendants knew or
    participated knowingly in the fraud is a triable issue. The
    defendants further argue that the transfer could not have
    prevented the Morganroths from collecting on their
    judgment because DeLorean had a 98% interest in Genesis.
    However, plaintiffs’ allegation is that the transaction was a
    sham meant to hinder or delay, not that it was an
    insuperable obstacle to eventual recovery. The Morganroths
    allege that the defendants knowingly participated in this
    scheme to hinder or delay.
    The defendants further argue that the Genesis transfer
    did not cause the plaintiffs to litigate with a third party
    because Merrill Lynch already had a superior lien on the
    Lamington Farm. The conveyance from DeLorean to
    12
    Genesis may or may not have affected the Morganroths’
    rights vis-a-vis Merrill Lynch, but it did hinder and delay
    plaintiffs’ efforts to enforce the Michigan judgment, and it
    did increase their litigation costs. The defendants argue
    that the plaintiffs cannot show that the sham Genesis
    transaction harmed them unless they can prove that but
    for the Genesis transfer, they would have obtained the farm
    outright. This argument is sophistry; the plaintiffs must
    only allege that the defendants actively and knowingly
    participated in a fraudulent scheme that hindered or
    delayed their efforts to enforce the Michigan judgment.
    These efforts might not have given plaintiffs unencumbered
    title to the farm by foreclosure but, at least, gave them a
    valuable interest or title subject to the Merrill Lynch lien.
    The complaint alleges that the defendants pursued an
    unlawful and fraudulent means of evading the writ of
    execution when they wrote DeLorean Cadillac’s attorney
    requesting him not to communicate with the Marshal or
    with Morganroth’s attorney about DeLorean’s furniture.
    Defendants argue that the letter merely asserts DeLorean’s
    legal position that DeLorean Cadillac has no obligation to
    inform the Morganroths that furniture obtained by
    DeLorean Cadillac pursuant to a writ of execution in
    another case had been moved to a warehouse. If the
    contents and purpose of the letter are proven at trial, this
    evidence would support plaintiffs’ claim of creditor fraud.
    The Morganroths also allege that the defendants
    knowingly made false representations in court proceedings
    regarding DeLorean’s furniture and his CRISTINA shares.
    The allegation is that the defendants knew, or should have
    known, that the transfers upon which their arguments were
    based were shams entered into with an intent to hinder or
    delay and defraud plaintiffs in the execution of the
    Michigan judgment.2
    2. Defendants implausibly argue that the Morganroths’ complaint fails to
    satisfy Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) because it is not pled with
    adequate particularity. See Dist. Ct. op. at 8. Rule 9(b) provides that “[i]n
    all averments of fraud or mistake, the circumstances constituting fraud
    or mistake shall be stated with particularity. Malice, intent, knowledge
    and other condition of mind of a person may be averred generally.” Fed.
    13
    We hold that when a complaint alleges that an attorney
    has knowingly and intentionally participated in a client’s
    unlawful conduct to hinder, delay, and/or fraudulently
    obstruct the enforcement of a judgment of a court, the
    plaintiff has stated a claim under New Jersey law for
    creditor fraud against the attorney. This is so even if the
    complaint does not allege any misrepresentation by the
    attorney to the judgment creditor and does not allege that
    the creditor detrimentally relied on such misrepresentation.
    In this case, the Morganroths have alleged many facts
    which, if proven, would amply satisfy this test. Thus, the
    District Court’s dismissal of the Morganroths’ fraud claim
    in Count III must be vacated.
    III.
    The District Court also erred when it held that the
    dismissal of Count III required the dismissal of the
    conspiracy and aiding and abetting claims. There are four
    elements to the tort of civil conspiracy: (1) a combination of
    two or more persons; (2) a real agreement or confederation
    with a common design; (3) the existence of an unlawful
    purpose, or of a lawful purpose to be achieved by unlawful
    means; and (4) proof of special damages. Naylor v. Harkins,
    
    99 A.2d 849
    , 855 (N.J. Super. Ct. Ch. Div. 1953), modified
    on other grounds, 
    109 A.2d 19
     (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div.
    1954).
    The District Court mistakenly cited Karo for the
    proposition that allegations of civil conspiracy were
    “adjunct” to the fraud claim. See Dist. Ct. op. at 13 (citing
    Karo, 
    752 A.2d at 348
    ). The citation in Karo is to Board of
    Educ., Asbury Park v. Hoek, 
    183 A.2d 633
     (N.J. 1962), in
    which the New Jersey Supreme Court explained that “[t]he
    gravamen of an action in civil conspiracy is not the
    R. Civ. P. 9(b). The purpose of Rule 9(b) is to provide notice, not to test
    the factual allegations of the claim. See Gutman v. Howard Savings
    Bank, 
    748 F. Supp. 254
    , 257 (D. N.J. 1990). The fraud allegations are
    sufficiently particular because they allege specific actions by which
    defendants exceeded the bounds of advocacy and became active
    participants in their client’s illegal scheme.
    14
    conspiracy itself but the underlying wrong which, absent
    the conspiracy, would give a right of action. Proof of a
    conspiracy makes the conspirators jointly liable for the
    wrong and resulting damages.” Id. at 646 (internal citations
    omitted). Mere agreement to do a wrongful act can never
    alone amount to a tort, whether or not it may be a crime.
    See Rose v. Bartle, 
    871 F.2d 331
    , 366 n.59 (3d Cir. 1989);
    McAlpine v. AAMCO Automatic Transmission, Inc., 
    461 F.Supp. 1232
    , 1273 (E.D. Mich. 1976). Some act that is
    itself a tort must be committed by one of the parties in
    pursuance of the agreement. See James v. Evans, 
    149 F. 136
    , 140 (3d Cir. 1906) (“The gist of the action is not the
    conspiracy charged, but the tort working damage to the
    plaintiff.”).
    Not every conspirator must commit an overt act in
    furtherance of the conspiracy, so long as at least one does.
    See Beck v. Prupis, 
    529 U.S. 494
    , 503 (2000). Here, the
    Morganroths have alleged a number of overt acts committed
    by one or more of the conspirators in furtherance of the
    conspiracy, many of which would hypothetically survive the
    dismissal of Count III. For example, if the defendants and
    DeLorean agreed to the conspiracy but all the overt acts in
    furtherance of the conspiracy were committed by DeLorean
    himself, defendants would still be liable for civil conspiracy.
    Thus, the conspiracy count survives both because the
    District Court erred in dismissing Count III and because
    the District Court erroneously concluded that DeLorean’s
    overt acts could not serve as the predicates for a conspiracy
    claim against defendants.
    Likewise, the District Court erred in dismissing the aiding
    and abetting claim set forth in Count II. The elements of
    aiding and abetting are: (1) the commission of a wrongful
    act; (2) knowledge of the act by the alleged aider-abettor;
    and (3) the aider-abettor knowingly and substantially
    participated in the wrongdoing. Monsen v. Consol. Dressed
    Beef Co., Inc., 
    579 F.2d 793
    , 799 (3d Cir. 1978); Elysian
    Fed. Savings Bank v. First Interregional Equity Corp., 
    713 F. Supp. 737
    , 760 (D.N.J. 1989) (interpreting inter alia New
    Jersey common law of fraud).3 The Morganroths’ complaint
    3. There are important differences between criminal and civil approaches
    to aiding and abetting liability. In particular, shared intent is not
    15
    provides numerous allegations of defendants’ knowing
    assistance to DeLorean’s fraudulent schemes. The
    truthfulness of plaintiffs’ allegations regarding the
    defendants’ knowledge of the fraudulent nature of
    DeLorean’s actions is a question of fact to be determined at
    trial.
    IV.
    As a general rule in New Jersey, each party must bear its
    own attorneys’ fees. See, e.g., Right to Choose v. Byrne, 
    450 A.2d 925
    , 940 (N.J. 1982). An exception to this rule is that
    if the wrongful conduct of a tortfeasor causes a plaintiff to
    sue a third party, the plaintiff can recover the fees incurred
    in the litigation against the third party from the tortfeasor.
    In re Estate of Lash, 
    776 A.2d 765
    , 769 (N.J. 2001). In
    Jugan, the creditor was simultaneously involved in
    litigation with both the debtor and the recipients of the
    debtor’s fraudulent conveyances. The court held that the
    creditor was entitled to recover, as damages for the debtor’s
    interference, the attorneys’ fees incurred in litigation with
    the transferees of the fraudulent conveyances, but not the
    fees incurred against the judgment debtor. Here, the
    situation is slightly different: plaintiffs charge that the
    debtor’s attorneys committed fraud. The debtor’s attorneys’
    fraud did not cause the plaintiffs to sue the debtor; it did
    cause them additional attorneys’ fees and expenses in the
    suit to enforce the judgment against the debtor and in the
    actions to set aside the purported unlawful transfers of
    property and other sham transactions.
    We conclude that the situation here is sufficiently
    analogous to Jugan to merit the same treatment. The
    defendants allegedly were both the “but for” cause and the
    proximate cause of the Morganroths’ additional attorneys’
    fees. Licensed lawyers are not shielded from liability if their
    required in the civil context in New Jersey. See Failla v. City of Passaic,
    
    146 F.3d 149
    , 157 (3d Cir. 1998). A person is liable for harm resulting
    to a third person from the conduct of another when he “knows that the
    other’s conduct constitutes a breach of duty and gives substantial
    assistance or encouragement to the other so to conduct himself . . . .”
    
    Id. at 157-58
     (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 876(b)).
    16
    conduct extends beyond the legitimate bounds of lawful
    representation. See Wahlgren v. Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.,
    
    68 F.2d 660
    , 664 (7th Cir. 1934) (“One may not use his
    license to practice law as a shield to protect himself from
    the consequences of an unlawful or illegal conspiracy.”);
    accord Banco Popular, 
    2003 N.J. Super. LEXIS 151
    , at *15-
    *16. Although the Morganroths are not entitled to attorneys’
    fees arising out of their original suit against DeLorean, the
    additional expenses in fees and costs they incurred to
    enforce the judgment as a result of defendants’ alleged
    fraud are recoverable. See Jugan, 
    646 A.2d at 1120
    .
    The District Court concluded that plaintiffs made an
    insufficient “blanket allegation” that they have suffered
    extra costs. See Dist. Ct. op at 10. The Morganroths’ theory
    of damages is that the defendants proximately caused them
    to suffer actual and consequential damages for injury to
    their business or property, including but not limited to
    attorneys’ fees and expenses incurred as a result of
    defendants’ fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, and aiding
    and abetting DeLorean’s fraud. Thus, the Morganroths seek
    to recover attorneys’ fees that they incurred as a result of
    defendants’ unlawful conduct in furthering DeLorean’s
    efforts. Defendants’ response is that they were merely
    engaged in adversarial lawyering and that any expenses the
    Morganroths incurred in enforcing the Michigan judgment
    against DeLorean resulted from preexisting legitimate
    claims to DeLorean’s assets by other parties. If these claims
    were legitimate or had arisen prior to defendants’
    representation of DeLorean, then the plaintiffs obviously
    would have no case. However, these are factual questions
    that cannot be resolved on a 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss.
    Thus, we hold that plaintiffs have stated a claim for
    damages under New Jersey law and the District Court’s
    Order of Dismissal must be reversed.4
    4. The defendants may also have violated New Jersey’s Uniform
    Fraudulent Transfer Act, N.J.S.A. §§ 25:2-20 to 25:2-34 (UFTA), which
    creates a cause of action for transfers made by a debtor that are
    fraudulent as to a creditor
    if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation: a. With
    actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor;
    17
    V.
    Defendants erroneously contend that plaintiffs’ claims to
    set aside the transfer of Lamington Farm and personal
    property to Genesis are barred by the statute of limitations.
    They argue that those claims accrued more than six years
    prior to the filing of this law suit. It is true that the transfer
    of the farm to Genesis took place May 24, 1994, and this
    action was not filed until August 23, 2000, more than six
    years later. However, plaintiffs’ action against the
    defendants for participating in DeLorean’s fraudulent
    scheme to avoid collection of the Michigan judgment did
    not accrue until the Morganroths obtained a judgment
    against DeLorean in the Michigan litigation. Thus, the
    statute of limitations runs from entry of that judgment on
    February 2, 1995. The statute of limitations has, therefore,
    not run on any of the plaintiffs’ claims in this lawsuit.5
    Moreover, many of defendants’ allegedly fraudulent acts
    and omissions took place within the time limitations period
    and others have been previously judicially determined. For
    example, Judge Taylor already held that the transfer of
    Lamington Farm from DeLorean to Genesis was a
    fraudulent conveyance. To the extent that the fraudulent
    nature of that transaction is necessary as a predicate to the
    or b. Without receiving a reasonably equivalent value in exchange
    for the transfer or obligation, and the debtor: (1) Was engaged or
    was about to engage in a business or a transaction for which the
    remaining assets of the debtor were unreasonably small in relation
    to the business or transaction; or (2) Intended to incur, or believed
    or reasonably should have believed that the debtor would incur,
    debts beyond the debtor’s ability to pay as they become due.
    N.J.S.A. § 25:2-25. However, the remedies directly under the UFTA are
    limited. See N.J.S.A. § 25:2-29. Thus, plaintiffs must rely upon the tort
    of creditor fraud articulated in Karo and Jugan to pursue damages for
    additional attorneys’ fees incurred.
    5. The Morganroths first address the statute of limitations question in
    their reply brief. The defendants raised the question in their brief. The
    reply brief was the appropriate time for the Morganroths to address the
    question because plaintiffs could not be expected to have anticipated
    that the defendants would raise the statute of limitations defense on
    appeal since it was not ruled on in the District Court.
    18
    Morganroths’ other allegations, defendants cannot now
    argue that it was not fraudulent.6
    VI.
    The District Court’s order granting defendants’ motion to
    dismiss entered March 20, 2002 will be vacated as to all
    three counts alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint and the case
    will be remanded for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion. Costs taxed against the defendants.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    6. Plaintiffs also assert that the continuing violation theory tolls the
    statute of limitations. See Fowkes v. Penn. R.R. Co., 
    264 F.2d 397
     (3d
    Cir. 1959). However, this theory does not apply when plaintiffs are aware
    of the injury at the time it occurred. See Kichline v. Consol. Rail Corp.,
    
    800 F.2d 356
    , 360 (3d Cir. 1986). The Morganroths successfully
    contested the transfer of Lamington Farm to Genesis during the
    Michigan action, demonstrating that they were aware of the injury at the
    time and precluding resort to the continuing violation theory of tolling.