SUSAN LUCAS VS. 1 ON 1 TITLE AGENCY, INC. SUSAN LUCAS VS. NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION (L-3144-13 AND L-0701-14, OCEAN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2019 )


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  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2217-16T2
    SUSAN LUCAS,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.                                         August 9, 2019
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    1 ON 1 TITLE AGENCY,
    INC., NEW JERSEY TITLE
    INSURANCE CO., A.
    SCHANCUPP & ASSOCIATES,
    INC., ARNOLD SCHANCUPP,
    ESQ., ALL-COUNTY SURVEYING,
    PC, and GEORGE W. LATOS,
    Defendants.
    SUSAN LUCAS,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
    TRANSPORTATION, STATE OF
    NEW JERSEY, THE BOROUGH OF
    MANTOLOKING, THE COUNTY
    OF OCEAN, MOUNT CONSTRUCTION,
    and ARORA AND ASSOCIATES, PC,
    Defendants.
    __________________________________
    Argued December 19, 2018 – Decided August 9, 2019
    Before Judges Fuentes, Vernoia and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Ocean County, Docket Nos. L-3144-13 and
    L-0701-14.
    John M. Hanamirian argued the cause for appellant
    Freeborn & Peters, LLP (Hanamirian Law Firm, PC,
    attorneys; John M. Hanamirian, on the brief).
    Jay J. Rice argued the cause for respondent Susan Lucas
    (Nagel Rice, LLP, attorneys; Jay J. Rice and Randee M.
    Matloff, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FUENTES, P.J.A.D.
    The attorneys who successfully represented plaintiff in the prosecution of
    a legal malpractice action sought counsel fees from plaintiff that exceeded the
    amount of consequential damages proximately caused by the attorney/tortfeasor.
    When plaintiff and the attorneys were unable to agree on the fee, the trial judge
    who presided over the legal malpractice action sua sponte decided to adjudicate
    the fee dispute over the attorneys' objection. At the time the trial judge asserted
    this authority, plaintiff had not sought to resolve the fee dispute before the
    District Fee Arbitration Committee pursuant to Rule 1:20A-1 to -6, and the
    attorneys had not filed a separate collection action against plaintiff.
    A-2217-16T2
    2
    In response to the attorneys' appeal, we now reverse. The fee dispute
    between plaintiff and her attorneys is not part of the underlying legal malpractice
    action. Plaintiff's attorneys were not a party in the case and had not filed a
    collection action against plaintiff nor sought relief under N.J.S.A. 2A:13-5,
    commonly known as the Attorney's Lien Act. Under these facts, the trial judge
    did not have subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate this counsel fee dispute.
    I
    Plaintiff Susan Lucas retained Freeborn & Peters LLP (Freeborn), a law
    firm located in Cook County, Illinois, to prosecute a legal malpractice action
    against Arnold Schancupp & Associates, a New Jersey law firm who represented
    her in the purchase of her home in the Borough of Mantoloking, Ocean County.
    Lucas claimed Schancupp failed to disclose that the property was subject to a
    storm water easement.      She also claimed the New Jersey Department of
    Transportation (NJDOT) was negligent by installing the storm water pipe under
    the foundation of her home.
    The trial began in May 2016 and lasted a total of twenty-two days. In this
    State, "a negligent attorney is responsible for the reasonable legal expenses and
    attorney fees incurred by a former client in prosecuting the legal malpractice
    action." Saffer v. Willoughby, 
    143 N.J. 256
    , 272 (1996). The Court deemed
    A-2217-16T2
    3
    these expenditures as "consequential damages that are proximately related to the
    malpractice." 
    Ibid. Lucas prevailed against
    her former real estate attorney.1
    The jury awarded plaintiff $980,000 as compensatory damages. Thereafter, the
    trial judge held a bench trial and awarded Lucas an additional $99,506.10 as
    consequential damages.
    The parties appeared before the trial judge on September 27, 2016, seeking
    to address how to determine the question of Lucas's outstanding legal fees.
    Because Lucas's cause of action included other parties, the judge recognized that
    Schancupp might not be liable for all of Lucas's consequential damages. In an
    order entered on September 30, 2016, the trial judge memorialized a protocol
    for the parties to conduct limited discovery. The court agreed to decide how
    much of the counsel fees Schancupp was required to pay Lucas by November
    15, 2016. At the parties' request, the judge agreed to delay his decision. In a
    telephonic conference held on November 18, 2016, Lucas informed the judge
    that she had settled all of her counsel-fees claims against Schancupp. The only
    remaining question concerned Freeborn's outstanding fees.
    1
    The jury returned a "verdict of no cause of action" in favor of the NJDOT.
    The remaining defendants named in the caption were not part of this trial.
    A-2217-16T2
    4
    Lucas paid Freeborn over $400,000 in the course of the litigation. At the
    conclusion of the trial, Freeborn submitted a statement of account for
    $1,727,168.52, reflecting the balance of attorney's fees Lucas owed to Freeborn.
    Darren VanPuymbrouck, an attorney at Freeborn, "assured the court that his law
    firm and Ms. Lucas would resolve their differences without the necessity of the
    court's intervention." The judge informed the parties that if they were unable to
    reach an agreement, "the court would resolve the dispute at the December 13,
    2016 plenary hearing." In his memorandum of opinion, the judge noted that
    neither Lucas nor VanPuymbrouck objected to this procedure.
    The retainer agreement between Lucas and Freeborn contained a provision
    that designated the Cook County, Illinois courts as the forum to adjudicate all
    disputes arising from their attorney-client relationship.        In a telephone
    conference held on December 2, 2016, VanPuymbrouck apprised the judge and
    Lucas that Freeborn objected to the jurisdiction of the New Jersey court to
    resolve the legal dispute with its client.    Lucas advised the judge that she
    intended to separately dispute the reasonableness of Freeborn's fees.
    Lucas did not file a separate claim against appellant, and the firm is not
    listed in the trial court's order. Despite the parties' positions, the trial court
    conducted a plenary hearing to determine the reasonableness of Freeborn's fees,
    A-2217-16T2
    5
    and entered an order reducing the counsel fees from approximately $1.7 million
    to approximately $359,000.        Lucas did not file a complaint or petition
    challenging Freeborn's fees.
    Freeborn appeals from that order, arguing the court did not have
    jurisdiction to set its fee.   It claims the court improperly interjected into the
    dispute between Lucas and Freeborn and without Freeborn's consent disregarded
    the forum selection clause in the retainer agreement. Freeborn also argues the
    judge improperly asserted jurisdiction over this dispute based on the erroneous
    belief that Lucas relied on Freeborn's purported consent to her decision to settle
    her claims against Schancupp, and improperly relied on the firm's pro hac vice
    admission to find jurisdiction. Finally, Freeborn argues the judge sua sponte
    and improperly decided this dispute over counsel fees without a formal
    complaint or petition for fees having been filed.
    We agree with Freeborn that under these circumstances, the Law Division
    did not have jurisdiction to decide this fee dispute. The fee dispute between
    Lucas and Freeborn was not part of the legal malpractice action against
    Schancupp.     When this issue came before the court, the judge addressed the
    parties and stated: "You have two alternatives; you can go through Fee
    Arbitration, [Rule 1:20A-1 to -6] or you can submit it to the [c]ourt, but the Fee
    A-2217-16T2
    6
    Arbitration Rules indicate that if the fee exceeds one hundred thousand dollars,
    that the Fee Arbitration committee has the right to say, 'We are not getting
    involved.'"2 Thus, as framed by the trial court, Lucas could file a petition with
    the District Fee Arbitration Committee, with the strong likelihood the
    Committee would decline jurisdiction, or wait for Freeborn to initiate legal
    action against her to collect the outstanding fees. However, the judge did not
    consider himself bound by these two options.
    On December 2, 2016, the court expressed its intention to proceed with
    the plenary hearing over Freeborn's objection:
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: As Mr. Campobasso had
    stated earlier, with all due respect, we don't consent to
    having the court adjudicate any dispute between
    ourselves and our client. And so, with all due respect
    again, I don't think any additional information needs to
    be provided to this court.
    THE COURT: All right.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: And I think we conveyed
    that position previously. So as I said, with all due
    respect, we just don't think there's any need to proceed
    any further.
    2
    Rule 1:20A-2(b)(3).
    A-2217-16T2
    7
    THE COURT: Well, with all due respect, if Ms. Lucas
    wishes the court to resolve the matter, the [c]ourt is in
    a position to do so and fully intends to do so.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Yes, Your Honor, but --
    THE COURT: I'm interested in Ms. Lucas' position.
    Would you like the [c]ourt to resolve the matter, or do
    you wish to have it done on your own?
    MS. LUCAS: Well, I wish to have the matter resolved
    with the [c]ourt, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: All right. The court [has] indicated
    previously that it intends to have a plenary hearing on
    December the 13th. That's the date of the hearing. You
    may attend the hearing and present the proofs that you
    find are appropriate, and the [c]ourt will proceed
    accordingly.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Your Honor, can I be
    heard and on the record please?
    THE COURT: You are on the record.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Yes. Your Honor, this is a
    matter in which my law firm, Freeborn & Peters, [has]
    an interest. They're not a party before this court or
    never have been. They never consented to being a party
    before this [c]ourt, and we're of the position we're not a
    party and won't consent to that. With all due respect,
    even though Ms. Lucas may prefer to proceed before
    this [c]ourt, that does not dictate our position. So, it's
    very clear to me that you do not have authority to -- not
    you, personally, but the court does not -- adjudicate a
    matter involving Freeborn & Peters at this point --
    THE COURT: How do you come to that conclusion?
    A-2217-16T2
    8
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: I'm sorry?
    THE COURT: How do you come to the conclusion that
    this [c]ourt does not have jurisdiction to resolve a
    dispute on legal fees between a party and its law firm
    on a matter that was litigated in front of this [c]ourt?
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Jurisdiction is a separate
    issue, Your Honor. It's a matter of ripeness at this
    point. It's a matter of consent. There's nothing pending
    before this [c]ourt that would allow the [c]ourt to
    adjudicate a dispute between Ms. Lucas and Freeborn
    & Peters. So that's our position.
    THE COURT: Well, then -- then I am going to indicate
    to the Morgan Melhuish firm that they are not to release
    the money to you. And that as soon as Ms. Lucas files
    a complaint to -- or a show cause order to receive her
    funds, I will hold the plenary hearing to resolve how it
    should be divided.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Right, Your Honor. With
    due respect, we object to that and don't believe that this
    [c]ourt has the authority to do that.
    THE COURT: Well, when you provide me persuasive
    authority that you are certain divest[s] me of that
    authority, I would be interested to read it. I would
    suggest to you, if you have not done so already, to
    review the case of Levine v. Levine,[3] which sets forth
    a procedure for the court to proceed in this type of
    matter.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Your Honor, I'm more
    than happy to look at any authority the [c]ourt cites. If
    there's anything else you want us to look at, we'd be
    3
    
    381 N.J. Super. 1
    (App. Div. 2005).
    A-2217-16T2
    9
    happy to do that. But we don't believe that's going to
    change our position, which is there is no ripe
    controversy before the [c]ourt, so…
    THE COURT: Well then, Ms. Lucas, I'm indicating to
    both of you that I’m going to contact the Morgan
    Melhuish firm, tell them that they are not to send the
    money until the [c]ourt resolves the matter that Ms.
    Lucas has indicated that there is a dispute between
    herself and the Freeborn Peters firm. And that once that
    matter is resolved, that the [c]ourt will indicate how it
    is to be divided.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: So, Your Honor, what --
    on what basis would the [c]ourt have authority over
    Freeborn & Peters not a party before the [c]ourt?
    THE COURT: Because I assume that if you can't
    resolve the matter between yourselves, that Ms. Lucas
    will file a complaint with the [c]ourt asking the [c]ourt
    to remedy the dispute.
    MR. VANPUYMBROUCK: Well, that assumption
    does not make it a reality, and with all due respect, Your
    Honor, it does not provide this [c]ourt in our view,
    again with all due respect, the authority to adjudicate a
    matter involving Freeborn & Peters.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    When the judge thereafter asked Lucas if she intended to challenge the
    reasonableness of Freeborn's fees, she replied: "Yes, I have no choice at this
    point."
    A-2217-16T2
    10
    II
    In Saffer, the Court created an exception to the "American Rule" in legal
    malpractice cases because the recovery of such fees are "consequential damages
    that are proximately related to the 
    malpractice." 143 N.J. at 272
    . The Court
    thereafter extended the rationale of Saffer to claims against attorneys who
    intentionally violate their fiduciary duties in Packard-Bamberger & Co. v.
    Collier, 
    167 N.J. 427
    , 444 (2001). In both cases, counsel fees are a measure of
    damages that a plaintiff must prove and a fact-finder must determine based on
    the evidence.
    There is a significant, material difference between an award of counsel
    fees under a fee-shifting statute, court rule, or contractual provision, and a fee
    dispute between a client and her own attorney. As Judge Pressler noted in
    Gruhin & Gruhin, P.A. v. Brown, 
    338 N.J. Super. 276
    , 281 (App. Div. 2001), a
    "client who has retained an attorney and promised to pay him stands on a
    completely different footing from the recipient of a fee-shifting allowance" and
    the amount a plaintiff seeks to recover under fee shifting is separate and dist inct
    from the amount the plaintiff owes her attorney.
    Freeborn's right to recover counsel fees against Lucas here arises under
    the retainer agreement executed by the parties. The trial judge's reliance on
    A-2217-16T2
    11
    Levine was misplaced because Levine "involves the right of an attorney in a
    matrimonial action to petition for a charging lien on the client's assets and the
    procedures to be followed in adjudicating such a petition." 
    Id. at 4.
    Pursuant to
    Rule 1:20A-6, the attorney notified the delinquent client of her right to pursue
    fee arbitration and "provided her with the name and address of the secretary to
    the district fee arbitration committee." 
    Levine, 381 N.J. Super. at 6
    . The client
    filed a petition before the Fee Arbitration Committee, which it declined to
    adjudicate because the amount of the fee in dispute exceeded $100,000. 4 
    Id. at 7.
    The attorney in Levine sought relief from the court by filing a petition
    before the judge in the underlying matrimonial action for the "entry of an order
    setting a date for a plenary hearing." 
    Id. at 7.
    However, the judge "refused to
    either impose a charging lien upon respondent's assets or schedule a plenary
    hearing." 
    Ibid. The judge dismissed
    the petition and directed the attorney to
    pursue "the usual procedure" and file a "separate action to collect the unpaid
    legal fees." 
    Ibid. The attorney appealed
    to this court. Relying on the Attorney's
    Lien Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:13-5, we reaffirmed that the "lien provided by this statute
    4
    Our colleagues in Levine cited Rule 1:20A-2(c)(1). This was an earlier
    codification of Rule 1:20A-2(b)(3).
    A-2217-16T2
    12
    'is intended to protect attorneys who do not have actual possession of assets
    against clients who may not pay for services rendered.'" 
    Id. at 9
    (quoting Martin
    v. Martin, 
    335 N.J. Super. 212
    , 222 (App. Div. 2000)).
    The Attorney's Lien Act is "rooted in equitable considerations, and its
    enforcement is within the equitable jurisdiction of the courts." Ibid. (quoting
    
    Martin, 335 N.J. Super. at 222
    ). An attorney has the discretion to file a petition
    for a lien "either before or after entry of the judgment in the underlying action."
    
    Ibid. Of particular relevance
    here, "N.J.S.A. 2A:13-5 does not authorize a trial
    court to dismiss a petition for an attorney's lien based on its preliminary view,
    derived from the evidence presented in the underlying action, that the fees
    claimed by the attorney are excessive." 
    Id. at 10.
    The procedural and substantive due process considerations reflected in
    Levine stand in sharp contrast to the ad hoc approach the trial judge employed
    here. Freeborn did not file a petition pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:13-5 requesting
    the trial court to adjudicate its fee dispute with Lucas. The court intruded in this
    dispute over Freeborn's repeated objections and Lucas's acquiescence, which in
    no way endowed the court with the subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate this
    fee dispute.   Because the trial court did not have the legal authority to
    unilaterally assert jurisdiction over this fee dispute, the court's decision to sua
    A-2217-16T2
    13
    sponte adjudicate this dispute was an ultra vires act; any relief awarded by the
    court in this context is a legal nullity.
    Freeborn must file a separate cause of action to adjudicate its claim for
    counsel fees against Lucas. We express no opinion about the enforceability of
    the forum selection clause in the retainer agreement.
    Reversed.
    A-2217-16T2
    14