IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF SAMUEL JOSEPH FEINER LYLE BROOCHIAN VS. USHER FEINER (190695, OCEAN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0561-15T3
    IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF
    SAMUEL JOSEPH FEINER, DECEASED.
    _______________________________
    LYLE BROOCHIAN and MOSHE
    FEINER,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents,
    v.
    USHER FEINER and PEARL
    BERKOVITS,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _______________________________
    CHILDREN OF DAVID FEINER,
    Intervenors-Respondents.
    _____________________________________
    Submitted September 25, 2017 – Decided October 3, 2017
    Before Judges Sabatino, Whipple and Rose.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Ocean County, Chancery Division, Docket No.
    190695.
    The Salvo Law Firm, PC, attorneys for
    appellants (Cindy D. Salvo, on the briefs).
    Law Offices of Taff & Davies, attorneys for
    respondent Lyle Broochian (Joel A. Davies, of
    counsel and on the brief, Matthew K. Kalwinsky
    and Christina V. Acker, on the brief).
    Keith, Winters & Wenning, LLC, attorneys for
    respondent Moshe Feiner (Michael J. Wenning,
    on the brief).
    The Kelly Firm, PC, attorneys for intervenors-
    respondents (Chryssa Yaccarino, on the letter
    relying on the briefs filed on behalf of
    respondents).
    PER CURIAM
    This marathon probate litigation was adjudicated through a
    protracted trial that consumed twenty-five days over a ten-month
    period, following four years of pretrial discovery supervised by
    the trial judge.    The dispute within this Orthodox Jewish family
    pitted two siblings, plaintiffs Lyle Broochian ("Lyle") and Moshe
    Feiner ("Moshe"), against their siblings, defendants Usher Feiner
    ("Usher") and Pearl Berkovits ("Pearl").1      The dispute centered
    upon wills and inter vivos transfers of property of the siblings'
    now-deceased parents, Samuel Feiner ("Samuel") and his wife Sara
    Feiner ("Sara"), which plaintiffs challenged as invalid.2
    After considering extensive testimony and more than a hundred
    exhibits, the trial judge issued a detailed oral opinion over the
    course of two days, declaring Sara's and Samuel's wills null and
    1
    For ease of reference, we use first names for the family members
    mentioned in this opinion, intending no disrespect in doing so.
    2
    At times Sara's first name is spelled in the record as "Sarah."
    2                          A-0561-15T3
    void,   removing     Pearl    as   administrator     of    Sara's    estate,        and
    appointing    a     substitute       independent        administrator.          Having
    nullified the wills, the judge ordered the distribution of the
    assets of the estates instead by intestacy.                    The judge also
    invalidated various inter vivos transfers of real and personal
    property.     The judge awarded counsel fees to                the prevailing
    parties.    In addition, the judge denied defendants' motion to set
    aside the final judgment because of their claimed inadvertent,
    post-trial discovery of a 1979 will purportedly executed by Samuel.
    Defendants now appeal, challenging a host of the trial judge's
    determinations      and   claiming     that    his      evidential       and     legal
    decisions    were    flawed    and   biased.       We    discern    no    merit       to
    defendants' contentions, and therefore affirm.
    I.
    There is no need for us to repeat here the lengthy factual
    chronology comprehensively set forth in the trial judge's two-day
    oral opinion.       We offer the following synopsis, recognizing that
    defendants dispute many of the judge's factual determinations.
    Samuel was a wealthy diamond dealer and property owner who
    divided his time between Brooklyn, New York, and, later in his
    advanced age, Lakewood, New Jersey. After surviving the Holocaust,
    Samuel moved to America as a widower with his daughter, Gita.
    3                                      A-0561-15T3
    Gita's mother, Samuel's first wife, was killed by the Nazis during
    World War II.
    Although Samuel lacked formal education and never became a
    fluent English speaker or writer, he functioned capably in Yiddish-
    speaking communities and was a successful businessman.         He married
    Sara, and had with her six additional children: Moshe, Lyle, the
    late David Feiner ("David"), Yankiel Feiner ("Yankiel"), Pearl,
    and Usher.3
    Plaintiffs' challenge to the estates and property transfers
    revolved   around   whether   Samuel   and   Sara   intended   to   largely
    disinherit them in favor of defendants Pearl and Moshe. Defendants
    were strict followers of Orthodox Judaism, as Samuel and Sara
    were. Pearl and Usher lived in Lakewood. Their parents subsidized
    their living costs so that both Usher and Pearl's husband could
    devote themselves to studying the Torah.
    Samuel, with Sara being listed on the titles, purchased
    several properties for Usher and Pearl to live in or rent out for
    income.    Over time, Samuel and Sara eventually purchased their own
    house in Lakewood.    They titled the property to Congregation Torah
    Veyirah D'Satmar ("Satmar"), a Jewish organization affiliated with
    3
    Yankiel and Gita did not participate as parties in the litigation
    but testified for defendants. David's children did not testify
    or join the litigation, but their interests were represented by
    counsel as intervenors.
    4                                A-0561-15T3
    Usher.     Several years later, Sara secured a $1 million mortgage
    on the property from Satmar, although there was apparently no
    mortgage note or evidence of any debt owed to her.
    In 2003, Sara signed a will ostensibly leaving most of her
    assets to Samuel and four properties to Pearl.                    None of the
    children    claim   to   have   known   at   the   time   about   that    will's
    existence.    A nonlawyer friend of Usher's apparently drafted the
    will after buying a form will packet from a stationery store.                 The
    friend had it notarized after Sara stopped him on the street one
    day and asked him to do so.        Sara did not have any other will.
    In early 2004, on the eve of a trip to Florida, Usher
    accompanied Sara and Samuel to the office of a real estate attorney
    in order to transfer seven properties from Sara's name to Sara and
    Samuel as tenants in common.            These were properties that Usher
    lived in or managed.        Around the same time, Sara assigned the
    mortgage for the Satmar property to Usher.
    While in Florida, Sara unexpectedly died on January 27, 2004,
    suffering a heart attack in a swimming pool.              Within weeks of her
    death, Usher asked the real estate attorney to re-deed the seven
    properties to Sara and Samuel as husband and wife, supposedly
    because the previous deeds designating them as tenants in common
    had been drafted in error.        Although the attorney knew that Sara
    had died, he followed Usher's instruction.                In 2004, the same
    5                                A-0561-15T3
    attorney handled a transfer of those properties to Usher from
    Samuel as widower.
    In her 2003 will, Sara named Samuel the executor of her
    estate, and in his absence, Pearl. Pearl claimed that Samuel had
    renounced his role as executor, but the Surrogate's Court in Ocean
    County lacked a record of that renunciation.     Nevertheless, in May
    2004, the court issued letters testamentary to Pearl, and she
    began to probate Sara's estate.       Pearl did not notify any of her
    siblings about Sara's will, nor did she hire an attorney to manage
    the administration. She did, however, hire an attorney to transfer
    the estate properties into her individual name.        Up until this
    trial in 2014 and 2015, the probate on Sara's will was incomplete
    and several estate bank accounts remained open.
    As of the time Sara died, she and Samuel had been living in
    Lakewood alone.   She was the primary caretaker for Samuel, who was
    much older than her and who had health problems.     After her death,
    Usher, Usher's wife, and their ten children moved into the Lakewood
    mansion with Samuel; Pearl lived next door.
    By this point, Usher's wife and Pearl became Samuel's primary
    caretakers.   Although the parties' testimony varied as to how
    independent Samuel was at that time, they essentially agreed that
    Samuel continued to study Torah, but he could not understand
    complex ideas in English or walk without aid of either a person
    6                           A-0561-15T3
    or walker.   To a large extent, Samuel relied primarily on Pearl's
    and Usher's families for assistance.   Around this time, Usher and
    Pearl started a charity in their mother's name, funding it with
    $50,000 from Samuel.   Usher and Pearl are listed on the charitable
    incorporation documents filed with the State, but Samuel is not.
    The charity at one point loaned money to Usher.
    After their mother died, Usher and Pearl accompanied Samuel,
    later in 2004, to make a will with an English-speaking attorney.
    Although that attorney testified that he did not remember making
    Samuel's will and that he did not keep any notes, the attorney
    testified that he would not have participated in the process if
    Samuel could not understand him.     In his 2004 will, Samuel left
    his interest in two Brooklyn properties to be divided equally
    among his children and David's children.     The residuary of the
    estate, including diamonds, properties, bank accounts, and other
    assets, were all left in the will to Usher and Pearl, who were
    also named Samuel's co-executors.
    Samuel died in 2011 at the age of ninety-nine.   Upon learning
    that Pearl and Usher were attempting to probate Samuel's estate,
    Lyle challenged the estate's administration in the Probate Part
    in October 2011.   In her complaint that Moshe later joined, Lyle
    contested the validity of Samuel's 2004 will.   The complaint also
    contested inter vivos property transfers that had been made by
    7                          A-0561-15T3
    Samuel, claiming that undue influence had been exercised over him
    by Pearl and Usher. In addition, plaintiffs contested transfers
    that Sara had made and her 2003 will, alleging forgery.
    Plaintiffs sought to void these transfers and both parents'
    wills, and to administer their estates under New Jersey's intestacy
    statutes, N.J.S.A. 3B:5-1 to -14.    They also requested attorney's
    fees under Rule 4:42-9(a)(3).
    Defendants vigorously denied their siblings' allegations of
    impropriety.   They asserted that Samuel and Sara had purposefully
    and legitimately rewarded them for their religious devotion and
    caring for their elderly parents.
    Over the course of four years, the assigned General Equity
    judge, Hon. John A. Peterson, Jr., oversaw a lengthy discovery
    process.   The judge issued many discovery orders, a number of
    which defendants did not comply with fully.    Later during trial,
    defendants attempted to offer documents into evidence that they
    previously had refused to disclose, or which they had denied
    existed.
    On intermittent trial dates over ten months in 2014 and 2015,
    the judge heard extensive testimony from the parties, as well as
    all living siblings, the Feiners' attorneys, neighbors, and other
    persons who had been involved with the properties.
    8                          A-0561-15T3
    After hearing plaintiffs' case-in-chief, Judge Peterson ruled
    that a presumption of undue influence had been "overwhelmingly"
    established.    That   finding   was    based   on     the        confidential
    relationship that Usher and Pearl had with their parents, in
    addition   to   "suspicious   circumstances"      found      by     the     court
    surrounding the creation of the parents' respective wills.
    Following the trial, the judge issued his lengthy oral bench
    ruling in May 2015.      Most fundamentally, the judge found that
    Usher and Pearl were not credible. Indeed, the judge's credibility
    findings in this regard were repeated and emphatic.
    Specifically, in an accompanying eighteen-page May 8, 2015
    final judgment, the judge ruled, among other things, that: (1)
    Sara's will was void for undue influence; (2) Samuel's will was
    also void for undue influence; (3) Pearl and Usher were removed
    as executors from the estates and an independent executor was
    appointed and ordered to undergo an accounting; (4) the estates
    were to be administered based on intestacy laws; (5) property
    transfers and mortgage assignments by Sara, Samuel, and their
    estates to Usher and Pearl were voided for undue influence; (6) a
    $50,000 judgment was issued against defendants for Samuel's money
    paid to the charity; (7) Pearl and Usher were to turn over all
    personal   property,   safe   deposit    boxes,      and     bank     accounts
    associated with their parents; and (8) Pearl and Usher were to pay
    9                                       A-0561-15T3
    fees for the attorneys of plaintiffs and David's children.                In a
    separate order, the judge applied a fifty percent fee enhancement
    multiplier to the counsel fees that he awarded to plaintiffs and
    David's children as prevailing parties.
    About three months after the entry of May 2015 final judgment,
    Usher and Pearl filed a motion for relief under Rule 4:50-1.              They
    claimed to have found a 1979 will executed by Samuel that purported
    to leave the bulk of his estate to Pearl, Usher, and Lyle.                They
    contended this will had been left in an area of Usher's (formerly
    Samuel's) house that they seldom used, located in a box under the
    basement stairs.
    The judge ordered limited discovery on the new trial motion.
    Following oral argument, the judge denied the motion on April 6,
    2016, finding that Usher had not acted diligently in attempting
    to   locate   all   documents   related   to   the   probate,   as   he    had
    possession of the documents in his home the entire time.                   The
    judge also found that Pearl shared responsibility for this failure.
    Two days after the judge rejected their new trial motion,
    Usher and Pearl nonetheless attempted to probate the 1979 will by
    filing a complaint with the Probate Part.        The judge dismissed the
    probate complaint, citing principles of res judicata, in an order
    dated June 15, 2016.
    This appeal followed.
    10                                A-0561-15T3
    II.
    Through   their   new   counsel      on   appeal,   defendants   present
    several arguments.     They contend that the trial judge improperly
    found they had engaged in undue influence, because the evidence
    was insufficient to support such a finding. Defendants also assert
    that the judge was biased because he personally disfavored parents
    disinheriting their children.
    Defendants further argue the judge lacked sufficient evidence
    to shift the burden of proof as to their parents' wills, or the
    inter vivos transfers.         They contend that their parents had
    deliberately benefited them in their wills due to their religious
    devotion,    which   by    contrast,       plaintiffs     allegedly   lacked.
    Further,    they   argue   because   plaintiffs     did    not   plead     undue
    influence in their initial complaint concerning Sara's will, the
    judge had procedurally erred in ruling against them as to her
    estate.
    Additionally,     defendants         argue   that    the    counsel      fee
    multiplier applied by the trial judge was improper, that the judge
    lacked justification to deny their motion for new trial, and that
    principles of res judicata did not apply because the validity of
    the 1979 will had not been decided.
    Having fully considered these contentions, we affirm the
    trial court's determinations in all respects, substantially for
    11                                  A-0561-15T3
    the cogent and legally sound reasons articulated by Judge Peterson
    in his successive decisions in this case.         The judge's painstaking
    factual findings and credibility rulings adverse to defendants are
    amply supported by the extensive trial record.             In addition, we
    are confident that the judge adhered to the governing law and
    applied it fairly and appropriately.
    Our Supreme Court has "firmly established in our case law"
    that a will may be set aside based upon a demonstration that it
    was procured through undue influence.          In re Estate of Stockdale,
    
    196 N.J. 275
    , 302 (2008).         The concept of undue influence connotes
    "mental, moral, or physical exertion of a kind and quality that
    destroys the free will of the testator by preventing that person
    from following the dictates of his or her own mind as it relates
    to the disposition of assets."          
    Id. at 302-03
    .   This is generally
    accomplished "by means of a will or inter vivos transfer in lieu
    thereof."   
    Id. at 303
    .
    Typically, the challenger of a will maintains the burden of
    proof in showing undue influence. 
    Id.
     However, that burden shifts
    when a beneficiary "stood in a confidential relationship to the
    testator and if there are additional 'suspicious' circumstances"
    present.    
    Ibid.
     (citing In re Rittenhouse's Will, 
    19 N.J. 376
    ,
    378-79   (1955)).     If    the   confidential   relationship   is    not    a
    professional   one,    as    in   an   attorney-client   relationship,    the
    12                            A-0561-15T3
    burden may be overcome by a preponderance of the evidence.                                    
    Ibid.
    (citing In re Catelli's Will, 
    361 N.J. Super. 478
    , 487 (App. Div.
    2003)).      "When         a   confidential           relationship      exists         between      a
    testator    and       a    beneficiary       who       draws   his    will,          the    court's
    suspicions are strongly aroused whether or not a presumption is
    created."         5       Alfred      C.   Clapp,       N.J.   Practice          –    Wills      and
    Administration, § 61 at 214 (1982) (citing Bennett v. Bennett, 
    50 N.J. Eq. 439
     (Prerog. Ct. 1892); Brick v. Brick, 
    43 N.J. Eq. 167
    (Prerog. Ct. 1887)).
    The Supreme Court has held that a confidential relationship
    exists    when    "the         testator,         'by    reason    .     .    .    weakness         or
    dependence,' reposes trust in the particular beneficiary, or if
    the parties occupied a 'relation[ship] in which reliance [was]
    naturally inspired or in fact exist[ed].'"                        Stockdale, supra, 
    196 N.J. at 303
     (quoting In re Hooper, 
    9 N.J. 280
    , 282 (1952)).
    Additionally, a confidential relationship is present "when the
    circumstances make it certain that the parties do not deal on
    equal    terms,       but      on   the    one    side    there    is       an   overmastering
    influence,    or,         on    the    other,     weakness,       dependence           or    trust,
    justifiably reposed."                 In re Codicil of Stroming, 
    12 N.J. Super. 217
    , 224 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    8 N.J. 319
     (1951).                                    To find
    suspicious circumstances that shift the burden, those suspicions
    13                                         A-0561-15T3
    "need only be slight."       Stockdale, 
    supra,
     
    196 N.J. at 304
    ; see
    also Haynes v. First Nat'l State Bank, 
    87 N.J. 163
    , 176-78 (1981).
    Similar principles apply for setting aside inter vivos gifts
    and property transfers on the grounds of undue influence. To
    establish a presumption of undue influence and shift the burden
    of proof, a challenger must show either that "the donee dominated
    the will of the donor, Seylaz v. Bennett, 
    5 N.J. 168
    , 172 (1950);
    Haydock v. Haydock, 
    34 N.J. Eq. 570
    , 574 (E. & A. 1881), or . . .
    a confidential relationship exist[ed] between [the] donor and
    donee, In re Dodge, [
    50 N.J. 192
    , 227 (1967)]; Mott v. Mott, 
    49 N.J. Eq. 192
    , 198 (Ch. 1891)."         Pascale v. Pascale, 
    113 N.J. 20
    ,
    30 (1988).    Accord Sipko v. Koger, Inc., 
    214 N.J. 364
    , 376 (2013).
    However,     inter   vivos   gifts,    unlike   wills,   do   not   require
    challengers to show suspicious circumstances to be set aside.
    Pascale, 
    supra,
     
    113 N.J. at 30-31
    .
    To rebut the presumption after the burden switches, the
    beneficiary of a gift challenged for undue influence must establish
    his or her case by clear and convincing evidence.         
    Id. at 31
    .     The
    beneficiary must prove "not only that 'no deception was practiced
    therein, no undue influence used, and that all was fair, open and
    voluntary, but that it was well understood.'" 
    Ibid.
     (citing Dodge,
    
    supra,
     
    50 N.J. at 227
    ).
    14                            A-0561-15T3
    Applying these standards here, Judge Peterson reasonably
    determined that plaintiffs had proven that Usher and Pearl had
    such a confidential relationship with their parents, and that
    there were suspicious circumstances surrounding the wills and
    property       transfers   that    shifted     the   burden    to   defendants     to
    establish their validity.          The judge concluded that defendants had
    not met that shifted burden of showing the legitimacy of the
    challenged      instruments.        We   are   satisfied      there   is   abundant
    evidence in the record to support the judge's findings in this
    regard.
    We must be mindful that our scope of review is limited.
    Although a probate judge's post-trial factual findings concerning
    issues    of    testamentary      capacity     and   undue    influence    are   not
    automatically controlling, such findings "are entitled to great
    weight [on appeal] since the trial court had the opportunity of
    seeing and hearing the witnesses and forming an opinion as to the
    credibility of their testimony."               In re Will of Liebl, 
    260 N.J. Super. 519
    , 523 (App. Div. 1992), (quoting Gellert v. Livingston,
    
    5 N.J. 65
    , 78 (1950)), certif. denied, 
    133 N.J. 432
     (1993). Unless
    the trial judge's findings are "so manifestly unsupported or
    inconsistent with the competent, reasonably credible evidence" the
    factual conclusions should not be disturbed.                  
    Id.
     at 524 (citing
    Leimgruber v. Claridge Assocs., Ltd., 
    73 N.J. 450
    , 456 (1977)).
    15                                 A-0561-15T3
    Such a "manifest" lack of evidential support simply has not
    been demonstrated by defendants on this appeal.      The record is
    replete with proof, including, among other things, the peculiar
    circumstances in which Samuel's and Sara's wills were prepared and
    executed, to support Judge Peterson's determinations.
    We are equally satisfied that Judge Peterson faithfully and
    fairly applied the governing principles of law in this case,
    despite defendants' efforts on appeal to portray his rulings as
    biased and flawed.   Defendants complain that the judge mentioned
    numerous times in his various rulings that the laws of intestacy
    ordinarily provide for the equal distribution of the assets of a
    parent among his or her surviving children, and that testators
    commonly provide for equal distribution of their estates to each
    of their surviving children.    There is nothing inherently wrong
    with the judge recognizing the legal consequences of intestacy,
    see N.J.S.A. 3B:5-3, or that testators often distribute their
    assets in equal shares.   We do not believe that the judge operated
    under some false assumption that competent parents are not entitled
    under the law to make wills that unequally divide their assets to
    their survivors.     In fact, the judge's May 2015 oral opinion
    expressly acknowledged that "a testator is not required to divide
    his estate equally among his children" and "may even exclude one
    or more" family members from his or her will.
    16                          A-0561-15T3
    To     be    sure,   the   judge   expressed      skepticism   about       the
    contentions that defendants presented in this case.                    But that
    skepticism was justified by both the trial evidence, and what he
    found to be the more credible testimony of plaintiffs and their
    own witnesses.       Although defendants advocated an opposing theory,
    the judge had ample evidence to conclude that the parents here did
    not   want    to    disinherit    any    of   their    children.   There    is    no
    "objectively        reasonable"    basis      to   conclude   that   the     trial
    proceedings were unfair to defendants.                Denike v. Cupo, 
    196 N.J. 502
    , 517 (2008); see also Liteky v. United States, 
    510 U.S. 540
    ,
    556, 
    114 S. Ct. 1147
    , 1157, 
    127 L. Ed. 2d 474
    , 491 (1994) (observing
    that "judicial remarks during the course of a trial that are
    critical or disapproving of, or even hostile to, counsel, the
    parties, or their cases, ordinarily do not support a bias or
    partiality challenge") (Kennedy J., concurring).
    In sum, the final judgment entered by the trial court was
    founded upon a fair and meticulous assessment of the record and a
    sound application of legal principles.                As the trier of fact, the
    judge simply found defendants and their witnesses less credible
    than plaintiffs' witnesses, and he was entitled to do so.                      Rova
    Farms Resort, Inc. v. Investors Ins. Co. of Am., 
    65 N.J. 474
    , 484
    (1974).
    17                                A-0561-15T3
    The judge specifically did not err in rejecting defendants'
    belated post-trial proffer of the 1979 will of Samuel they claimed
    to have only recently discovered in Usher's basement.          Rather than
    abruptly reject this proffer out of hand, the judge prudently
    conducted an evidentiary hearing.            He then concluded Usher and
    Pearl had not diligently acted to attempt to find this 1979
    document, which generally was not as favorable to their interests
    (because it included a distribution to Lyle) as the wills they had
    advocated to enforce at the trial.           Although the purported 1979
    will    was   found   in   Usher's        residence,   Pearl   shared   the
    responsibility to locate it sooner because of her own duties as a
    fiduciary.    This is buttressed by the judge's earlier observation
    at the conclusion of the trial, characterizing Pearl's conduct as
    "gross carelessness and indifference to her fiduciary role."
    We likewise agree with the judge's application of res judicata
    principles in dismissing plaintiffs' attempt to probate the 1979
    will.     Having denied defendants' motion for the extraordinary
    relief of a new trial stemming from their discovery of the 1979
    will, the judge rightly barred defendants' subsequent attempt to
    relitigate his decision.      In re Estate of Gabrellian, 
    372 N.J. Super. 432
    , 446 (App. Div. 2004).
    Next, we reject defendants' argument that the judge erred in
    ordering a $50,000 repayment of the estate funds paid to the
    18                            A-0561-15T3
    charity.    We are mindful that the court-appointed administrator
    determined,     post-judgment,    that      the    charity    was       legitimate.
    However,    the   administrator's      determination         of    the    charity's
    legitimacy does not automatically mean that the judge erred in
    ordering the funds that had been paid to the charity to be repaid.
    In fact, the judge specified that any party in interest could, on
    motion, petition the court to modify this aspect of the final
    judgment, following the accounting of the charity.                  Defendants did
    not file such a motion for relief.            Even so, they still maintain,
    without prejudice, the right to do so in the trial court, within
    a reasonable time after our decision in this appeal.
    Lastly, defendants have not persuaded us that the trial
    court's awards of counsel fees, made pursuant to Rule 4:42-9(a)(3),
    should be disturbed.      Well-established case law governing counsel
    fees instructs that such fee awards by trial courts should be
    disturbed "only in the rarest of occasions, and then only because
    of a clear abuse of discretion."              Rendine v. Pantzer, 
    141 N.J. 292
    , 317 (1995).       The fees awarded by the trial judge here to the
    prevailing parties were reasonable, and are not reflective of any
    abuse of discretion.
    As    we   have   noted,   this    was    a   lengthy        and   hard-fought
    litigation that consumed four years of pretrial discovery and over
    twenty-five days of trial.       The trial judge who oversaw that whole
    19                                   A-0561-15T3
    process was in a superior position to assess the nature and quality
    of the legal services that counsel provided, and the reasonableness
    of their charges.     In addition, the fifty percent multiplier the
    judge applied to the fee lodestar amount was an enhancement well
    within the court's discretion.    Rendine, supra, 
    191 N.J. 316
    -17;
    In re Estate of Reisen, 
    313 N.J. Super. 623
    , 630 (Ch. Div. 1998).
    The balance of defendants' arguments, to the extent we have
    not already addressed them explicitly, lack sufficient merit to
    warrant discussion.    R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
    20                         A-0561-15T3