THOMAS AND KIMBERLY DOLAN VS. 130 STAR PROPERTIES, LLC JOHN F. VASSALLO, JR. VS. THOMAS AND KIMBERLY DOLAN (L-0322-14, BURLINGTON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2616-18T2
    THOMAS and KIMBERLY
    DOLAN,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.
    130 STAR PROPERTIES, LLC,
    Defendant.
    ____________________________
    JOHN F. VASSALLO, JR.,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    THOMAS and KIMBERLY
    DOLAN, and DOLAN'S IRISH
    PUB & RESTAURANT, INC.,
    f/k/a MIKE & NISSAN, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    JACOB SPIGELMAN,
    Defendant-Respondent,
    and
    130 STAR PROPERTIES, LLC,
    c/o THOMAS PATSAROS, and
    CITY OF BURLINGTON,
    Defendants.
    ____________________________
    Argued January 13, 2020 – Decided February 25, 2020
    Before Judges Messano and Vernoia.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Burlington County, Docket No. L-0322-14.
    Mark J. Molz argued the cause for appellants.
    John E. Shields argued the cause for respondent
    (Helmer, Conley & Kasselman, PA, attorneys; John E.
    Shields, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiffs Thomas Dolan, Kimberly Dolan, and Dolan's Irish Pub &
    Restaurant, Inc. (Dolan's Irish Pub) appeal from a January 8, 2019 order granting
    defendant Jacob Spigelman's motion to vacate a June 30, 2017 order that
    effectively reversed an order granting Spigelman summary judgment. 1 Having
    1
    The court's January 8, 2019 order contains a typographical error. It states that
    it vacates a June 20, 2017 order, but the vacated order is dated June 30, 2017.
    A-2616-18T2
    2
    considered the record, and discerning no abuse of discretion in the court 's entry
    of the January 8, 2019 order, we affirm.
    I.
    This matter arises out of a dispute over the purchase of a liquor license
    and restaurant from defendants Thomas Patsaros and 130 Star Properties, LLC.
    Defendant John F. Vassallo, Jr., a New Jersey attorney, represented plaintiffs in
    the purchase.2 As part of the transaction, Thomas Dolan, Kimberly Dolan, and
    Patsaros became shareholders in Dolan's Irish Pub, which became the purchaser
    of the liquor license and restaurant. Kimberly Dolan held ninety-eight percent
    of the shares in Dolan's Irish Pub stock. Thomas Dolan and Patsaros held one
    percent each.
    Plaintiffs required working capital to complete the transaction, so
    Vassallo and Patsaros arranged for Spigelman to loan Dolan's Irish Pub fifty
    thousand dollars. Although Thomas Dolan and Kimberly Dolan never met
    Spigelman, they executed a fifty-thousand-dollar promissory note on behalf of
    Dolan's Irish Pub in Spigelman's favor.           Patsaros personally guaranteed
    repayment of the note, and he, Thomas Dolan, Kimberly Dolan, and Spigelman
    entered into an Escrow and Pledge Agreement (escrow agreement), which, in
    2
    Plaintiffs alleged Vassallo also represented Patsaros in the transaction.
    A-2616-18T2
    3
    pertinent part, pledged the stock in Dolan's Irish Pub to secure payment of the
    note. With the authorization of Thomas Dolan and Kimberly Dolan, Spigelman
    transferred fifty thousand dollars to Vassallo, who deposited the funds in his
    attorney trust account. Vassallo disbursed the funds in a manner that became an
    issue in the litigation.
    Plaintiffs later filed a complaint against Vassallo, Patsaros, and 130 Star
    Properties, LLC, asserting causes of action arising out of the transaction.
    Vassallo filed a separate complaint against plaintiffs; 130 Star Properties, LLC;
    Patsaros; the City of Burlington; and Spigelman. It appears Spigelman filed a
    cross-claim against plaintiffs on the obligations under the promissory note and
    escrow agreement. It further appears plaintiffs and Dolan's Irish Pub filed cross-
    claims against Spigelman seeking nullification of the obligations under the
    note.3 The court consolidated plaintiffs' and Vassallo's complaints, and the
    various claims asserted were thereafter litigated in a single proceeding.
    3
    In their respective appendices, plaintiffs and Spigelman fail to include all of
    the pleadings filed by all of the participants in the Law Division proceedings.
    For example, and not by way of limitation, plaintiffs do not provide their
    complaint and amended complaint in the record on appeal. In any event, we
    generally summarize the respective claims based on what we glean from the
    record provided, and note there are clearly many claims we do not mention that
    were asserted by and among the numerous parties. It is unnecessary that we
    detail all of the claims asserted by the parties, even including those between
    A-2616-18T2
    4
    Following the completion of discovery, and just prior to the scheduled
    trial date, the court permitted the filing of dispositive motions in accordance
    with an accelerated schedule. Spigelman moved for summary judgment on his
    claims under the note and for dismissal of plaintiffs' cross-claims seeking
    rescission of the note. 4 Plaintiffs cross-moved for summary judgment on their
    claims against Spigelman and his claims against them.
    On May 30, 2017, Judge Janet Z. Smith heard extensive argument on the
    cross-motions and informed the parties Spigelman's summary judgment motion
    was granted and plaintiffs' motion was denied. In plaintiffs' counsel's presence,
    Judge Smith also advised Spigelman his appearance at future proceedings in the
    case was no longer required. On June 12, 2017, Judge Smith entered an order
    (summary judgment order) granting Spigelman summary judgment on his claims
    under the note and for unjust enrichment against plaintiffs, dismissing plaintiffs'
    claims against Spigelman, and denying plaintiffs' cross-motion.        In her oral
    plaintiffs and Spigelman, because we are required to decide only wheth er the
    court erred by entering its January 8, 2019 order vacating its June 30, 2017 order,
    and our resolution of that issue does not require an analysis of the merits of the
    causes of action asserted.
    4
    Plaintiffs also sought damages based on alleged fraud in obtaining the note
    and in the disbursement of the loan funds.
    A-2616-18T2
    5
    opinion, Judge Smith found $50,000 was due to Spigelman under the note, but
    the summary judgment order does not include an amount due. 5
    The remaining claims involving plaintiffs, Vassallo, 130 Star Properties,
    LLC, and Patsaros proceeded to trial before a different judge. The claims
    against Vassallo settled, and the judge conducted a June 28, 2017 proof hearing
    on plaintiffs' claims against Patsaros, 6 who did not appear for trial or the proof
    hearing.7 Thomas Dolan and Kimberly Dolan appeared at the proof hearing with
    their counsel. No other parties or counsel were present.
    5
    During the summary judgment proceeding, Judge Smith said "there is a
    judgment for $50,000 for . . . Spigelman against . . . plaintiffs," and "grant[ed]
    summary judgment, but only to the extent of $50,000." Plaintiffs correctly note
    the summary judgment order does not include the amount the court determined
    is due to Spigelman. See Taylor v. Int'l Maytex Tank Terminal Corp., 355 N.J.
    Super. 482, 498 (App Div. 2002) ("Where there is a conflict between a judge's
    written or oral opinion and a subsequent written order, the former controls.").
    Plaintiffs do not appeal from the summary judgment order and Spigelman d id
    not cross-appeal from the order. We therefore do not address any alleged
    deficiency in the order. However, nothing in our opinion precludes the parties
    from moving before the trial court in accordance with Rule 1:13-1 for the
    correction of any clerical error "arising from oversight and omission" in the
    summary judgment order.
    6
    The court addresses 130 Star Properties, LLC in an order entered following
    the proof hearing. The order provides that 130 Star Properties, LLC is an "entity
    [that] has been utilized with a lack of corporate formality," is Patsaros's "alter-
    ego," and failed to appear for trial.
    7
    Plaintiffs have not provided transcripts of any trial proceedings. The record
    includes a transcript of the June 28, 2017 proof hearing.
    A-2616-18T2
    6
    During the proof hearing, there was no testimony concerning Spigelman,
    and his name was not mentioned by the court, counsel, or plaintiffs. Plaintiffs '
    counsel did not advise the court Judge Smith entered the summary judgment
    order in Spigelman's favor two weeks earlier. The record is devoid of evidence
    plaintiffs' counsel notified Spigelman or his counsel prior to the proof hearing
    that plaintiffs intended to request that the court vacate or modify Judge Smith 's
    summary judgment order. And, during the proof hearing, plaintiffs' counsel
    never stated plaintiffs sought relief as to Spigelman or the promissory note and
    never requested vacation or modification of the summary judgment order. In
    addition, although Judge Smith issued the summary judgment order, plaintiffs
    never moved before her for reconsideration of the order.
    Nonetheless, following the proof hearing, plaintiffs' counsel submitted a
    proposed order to the court entitled "ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN
    LOAN."8 The order in part addressed the issue presented to the court during the
    proof hearing—Patsaros's liability to plaintiffs—but it also effectively vacated
    8
    Plaintiffs' counsel submitted two orders to the court following the proof
    hearing. The court entered both orders. One of the orders, which is captioned
    "ORDER DISMISSING CROSSCLAIMS," dismissed Patsaros's and 130 Star
    Properties, LLC's crossclaims against plaintiffs, and dismissed the case as to
    Vassallo. We do not address that order because it was not vacated by the January
    8, 2019 order that is the subject of this appeal.
    A-2616-18T2
    7
    and reversed Judge Smith's summary judgment order. The order provided "it
    would be inequitable to require [p]laintiffs to be responsible for [the Spigelman]
    loan," found the loan documents were "part of a continuing [f]raud and are void
    ab initio," and stated that Patsaros was "100% responsible for the loan
    from . . . Spigelman."
    There is no evidence plaintiffs' counsel served Spigelman or his counsel
    with the proposed order when it was submitted to the court, see R. 4:42-1(c); or
    that Spigelman or his counsel were served with the order following its entry ,9
    see R. 1:5-1(a). Moreover, the proof hearing record does not include any
    evidence or argument supporting the vacation of Judge Smith's summary
    judgment order. The record is further bereft of any evidence plaintiffs or their
    counsel notified Spigelman that they would seek the vacation of Judge Smith's
    summary judgment order at either the trial or proof hearing.
    The judge who held the proof hearing entered plaintiffs' proposed ORDER
    REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN on June 30, 2017, without making any
    findings of fact or conclusions of law. See R. 1:7-4. Thus, the court's reasoning
    for its inexplicable entry of the order is unknown.
    9
    The order required that it be "served upon all parties that have not settled and
    who appear herein within [seven] days after receipt hereof." The record on
    appeal does not establish service of the order on Spigelman or his counsel.
    A-2616-18T2
    8
    Spigelman subsequently moved to vacate the ORDER REGARDING
    SPIGELMAN LOAN pursuant to Rule 4:50-1(c), arguing it was obtained by
    "fraud . . . , misrepresentation or other misconduct of an adverse party." More
    particularly, Spigelman claimed plaintiffs' counsel never informed the court
    about Judge Smith's summary judgment order and submitted the ORDER
    REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN even though there was no evidence
    presented during the proof hearing regarding Spigelman.
    The court heard argument and entered a January 8, 2019 order granting
    Spigelman's motion, vacating the ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN,
    and    providing    that   Judge     Smith's    "June     12,   2017      [order]
    granting . . . Spigelman's [m]otion for [s]ummary [j]udgment remains in full
    force and effect." Entry of the order is untethered to any findings of fact or
    conclusions of law. See R. 1:7-4. This appeal followed.
    Plaintiffs present the following arguments for our consideration:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY VIOLATING RULE
    4:46-1 IN THE SCHEDULING OF DISPOSITIVE
    MOTIONS ON THE EVE OF TRIAL[.]
    POINT II
    ALTHOUGH JUDGE SMITH ENTERED SUMMARY
    JUDGMENT AS TO LIABILITY, THE TRIAL
    A-2616-18T2
    9
    COURT NEVER ENTERED                   A    JUDGMENT
    AGAINST THE PLAINTIFFS[.]
    POINT III
    ALTHOUGH JUDGE SMITH ENTERED SUMMARY
    JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF MR. SPIGELMAN ON
    LIABILITY, THERE WERE MATERIAL ISSUES OF
    CONTESTED FACTS AND CROSSCLAIMS WHICH
    PRECLUDED SUMMARY DISPOSITION[.]
    II.
    Plaintiffs' arguments center solely on their claim Judge Smith erred by
    granting Spigelman's summary judgment motion. They argue Judge Smith
    incorrectly condensed the Rule 4:46 time frames for submission of the summary
    judgment motion papers; 10 the summary judgment order was not final because it
    did not include a monetary amount; and there were genuine issues of material
    fact precluding a proper grant of summary judgment.
    We reject plaintiffs' arguments because plaintiffs do not appeal from the
    summary judgment order. Their notice of appeal lists only the January 8, 2019
    10
    The record reflects that despite the court's requirement that parties file
    dispositive motions on an accelerated basis prior to the impending trial date,
    plaintiffs filed opposition papers and a cross-motion for summary judgment.
    Plaintiffs' brief on appeal does not identify any evidence or facts demonstrating
    they were prejudiced by the accelerated schedule. They also do not make any
    showing that if the schedule had not been accelerated, they would have presented
    additional evidence affecting the disposition of the summary judgment motions.
    A-2616-18T2
    10
    order vacating the ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN. A notice of
    appeal in a civil action must "designate the judgment, decision, action or rule,
    or part thereof appealed from." R. 2:5-1(e)(3)(i). "[I]t is only the judgments or
    orders or parts thereof designated in the notice of appeal which are subject to
    the appeal process and review." Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J. Court Rules,
    cmt. 6.1 on R. 2:5-1 (2020); see also 30 River Court E. Urban Renewal Co. v.
    Capograsso, 
    383 N.J. Super. 470
    , 473-74 (App. Div. 2006) (refusing to review
    orders dismissing the defendant's affirmative claims because they were not
    included in her notice of appeal); Campagna ex rel. Greco v. Am. Cyanamid
    Co., 
    337 N.J. Super. 530
    , 550 (App. Div. 2001) (refusing to consider an order
    not listed in the notice of appeal). Thus, because plaintiffs appeal only from the
    January 8, 2019 order, the arguments presented, which challenge only the
    summary judgment order, are wholly inapposite to the order under review.
    In fact, plaintiffs offer no arguments challenging the order that is the
    subject of their appeal, and, for that reason alone, we affirm the court's January
    8, 2019 order. Nonetheless, we also address the merits of the order.
    Rule 4:50-1 is "'designed to reconcile the strong interests in finality of
    judgments and judicial efficiency with the equitable notion that courts should
    have authority to avoid an unjust result in any given case.'" Mancini v. EDS ex
    A-2616-18T2
    11
    rel. N.J. Auto. Full Ins. Underwriting Ass'n, 
    132 N.J. 330
    , 334 (1993) (quoting
    Baumann v. Marinaro, 
    95 N.J. 380
    , 392 (1984)). A court's grant of relief under
    the Rule "warrants substantial deference, and should not be reversed unless it
    results in a clear abuse of discretion." U.S. Bank Nat'l Ass'n v. Guillaume, 
    209 N.J. 449
    , 467 (2012). Plaintiffs make no showing the court abused its discretion
    by entering the January 8, 2019 order, and the record does not support such a
    finding.
    The ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN was entered following
    the summary judgment order that disposed of all of plaintiffs' claims against
    Spigelman and granted Spigelman judgment against plaintiffs for their
    obligations under the note.   Plaintiffs and their counsel were aware of the
    disposition and that Judge Smith appropriately advised Spigelman his further
    participation in the proceedings in the case was unnecessary. Although they
    were apparently dissatisfied with the summary judgment order, plaintiffs opted
    not to seek reconsideration from Judge Smith in accordance with Rule 4:49-2.
    Judge Smith's summary judgment order was interlocutory, and the new
    judge was "empowered to revisit the prior ruling and right the proverbial ship"
    if such relief was warranted. Lombardi v. Masso, 
    207 N.J. 517
    , 537 (2011).
    However, "[p]rocedurally, where a judge is inclined to revisit a prior
    A-2616-18T2
    12
    interlocutory order," it is "critical . . . that he [or she] provide the parties a fair
    opportunity to be heard on the subject," so they "may argue against
    reconsideration and advance claims of prejudice."             
    Ibid. After a judge
    determines to revisit a prior order, "he [or she] must apply the proper legal
    standard to the facts and explain" the reasons reconsideration is appropriate.
    
    Ibid. For example, where
    a court decides to reconsider an order granting
    summary judgment, it "should apply Rule 4:46-2 and explain what genuine
    issues of material fact require trial." 
    Id. at 537-38.
    In Lombardi, the Court affirmed a judge's decision to vacate an
    interlocutory summary judgment order based on evidence produced during a
    subsequent proof hearing. 
    Id. at 523-24.
    The Court noted, however, that after
    considering the evidence presented at the proof hearing, the judge first "advised
    the parties of his concern that the case was more complex than he had originally
    intuited and gave them the record of the proof hearing, ample time to prepare,
    and an opportunity to weigh in on what he was considering." 
    Id. at 538.
    The
    Court concluded that under those circumstances, "the trial judge abided by all
    of the relevant principles in determining to revisit his original summary
    judgment order." 
    Ibid. A-2616-18T2 13 Here,
    plaintiffs settled their claims against Vassallo and participated in a
    proof hearing against the only defendant remaining in the case, Patsaros.
    Plaintiffs and their counsel never notified Spigelman they intended to seek relief
    from the summary judgment order at the trial or proof hearing, never mentioned
    Spigelman or the summary judgment order during the proof hearing, and never
    advised the new judge they sought relief from Judge Smith's summary judgment
    order. Thus, they not only deprived Spigelman of what the Supreme Court in
    Lombardi described as the "critical . . . opportunity" to be heard on the
    reconsideration of the summary judgment 
    order, 207 N.J. at 537
    , they also
    deprived the new judge of the knowledge that he was being asked to reconsider
    and vacate a prior court order.
    Following the hearing, plaintiffs submitted an order, without notice to
    Spigelman, that effectively reversed the summary judgment order entered in his
    favor. They indirectly accomplished what they failed to do directly; obtain
    reconsideration of the summary judgment order without filing a motion for
    reconsideration with Judge Smith or notifying the new judge about the summary
    judgment order and expressly requesting he reverse it. Plaintiffs acted with the
    apparent hope the unsuspecting new judge would simply enter their order
    following a hearing at which Spigelman was not present and no opposition was
    A-2616-18T2
    14
    presented.    Their strategy worked.    The judge entered plaintiffs' proposed
    ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN.
    The court's entry of the order violated Spigelman's basic due process right
    to notice of the proceedings at which summary judgment entered in his favor
    was reversed; was inconsistent with the principles espoused by the Supreme
    Court in Lombardi, 
    207 N.J. 537-38
    ; and in part it was the result of an
    indefensible lack of disclosure to the new judge that judgment previously had
    been entered in Spigelman's favor.11 Moreover, the testimony presented at the
    proof hearing did not support the entry of the order reversing Spigelman 's
    judgment.12
    11
    We prefer to attribute plaintiff's counsel's failure to advise the court about
    Judge Smith's summary judgment order to a lack of attention or inadequate
    preparation, and not to an intentional violation of his duty of candor to his
    adversary and the court. See R.P.C. 3.3(a)(1); McKenney v. Jersey City Med.
    Ctr., 
    167 N.J. 359
    , 371 (2001) (noting "[l]awyers have an obligation of candor
    to each other and to the judicial system").
    12
    The ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN refers to what appear to be
    two exhibits, "P33" and "Exhibit 35," as support for the court's findings. The
    proof hearing transcript, however, reflects that neither purported exhibit was
    marked for identification or admitted in evidence. Plaintiffs are responsible to
    provide the "parts of the record . . . as are essential to the proper consideration
    of the issues," R. 2:6-1(a)(1)(I), including all of the relevant transcripts of the
    proceedings, R. 2:5-3(a); see also Cipala v. Lincoln Tech. Inst., 
    179 N.J. 45
    , 55
    (2004) (affirming the Appellate Division's refusal to address an issue because
    the appellant failed to provide the transcript from the proceedings from which
    A-2616-18T2
    15
    Under these circumstances, we find no abuse of the court's discretion in
    its January 8, 2019 order vacating the improvidently entered ORDER
    REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN. See 
    Guillaume, 209 N.J. at 467
    . The
    record supports a finding Spigelman was entitled to relief from the order under
    Rule 4:50-1(c) due to plaintiffs' misconduct in failing to provide notice to
    Spigelman they intended to seek a reversal of the summary judgment order at
    the proof hearing; failing to inform the new judge summary judgment had been
    entered in Spigelman's favor; and submitting a proposed order, without notice
    to Spigelman, on an issue not directly presented to the new judge and for which
    there was no support in the proof hearing record. We also conclude relief from
    the order was required under Rule 4:50-1(f). That is, Spigelman was entitled to
    relief from the ORDER REGARDING SPIGELMAN LOAN based on the
    totality of the exceptional circumstances presented and because enforcement of
    the order would be unjust and inequitable. See 
    id. at 484.
    As noted, plaintiffs
    offer no arguments to the contrary.
    Affirmed.
    the appeal was taken); Soc'y Hill Condo. Ass'n v. Soc'y Hill Assocs., 347 N.J.
    Super. 163, 177-78 (App. Div. 2002) (declining to address issues requiring
    review of portions of the trial record not included in the record on appeal).
    A-2616-18T2
    16