ANTOINETTE TAYLOR, ON BEHALF OF MAURICE HAGAN VS. CARRIE E. REED (C-000115-18, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2020 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5674-18T1
    ANTOINETTE TAYLOR, On
    Behalf of MAURICE HAGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    CARRIE E. REED,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    __________________________
    Argued October 13, 2020 – Decided October 28, 2020
    Before Judges Rothstadt and Mayer.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Essex County, Docket No. C-
    000115-18.
    Luretha M. Stribling argued the cause for appellant.
    Deborah E. Winston argued the cause for respondent.
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiff Antoinette Taylor filed this action on behalf of her father,
    Maurice Hagan, in response to defendant Carrie Reed's removal of plaintiff from
    Hagan's business where Taylor had been working for many years. Defendant is
    Hagan's significant other with whom he has lived since at least 2008. Plaintiff
    now appeals from a July 26, 2019 order granting summary judgment to
    defendant and dismissing the complaint. Plaintiff's complaint sought an order
    directing defendant to turn over possession and control of Hagan's business to
    plaintiff and challenged the authenticity of a power of attorney allegedly given
    by Hagan to defendant.
    The Chancery judge granted defendant's motion after determining that
    plaintiff lacked standing to file and pursue this action on behalf of her father,
    who, despite his health issues, was never declared incompetent or incapacitated,
    nor did he authorize plaintiff to act on his behalf. On appeal, as to the standing
    issue, plaintiff argues summary judgment was improperly granted because she
    was authorized to act for her father as his agent. 1 We affirm as we too conclude
    that plaintiff did not have standing to sue on her father's behalf, substantially for
    the reasons stated by the Chancery judge in her oral decision that was placed on
    the record prior to the entry of the challenged order.
    1
    Plaintiff asserted other contentions that addressed other issues such as the
    authenticity of defendant's power of attorney, spoliation of the original power
    of attorney, and the judge's failure to take action in response to plaintiff's letter
    about problems she had in securing two hospitals' compliance with subpoenas
    for the production of documents.
    A-5674-18T1
    2
    As the present appeal requires that we review a decision on summary
    judgment, we derive the following facts from the evidence submitted by the
    parties in support of, and in opposition to, the summary judgment motion,
    viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff as the party who opposed entry of
    summary judgment. Edan Ben Elazar v. Macrietta Cleaners, Inc., 
    230 N.J. 123
    ,
    135 (2017).
    Hagan owns the Coachman's N, which is a tavern in Newark, and he is the
    president of E.C.L.C., Inc., a related company that holds the liquor license for
    the tavern. Neither plaintiff nor defendant owns any interest in either entity. 2
    By 2012, plaintiff, who had worked at the tavern for many years, assisted
    her father in its management. In July 2014, Hagan was hospitalized because of
    cardiac issues. As a result of her father's hospitalization, plaintiff became
    responsible for paying the tavern's employees, as well as staffing for the tavern,
    making annual payments to maintain the liquor license, and paying various bills,
    including the tax bill.   She continued to perform many if not all of those
    functions even after her father's discharge from the hospital.
    2
    However, in her counterclaim, which was ultimately dismissed voluntarily,
    defendant alleged she was a part owner and officer in Hagan's businesses. She
    also alleged that she and Hagan lived together for approximately forty years.
    A-5674-18T1
    3
    In 2016, Hagan was hospitalized again after falling and striking his head.
    According to plaintiff, during his stay at the hospital, Hagan was placed on a
    ventilator and later transferred to another long-term care facility.    He was
    transferred again to a nursing home until he was released on March 23, 2017.
    Plaintiff visited him in the nursing home and described Hagan as confused and
    unable to speak clearly. While there, a psychologist reported on January 31,
    2017, that Hagan was referred for an evaluation due to a history of "depression,
    dementia, [and] talking ability" but that "cognitive deficits preclude[d]
    successful psychotherapy," and an assessment of Hagan's cognitive abilities,
    completed on March 4, 2017, indicated he had difficulty repeating three words
    in a row, and he neither knew the year nor the date.
    Following his release from the nursing home, Hagan returned to his home
    with defendant, who thereafter transported Hagan once a month to the tavern so
    he could check on the business and pick up money. 3 According to plaintiff,
    Hagan expected her to continue managing the tavern.
    3
    According to defendant it was during this time period in 2017 that Hagan
    transferred to her an interest in his business and signed a durable power of
    attorney.
    A-5674-18T1
    4
    Unfortunately, on January 11, 2018, Hagan suffered a stroke. The stroke
    caused Hagan to be wheelchair bound and to suffer from limited speech and
    cognitive abilities, which, according to plaintiff, other than being wheelchair
    bound, Hagan was already experiencing in 2017. Upon discharge from the
    hospital, Reed cared for him at their home.
    On January 26, 2018, defendant appeared at the tavern along with two
    Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission (ABC) officers and demanded that
    plaintiff vacate the premises, citing a power of attorney that Hagan had
    purportedly signed on March 1, 2017. Plaintiff, however, was never presented
    with the document allegedly signed by her father. 4 Nevertheless, plaintiff left
    the premises.
    Approximately five months later, plaintiff filed her complaint on behalf
    of her father.5 In her complaint, plaintiff sought relief on behalf of her father
    and the tavern's holding company. She specifically demanded that:
    [Defendant] . . . provide[:] all keys to the tavern, all
    receipts that she has collected since the date of January
    28, 2018 when [she] entered the tavern and proclaimed
    4
    During discovery, defendant presented a copy of the power of attorney that
    Hagan allegedly signed. Plaintiff's handwriting expert determined that the
    power of attorney was not genuine.
    5
    In her answer to interrogatories, plaintiff stated that her legal authority for
    filing this action was that she was Hagan's daughter "and his next of kin."
    A-5674-18T1
    5
    herself to be in possession of a Power of Attorney and
    now the new manager and owner of the tavern[;] . . . the
    original Power of Attorney and explain the
    circumstances of how she obtained this Power of
    Attorney. [She] must also explain to the Court how it
    was that she represented herself as the owner of the
    building, . . . and advised [plaintiff] that she needed to
    sign a lease as [defendant] did not own[the building].
    It is [also] requested that the Court find that [defendant]
    has no ownership interest in the Coachman's N, no right
    to ownership of the liquor license and no right to the
    management of Coachman's N. It is requested that the
    Court eject [defendant] from the Coachman's N. and
    quiet title in [plaintiff] for the benefit of Hagan. The
    Court must also require the [liquor] license to the tavern
    be in the name of ECLC Inc. and further that the liquor
    license be amended and placed in Hagan's name only.
    It is further requested that the Court order that
    [defendant] be ordered to pay all Counsel Fees and
    costs incurred as a result of having to bring this action.
    Finally it is requested that the Court Order and address
    any and all other matters which the Court deems
    necessary and proper in settlement of the issues in this
    case.
    Defendant later filed an answer and counterclaim demanding that plaintiff
    produce Hagan's business's mail, provide an accounting of the income realized
    while plaintiff was managing the tavern, and its tax returns. Plaintiff filed a
    responsive pleading, essentially denying defendant's allegations of having an
    interest in Hagan's business and defendant's entitlement to any relief.
    Thereafter, the parties exchanged discovery demands and issues arose
    with their providing adequate responses. Motions were filed to address their
    A-5674-18T1
    6
    issues and as to one motion, on February 20, 2019, the Chancery judge entered
    an order denying defendant's motion to compel discovery, but nonetheless stated
    "[t]o the extent that [plaintiff] has not responded to discovery served by
    [defendant she was] barred from offering any evidence, witnesses, [or]
    arguments at trial which she has failed to produce through discovery. Plaintiff
    shall not be permitted to benefit from her failure to comply with discovery
    deadlines in the [c]ase [m]anagement [o]rder."
    At a subsequent case management conference held on March 18, 2019, the
    judge ordered that expert reports were to be served by May 31, 2019. Plaintiff
    did not serve any expert reports relating to Hagan's mental or physical health.6
    She did write to the judge, without ever filing any motions for enforcement,
    complaining that two hospitals were not responding to subpoenas she had
    served.
    Defendant filed for summary judgment in June 2019. Plaintiff opposed
    the motion. On July 26, 2019, after considering the parties' written submissions
    and oral arguments, the Chancery judge granted defendant's motion after placing
    her decision on the record that day.
    6
    On July 17, 2019, Taylor submitted her handwriting expert's report, analyzing
    the authenticity of a power of attorney that Hagan allegedly signed in favor of
    defendant.
    A-5674-18T1
    7
    The judge found that Hagan and defendant had lived together since at least
    2008, Hagan had a stroke in 2018, and plaintiff never had a power of attorney
    from Hagan. The judge also found that plaintiff was not Hagan's guardian and
    she never had any ownership interest in Hagan's businesses. Moreover, the
    judge found that plaintiff never produced an expert to address Hagan's mental
    capacity.
    In granting defendant's motion, the judge stated she had "no knowledge of
    any legal support for the right of an individual to bring a lawsuit on behalf of
    another individual without a legal appointment to do so, either through the
    [c]ourt or some written documentation." The judge rejected plaintiff's primary
    argument, that her actions on behalf of her father gave her apparent or actual
    authority to file a lawsuit on his behalf.
    Addressing plaintiff's contention that she acted as her father's agent, the
    judge stated the following:
    The plaintiff has argued that she has the right to
    bring this lawsuit on behalf of her father, Maurice
    Hagan, because of an apparent or actual agency given
    to her by her father. Indeed, it appears that [plaintiff]
    did manage the Coachman's N, the tavern in which her
    father apparently has an interest.
    And, . . . for purposes of [s]ummary [j]udgment,
    the [c]ourt accepts that [plaintiff] acted on her father's
    behalf on personal business issues, that she had contact
    A-5674-18T1
    8
    with his accountant, that she engaged with the
    insurance company representatives on behalf of her
    father.
    And, there were other areas where the plaintiff
    alleges she was acting on behalf of her father and with
    her father's authority. The [c]ourt accepts that for
    purposes of this motion. However, the Court does not
    find that that gives [plaintiff] the right to bring a lawsuit
    on his behalf, specifically this lawsuit on his behalf.
    The judge stated these actions did not give plaintiff the right to bring this
    lawsuit on his behalf because "[h]e's not been deemed incapacitated. [Plaintiff]
    has not been appointed as his guardian. She's not his guardian ad litem. In fact,
    there is no guardian or guardian ad litem, or anybody legally appointed to act on
    behalf of Mr. Hagan for purposes of bringing a lawsuit on his behalf."
    The judge again stated that plaintiff never produced an expert to opine that
    Hagan was incapacitated. Despite plaintiff's argument that medical records
    indicated that Hagan might not have been well, those records did not "give the
    [c]ourt enough to find that he was incapacitated for purposes of having a lawsuit
    filed on his behalf."
    As to the power of attorney given to defendant, which plaintiff argued was
    fraudulent, the judge stated:
    For purposes of this motion for summary judgment, to
    dismiss [plaintiff's] complaint, the [c]ourt does not find
    that the power of attorney is relevant. The power of
    A-5674-18T1
    9
    attorney would be relevant if somebody is attempting
    to rely on it, in this case, [defendant], for her own legal
    purposes.
    But, the [c]ourt finds that the power of attorney would
    not be relevant to the motion to dismiss or the motion
    for summary judgment brought by [defendant].
    Certainly, [plaintiff] may and likely will raise that issue
    in regard to the counter-claim, which was filed by
    [defendant].
    After the judge finished placing her reasons on the record, defendant
    advised the judge that defendant was voluntarily dismissing her counterclaim.
    The judge then entered an order granting defendant summary judgment and
    dismissing the complaint and the counterclaim. This appeal followed.
    We review a court's grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the
    same standard as the trial court. Conley v. Guerrero, 
    228 N.J. 339
    , 346 (2017).
    Summary judgment must be granted if "the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show
    that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact challenged and that the
    moving party is entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law." Templo
    Fuente De Vida Corp. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins. of Pittsburgh, 
    224 N.J. 189
    , 199
    (2016) (quoting R. 4:46-2(c)).
    Standing is a question of law we review de novo. Courier-Post Newspaper
    v. Cty. of Camden, 
    413 N.J. Super. 372
    , 381 (App. Div. 2010); In re Project
    A-5674-18T1
    10
    Authorization Under N.J. Register of Historic Places Act, 
    408 N.J. Super. 540
    ,
    555 (2010). The "traditional criteria" for assessing standing are "whether the
    party has a sufficient stake in and real adverseness with respect to the subject
    matter, and whether the party will be harmed by an unfavorable decision." In re
    Grant of Charter Sch. Application of Englewood, 
    320 N.J. Super. 174
    , 222 (App.
    Div. 1999), aff'd as mod. on other grounds, 
    164 N.J. 316
    (2000). Litigants
    generally do not have standing "to assert the rights of third parties." Stubaus v.
    Whitman, 
    339 N.J. Super. 38
    , 48 (2002).
    Here, plaintiff has filed a complaint on behalf of her father, but it is
    undisputed he had not made her his attorney in fact under a power of attorney,
    see N.J.S.A. 46:2B-1 to -19, that could have allowed her to handle her father's
    "legal affairs . . . including but not limited to, retaining and communicating with
    a lawyer, and authorizing such lawyer to take legal action on [his] behalf."
    Marsico v. Marsico, 
    436 N.J. Super. 483
    , 488 (Ch. Div. 2013). Further, Hagan
    has not been declared incompetent, no action was ever filed seeking the
    A-5674-18T1
    11
    appointment of a guardian for him, 7 and no guardian ad litem was appointed.8
    See R. 4:26-2; R. 4:86-4(d) (addressing appointment of a guardian ad litem); R.
    4:86-1 to –10 (addressing guardianship actions); N.J.S.A. 3B:13A-1 to –36; R.
    4:86-11; In re Conservatorship of Halley, 
    342 N.J. Super. 457
    , 462–65 (App.
    Div. 2001) (addressing conservatorships). Under these circumstances, where
    plaintiff might benefit from the outcome of the litigation by being placed in
    control of her father's business, there is no evidence that filing this lawsuit
    conformed to his wishes or, assuming he was incapacitated, it was in his best
    7
    A proceeding under Rule 4:86-1 "to determine incapacity of a person and for
    appointment of guardian" "is a very specific and detailed fact-finding process in
    the surrogate's court . . . . involv[ing], among other requirements, affidavits of
    two physicians (Rule 4:86-2(b)) and court-appointed counsel for the alleged
    incompetent person (Rule 4:86-4(b))." 
    Marsico, 436 N.J. Super. at 492
    n.3.
    8
    "The function of such guardian is generally to insure the protection of the
    rights and interests of a litigant who is apparently incompetent to prosecute or
    defend the lawsuit" where the incapacity is apparent. In re S.W., 
    158 N.J. Super. 22
    , 25–26 (App. Div. 1978). Where it is not,
    an action [must be filed] in accordance with [Rule 4:86]
    for the determination of his or her mental incompetency
    and the appointment of a general guardian for that
    person, the submission of medical proof that the alleged
    incompetent is unfit and unable to govern himself or
    herself and to manage his or her affairs, and an
    adjudication by the court of such incompetency after a
    hearing.
    [Id. at 26.]
    A-5674-18T1
    12
    interest. See Kronberg v. Kronberg, 
    263 N.J. Super. 632
    (Ch. Div. 1993)
    (appointing a plaintiff's daughter as guardian in a divorce proceeding because
    although the daughter could benefit from the outcome, plaintiff would have
    wanted to sue for divorce and it was in the plaintiff's best interest to pursue the
    divorce). But see In re Jennings, 
    187 N.J. Super. 55
    (Ch. Div. 1981) (rejecting
    a mother's application for permission to pursue divorce on behalf of her adult
    incapacitated adult son because there was no indication he wanted to seek a
    divorce and the dispute was in reality between his wife and his relatives over
    their eventual inheritance). Under these circumstances, as the motion judge
    found, plaintiff did not have standing to pursue this action.
    We are not persuaded otherwise by plaintiff's contention that she
    demonstrated that because she managed the tavern, she had authority as her
    father's agent to file this action on his behalf. An agent can only take action on
    behalf of his or her principal if the principal has "manifest[ed] to the agent, that
    the principal wishes the agent" to take a specific action. N.J. Lawyers' Fund for
    Client Prot. v. Stewart Title Guar. Co., 
    203 N.J. 208
    , 220 (2010) (quoting
    Restatement (Third) of Agency, § 2.01). Implied actual authority exists when
    "an agent is authorized to do what he [or she] may reasonably infer 'the principal
    desires him [or her] to do' in light 'of the principal's manifestations' and 'fact s as
    A-5674-18T1
    13
    he [or she] knows or should know them' when he [or she] acts." Lampley v.
    Davis Mach. Corp., 
    219 N.J. Super. 540
    , 548–49 (App. Div. 1987) (quoting
    Lewis v. Travelers Ins., 
    51 N.J. 244
    , 251 (1968)). Here, the record contains no
    evidence of any written or oral statement, or any conduct by Hagan that
    authorized plaintiff to retain counsel and sue defendant on his behalf. Merely
    having allowed plaintiff to help in the tavern's operations did not amount to
    conduct that provided her with authority to pursue this lawsuit, and plaintiff
    cites no authority suggesting otherwise.
    Having concluded from our de novo review that the Chancery judge
    correctly determined that plaintiff did not have standing to file this action, we
    need not address in detail plaintiff's remaining contentions. We only observe
    that many of them were directed toward the authenticity of defendant's alleged
    power of attorney, the determination of which had no bearing on plaintiff's
    standing. As to her other arguments, we conclude they are without sufficient
    merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
    A-5674-18T1
    14