Acre Mortgage & Financial, Inc. v. Joseph James Lang IV ( 2024 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1385-21
    ACRE MORTGAGE &
    FINANCIAL, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    JOSEPH JAMES LANG IV, a/k/a JOE
    LANG, JOSEPH LANG, and JOSEPH
    J. LANG, NATION ONE MORTGAGE
    CORPORATION, and GEORGE
    DIFRANCESCO,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    JOSEPH JAMES LANG IV and
    NATION ONE MORTGAGE
    CORPORATION,
    Third-Party Plaintiffs/
    Respondents,
    v.
    JOSEPH DICRISCIO and JOHN
    MERLINO,
    Third-Part Defendants/
    Respondents.
    __________________________
    Argued June 1, 2023 – Decided November 6, 2024
    Before Judges Accurso, Vernoia and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Burlington County, Docket No.
    C-000073-17.
    Mitchell Sandler LLC, attorneys for appellant
    (Katharine T. Batista, on the briefs).
    Daniel E. Rhynhart (Blank Rome LLP) of the
    Pennsylvania bar, admitted pro hac vice, argued the
    cause for respondents Joseph James Lang IV and
    Nation One Mortgage Corporation (Blank Rome LLP,
    Posternock Apell, PC, and Daniel E. Rhynhart,
    attorneys; Stephen M. Orlofsky, Michael R. Darbee,
    Daniel Posternock, and Daniel E. Rhynhart, on the
    brief).
    John A. Zohlman, III, argued the cause for respondent
    George DiFrancesco (Hagner & Zohlman, LLC,
    attorneys; John A. Zohlman III and YooNieh Ahn, on
    the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    ACCURSO, P.J.A.D.
    This appeal arises out of a dispute among the participants in a residential
    mortgage market "net branch" system. Plaintiff Acre Mortgage Financial, Inc.
    is a mortgage brokerage firm, owned by third-party defendants John Merlino
    A-1385-21
    2
    and Joseph DiCriscio, which sells mortgage loans originated by its net
    branches to investors in the secondary market. Although these Acre branches
    have no legal existence apart from Acre, they operate largely independently,
    with the branch manager assuming all responsibility for branch performance
    and retaining 100 percent of the branch's net profits. Defendant and third-
    party plaintiff Joseph James Lang IV managed an Acre branch in Marlton,
    doing business as Nation One Mortgage Corporation.
    As Judge Fiamingo explained in her meticulously detailed sixty-nine-
    page opinion, Acre would credit Lang's branch "with the amounts paid by the
    secondary purchaser, less certain pass-through expenses due to Acre," such as
    fees for credit reports and flood searches, and Acre's per loan fee calculated as
    an agreed number of basis points on each loan sold, which Acre could adjust in
    its discretion. Acre deposited the balance into a segregated account
    maintained for Lang's branch from which "the salaries of the employees of
    Lang's net branch, operating expenses, such as rents and utilities for the office
    location, furnishings, fixtures and equipment, and all other costs associated
    with the office were paid." Although Lang was not a signatory on the account,
    and thus could neither deposit nor withdraw funds from it, he could, and did,
    monitor the funds moving in and out of the account. "Lang, as net branch
    A-1385-21
    3
    manager, was entitled to dispose of the amounts from the remaining profits of
    the net branch as he determined in his discretion, including distributing such
    amounts as compensation to himself, subject only to retaining a 'cushion' for
    operating expenses and other potential costs."
    The dispute between Acre, Merlino and DiCriscio on one side and Lang
    and Nation One on the other arose when Lang left Acre in 2017 and
    established Nation One as a mortgage company competing with Acre. Central
    to the dispute was whether Acre and Lang's relationship was governed by the
    2011 agreement they signed shortly after Lang joined Acre or a June 30, 2015
    agreement signed on behalf of Acre by George DiFrancesco, Acre's national
    sales manager. DiFrancesco managed the day-to-day operation of all Acre
    branches, apart from Acre's own corporate branch, and was responsible for
    negotiating and executing agreements between Acre and its branch managers .
    DiFrancesco had signed the 2011 agreement between Acre and Lang on Acre's
    behalf.
    Following Lang's departure, Acre sued Lang for breach of contract,
    breach of the duty of loyalty, and breach of fiduciary duty, and sued Lang and
    Nation One for violation of the Lanham Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 1125
    (a), tortious
    interference with current contractual and prospective economic relations,
    A-1385-21
    4
    unfair competition, misappropriation of trade secrets in violation of New
    Jersey's Trade Secrets Act, N.J.S.A. 56:15-1 to -9, and violation of Defend
    Trade Secrets Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1836
    . Acre also sued DiFrancesco for breach
    of the duty of loyalty, and breach of fiduciary duty, and sued Lang and
    DiFrancesco for conspiracy, alleging the two fabricated Lang's 2015 branch
    agreement, which DiFrancesco signed without authorization and without
    Merlino and DiCriscio's knowledge
    DiFrancesco counterclaimed for breach of contract, breach of the
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing, unjust enrichment, and conversion,
    alleging Acre failed to pay him all his commissions and to tender his final
    paycheck.
    Lang and Nation One asserted counterclaims against Acre for breach of
    contract, promissory estoppel, unjust enrichment, fraud, conversion, breach of
    fiduciary duty, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, unpaid
    commissions, and violation of New Jersey's Wage Payment Law, N.J.S.A.
    34:11-4.1 to -4.15. Lang and Nation One also filed a third-party complaint
    against Merlino and DiCriscio, asserting causes of action for fraudulent
    inducement, common law fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, indemnification,
    common law indemnification, and contribution.
    A-1385-21
    5
    Judge Fiamingo presided over a twenty-day bench trial in the Chancery
    Division in which eleven fact witnesses and two experts testified, and 152
    documents were admitted in evidence. She found Lang began operating the
    Marlton branch for Acre in late 2010, bringing in his own book of business and
    referral sources, as well as employees and office space. Lang had been in the
    business for several years and had operated his own mortgage company, thus
    requiring little assistance on Acre's part to get the branch up and running. The
    judge found Lang and DiFrancesco credibly "testified that should Lang leave
    Acre he would be able to 'leave as he came,' with his employees, office, leads,
    and referral sources," and that "Merlino and DiCriscio's testimony to the
    contrary" was not believable and at odds with other evidence about how Acre
    took on and shed net branches.
    Although Acre and Lang initially operated without a written agreement,
    that changed in 2011 after the enactment of Dodd-Frank, 
    12 U.S.C. § 5301
    .
    The judge found Lang balked at signing the 2011 agreement Acre presented
    him, because it did not reflect their then-current arrangement. The judge
    accepted Lang's testimony that he only signed because Merlino told him it was
    the only way he was going to be paid and assured him "the deal would
    A-1385-21
    6
    continue as before despite any provisions in the 2011 Agreement to the
    contrary."
    Judge Fiamingo found the credible evidence demonstrated the
    arrangement between Acre and Lang continued in the same manner as before
    "execution of the 2011 Agreement and as if that agreement had not been
    executed." She found Lang's "actual compensation arrangement bore no
    resemblance to that set forth in the 2011 Agreement and more closely
    resembled the arrangement described by Lang and DiFrancesco."
    The parties stipulated that "[f]rom the time Lang was hired until 2012,
    Acre's fee for loans closed by Lang's branch was 58 basis points," well below
    the 150 basis points Acre charged other branches. Merlino testified the
    "aggressive pricing" was in expectation of the volume of business Lang would
    generate. When that expected volume failed to materialize, Acre increased
    Lang's per loan fee to 70 basis point in 2012. If Lang's branch closed over $10
    million a month in loans, however, Acre paid Lang 12 basis points, effectively
    bringing Acre's fee back down to 58 basis points. That credit was discontinued
    in May 2015. Judge Fiamingo found "Lang did not dispute Acre's ability to
    unilaterally make those changes."
    A-1385-21
    7
    Lang ultimately became a top producer for Acre, becoming its most
    successful branch, representing 40 percent of Acre's total business by volume
    in 2016. Lang testified his relationship with Merlino and DiCriscio changed in
    2014, however, when Lang "caught Acre stealing from [him]" by skimming
    fifty basis points off the purchase "advices" on loans Acre sold to The Money
    Source. Merlino testified Acre had negotiated a volume bonus of 50 basis
    points on loans sold to The Money Source to which Acre claimed it was
    entitled without passing through the savings on Lang's loans to Lang's branch.
    Merlino testified DiCriscio was adamant that Lang wasn't entitled to the
    bonus Acre had negotiated with The Money Source. Merlino also testified,
    however, that Lang was incensed, and Merlino convinced DiCriscio that "it's
    probably better just to pay [Lang] to keep the peace." Thus, while denying any
    wrongdoing, Merlino and DiCriscio agreed to pay Lang the $168,000 in
    dispute. Judge Fiamingo found Merlino's testimony "that Acre 'just paid'
    nearly $200,000 in additional compensation to Lang" not credible.
    Judge Fiamingo found in accordance with Lang's testimony "that he
    became suspicious of Acre's good intentions" after that dispute and uneasy
    about the 2011 contract he'd signed. The parties stipulated that in early 2015,
    Lang told Merlino, DiCriscio, and DiFrancesco he wanted a new contract, and
    A-1385-21
    8
    that they exchanged draft "Non-Originating Branch Manager Employment
    Agreements." At Lang's request, he met with Merlino and DiCriscio in March.
    DiFrancesco attended the meeting. Lang and DiFrancesco testified the four
    discussed Lang's arrangement with Acre and agreed on terms, with Merlino
    telling Lang to have his lawyer write up the agreement. Judge Fiamingo found
    Merlino and DiCriscio acknowledged a meeting took place but were vague on
    the details of what occurred and what they had agreed to. The parties
    vehemently disagreed over whether the agreement signed by Lang and
    DiFrancesco in 2015 was authorized and binding.
    Lang and DiFrancesco maintained that after several rounds of
    negotiations, Lang's agreement with Acre was memorialized in the signed,
    written agreement dated June 30, 2015, with both men understanding that
    DiFrancesco had the authority to sign the agreement on behalf of Acre. Both
    also testified the June 2015 agreement was acknowledged by Acre and
    implemented, noting that about a month after the contract was executed
    Merlino was copied on an email in which the agreement was explicitly
    referenced.
    Merlino and DiCriscio denied that any written agreement was signed in
    2015. They testified they explicitly rejected Lang's draft agreement, and
    A-1385-21
    9
    DiFrancesco knew it. They also denied that DiFrancesco had the authority to
    sign any contract other than a form contract approved by Acre's attorneys,
    which the 2015 document was not. Both were forced to concede, however,
    that there was nothing either orally or in writing advising branch managers, or
    Lang in particular, that DiFrancesco's contracting powers were so limited.
    Although DiCriscio testified he "knew" Lang was paying DiFrancesco,
    suggesting Lang must have paid DiFrancesco to sign the contract, he presented
    no evidence to support that allegation, and both Lang and DiFrancesco denied
    it.
    Judge Fiamingo credited the testimony of Lang and DiFrancesco on the
    issue of the 2015 agreement, rejected the testimony of Merlino and DiCriscio,
    and concluded the 2015 contract was enforceable against both Acre and Lang.
    The judge found DiFrancesco testified credibly that he'd been charged with
    negotiating and executing agreements between Acre and its branch managers
    and had done so regularly on Acre's behalf throughout his tenure. The judge
    specifically rejected as simply not credible "DiCriscio and Merlino's testimony
    that DiFrancesco's authority was limited to obtaining signatures on form
    contracts without revisions," noting Merlino's concession on cross examination
    A-1385-21
    10
    that DiFrancesco had signed hundreds of documents for Acre over the years
    and that Acre had only taken issue with the 2015 Lang contract.
    The judge found that neither Merlino nor DiCriscio ever advised
    DiFrancesco that the draft agreements he and Lang exchanged, which the
    record established they'd received, were unacceptable to them. She believed
    DiFrancesco when he testified that he understood "the lack of response by
    Merlino and DiCriscio to Lang's repeated status requests [as] an indication of
    their 'not wanting to be bothered with the process,' and that they never
    provided him with any indication that they were not in agreement with the
    proposal." Judge Fiamingo concluded "[t]he credible testimony reveal[ed] that
    the terms of the 2015 Agreement represented the manner in which the Lang
    branch was operated during the four years preceding its execution, and more
    accurately reflected the agreement between the parties, and importantly, the
    terms which had been agreed to in the March 2015 meeting between the
    parties."
    The parties agree that in late 2016, Lang met with Merlino to tell him he
    would be leaving Acre to start his own mortgage company at some point in the
    future. Merlino testified he told Lang to leave "the right way," meaning:
    "Don't steal my people and don't steal my deals." According to Merlino, he
    A-1385-21
    11
    and Lang shook hands on those terms, and Lang stated: "John, if I break
    anything on the way out, I'll pay for it." DiCriscio testified that he expected
    Lang would meet with Acre and "come up with a comprehensive plan" on what
    his exit would look like; what date he'd cease operating at Acre, "stop taking
    loans or talking to clients as Acre Mortgage, open his new company, and . . .
    how would we move forward and . . . get the loans . . . that were originated by
    us done, and just kind of go through the entire transition."
    Lang denied Merlino told him "Don't steal my deals or my . . . people,"
    and claimed the phrase didn't "even make sense," because "[t]he deals were
    mine, the leads were mine, the people were mine." Lang testified his
    conversation with Merlino addressed the logistics of his leaving, such as: Acre
    releasing the name Nation One, so Lang could begin the process of licensing
    his new company right away; his taking a few employees with him, in order to
    get Nation One off the ground; Lang's doing his "test cases" for HUD's
    approval while still at Acre; and the timing of his slowly winding down the
    loans in Acre's pipeline, and ramping up the Nation One pipeline in order for
    there to be an "orderly transition."
    Lang testified Merlino "knew it was coming, and so he wasn't shocked."
    According to Lang, there was nothing "earth-shattering" about the discussion,
    A-1385-21
    12
    testifying "you've got to remember, they only ever made 70 basis points off
    me. So, you know, $10 million in loan volume, I would pay them $70,000."
    Lang testified Merlino thought Lang "could be gone in March," which Lang
    felt "was a very aggressive date," as he was thinking it would take him until
    June. Lang testified that given the nature of the mortgage business, and the
    lifecycle of a loan, there would be no way for him to leave abruptly without
    hurting borrowers; there had to be a transition process.
    Although it is undisputed that in early 2017, Acre increased the fee
    Lang's branch was required to pay on each loan from 70 basis points to 150
    basis points, and that Lang asked Merlino and DiCriscio around that same time
    to remove Nation One Mortgage from Acre's New Jersey license, Merlino and
    DiCriscio testified it was never clear whether or when Lang was going to leave
    Acre. They testified that although they were aware Lang was setting up his
    new company, he wavered about whether he was going to leave, and he never
    chose a departure date.
    As to this dispute, DiFrancesco testified that on learning Lang intended
    to leave Acre and open his own company, he suggested to Merlino and
    DiCriscio that they develop an exit strategy, as had been done in the past when
    A-1385-21
    13
    branch managers left the company, which happened on a fairly regular basis. 1
    He testified Merlino and DiCriscio "were very reluctant" to do so, and that
    DiCriscio had cursed Lang and said: "[N]o, we're not helping Joe start his own
    business," after which DiFrancesco was "cut out of the loop."
    DiFrancesco resigned in mid-April after Merlino and DiCriscio
    attempted to have him sign an affidavit to the effect that Acre's 2015
    agreement with Lang was a fraud perpetrated by Lang; that DiFrancesco
    agreed to sign the document Lang presented him despite knowing its terms
    would "never be acceptable by Acre"; and that Lang had made statements
    acknowledging the 2011 Agreement remained in "full force and effect."
    DiFrancesco left without another job. He remains working in the mortgage
    industry but has never worked for Lang.
    On April 3, 2017, Lang had a "soft opening" for Nation One. He
    testified, however, that every borrower who had signed a loan application with
    Acre remained at Acre and closed their loan with Acre, which was how he
    understood the process should work, and how the process had worked in the
    past with respect to other branch managers who left Acre. Later in April, Lang
    1
    Lang's expert testified that net branch managers "tend to act and think like
    free agents" and are "not famous for sticking around at companies."
    A-1385-21
    14
    provided Acre with a separation agreement his attorney had drafted consistent
    with a discussion he'd had with Merlino and DiCriscio in March. DiCriscio
    rejected the draft "unequivocally," and stated that Acre expected Lang to
    continue to comply with the terms of his 2011 employment agreement .
    DiCriscio testified the draft was "ludicrous" and "a non-starter" and "didn't
    reflect any of the conversations [they] were having at that point in time ."
    In early June, Acre sent Lang a separation agreement, which proposed a
    transition period starting retroactively on April 1, 2017, which DiCriscio
    testified at trial was a typo, as he'd maintained he'd had no idea Lang was
    operating his new business before July. Both Merlino and DiCriscio denied
    any knowledge that Lang was already operating Nation One when they sent
    him the separation agreement, or that they approved of his operating a
    competing business while still employed by Acre. Ten days later, Lang
    rejected the proposal through his attorney, and accused Acre of attempting to
    obstruct his departure while posturing for future litigation. He also provided a
    counterproposal to which Acre did not respond.
    Lang continued to work at Acre for the next month, finishing up loans
    started with Acre, and getting Nation One off the ground. Acre terminated
    Lang's employment in mid-July, claiming it had learned that Lang had diverted
    A-1385-21
    15
    loans from Acre to Nation One. Lang denied any wrongdoing, testifying he
    was terminated because "[t]he transition was over," and "there was no more
    money to squeeze out of me." The employees from Lang's branch resigned the
    day after Lang was terminated. Acre sent them all termination letters the
    following day.
    Judge Fiamingo dismissed Acre's claims against Lang and Nation One
    for violation of the Lanham Act and misappropriation of trade secrets under
    State and federal law, and against Lang for conspiracy. The judge found in
    favor of Acre on its claims against Lang for breach of contract, breach of the
    duty of loyalty, breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with current
    contractual and prospective economic relations, and unfair competition.
    The judge found that although nothing in the 2015 agreement prohibited
    Lang from soliciting business "from all sources with whom he became
    associated during his employment" after his employment ended, "[n]othing in
    the 2015 Agreement permits such solicitation during the term of his
    employment." The judge found Lang was not "entitled to operate a competing
    branch while operating the Acre branch, except in connection with his
    termination of employment and preparation for competition with Acre
    A-1385-21
    16
    thereafter" and that "[d]oing so required that he solicit leads and referrals prior
    to his termination of employment in contravention of the 2015 Agreement."
    Although Judge Fiamingo found "as a fact that Merlino and DiCriscio
    were aware of Lang's actions in establishing his new company and setting
    himself up to compete with Acre after his termination," she also found that
    "knowledge did not constitute any agreement or other acquiescence on their
    part to his competition with Acre while he was employed by Acre" and,
    indeed, that Acre did not give Lang permission "to breach the 2015 Agreement
    and to enter into competition with . . . Acre." Judge Fiamingo also found that
    Acre established Lang breached his fiduciary duty and duty of loyalty to Acre
    and engaged in the common law business tort of unfair competition by
    competing with his employer while still employed by the company .
    Judge Fiamingo was also satisfied that Acre had proved Lang had
    interfered with Acre's current and prospective economic relations. The judge
    found that Acre had a reasonable expectation it would be paid its commissions
    on those loans Lang closed prior to the termination of his employment, and as
    to those loans on which it did not receive a commission, Lang tortiously
    interfered with Acre's reasonable expectations of economic advantage.
    Likewise, the judge found "Acre had such reasonable expectations with respect
    A-1385-21
    17
    to those loans which were in process prior to Lang's separation, but which
    thereafter closed with [Nation One] after Lang's separation." Thus, "to the
    extent that loans closed by [Nation One] subsequent to Lang's separation were
    reasonably anticipated to be closed for Acre's benefit, Acre's claim is also
    sustained."
    Judge Fiamingo found that DiCriscio and Merlino were, without
    question, aware that Lang had started his new business when they sent him
    their proposed separation agreement in June. But she found, nonetheless, that
    neither their knowledge "nor Merlino's awareness of Lang's need to engage in
    test cases constituted their acquiescence with competition by Lang with Acre
    during any period that Lang was acting as its branch manager." The judge
    found the evidence clearly established "that Lang was well aware of Acre's
    reasonable expectations in this regard, and that Lang took efforts to hide the
    operation of his competing business from Acre knowing that Merlino and
    DiCriscio had yet to approve a transition plan." The judge further found that
    Lang knew Merlino and DiCriscio "were unlikely to agree to the proposal he
    eventually presented to them only after he had successfully completed his soft
    opening and was ready to engage in full scale competition with Acre."
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    18
    As to Lang's counterclaims against Acre, the judge dismissed Lang's
    claims for promissory estoppel, unjust enrichment, fraud, conversion, breach
    of fiduciary duty, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and
    violation of New Jersey's Wage Payment Law. The judge also dismissed all of
    Lang's third-party claims against Merlino and DiCriscio.
    Judge Fiamingo found "Lang's claims of misrepresentations by Merlino
    and DiCriscio as to the 'transition' period after his November 2016
    announcement disingenuous at best." She found there was never an agreement
    as to the transition, "a fact of which Lang was fully aware." Nevertheless,
    "Lang chose to forge ahead with his own plan, knowing full well he had no
    agreement with Acre." Although acknowledging that Merlino and DiCriscio
    were aware "Lang was making efforts to commence his new business during
    this period," the judge found "Lang's assertion that Merlino and DiCriscio
    were aware of the extent of his activities [was] unsupported by the evidence."
    The judge concluded that "Lang did not remain at Acre as a result of any
    representation made to him by Merlino or DiCriscio. He remained at Acre
    only as long as necessary to complete [Nation One's] readiness to commence
    business."
    A-1385-21
    19
    Judge Fiamingo concluded, however, that Lang established Acre had
    also breached the parties' 2015 Agreement "when it failed to pay the
    commissions due to Lang's branch for the period prior to his termination,
    which include[ed] the amounts to be paid for the loans closed for Acre and the
    funds remaining in the branch account, as well as the severance" due under the
    2015 Agreement. The judge also found Acre breached the Agreement by
    failing to release the rights to the Nation One name after Lang's termination as
    required by the Agreement.
    Acre sought damages of $3,602,288, which included: the application of
    150 basis points on loans that were closed at Nation One, which Acre
    maintained should have closed with Acre; the disgorgement of Nation One's
    profit on secondary sales of those loans; the disgorgement of Nation One 's
    origination fees for each of those loans; the forfeiture of the compensation
    Acre had paid to Lang between April 3, 2017 (the date of Nation One's soft
    opening) and the termination of his employment in July 2017; and the
    forfeiture of Lang's income that had been withheld by Acre (which Lang was
    seeking in damages).
    Lang sought a total of $2,370,976 in damages, which included:
    $1,013,347.22 on ninety-six loans he closed at Acre, and which Acre sold on
    A-1385-21
    20
    the secondary market mostly before he left its employ; $506,638.64,
    representing the eighty basis points Acre had taken on every loan after
    February 2017, above the agreed-upon seventy; $850,991.74 in severance
    pursuant to the 2015 Agreement (if only seventy basis points were taken by
    Acre), or $744,464.39 (if 150 basis points were taken by Acre); and his final
    paycheck for July 2017, which Acre withheld.
    Judge Fiamingo awarded Acre damages for Lang's unfair competition
    while still employed of 150 basis points on all the loans closed by Nation One
    prior to Lang's termination. Based on the evidence that Nation One closed
    loans totaling $7,823,982 during that period, the judge awarded Acre
    $117,359.73 ($7,823,982 x .015) for the loans closed by Nation One through
    July 11, 2017.
    The judge also awarded Acre damages for loans closed by Nation One
    for the sixty-day day period after Lang's termination. Although finding the
    testimony about which loans originated with Acre and closed with Nation One
    "confusing at best," the court found "it likely that loans closed within a
    relatively short period of Lang's termination . . . had to have started the process
    during his employment with Acre and incredible to find otherwise."
    Accordingly, the judge awarded Acre damages of 150 basis points on the
    A-1385-21
    21
    $10,075,303 in loans closed by Nation One between July 11, 2017 and
    September 4, 2017, or $151,129.55, for total damages of $268,489.28. The
    judge rejected Acre's claim for disgorgement of Lang's compensation, and its
    claim for disgorgement of Nation One's profits for the entirety of 2017 as
    "overreaching and not supported by any credible evidence."
    As for Lang's use of the name "Nation One," Judge Fiamingo found the
    parties' disagreement was "disingenuous on the part of both Acre and Lang."
    On the one hand, it was clear "Acre had no real interest in the use of the name
    outside of Lang's branch"; on the other, "Lang's insistence on his right to . . .
    transfer [of the name] prior to his termination of employment . . . is not
    supported by the terms of the 2015 Agreement." Ultimately, the judge held
    Acre breached the parties' 2015 contract by never releasing the Nation One
    name, even after the termination of Lang's employment.
    Judge Fiamingo found "Acre breached its agreement with Lang with
    respect to the amounts earned by Lang prior to his termination, and its failure
    to pay to Lang the balance remaining in the branch account, as well as the
    severance payment" provided in the 2015 Agreement. The judge awarded
    Lang damages of $1,013,347 for the loans Lang closed for Acre prior to his
    A-1385-21
    22
    termination, plus the balance remaining in the branch account of $166,055 , for
    a total award of $1,179,402.
    The court declined to award Lang any damages for the 80-point
    differential between the 150 basis points Acre charged Lang in 2017 and the
    70 basis points it had previously charged him. Lang acknowledged Acre had
    the right to make that unilateral adjustment, and testified he had accepted it
    without argument. The judge also declined to award Lang the $744,464.39
    severance payment due under the 2015 Agreement, finding "that such an award
    to a disloyal employee would be inequitable." Finally, the judge declined
    Lang's request for punitive damages and declined prejudgment interest to both
    parties.
    Judge Fiamingo dismissed Acre's claims against DiFrancesco for breach
    of fiduciary duty, breach of the duty of loyalty, and conspiracy related to his
    involvement with Lang's 2015 Agreement. The judge also dismissed
    DiFrancesco's counterclaims for breach of the duty of good faith and fair
    dealing, unjust enrichment, and conversion. The judge, however, awarded
    DiFrancesco damages of $486,264 in unpaid commissions, on a breach of
    contract theory, on loans closed by Lang's branch and two others that joined
    Acre at the same time in 2010.
    A-1385-21
    23
    Although the judge found Acre also breached its contract with
    DiFrancesco by failing to tender his final paycheck, the judge did not calculate
    the amount due DiFrancesco on that claim. The judge denied DiFrancesco
    prejudgment interest, finding he made no effort to contest Acre's failure to
    make payment of the amounts due him, and indeed was "willing to forego that
    compensation, notwithstanding his resignation until Acre chose to embroil him
    in this litigation."
    The facts on this point are largely undisputed. When DiFrancesco joined
    Acre in 2007, he signed an "Employment Offer Letter" from Merlino on Acre
    letterhead that reads as follows:
    Please accept this letter as an offer of employment
    with Acre Mortgage. We would like you to represent
    our company as our wholesale rep. Initially you will
    be responsible to generate wholesale business in any
    and all states in which we are licensed. As the
    company and this division grow, territories may be
    divided among others. You are also expected to help
    in our quest to recruit outside branches to Acre
    Mortgage. For this you will be paid the following
    compensation.
    For the first three months you will be paid a forgivable
    draw. This will be paid as follows:
    Month 1- $6000
    Month 2- $6000
    Month 3- $6000
    A-1385-21
    24
    In the event that you close enough loans that your
    commissions exceed the above noted draw, you will
    be paid the difference. If you do not close enough
    business to cover the draw, then this draw will be
    forgiven. After the first three months you will be paid
    a salary of $24,000 per yr and you will be paid 10
    basis points for all loans that you close. You will be
    responsible to pay your own daily expenses. If there
    is a major expense that you incur we will reimburse
    you for that expense as long as it has been pre-
    approved by me or Joe DiCriscio. As a company
    policy, we contribute $100 per month to your health
    insurance and you will be responsible to pay the
    difference. When you recruit a branch that we decide
    to hire, you will be paid $500 when we receive their
    branch license from the state banking commission, and
    an additional $500 when they close their first loan.
    We hope that you accept this offer of employment, as
    we feel that you will be an asset to our company.
    DiFrancesco's job was to generate wholesale business in all states in
    which Acre was licensed and recruit new branches to the company. He was
    not a loan officer, however, so he did not close loans. Thus, although the offer
    letter referred to his receiving compensation on loans he closed, he was
    actually paid based on the production of others. That is, he was paid ten basis
    points on loans closed by branches he recruited or managed, plus $500 when
    the branch was licensed, and $500 when the branch closed its first loan.
    In 2008, DiFrancesco's title changed to national sales manager; his
    duties and compensation did not change. He continued to recruit and manage
    A-1385-21
    25
    branches for Acre, which included managing day-to-day branch operations, as
    well as managing the on-boarding and departures of branches, all of which
    involved independently negotiating and signing contracts on behalf of the
    company. The offer letter is the only written agreement between DiFrancesco
    and Acre.
    Lang joined Acre with two other net branch managers, Ryan Barbalios
    and Rich Roney, with whom he had been working at another mortgage
    company. Like Lang, Acre charged Barbalios and Roney only 58 basis points
    for loans closed by their branches, a steep discount from the 150 basis points
    Acre charged other branches. DiFrancesco and Acre referred to Lang's,
    Barbalios', and Roney's branches as "the big three." DiFrancesco testified that
    when Acre was negotiating to bring them on, Merlino advised him that he
    would not receive a commission on any of the loans closed by any of the three
    branches because "the deal's too rich."2
    2
    DiFrancesco did not dispute that Merlino told him before Lang, Barbalios
    and Roney joined Acre that he would not be receiving any commission on their
    loans. He only disputed at trial whether he'd been told that before his first
    meeting with them. DiFrancesco was impeached on that point with his
    deposition testimony. When asked at deposition how long that first meeting
    had been, DiFrancesco answered:
    A-1385-21
    26
    DiFrancesco testified he never agreed to that arrangement and always
    complained to Merlino about it. In 2012, when Acre increased the fee on "the
    big three" to 70 basis points, Merlino agreed that Acre would pay DiFrancesco
    1.5 points on every loan they closed, capped at $1,500 per month.
    DiFrancesco testified he believed he was due 10 basis points on loans closed
    by "the big three," that he never agreed to take anything less, and had always
    believed "deep down" that Merlino would eventually pay him the 10 basis
    points DiFrancesco believed he was owed.
    Judge Fiamingo found DiFrancesco's offer letter constituted an
    employment agreement that Acre was not free to unilaterally change. The
    judge rejected Acre's reliance on Woolley v. Hoffman-LaRoche, 
    99 N.J. 284
    (1985), because "[i]n Woolley no written employment contract existed and the
    plaintiff was an at-will employee." The judge found "Acre misconstrue[ed] the
    relationship between it and DiFrancesco and his claim against it.
    DiFrancesco's claim is a breach of contract claim. There was an express
    How long they wanted it to last or how I wanted it to
    last. I wanted it to be over in five minutes because I
    had to go get my kids, and the other part of that was I
    didn't even want to be in there because they had
    already told me I was not going to be compensated on
    the account.
    A-1385-21
    27
    contractual agreement between them which was never the subject of an express
    amendment."
    Judge Fiamingo found "New Jersey courts . . . do not permit unilateral
    amendments to existing agreements to change material terms." Discover Bank
    v. Shea, 362 N.J. Super 200, 203 (Law Div. 2001). "A proposed modification
    by one party to a contract must be accepted by the other to constitute mutual
    assent to modify." County of Morris v. Fauver, 
    153 N.J. 80
    , 95 (1998).
    Because the judge found the offer letter constituted a bilateral contract
    between Acre and DiFrancesco that Acre was not free to modify without
    DiFrancesco's express consent, which Acre never sought or obtained, she
    concluded Acre had breached its agreement to DiFrancesco and awarded him
    damages.
    Although DiFrancesco sought $688,054 in unpaid commissions on loans
    closed by the Barbalios, Roney, and Lang branches between 2011 and 2017,
    Judge Fiamingo ordered Acre to pay DiFrancesco ten basis points for loans
    closed by those branches beginning in 2013, finding any claim before that was
    barred by the six-year statute of limitations, for a total of $486,264. As
    already noted, the judge did not calculate or award any damages on
    A-1385-21
    28
    DiFrancesco's claim to his final paycheck, although finding he was entitled to
    that sum as well.
    Acre appeals, raising only two issues: that the trial court erred in failing
    to order "or even consider" that Lang disgorge his compensation as well as the
    profits made by Nation One during the period of Lang's disloyalty; and in
    finding Acre required DiFrancesco's consent to modify his compensation
    terms. We find no error in the court's decision to decline to order equitable
    disgorgement against Lang and Nation One, but agree the court erred in
    finding Acre was not free to unilaterally alter DiFrancesco's compensation by
    excluding commissions on loans to be closed by "the big three" branches on
    their joining Acre.
    Final determinations by the trial court following a bench trial "are
    subject to a limited and well-established scope of review." Seidman v. Clifton
    Sav. Bank, SLA, 
    205 N.J. 150
    , 169 (2011). We will not overturn the court's
    "factual findings and legal conclusions . . . unless we are convinced that they
    are so manifestly unsupported by or inconsistent with the competent, relevant
    and reasonably credible evidence as to offend the interests of justice." 
    Ibid.
    (quoting In re Tr. Created By Agreement Dated Dec. 20, 1961, 
    194 N.J. 276
    , 284 (2008)). That means "[w]e do not weigh the evidence, assess the
    A-1385-21
    29
    credibility of witnesses, or make conclusions about the evidence." 160 West
    Broadway Assocs., LP v. 1 Memorial Drive, LLC, 
    466 N.J. Super. 600
    , 610
    (App. Div. 2021) (quoting Mountain Hill, LLC v. Twp. of Middletown, 
    399 N.J. Super. 486
    , 498 (App. Div. 2008) (alteration in original)).
    Instead, we "give deference to the trial court that heard the witnesses,
    sifted the competing evidence, and made reasoned conclusions." Griepenburg
    v. Twp. of Ocean, 
    220 N.J. 239
    , 254 (2015). "Deference is especially
    appropriate 'when the evidence is largely testimonial and involves questions of
    credibility.'" Balducci v. Cige, 
    240 N.J. 574
    , 594 (2020) (quoting Cesare v.
    Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    , 412 (1998)). "[A]n appellate court's review of a cold
    record is no substitute for the trial court's opportunity to hear and see the
    witnesses who testified on the stand." Id. at 595. Our review of the trial
    court's legal conclusions, including legal interpretations and the legal
    consequences that flow from established facts, however, is plenary.
    Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378
    (1995). Because courts are afforded "broad discretion" in "fashioning
    equitable remedies that are fair and practical," including "the remedy of
    equitable disgorgement" for an employee's disloyal conduct, we review those
    A-1385-21
    30
    decisions only for abuse of discretion. Kaye v. Rosefielde, 
    223 N.J. 218
    , 221-
    22 (2015).
    We reject as entirely without merit Acre's claim that the trial court failed
    to consider ordering Lang to disgorge his compensation and Nation One's
    profits during the three-month period preceding Lang's termination. We quote
    from Judge Fiamingo's opinion:
    "Just as the trial court's determination of the disloyalty
    claim mandates a fact-sensitive inquiry, so does its
    fashioning of a remedy." Kaye v. Rosefielde, 
    223 N.J. 218
    , 231 (2015). "Depending on the facts of the case,
    an employee's breach of the duty of loyalty can give
    rise to either equitable or legal relief." Cameco, Inc.
    v. Gedicke, 
    157 N.J. 504
    , 518 (1999). When there is a
    finding of a breach of fiduciary duty, the
    "egregiousness of the employee's conduct" affects the
    determination of the appropriate remedy. 
    Id. at 517
    .
    Additionally, if equity so requires, a "trial court may
    order disgorgement of an employee's compensation as
    a remedy for a breach of loyalty in an appropriate
    case." Kaye, 
    223 N.J. at 222
    . Such disgorgement is
    appropriate only for the period during the employment
    when the employee has been disloyal. 
    Ibid.
    Acre sought both actual and equitable damages, including
    "[d]isgorgement of all compensation" paid to Lang during the period that he
    was acting for his and Nation One's "sole benefit and to the detriment of
    Acre," as well as "disgorgement of Defendants' profits in amounts to be
    proven." Judge Fiamingo awarded Acre all its legal damages, that is, 150 basis
    A-1385-21
    31
    points on the $7,823,982 in loans closed by Nation One during Lang's period
    of disloyalty totaling $117,359.73, and 150 basis points on the $10,075,303 in
    loans closed by Nation One during the sixty-day period following Lang's
    termination on July 11, 2017, totaling $151,129.55, for total damages of
    $268,489.28, finding the remainder of Acre's claim "overreaching and not
    supported by any credible evidence." Acre would not have earned a penny
    more on those loans had Lang remained at Acre working solely on its behalf
    during that period.
    The trial court found that, in addition to the 38 loans Nation One closed
    in the three months prior to Lang's termination, Lang had closed 205 loans for
    Acre for which Acre had failed to pay an aggregate of $1,013,347.22 in net
    profits to Lang's branch, after taking Acre's fee of 150 basis points on each
    loan, and failed to pay the $166,055 balance remaining in Lang's branch
    account. Acre's argument that the court erred in finding that "Lang diverted
    nearly 18 million dollars in loans from Acre, stealing well over $250,000
    dollars in profits," and yet "failed to appreciate Acre's position that forfeiture
    of compensation was an appropriate remedy," ignores that the court fully
    compensated it for all amounts due on those loans, relieved it of its obligation
    under the 2015 Agreement to pay nearly $750,000 in severance to Lang and
    A-1385-21
    32
    only ordered it to turn over to Lang the $1,013,347.22 in net profits due his
    branch for which Acre had already taken its fees and the $166,055 balance
    remaining in Lang's branch account — without interest. Given the net branch
    arrangement, disgorgement of Lang's salary would have worked a windfall to
    Acre as Acre didn't pay Lang a salary; Lang paid his own salary out of the net
    profits of his branch.
    Having reviewed the trial transcripts and Judge Fiamingo's thorough and
    thoughtful opinion, we are confident she correctly applied the governing law to
    this complicated dispute and fairly found "both Acre and Lang to have been at
    least partially at fault" in the failure to adopt "a clear transition plan" for
    Lang's orderly departure "create[ing] a murky situation for all of the parties
    involved." We certainly cannot find she abused her considerable discretion in
    declining to order the equitable remedy of disgorgement on these facts. See
    Natovitz v. Bay Head Realty Co., 
    142 N.J. Eq. 456
    , 463 (E. & A. 1948)
    (noting the maxim "that he who seeks equity must do equity").
    In contrast, we find the court made a legal error in concluding Acre was
    not free to unilaterally determine not to pay DiFrancesco ten basis points on
    loans to be closed by the Barbalios, Roney, and Lang branches. In concluding
    A-1385-21
    33
    the offer letter constituted a bilateral contract that Acre violated by changing
    the terms of DiFrancesco's compensation, the trial court erred.
    DiFrancesco does not dispute the contract at issue is an offer letter.
    Although executed offer letters qualify as employment agreements, Hanisko v.
    Billy Casper Golf Mgmt., Inc., 
    437 N.J. Super. 349
    , 362 (App. Div. 2014), a
    writing alone will not alter the at-will nature of the employment. Our Supreme
    Court has unequivocally held that "in the absence of a contrary agreement, an
    employee is hired at-will, regardless of the way in which the salary is quoted
    in an offer letter." Bernard v. IMI Sys., 
    131 N.J. 91
    , 96 (1993).
    Moreover, in the at-will employment context, employers retain the
    authority to alter the terms and conditions of employment, subject, of course,
    to any statutory or common law limitations. Mita v. Chubb Comput. Servs.,
    Inc., 
    337 N.J. Super. 517
    , 526-27 (App. Div. 2001). And the employee's
    decision to remain employed, subject to the terms and conditions set by the
    employer, is deemed an acceptance of those terms. Martindale v. Sandvik,
    Inc., 
    173 N.J. 76
    , 88 (2002); Witkowski v. Thomas J. Lipton, Inc., 
    136 N.J. 385
    , 399 (1994); Woolley, 
    99 N.J. at 302
    ; Mita, 
    337 N.J. Super. at 527
    . The
    law is well-settled that an employer's freedom to change the terms of at-will
    employment include compensation terms, Alexander v. Kay Finlay Jewelers,
    A-1385-21
    34
    
    208 N.J. Super. 503
    , 506-07 (App. Div. 1986), which new terms are presumed
    accepted by the employee once the employee becomes aware of the change and
    chooses to continue working, Mita, 
    337 N.J. Super. at 526-27
    .
    We have no quarrel with the trial court's factual findings on this point.
    The evidence supports the court's finding that the April 2, 2007 offer letter
    constituted a contract, as it was written, signed by both parties, and it set forth
    the material terms of employment, particularly the terms of DiFrancesco 's
    compensation. Hanisko, 
    437 N.J. Super. 362
    . Indeed, the court's post-trial
    opinion reflects that the parties stipulated that they entered into an employment
    agreement by virtue of the April 2, 2007, offer letter.
    Nevertheless, the offer letter created only an at-will employment
    relationship between the parties. Bernard, 131 N.J. at 96. That is, the offer
    letter did not contain any limitation on Acre's right to terminate DiFrancesco's
    employment, nor any limit on its right to amend the terms or conditions of his
    employment. Therefore, Acre retained the right to modify the terms of
    employment, and the record reflects that Acre exercised that right with respect
    to DiFrancesco's compensation, specifically with regard to the Barbalios,
    Roney, and Lang branches.
    A-1385-21
    35
    Acre did not breach any legal obligation to DiFrancesco by changing the
    terms of his compensation, because in every instance it made the changes
    prospectively. As stated by this court in Winslow v. Corp. Exp., Inc., 
    364 N.J. Super. 128
    , 139 (App. Div. 2003):
    Because plaintiff was an at-will employee, defendant
    of course remained free to change the method by
    which plaintiff's commissions were calculated. [Mita,
    
    337 N.J. Super. at 526
    .] However, defendant could
    only make such a change prospectively, after giving
    plaintiff prior notice that would afford him an
    opportunity to decide whether he wished to continue
    working at a reduced rate of compensation. See Nolan
    v. Control Data Corp., 
    243 N.J. Super. 420
    , 430-32
    (App. Div. 1990).
    Specifically, as for the compensation to be paid DiFrancesco in
    connection with the Barbalios, Roney, and Lang branches: in 2010, Acre
    determined that DiFrancesco would not receive any compensation for loans
    closed by these branches; and in 2012, it decided to pay him 1.5 basis points
    on loans closed by these branches, capped at $1,500 per month. On each
    occasion, Acre made these changes prospectively, notified DiFrancesco of the
    change to the terms of his compensation, and explained the basis for its
    decision, which related to the basis points taken by Acre on loans closed by
    those branches. Each time, DiFrancesco orally objected to Acre's decision.
    Notwithstanding his objections, DiFrancesco's decision to remain employed by
    A-1385-21
    36
    Acre, subject to the new compensation terms, constituted his acceptance of
    those terms. Mita, 
    337 N.J. Super. at 527
    . Accordingly, the judgment in favor
    of DiFrancesco on his breach of contract claim as to commissions owed with
    respect to the Barbalios, Roney, and Lang branches must be reversed and
    judgment entered for Acre on that claim.
    There remains, however, the question of DiFrancesco's final paycheck.
    As to this issue, the court credited DiFrancesco's testimony that DiCriscio
    informed him "he would have to sue Acre to get his final paycheck and that
    Acre would bring DiFrancesco into the lawsuit" against Lang. The court
    further found: "Acre does not dispute that no payment was made for
    DiFrancesco's final period of employment and has provided no explanation for
    the failure to pay him other than the allegations set forth in their complaint. "
    Further, the court explicitly rejected Acre's claims against DiFrancesco,
    in which it sought the forfeiture of his salary for a period of disloyalty, stating:
    "[T]he court finds that DiFrancesco breached no duty he owed to Acre.
    DiFrancesco undertook all of his duties to his employer in an honorable and a
    loyal manner." Thus, the court correctly held that Acre was obligated to pay
    DiFrancesco his final paycheck, reflecting work he performed for the company
    through his resignation in April 2017. Because the court did not perform any
    A-1385-21
    37
    calculation of the amount due DiFrancesco for his final pay period, separate
    from the commission calculation for the Barbalios, Roney, and Lang branches ,
    a remand is required for the court to determine the amount that remains owing
    to DiFrancesco.3
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
    3
    Unlike Lang, DiFrancesco did not assert a claim under New Jersey's Wage
    Payment Law, N.J.S.A. 34:11-4.1 to -4.14. We express no opinion as to
    whether DiFrancesco may be entitled to relief under that statute at this point.
    See Maia v. IEW Constr. Grp., 
    257 N.J. 330
    , 337 (2024) (addressing
    retroactivity of 2019 amendments to the statute).
    A-1385-21
    38
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-1385-21

Filed Date: 11/6/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/6/2024