| Nawaz v Boryczka |
| 2012 NY Slip Op 50367(U) [34 Misc 3d 1234(A)] |
| Decided on March 2, 2012 |
| Supreme Court, Kings County |
| Rivera, J. |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
Shamim Nawaz,
Plaintiff,
against Slawomir D. Boryczka, Royal Luxury Limo Inc., Vadim Tchoukanine, and Irina Tchoukannina, Defendants. |
By order to show cause, filed on November 16, 2011 under motion sequence
number three, Paris & Chaikin, PLLC (hereinafter P & C), plaintiff's counsel, has moved
pursuant to 22 NYCRR 603.13(b) for leave to share legal fees with Resnick & Binder, P.C.
(hereinafter R & B), plaintiff's prior counsel, for legal services R & B performed before its
principal members were disbarred. The motion is unopposed.
MOTION PAPERS
Plaintiff's order to show cause consists of an attorney's affirmation, and two exhibits
labeled A and B. Exhibit A is an affidavit signed by Serge Binder, one of the principals of R &
B. Exhibit B is a copy of this court's September 9, 2011 order denying plaintiff's prior request for
relief.
LAW AND APPLICATION
The instant motion papers demonstrate the following facts. Resnick & Binder, P.C., initiated and litigated this instant action for damages due to personal injury on behalf of plaintiff Shamim Nawaz. Thereafter, P & C substituted R & B as plaintiff's attorney of record and entered into a fee sharing agreement with R & B. In accordance with that agreement P & C was to receive 33 1/3% of the net legal fees collected in the instant action for legal work performed [*2]prior to their substitution and subsequent disbarment.
Plaintiff eventually settled the action for $12,500.00. P & C is seeking court permission to disburse $1,501.12 to R & B, which represents 33 and 1/3% of the net legal fee, plus $210.00 in disbursements incurred by R & B. This amount is currently in P & C's New York State Interest on Lawyer Account ("IOLA").
The movant made a prior request for the exact same relief in motion sequence number two.
By order of this Court dated September 9, 2011, that request was denied without prejudice for
failure to show that the disbarment of R & B was unrelated to its representation of the plaintiff.
The instant motion is supported by an affidavit by Serge Binder, one of the principal attorneys of
R & B, in which he avers that the disbarment of the principals of R & B was unrelated to the
representation of the plaintiff in the underlying action.
The Rules and Regulations of the Appellate Divisions, 22 NYCRR 603.13(b),
provide, in pertinent part, that "[a] disbarred, suspended or resigned attorney may not share in
any fee for legal services performed by another attorney during the period of his removal from
the bar," although he may "be compensated on a quantum meruit basis for legal services
rendered and disbursements incurred by him prior to the effective date of the disbarment or
suspension order or of his resignation." "The amount and manner of payment of such
compensation and recoverable disbursements shall be fixed by the court on the application of
either the disbarred, suspended or resigned attorney or the new attorney, on notice to the other as
well as on notice to the client." 22 NYCRR 603.13(b).
Further, a disbarred attorney forfeits his entire fee if his misconduct relates to his
representation in the matter for which the fees are sought(Decolator, Cohen & DiPrisco, LLP
v. Lysaght, Lysaght & Kramer, P.C., 304 AD2d 86, 91 [2d 2003]). "It is well settled that
[a]n attorney who engages in misconduct by violating the Disciplinary Rules is not entitled to
legal fees for any services rendered'" (Pessoni v. Rabkin, 220 AD2d 732, 633 N.Y.S.2d
338 [2d 1995] citing Matter of Winston, 214 AD2d 677 [2d 1995]).
In this case, the order to show cause notified both R & B and plaintiff Shamim
Nawaz of applicant's request for relief. Applicant has therefore properly satisfied the notice
requirement of 22 NYCRR 603.13(b). Applicant has also provided the affidavit of Serge Binder,
one of the principals of R & B, who has sworn that the firms' disbarment was in no way related to
the Nawaz matter. Applicant has therefore, at the very least, made a prima facie showing that R
& B's misconduct did not relate to the matter at hand, and consequently, that it need not forfeit its
rights under the agreement.
The court must now determine what amount of compensation for R & B would be
consistent with "quantum meruit." Black's Legal Dictionary (5th Ed., 1979, p. 1119) defines
"quantum meruit" to be "as much as he deserved." In Rosenzweig v. Gomez, 250 AD2d
664, 664 (2d 1998), the court, in assessing such amount, held that the amount should be based
upon evidence of the time and skill required in that case, the complexity of the matter, the
attorney's experience, ability, and reputation, the client's benefit from the services, and the fee
usually charged by other attorneys for similar services.
In the instant case, the movant failed to provide the following facts: when R & B
initiated [*3]this action; when its principal attorneys were
disbarred and for what reason; when P & C substituted for R & B as attorneys of record; and
when the fee-splitting agreement was consummated. The movant also failed to describe the work
that R & B accomplished prior to its disbarment; and, how this work helped plaintiff ultimately
secure a judgment in her favor.
The court must therefore consider, what role, if any, the fee-splitting agreement
should play in determining quantum meruit recovery. In Padilla v. Sansivieri, 31 AD3d 64, 65 (2d 2006), the court held that
a disbarred attorney's entitlement to legal fees are capped by the rule of quantum meruit, and no
private agreement as to compensation is binding on the court. An award in quantum meruit
should in all cases reflect the court's assessment of the qualitative value of the services rendered,
made after weighing all relevant factors considered in valuing legal services. An agreement as to
compensation is one such factor.
Utilizing, the Rosenzweig factors as guidance, the Padilla court
observed that incoming and outgoing counsel's agreement concerning the apportionment of a
contingency fee was "some evidence of, inter alia, the parties' own assessment of their respective
contributions" (Padilla at 66). Distinguishing a prior ruling which limited quantum
meruit recovery to an hourly rate (Casey v. Ruffino, 306 AD2d 304 [2d 2003]), the court
concluded that "[n]either controlling case law nor the plain meaning of the phrase quantum
meruit precludes the calculation of compensation to a disbarred attorney as a portion of a
contingent fee" (Padilla at 67).
Similarly, in Decolator, Cohen & DiPrisco, LLP v. Lysaght, Lysaght & Kramer,
P.C., 304 AD2d 86, 92 (2d 2003), the court held that entitling the original disbarred attorney
to a percentage of a contingency fee based on "the proportionate share of the overall services it
performed before the disbarment of its principals is consistent with 22 NYCR § 603.13(b)."
However, even if this court were to interpret Rosenzweig and Decolater
to plainly authorize a fee-splitting agreement with a now disbarred law firm, it would still
need to know what R & B's "overall services" consisted of in order to determine quantum merit
compensation. In this instant case, applicant has left the court to guess what work R & B actually
provided. Common sense also dictates that an arrangement with a now disbarred law firm should
be subject to at least a minimal degree of scrutiny, particularly when applicant seeks an
order from the court not merely to enforce the agreement —which incidentally, the court
must find to be consistent with public policy — but to authorize distribution of funds
pursuant to its alleged terms. Movant's motion papers, simply assert that P & C entered into an
agreement with R & B, which may or may not have been put into writing, and which occurred at
an undisclosed date, sometime before R & B's disbarment. The motion is also unopposed, thus
leaving the court with only "one set of facts" concerning an agreement which implicates matters
of professional responsibility and legal ethics. In its discretion, the court finds that movant's
papers, by themselves, are insufficient to authorize payment pursuant to the agreement.
Nonetheless, the court may take judicial notice of its own records and published
court decisions. (See, Wachovia Bank, N.A. v. Otto N. Williams, 17 Misc 3d
1127(A) [NY Sup. 2007] citing Matter
of Khatibi v. Weill, 8 AD3d 485 [2d 2004]). A review of the public records shows that
on July 30, 2009 David Resnick and Serge Binder, principal attorneys at R & B, pleaded guilty to
filing false personal income tax returns, in violation of Tax Law §1804(b), a class E felony
(see Matter of Resnick, 73 AD3d
75 [2d 2010]; Matter of Binder,
74 AD3d 54 [2d 2010]). [*4]"An attorney convicted of a
felony is automatically disbarred ... "Conviction" is defined as the "entry of a plea of guilty to, or
a verdict of guilty upon, an accusatory instrument other than a felony complaint, or to one or
more counts of such instrument" (CPL 1.20 [13])" (Matter of Delany, 87 NY2d 508, 512
[1996]).
More relevant to the quantum meruit determination, the court's records indicate that
as attorneys of record, R & B filed a summons and complaint and several affidavits of service
prior to July 30, 2009—the date of their disbarments.
At the very least, quauntum meruit entitles an attorney to an hourly rate (see,
Decolator, at 92). R & B's work-product, accessible and verifiable by the court's own
records, evinces that R & B committed a fair amount of time to the Nawaz matter. Even if R & B
charged plaintiff the most modest of hourly rates, it would still be entitled to $1,501.12 in fees.
Therefore, the court concludes that compensation of $1,501.12 to R & B is appropriate on a
quantum meruit basis and is consistent with 22 NYCRR § 603.13(b).
Plaintiff's counsel is granted to leave to provide said amount to R & B.
The foregoing constitutes the decision and order of this court.
Enter:
J.S.C.
Enter forthwith:
J.S.C.