JESSE ROSENBLUM V. BORO OF CLOSTER ET AL
Case Date: 11/13/1995
Court: Superior Court of New Jersey
Docket No: none
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SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
JESSE ROSENBLUM,
Plaintiff-Appellant/
vs.
BOROUGH OF CLOSTER,
Defendant,
vs.
MIELE SANITATION COMPANY,
Third Party Defendant,
Argued October 11, 1995 - Decided November 13, 1995
Before Judges Michels, Villanueva and Kimmelman.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Bergen County.
Corinne M. Mullen argued the cause for
appellant/cross-respondent (Ms. Mullen,
attorney, of counsel and on the brief).
James A. Farber argued the cause for
respondent Borough of Closter (DeCotiis,
Fitzpatrick & Gluck, attorneys; Judy A.
Verrone, of counsel and on the brief).
Kathryn A. Gilbert argued the cause for
respondent/cross-appellant Miele Sanitation
Company (Ms. Gilbert, attorney, of counsel
and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
VILLANUEVA, J.A.D.
The second action is referred to as the "garbage contract"
action. Under an agreement dated June 12, 1991, incorporating
the settlement of a prior dispute between Miele and Closter,
Miele agreed to provide solid waste transfer station services to
Closter for two years at a fixed rate for all waste types,
notwithstanding the fact that Miele's cost to dispose of
Closter's bulky waste might exceed the fixed rate charged to
Closter. In this action, although plaintiff sought to set aside
the contract, he sued only the Borough, deliberately omitting
Miele as a defendant, allegedly because of a pending defamation
suit brought by Miele against him. The garbage contract
complaint alleged that the Borough's acceptance of a new contract
with Miele "is injurious to the taxpayers of Closter . . .
[because] the new contract forgives any funds or interest due the
Borough from the prior contract." Plaintiff sought to have "the
new contract, in that portion which forgives funds due the
Borough on the prior contract" declared invalid and sought to
require the Borough to recoup such funds.
disposal services because of the costs associated with the
acquisition of additional facilities, the purchase of necessary
equipment and the prohibitive costs of hiring of personnel.
Third, given the uncertainty of prevailing in a recoupment
action against Miele, the Borough decided that legal action was
inadvisable.
in a libel actionSee footnote 1 filed by Miele against plaintiff as the
result of articles plaintiff published in his "community
newsletter," the Informed Citizen in Closter (I.C.I.C.).
Plaintiff's putative purpose for commencing the garbage
contract action and pursuing what he has consistently
characterized as a "public interest" action was to compel the
Borough to "recover an overcharge approximating $42,000 from
Miele." When the case initially came on for trial on July 7,
1992, the trial judge declared a mistrial because of plaintiff's
failure to prepare his case. Despite the trial judge's warning
that plaintiff faced a difficult burden of proof, plaintiff
vigorously continued to pursue the garbage contract action,
engaging in extensive discovery with reference to both Closter
and Miele for the next twenty months.See footnote 4 However, when plaintiff
spent seven months opposing a trial court order requiring him to
answer one Interrogatory propounded by Miele -- including filing
at least three motions in the Law Division and six interlocutory
motions in the Appellate Division, which were all denied -- the
trial court sanctioned plaintiff's conduct. It also awarded
Closter fees pursuant to R. 4:17-5(d), which are not the subject
of this appeal.
action was a conclusory allegation of "chicanery and corruption
between Miele and Closter officials, including the $42,000
overcharge by Miele on the garbage contract." Closter asserted
in its answer that it had exercised its judgment pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 59:2-3 and 59:3-2 and that plaintiff had failed to join
an indispensable party, Miele, without whom the action could not
proceed. See R. 4:28-1(a).
failed to do so, "plaintiff's complaint against Defendant
[Borough of Closter] and the third party complaint against third
party defendant shall be dismissed without prejudice; said
dismissal to be effective on the twentieth (20th) day following
the day of this Order without further notice." By order dated
March 19, 1993, the court, pursuant to R. 4:23-5(a)(2), converted
the October 27, 1992, order of dismissal without prejudice into a
dismissal with prejudice for plaintiff's failure to comply with
the discovery. Plaintiff challenges the award of attorney fees to the Mieles in the land transfer case. Sometime in 1988, Joseph Miele proposed that the Borough consider a sale of certain Borough-owned land. After extensive public hearings, the Mayor and Council adopted resolutions authorizing the sale of the property. After rejecting two private bids (one from Miele and one from plaintiff herein), the Borough offered the property at a public sale. It received only one bid, that of the Mieles for $126,000, which was found to be in order and accepted by the Borough. More than two years later, plaintiff filed a verified complaint in lieu of prerogative writs seeking to rescind the sale to the Mieles, which named both Closter and the Mieles as defendants. The trial court dismissed the complaint as woefully late, and awarded frivolous litigation fees to Closter in the amount of $4,331.21, both of which orders were upheld on appeal. Upon the Mieles' application for attorney fees pursuant to the Statute, the trial court properly decided that its original finding as to the frivolous nature of the complaint was the law of the case. Khoudary v. Salem County Bd. of Social Servs., 281 N.J. Super. 571, 575 (App. Div. 1995). The judge noted: "I have already made substantial findings about the nature of [plaintiff's] behavior with respect to this case and how egregious it was." At the hearing, plaintiff offered no evidence to indicate that his claims against the Mieles were any different
than those he asserted against Closter, nor could there have been
any such evidence since all defendants were equally affected by
plaintiff's frivolous complaint. The trial court properly
awarded the Mieles' attorneys $4,271.75 for the filing of this
frivolous complaint. Plaintiff also challenges the award of attorney fees to Closter in the garbage contract action. Citizens should have ready access to all branches of government, including the judiciary. McKeown-Brand v. Trump Castle Hotel & Casino, supra, 132 N.J. at 561-62 (citing Iannone v. McHale, 245 N.J. Super. 17, 27 (App. Div. 1990)). Unless a litigant knows, or should know, that a complaint is without reasonable basis, N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1a(2), he or she should not be deterred from filing a complaint which challenges the action of a public entity or public official. We do not suggest, however, that a citizen who questions a governmental decision not to pursue a claimed overcharge without considering purported valid reasons therefor should be subject to frivolous litigation fees for filing a complaint against all indispensable parties to compel governmental action. However, when a plaintiff deliberately fails to name an indispensable party even after immediately being specifically
informed of this deficiency, see R. 4:28-1(a), and continues
extensive discovery for twenty months for a cause of action that
clearly cannot succeed, that plaintiff is subject to being
assessed attorney fees under the Statute.
Id. at 557-558. Except with respect to a discovery matter,See footnote 7
plaintiff acted pro se. He did not rely upon the advice of any
attorney until the applications for frivolous litigation attorney
fees were made.
circumstance, i.e., that it lacked a reasonable basis. In
awarding frivolous litigation fees the trial judge found that
there was not a scintilla of evidence that the Borough's actions
were arbitrary, capricious or fraudulent. He found instead that
plaintiff simply opposed the settlement and therefore sued "these
people [to] run up a bill that's $32,000 in an effort to save him
49 [sic]."
The judge found here that "plaintiff, though not a lawyer,
is not unfamiliar with the legal system in this county and this
state." The judge pointed out that "this plaintiff engaged in
serious and aggressive discovery" in "litigation [which] from the
beginning [was] frivolous" and "was filed without any hope of a
serious recovery." Realistically, "no reasonable person could
have expected its success." Having so determined, there was no
need for the trial court to decide the issue of plaintiff's bad
faith.
manner with which plaintiff disagreed. Moreover, Closter
consistently maintained that the settlement was reached after it
gave due consideration to other alternatives, i.e., pursuing
legal action to recoup any overcharge and undertaking its own
solid waste disposal services, but rejected those alternatives as
uncertain and too costly.
its continuance. Unfortunately, Closter was the vehicle that
plaintiff used to carry out this vendetta. Not only was
plaintiff's complaint initiated without any basis in law or in
equity, it was continued for twenty months during a period when
plaintiff knew or should have known, using either a subjective or
objective standard, that there was no legal or equitable basis
for it. In the garbage contract case, Miele Sanitation Company cross-appeals from the order which denied it frivolous litigation attorney fees solely because plaintiff did not name Miele as a direct defendant. The garbage contract case cannot be viewed in a vacuum but must be assessed against the backdrop of the extensive history between the parties. When plaintiff initiated the complaint, he did not mention Miele except by reference, calling it a "solid waste transfer station facility." Plaintiff had told the court at oral argument that he did not specifically name Miele because of Joseph Miele's pending defamation action, discussed supra, and plaintiff's fear that including Miele in this action would have been used against plaintiff in the libel case. However, since
plaintiff's complaint dealt solely with a specific transaction
between Closter and Miele and because the relief sought required
Closter to recoup funds allegedly due to it from Miele, Closter
set forth as a separate defense that Miele was an indispensable
party and joined Miele by third party complaint.
from having attorney fees assessed against him despite discovery
because plaintiff deliberately did not name Miele. Without
question, Miele has suffered the hardship of the frivolous
litigation instituted by plaintiff.
never questioned the reasonable value thereof, we exercise
original jurisdiction in this matter, R. 2:10-5, and determine,
based upon Miele's attorney's certification of services, the
amount payable by plaintiff to Miele for attorney fees in the
garbage contract case to be $9,012.50. Footnote: 1 The libel action was filed in June 1988 and concluded in plaintiff's favor in December 1991. Footnote: 2 The Tax Court invalidated farmland status for 1991 but declined to impose rollback taxes. Footnote: 3 The record indicates that plaintiff made at least 128 complaints, either in newspaper articles or letters to various people and entities, including governmental agencies, regarding Miele. The governmental agencies included three municipalities, as well as the Bergen County Soil Conservation District, Bergen County Utilities Authority, Bergen County Prosecutor, Bergen County Board of Taxation, Attorney General of New Jersey, New Jersey Department of Agriculture, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, New Jersey Division of Taxation, United States Environmental Protection Agency, United States Army Corps of Engineers, United States Fish and Wildlife Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Footnote: 4 Plaintiff deposed Harry Lampman, Closter DPW Superintendent, and Joseph Miele; he attempted to depose Councilman Bruce Litt, but was precluded by a protective order granted to Closter; he also attempted to depose Loretta Castano, Borough Clerk, and Harold Benel, Closter's Building Inspector, but relented when Closter objected as to relevancy. Further, he demanded and reviewed voluminous Borough documents. Footnote: 5 This amount was reduced by approximately $5,000 by virtue of two awards of attorney fees to Closter as a result of plaintiff's frivolous conduct on certain other issues in this matter. Footnote: 6 This amount did not include the attorney fees incurred as a result of plaintiff's frivolous opposition to discovery, for which Closter received an earlier award. Footnote: 7 Actually, plaintiff had been advised by an attorney to answer this one Interrogatory despite his defense of the Shield Law and First Amendment privilege. This attorney, who specializes in this area of the law, advised plaintiff that those defenses were inapplicable to our discovery rules and had advised him to answer the Interrogatory. Despite the attorney's correct advice, plaintiff persisted for seven months in his refusal to answer the Interrogatory.
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