In the Matter of the Estate of Solomon Z. Balk , 445 N.J. Super. 395 ( 2016 )


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  •                     NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1197-14T2
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    May 12, 2016
    IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE
    OF SOLOMON Z. BALK, DECEASED.                   APPELLATE DIVISION
    _______________________________
    Submitted April 19, 2016 – Decided May 12, 2016
    Before Judges Fisher, Espinosa, and Currier.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Atlantic County,
    Docket No. 91349.
    Jarred S. Freeman,     attorney       for   appellant
    Mark Roseman.
    Indik & McNamara, P.C., and Kulzer &
    DiPadova, P.A., attorneys for respondents
    Michael   Balk,  individually  and   as  co-
    administrator of the Estate of Solomon Z.
    Balk, and Mark S. Pinnie, Esquire, as
    executor of the Estate of Mark Balk, and as
    co-administrator of the Estate of Solomon Z.
    Balk (Thomas S. McNamara, of counsel; Eric
    A. Feldhake, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    CURRIER, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned).
    Mark Roseman, the prior executor of the estate of Solomon
    Z.   Balk   (the   Estate),   appeals   the     September    2,    2014   order
    granting judgment against him for an unpaid principal due under
    a settlement agreement and promissory note associated with the
    Estate.     After reviewing the contentions advanced on appeal in
    light of the facts in the record and the applicable law, we
    affirm.
    Prior to Solomon's1 death, he executed a will naming Roseman
    as the executor, trustee and a beneficiary.                       His two sons, Mark
    and Michael, were residuary beneficiaries of a trust designated
    in the will.
    After    Solomon's   death   and     probate          of    the   will    in    New
    Jersey,     Mark   and   Michael    filed    an       action       against      Roseman,
    alleging breach of fiduciary duty and seeking to remove him as
    the executor of the estate.           On June 4, 2007, Roseman entered
    into    a      settlement   agreement       with       the        Estate     and      both
    beneficiaries,      agreeing   to   execute       a    promissory        note    in   the
    amount of $800,000, as settlement of all claims between the
    parties.2       The terms of the note required Roseman to make an
    initial installment of $10,000 within sixty days of its signing.
    The    remaining    payments   were   to    be        made    in    installments        as
    follows: $40,000 on December 3, 2007; $80,000 on June 3, 2008;
    $100,000 on December 3, 2008; and the outstanding balance of the
    1
    We use the first names for purposes of clarity.                        We intend no
    disrespect in doing so.
    2
    A consent order executed the same day removed Roseman as
    executor and appointed new co-administrators, dismissing all
    litigation between the parties.
    2                                       A-1197-14T2
    note was to be satisfied within twenty-four months of the date
    of execution.       Failure to pay the initial or any subsequent
    installment payment entitled the Estate to a judgment for the
    entire unpaid amount.            The agreement contained a choice-of-law
    provision requiring it to be governed by New Jersey law.
    Between    August    2007     and    January       2009,      Roseman   remitted
    $37,047 towards the promissory note repayments.                           He failed to
    pay the initial sum or the installment payments later required
    by the note in full.             On June 2, 2014, Michael for the first
    time sought to recover damages for Roseman's failure to honor
    his obligations by filing a motion to enforce the settlement
    agreement and for entry of judgment against Roseman.3
    Roseman opposed the motion, contending that Pennsylvania
    law   should    govern    this    matter       as   he   and   Michael      resided    in
    Pennsylvania,     the    acts     alleged      against     him      had   taken   place
    there, and the promissory note contained a Pennsylvania choice-
    of-law provision and had been executed in that state.                             Under
    Pennsylvania     law,     the     four-year         statute    of    limitations       on
    contract claims had already expired.                     In contrast, New Jersey
    3
    Prior to filing the New Jersey action, Michael caused judgment
    by confession to be entered in the Court of Common Pleas of
    Delaware County, Pennsylvania, against Roseman in November 2013.
    The judgment was later vacated by praecipe and the Estate
    dismissed the action without prejudice in March 2014.
    3                                   A-1197-14T2
    applies a six-year statute of limitations to contract claims.
    N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1.
    In    a    written    decision,   the    judge       noted    the    presumptive
    application of New Jersey statutes of limitations to New Jersey
    cases   unless:     "maintenance     of     the     claim       would    serve     no
    substantial interest of New Jersey; or the claim would be barred
    under   the    statute   of   limitations     of    a    state    having    a    more
    significant relationship to the parties and the occurrence."                       He
    held:
    The   State   of  New   Jersey   has   a
    substantial   interest  in   protecting   the
    rights and interests of beneficiaries of the
    estates of New Jersey decedents whose wills
    have been admitted for probate in New Jersey
    from breaches of duty and other misconduct
    by executors . . . who are responsible for
    the administration of such estates. In
    addition, the State of New Jersey has a
    strong public policy favoring the settlement
    of litigation. Accordingly, the State . . .
    has a substantial interest in ensuring that
    the beneficiaries of New Jersey decedents
    who enter into settlement agreements with
    executors responsible for the administration
    of the estates of New Jersey decedents, to
    resolve claims for breaches of duty and
    other misconduct against such executors, are
    able to enforce such agreements and recover
    for their breach.
    Finding that Pennsylvania did not have a more significant
    relationship to the parties or the occurrences than did New
    Jersey, the judge concluded that New Jersey's six-year statute
    of limitations was applicable.             Using the installment contract
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    approach to determine the accrual date of the Estate's claims,
    the judge found the Estate was entitled to collect on each of
    the installment payments that was due and owed by Roseman on and
    after June 3, 2008.
    On appeal, Roseman argues: (1) the judge erred in applying
    the installment contract approach; and (2) the Estate's claim
    accrued when the initial payment was not made, and therefore
    fails even under the six-year statute of limitations.              He raised
    a number of new issues in a supplemental brief.4
    A     settlement     agreement      is   subject   to   the      ordinary
    principles of contract law.            Thompson v. City of Atlantic City,
    
    190 N.J. 359
    , 374 (2007).         "Interpretation and construction of a
    contract is a matter of law for the court subject to de novo
    review."     Fastenberg v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 309 N.J.
    Super.   415,   420     (App.   Div.    1998).   "Accordingly,   we    pay   no
    special deference to the trial court's interpretation and look
    4
    In a supplemental brief, Roseman makes an alternative argument
    for the first time that the amount of the judgment should be
    reduced because the settlement agreement imposed on the Estate
    the duty to mitigate damages; he argues the Estate failed to
    demonstrate reasonable efforts in complying with this clause.
    This argument was not presented in Roseman's opposition to the
    motion filed in the trial court, and therefore it need not be
    addressed by us. State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 19 (2009) ("The
    jurisdiction of appellate courts rightly is bounded by the
    proofs and objections critically explored on the record before
    the trial court by the parties themselves."). We also note that
    Roseman entered into the agreement and promissory note for the
    agreed-upon sum of $800,000.
    5                             A-1197-14T2
    at the contract with fresh eyes."                     Kieffer v. Best Buy, 
    205 N.J. 213
    , 223 (2011);            see Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of
    Manalapan,       
    140 N.J. 366
    ,        378        (1995)    ("A        trial    court's
    interpretation of the law and the legal consequences that flow
    from    established         facts        are    not        entitled       to     any    special
    deference.").
    In determining when the Estate's cause of action accrued,
    the    judge    applied      the    "installment            contract"      approach.           The
    installment      contract      method          provides       that     "claims         based    on
    installment      contracts          or     other          divisible,       installment-type
    payment requirements accrue with each subsequent installment.
    In    other    words,   a    new    statute          of    limitations         begins    to    run
    against each installment as that installment falls due and a new
    cause of action arises from the date each payment is missed."
    Cnty.   of     Morris   v.    Fauver,          
    153 N.J. 80
    ,    107       (1998)   (citing
    Metromedia Co. v. Hartz Mountain Assocs., 
    139 N.J. 532
    , 535-36
    (1995)).       Unless there is a repudiation, "a plaintiff may sue
    for each breach only as it occurs because '[t]o hold otherwise
    would allow a claimant to trigger the statute of limitations
    upon presentation of a claim rather than having the existence of
    a    claim    trigger   the    statute          of    limitations.'"              
    Id. at 108
    (alteration in original) (quoting 
    Metromedia, supra
    , 139 N.J. at
    536).
    6                                       A-1197-14T2
    Roseman does not contend that there was a repudiation in
    this matter, but rather argues that his failure to make the
    first installment payment constituted a total breach under the
    agreement, preventing application of the installment approach
    and theory of accrual.    We disagree.
    In looking at installment contracts, our Supreme Court has
    held that, "absent a repudiation, a plaintiff may sue for each
    breach only as it occurs, and the statute of limitations begins
    to run at that time." 
    Metromedia, supra
    , 139 N.J. at 535 (citing
    Corbin on Contracts § 989 (1951)).
    A    repudiation     "entails       a   statement   or   'voluntary
    affirmative act' indicating that the promisor 'will commit a
    breach' when performance becomes due."           Franconia Assocs. v.
    United States, 
    536 U.S. 129
    , 143, 
    122 S. Ct. 1993
    , 2002, 153 L.
    Ed. 2d 132, 146 (2002) (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    § 250 (1981)).   In an installment contract, the first instance
    of a failure to perform is a "partial breach" and not a "total
    breach" unless accompanied by a repudiation that is anticipatory
    with respect to performances due in the future.         Corbin, supra,
    § 954.   Other jurisdictions have established this general rule,
    finding that "a breach of an installment contract by non-payment
    does not constitute a breach of the entire contract."        U.S. Bank
    Nat'l Ass'n v. Gullotta, 
    899 N.E.2d 987
    , 992 (Ohio 2008); see
    7                          A-1197-14T2
    also Nat'l Util. Serv. v. Cambridge-Lee Indus., 
    199 F. App'x 139
    , 143 (3d Cir. 2006) ("In a[n] . . . installment contract,
    the first instance of a continuing breach alone is not a 'total
    breach'   unless   accompanied           by   an   anticipatory         repudiation      of
    performance due in the future.") (citing Corbin, supra, § 954).
    In adhering to these principles, we find that a missed
    payment   is   insufficient         to    constitute       a    total    breach     of   an
    installment      contract      or        agreement     unless          accompanied       by
    anticipatory repudiation indicating a failure to perform future
    obligations specified in the contract.
    Although Roseman breached his obligation to pay the first
    installment in 2007, there was no repudiation or total breach of
    the promissory note at that time because there was no indication
    that Roseman would not fulfill his future obligations.                             To the
    contrary, Roseman remitted $37,000 to the Estate over the next
    several years.
    We    find   the   judge      appropriately        applied         the   installment
    method    as   there   was   no     repudiation       or       total    breach    of     the
    promissory note.       Roseman's conduct of paying monies over the
    next several years belies any argument that he did not intend to
    honor the agreement.
    The Estate is entitled to all payments which were due from
    the six years prior to the motion's filing date of June 2, 2014;
    8                                   A-1197-14T2
    therefore, we find the judge's conclusion that the Estate is
    "entitled to collect on each of the installment payments that
    was due and owing by Roseman on and after June 3, 2008" to be
    correct.
    Affirmed.
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