Mortgage Grader, Inc. v. Ward & Olivo, L.L.P., and John Olivo, Esq., and John Ward, Esq. , 438 N.J. Super. 202 ( 2014 )


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  •                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3777-13T3
    MORTGAGE GRADER, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.                                                   November 14, 2014
    WARD & OLIVO, L.L.P., and                           APPELLATE DIVISION
    JOHN OLIVO, ESQ.,1
    Defendants,
    and
    JOHN WARD, ESQ.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________
    Submitted November 5, 2014 – Decided November 14, 2014
    Before   Judges      Yannotti,        Fasciale     and
    Hoffman.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Union County, Docket No. L-
    3739-12.
    Piro, Zinna, Cifelli, Paris & Genitempo,
    L.L.C., attorneys for appellant (Daniel R.
    Bevere and Shane A. Sullivan, on the brief).
    Pashman    Stein,   P.C.,  attorneys   for
    respondent (Dennis T. Smith and Michael J.
    Zoller, on the brief).
    1
    Incorrectly   designated    as   Ward    &   Olivio,   L.L.P.    and   John
    Olivio, Esq.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FASCIALE, J.A.D.
    In this legal malpractice case, we granted leave to appeal
    from a February 28, 2014 order denying defendant John Ward's
    motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to comply with the
    Affidavit of Merit Statute ("AMS"), N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-26 to -29.
    Under    the     facts    of    this   case,      Ward    argues    that     he    is
    shielded from liability as a partner in a limited liability
    partnership ("LLP") and is therefore not vicariously liable for
    the alleged legal malpractice of his former partner, defendant
    John Olivo.      Ward also contends that he is otherwise entitled to
    a dismissal of the complaint because plaintiff Mortgage Grader,
    Inc. ("MG") failed to serve an affidavit of merit ("AOM") on
    Ward or substantially comply with the AMS.
    The    primary     issue       is   whether      Ward    loses   his    liability
    protection as a partner in an LLP if the LLP failed to purchase
    a tail insurance policy.2              We disagree with the motion judge that
    such   a     sanction    is     authorized        and   hold    that    when   attorneys
    practice law as an LLP, and the LLP fails to obtain and maintain
    2
    A tail insurance policy provides insurance coverage for
    malpractice that occurs during the claims-made policy coverage
    period but is reported after the claims-made policy has lapsed.
    See Zuckerman v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 
    100 N.J. 304
    , 310-11
    (1985) (describing various types of insurance coverage including
    the definition of a "tail").
    2                                   A-3777-13T3
    professional        liability     insurance     as    required      by    Rule   1:21-
    1C(a)(3),     the    LLP   does    not   revert      to   a     general   partnership
    ("GP")   under      the    Uniform   Partnership          Act    ("UPA"),    N.J.S.A.
    42:1A-1 to -56.        Rather, pursuant to Rule 1:21-1C(a)(2), "[a]ny
    violation of [Rule 1:21-1C] by the [LLP] shall be grounds for
    the Supreme Court to terminate or suspend the [LLP]'s right to
    practice law or otherwise to discipline it."                      (Emphasis added).
    We also conclude that Ward is entitled to a dismissal of the
    complaint against him because MG failed to serve an AOM on Ward
    or substantially comply with the AMS.
    As a result, we reverse, remand, and direct the trial court
    to enter an order dismissing the complaint against Ward with
    prejudice.
    I.
    Ward and Olivo established defendant Ward & Olivo, L.L.P.,
    ("W&O"), a law firm engaged in the practice of intellectual
    property law.        Ward and Olivo formed W&O as an LLP pursuant to
    the   UPA,3    and     W&O   obtained         and    maintained      a    claims-made
    professional liability insurance policy.
    3
    N.J.S.A. 42:1A-47 delineates the requirements for becoming an
    LLP:   approval by partnership vote, filing of a statement of
    qualification with the office of the Division of Commercial
    Recording in the Department of the Treasury, and appointment of
    an agent for service of process.
    3                                  A-3777-13T3
    On July 29, 2009, MG retained W&O to sue various persons or
    entities     for    patent       infringement.               Olivo    entered       into     a
    contingency       fee    agreement     with      MG    and    filed    a    lawsuit      (the
    "underlying lawsuit") against several defendants.                                MG settled
    the   underlying         lawsuit     ("the     settlements")          by    giving     those
    defendants    licenses         in    exchange     for    payment       of    a    "one-time
    settlement amount."
    On    June    30,        2011,    Ward     and     Olivo       stopped       actively
    practicing law as W&O.4             Thereafter, W&O began winding up its law
    practice     by     collecting         outstanding           legal     fees.           W&O's
    professional       liability        insurance     policy      expired       on   August    8,
    2011, and W&O did not purchase a tail insurance policy.
    MG filed a legal malpractice complaint against W&O, Olivo,
    and Ward in October 2012.                MG alleged in its complaint that
    Olivo's legal advice harmed MG's patent rights because Olivo,
    among other things, failed to require that royalty rates or
    licensing fees be part of the settlement.                       MG also alleged that
    W&O   and   Ward        were   vicariously       liable       for     Olivo's      acts     or
    omissions.        By the time MG filed its complaint, W&O's claims-
    made policy had expired and W&O was uninsured.                               Ward had no
    4
    Since July 1, 2011, Ward has engaged in the practice of law
    with another partner in a different LLP.
    4                                      A-3777-13T3
    involvement         in    the    underlying          lawsuit,    the     settlements,       or
    Olivo's legal representation of MG.
    On March 5, 2013, Ward filed his answer to the complaint.
    MG did not provide Ward with an AOM within 120 days pursuant to
    N.J.S.A.      2A:53A-27         (establishing         deadlines    for    service     of   an
    AOM).    On July 29, 2013, Ward filed his motion to dismiss the
    complaint for failure to serve the AOM.                         Ward also argued that,
    under the facts of this case, he was shielded from liability as
    a   partner    of        W&O   pursuant     to       N.J.S.A.    42:1A-18c   (indicating
    generally that a partner in an LLP is not personally liable for
    the acts of another partner).
    MG maintained that it had substantially complied with the
    AMS by serving Olivo and W&O, but not Ward, with a December 19,
    2012    AOM   prepared          by   John   P.       Maldjian,    Esq.    (the   "Maldjian
    AOM").        The    Maldjian        AOM    states       that    only    Olivo   provided
    substandard legal services, and that "[b]ecause [Olivo] was part
    of an apparent partnership, known as [W&O], [Maldjian's] opinion
    likewise extends to [W&O]."                 The Maldjian AOM does not name or
    refer to Ward.            MG also asserted that the protection afforded by
    N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18c was unavailable to Ward because W&O lost its
    status as an LLP when it wound up the law practice without tail
    insurance.
    5                                  A-3777-13T3
    The     motion    judge     conducted    oral    argument          and   issued      a
    written opinion.        The judge determined that MG was required to
    serve Ward with an AOM and failed to do so.                      He rejected MG's
    contention that it had substantially complied with the AMS.                           The
    judge stated that "[i]f the AOM were the only issue, [then] the
    complaint would be dismissed."
    The     judge    determined,      however,    that     W&O    had     not    ceased
    practicing    law    because    W&O     collected    outstanding         legal       fees
    after June 30, 2011.          Reading N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18c and Rule 1:21-
    1C(a)(3)    together,    the    judge    concluded       that    "[t]he      condition
    precedent    to    attorneys    operating    as     an   LLP     is    [maintaining]
    malpractice       insurance."      The    judge   stated        that    because       W&O
    allowed its claims-made policy to expire without obtaining tail
    coverage, W&O's status as an LLP was "relegated . . . to the
    status of a [GP]."        The judge therefore considered W&O to be a
    GP and found that Ward was no longer "entitled to protection
    under the UPA."       He concluded that MG's service of the Maldjian
    AOM on W&O satisfied MG's obligations as to Ward under the AMS.
    He reasoned that service on the entity is considered service on
    its general partners.         The judge then denied Ward's motion.
    On appeal, Ward argues that the motion judge acted without
    legal authority to convert a properly organized LLP into a GP.
    Ward contends that as a partner in an LLP, he is shielded from
    6                                      A-3777-13T3
    Olivo's liability and that MG's complaint against him should be
    dismissed with prejudice as a matter of law.                   Ward also contends
    that    he   is   entitled     to   a   dismissal       of   the   complaint     with
    prejudice      because    MG   failed    to     serve    him    with   an   AOM     or
    otherwise substantially comply with the AMS.
    Because the judge resolved legal questions, we review his
    conclusions on issues of law de novo.               Manalapan Realty, L.P. v.
    Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995).                     The judge's
    interpretations of our court rules are similarly reviewed de
    novo.       See Washington Commons, L.L.C. v. City of Jersey City,
    
    416 N.J. Super. 555
    , 560 (App. Div. 2010), certif. denied, 
    205 N.J. 318
    (2011).
    II.
    We    begin   by    addressing         Ward's    contention     that     MG's
    complaint must be dismissed as a matter of law because N.J.S.A.
    42:1A-18c shields him from Olivo's alleged malpractice.                          Ward
    acknowledges that Rule 1:21-1C(a)(3) required W&O to purchase
    malpractice insurance.         Ward contends, however, that there is no
    legal authority mandating that partners of an LLP must lose
    their liability protection if the LLP fails to maintain a tail
    insurance policy after its ceases the active practice of law.
    These contentions require us to read N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18c and Rule
    1:21-1C(a)(3) together.
    7                                  A-3777-13T3
    A.
    Our paramount goal in interpreting N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18c is to
    ascertain the Legislature's intent, and "generally[] the best
    indicator of that intent is the statutory language."                        DiProspero
    v. Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492 (2005).                     When interpreting a statute,
    we   give    words       "'their       ordinary        meaning   and   significance.'"
    Tumpson     v.    Farina,        
    218 N.J. 450
    ,      467   (2014)   (alteration       in
    original) (quoting 
    DiProspero, supra
    , 183 N.J. at 492).
    The plain language of N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18c clearly expresses
    the Legislative intent that the partners of an LLP are shielded
    from liability for a fellow partner's acts:
    An obligation of a partnership incurred
    while the partnership is [an LLP], whether
    arising in contract, tort, or otherwise, is
    solely the obligation of the partnership. A
    partner is not personally liable, directly
    or indirectly, by way of contribution or
    otherwise, for such an obligation solely by
    reason of being or so acting as a partner.
    [N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18c.]
    Without     LLP        status,     "all   partners        are    liable   jointly       and
    severally        for    all   obligations         of    the   partnership   .   .   .    ."
    N.J.S.A. 42:1A-18a.
    Under the UPA, the status of an LLP remains effective until
    the LLP itself cancels its status, N.J.S.A. 42:1A-6d, or the
    LLP's status is revoked by the Department of the Treasury in the
    event the LLP "fails to file an annual report when due or pay
    8                                 A-3777-13T3
    the required filing fee."          N.J.S.A. 42:1A-49c.            Nowhere in the
    UPA did the Legislature state that, when attorneys practice as
    an   LLP,    the   LLP   reverts   to   a   GP    if    it   fails     to   maintain
    professional       liability   insurance,        as    required   by    the    court
    rules.      See also N.J.S.A. 42:1A-47f (stating that the status of
    an LLP and the liability of its partners are not affected by
    errors or later changes in the statement of qualification).
    B.
    The same principles of statutory construction apply to the
    interpretation of court rules:
    When   interpreting   court  rules,   we
    ordinarily    apply   canons   of   statutory
    construction . . . . The Court must ascribe
    to the [words of the rule] their ordinary
    meaning and significance . . . and read them
    in context with related provisions so as to
    give sense to the [court rules] as a whole
    . . . .     If the language of the rule is
    ambiguous such that it leads to more than
    one plausible interpretation, the Court may
    turn to extrinsic evidence.
    [Wiese v. Dedhia, 
    188 N.J. 587
    , 592 (2006)
    (alterations in original) (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted).]
    The plain language of Rule 1:21-1C(a)(3) is not ambiguous.
    For attorneys to practice law as an LLP, the LLP must maintain
    malpractice insurance.
    Attorneys may engage in the practice of law
    as [an LLP] . . . provided that: . . . The
    [LLP] shall obtain and maintain in good
    standing one or more policies of lawyers'
    9                                   A-3777-13T3
    professional liability insurance which shall
    insure the [LLP] against liability imposed
    upon it by law for damages resulting from
    any claim made against the [LLP] by its
    clients arising out of the performance of
    professional services by attorneys employed
    by   the  [LLP]   in  their   capacities  as
    attorneys.5
    [R. 1:21-1C(a)(3).]
    The rules also require that LLPs must comply with all provisions
    of the UPA and "all rules governing the practice of law by
    attorneys."   R. 1:21-1C(a)(1), (2).
    In the exercise of its rulemaking authority, the Supreme
    Court enumerated specific sanctions against LLPs for failing to
    comply with Rule 1:21-1C.    In 1996, the Court promulgated Rule
    1:21-1C(a)(2) stating in pertinent part that "[a]ny violation of
    [Rule 1:21-1C] by the [LLP] shall be grounds for the Supreme
    Court to terminate or suspend the [LLP]'s right to practice law
    or otherwise to discipline it." (Emphasis added).   The Court did
    not include as a sanction the conversion of an LLP into a GP,
    thereby removing the protection afforded to a partner in an LLP
    5
    Parallel rules to Rule 1:21-1C for professional corporations
    and limited liability corporations can be found in Rules 1:21-1A
    and -1B.     These rules similarly provide that professional
    corporations and limited liability corporations engaged in the
    practice of law shall obtain and maintain professional liability
    insurance.
    10                       A-3777-13T3
    under   the     UPA,     when    attorneys     practice    as    an    LLP    without
    maintaining professional liability insurance.
    It is well-settled that the Legislature is presumed to be
    aware of the court rules.            Cf. Quaremba v. Allan, 
    67 N.J. 1
    , 14
    (1975).     Thus, the Legislature has been aware of Rule 1:21-1C
    since 1996.       The Legislature has decided not to amend the UPA to
    require an LLP to revert to GP status as a sanction for failing
    to purchase a tail insurance policy when attorneys practice as
    an   LLP.         Therefore,      our    interpretation     of     the       available
    sanctions     is     supported      by    a    long    period     of     legislative
    acquiescence by failing to amend the UPA.                  Cf. Macedo v. Dello
    Russo, 
    178 N.J. 340
    , 346 (2004) (indicating that the legislature
    is presumed to approve consistent judicial interpretations and
    that courts are "bound by that Legislative acquiescence").
    Thus, if attorneys practice as an LLP, and the LLP fails to
    maintain malpractice insurance as required by the court rules,
    then the Supreme Court may terminate or suspend the LLP's right
    to   practice      law   or     otherwise     discipline   it.         As   currently
    written, however, the court rules do not authorize a trial court
    to sanction a partner of an LLP for practicing law as an LLP
    without     the     required      professional        liability       insurance       by
    converting an otherwise properly organized LLP into a GP.
    11                                  A-3777-13T3
    C.
    Although we have concluded that the plain language of the
    UPA    and   the     court      rules    are    unambiguous,          our    review   of     the
    committee report leading to the Court's adoption of Rule 1:21-1C
    supports our interpretation.
    Nothing in the report of the committee which proposed Rule
    1:21-1C suggests any intent to convert an LLP into a GP if the
    entity       failed       to     carry        the    required         legal       malpractice
    insurance.      See Report of the Comm. on the Practice of Law by
    Ltd.    Liab.      Cos.    and    Ltd.    Liab.      P'ships.,           reprinted    in     145
    N.J.L.J.      308     (1996).        Rather,        the   committee         concluded      that
    attorneys      should      be    able    to     practice       as    an     LLP   subject     to
    conditions similar to professional corporations, which include
    the requirement to carry malpractice insurance.                             
    Id. at 310.
    Our    Supreme        Court      has    chosen     to        discipline      attorneys
    without malpractice insurance that are organized as professional
    corporations, rather than dissolve their corporate structure.
    See e.g., In re Aponte, 
    215 N.J. 298
    , 298-99 (2013) (censuring
    an attorney for failing to maintain liability insurance while
    practicing      as    a   professional          corporation         in    violation     of    R.
    1:21-1A(a)(3)); In re Muldoon, 
    213 N.J. 79
    (2013) (same); see
    also In re Tiffany, 
    217 N.J. 519
    , 520 (2014) (disbarring an
    attorney for, among other things, violating the rule requiring
    12                                     A-3777-13T3
    professional    corporations      to   file    a    certificate      of    insurance
    with the Clerk of the Supreme Court).6
    We also note that because the plain language of the UPA and
    our Rules of Court does not permit a trial court to convert an
    LLP to a GP when a law firm fails to maintain a tail insurance
    policy, we cannot assume the Legislature or our Supreme Court
    intended such a result.          See 
    DiProspero, supra
    , 183 N.J. at 492
    (indicating that "[i]t is not the function of [an appellate
    court]   to     'rewrite     a    plainly-written             enactment     of    the
    Legislature     []    or   presume      that       the    Legislature       intended
    something     other   than   that      expressed         by   way   of    the    plain
    language.'" (second alteration in original) (quoting O'Connell
    v. State, 
    171 N.J. 484
    , 488 (2002))).                Only the Legislature can
    amend the UPA, or our highest court can revise Rule 1:21-1C, to
    make such an outcome explicitly clear.
    Therefore, we disagree with the trial court's conclusion
    that, as a matter of law, W&O was converted from an LLP to a GP
    when it failed to purchase a tail insurance policy.                         Ward is
    6
    Whether winding up their law practice by collecting legal fees
    constitutes "practicing law" as an LLP and whether Ward and
    Olivo should be censured or otherwise disciplined for failing to
    purchase a tail insurance policy for the LLP may be issues
    appropriate for consideration by the Office of Attorney Ethics,
    the Disciplinary Review Board, or a district ethics committee.
    R. 1:20-1.
    13                                  A-3777-13T3
    thus shielded from personal liability in this case because of
    W&O's LLP status.
    III.
    Ward argues that, even if he is not shielded from personal
    liability as a partner of W&O, the complaint against him should
    have been dismissed with prejudice because MG did not comply
    with the AMS.           We agree.
    A    plaintiff         filing    a    lawsuit          alleging          "malpractice      or
    negligence by a licensed person in his profession or occupation
    . . . shall . . . provide each defendant" with an AOM.                                    N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-27.          The    AOM      must    explain          "that    the       care,    skill    or
    knowledge exercised or exhibited in the treatment, practice or
    work       that   is     the     subject         of    the    complaint,          fell     outside
    acceptable professional or occupational standards or treatment
    practices."        
    Ibid. If the AOM
    is not filed within the time required by the AMS
    and the defendant moves to dismiss, then the action will usually
    be   dismissed         with     prejudice.             Paragon       Contractors,         Inc.    v.
    Peachtree         Condo.       Ass'n,      
    202 N.J. 415
    ,        422    (2010).         The
    requirement to serve an AOM also applies, as in this case, where
    a plaintiff "wishes to invoke principles of vicarious liability"
    against       partners         of   a      law        firm    for     a     fellow       partner's
    malpractice        or     negligence.            See     Shamrock         Lacrosse,       Inc.    v.
    14                                        A-3777-13T3
    Klehr, Harrison, Harvey, Branzburg & Ellers, L.L.P., 416 N.J.
    Super.    1,    23    (App.    Div.    2010)     (noting      that   "[i]ndeed,      the
    wording    of    the    [AMS]       contemplates      such    potential     vicarious
    liability").7
    Two equitable remedies temper an inflexible application of
    the AMS.        "A complaint will not be dismissed if the plaintiff
    can show that he has substantially complied with the statute."
    Ferreira    v.    Rancocas         Orthopedic    Assocs.,      
    178 N.J. 144
    ,    151
    (2003).        Even    in    the    absence     of   substantial     compliance,      "a
    complaint      will    be    dismissed    without      prejudice      if    there    are
    extraordinary circumstances to explain noncompliance."                       
    Ibid. Here, MG argued
    that it substantially complied with the
    AMS.     "The doctrine of substantial compliance is an equitable
    one which is utilized 'to avoid the harsh consequences that flow
    from   technically          inadequate   actions       that    nonetheless     meet    a
    statute's underlying purpose.'"                Cnty. of Hudson v. State, Dep't
    7
    However, an AOM may be unnecessary in some vicarious liability
    contexts. See, e.g., Borough of Berlin v. Remington & Vernick
    Eng'rs, 
    337 N.J. Super. 590
    , 599 (App. Div.) (instructing that
    an AOM from a qualified engineer is not needed to support a
    complaint against an engineering firm, if the claims are limited
    to "the doctrines of respondent superior or agency" arising out
    of alleged negligence of a hydrogeologist "employed by or
    working for" that firm, although an AOM from an engineer would
    be required for claims of negligent supervision, negligent
    hiring, or any other alleged breach of the engineering firm's
    own professional standards of care), certif. denied, 
    168 N.J. 294
    (2001).
    15                                  A-3777-13T3
    of Corr., 
    208 N.J. 1
    , 21 (2011) (quoting Galik v. Clara Maass
    Med. Ctr., 
    167 N.J. 341
    , 352 (2001)).             The doctrine requires MG
    to show
    (1) the lack of prejudice to the defending
    party; (2) a series of steps taken to comply
    with the statute involved; (3) a general
    compliance with the purpose of the statute;
    (4) a reasonable notice of [a plaintiff's]
    claim; and (5) a reasonable explanation why
    there was not strict compliance with the
    statute.
    
    [Ferreira, supra
    , 178 N.J. at 151 (citation
    and internal quotation marks omitted).]
    We agree with the judge's well-reasoned determination that
    MG failed to substantially comply with the AMS.                   In reaching
    that conclusion, the judge stated that
    the [c]ourt finds that there is real
    prejudice to Ward, since he is uninsured and
    his personal assets would be at risk.
    Moreover,   there    were   no    deliberate,
    thoughtful steps taken to comply with the
    statute, the purpose of the statute was
    essentially ignored, there was no reasonable
    notice of the claim as to Ward personally
    and no remotely reasonable explanation of
    why there was not strict compliance.
    As a result of failing to serve an AOM on Ward or substantially
    comply    with   the   AMS,   MG's    complaint    against   Ward    must     be
    dismissed   with   prejudice.        See   N.J.S.A.   2A:53A-29    (providing
    that failure to comply with the AMS is tantamount to failure to
    state a cause of action).
    16                              A-3777-13T3
    We reverse, remand, and direct the judge to enter an order
    dismissing the complaint against Ward with prejudice.
    17                       A-3777-13T3