Amoresano v. Laufgas

796 A.2d 164, 171 N.J. 532, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 29, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 796 A.2d 164 (Amoresano v. Laufgas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amoresano v. Laufgas, 796 A.2d 164, 171 N.J. 532, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 16 (N.J. 2002).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

VERNIERO, J.

The issues raised in this appeal involve the judiciary’s summary contempt power. We are called on to determine whether the trial court erred in imposing jail sentences of varying lengths on the same litigant after finding him in contempt on three separate occasions. In accordance with Rule 1:10-1, the trial court founded the first adjudication on a series of letters and certifications in which the litigant made highly disparaging comments about the judge. Pursuant to Rule 1:10-2, a different judge based the second adjudication on the court’s findings that the litigant had violated numerous provisions of a temporary restraining order. Finally, under that same rule, a third judge held the litigant in contempt based on the court’s finding that he had attempted to intimidate a witness and opposing counsel.

*537 A divided panel of the Appellate Division affirmed the three adjudications. We affirm the disposition in the first and third actions, and reverse the disposition in the second action.

I.

Given the long, circuitous path on which this case has traveled, a brief road map is in order. The City of Paterson (the City) and its Chief of Police, Vincent Amoresano (collectively, plaintiffs), filed a Chancery Division action in June 1996 against Bernard Laufgas (defendant). Somewhat ironically, that action, which also centered on alleged disruptive conduct on the part of defendant, provided the medium in which defendant engaged in the separate acts of contempt that are the subject of this appeal.

Plaintiffs’ action sought both temporary and permanent restraints. Over the lengthy history of their dispute, the parties appeared before several judges. Judge Saunders considered plaintiffs’ request for temporary restraints, entering those restraints in July 1996. Two years later, Judge Passero presided over an eight-day trial, and ruled in favor of plaintiffs in respect of their application for permanent restraints. In the interim, Judge Passero addressed numerous pre-trial issues. Although named as a plaintiff, the Passaic County Prosecutor’s Office essentially ended its participation in April 1997 for reasons not relevant to our disposition.

Judge Passero adjudicated the first of the three contempt charges that grew out of plaintiffs’ underlying Chancery Division action. Two other trial judges respectively adjudicated the second and third contempt charges. We will first describe the facts pertaining to plaintiffs’ action, derived largely from the trial testimony presented before Judge Passero. We then will outline defendant’s conduct that formed the basis of the three contempt adjudications.

A.

At all times relevant to this dispute, defendant was a resident of Barnegat. In February 1996, defendant traveled to the City to *538 photograph furniture and garbage left by former tenants of a dwelling owned by his wife. In response to a telephone call from the owner of a neighboring house, a City police officer arrived at the scene to investigate whether the debris was being left in front of that neighbor’s property. The officer testified that when he approached defendant to discuss the neighbor’s call, defendant became “arrogant” and “nasty.”

After defendant twice refused to identify himself, the officer charged him with obstructing a governmental function in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:29-1. The officer also issued defendant a ticket for obstructing the sidewalk with the debris. After the issuance of that summons, defendant’s contact with City officials intensified and grew increasingly adversarial. Defendant filed a complaint with the Police Department’s Office of Internal Affairs, alleging that the officer who had issued him the ticket had made racial slurs toward defendant. A different officer investigated that complaint and concluded that there was no basis for it, a finding accepted by Chief Amoresano.

A third officer testified that on several occasions defendant disrupted the employees working at the police chiefs office. As an example, the officer explained that defendant would demand to see Chief Amoresano without an appointment. When those requests were refused, “[defendant] would become hostile, he would become abusive; he’d raise his voice [so] that it would be totally disturbing[.]” On one occasion, the officer escorted defendant out of police headquarters after he purportedly became abusive and refused to comply with repeated requests to leave. Defendant subsequently filed a criminal complaint against that officer, charging him with official misconduct. That complaint was later dismissed.

A parking violations officer testified that she had encountered defendant when she was issuing summonses to vehicles parked at the City’s public safety complex. According to the officer, she observed defendant in a small gray car that was parked illegally. When she informed him that he needed a parking permit, defen *539 dant yelled at the officer. Defendant ordered the officer to issue summonses to the police ears found in the same area, ears that defendant contended also had been parked illegally.

The officer issued only a warning to defendant. Nonetheless, he purportedly followed her and yelled at her for approximately forty minutes as she tried to continue her duties. The officer further testified that she had felt threatened by defendant’s behavior, and that his conduct had interfered with her work. Defendant later filed criminal charges against the parking violations officer, alleging official misconduct because she had refused to issue tickets to the marked patrol cars.

A police captain testified that he had observed defendant in the municipal parking lot in the section reserved for court employees and municipal court judges. The officer stated that defendant was recording license plate numbers and photographing vehicles. The officer later learned that defendant had obtained the home addresses of police officers through records obtained from the New Jersey Division of Motor Vehicles. After photographing the cars of City officials, defendant issued “citizen parking violations” for vehicles owned by City employees.

The City’s clerk testified that defendant had sent a letter to the Mayor requesting that he (defendant) be permitted to inspect a large number of documents. The clerk estimated that those documents, some of which dated as far back as sixteen years, would have amounted to about 500,000 pages. She also testified that when defendant visited the clerk’s office “he demand[ed] information ... and he often [became] abusive and disruptive[.] ... [M]y staff tr[ied] to assist him[,] and when they [could not] assist him [ ] they [would] call me out because they [were] afraid[,] and they [felt] that [he was] disrupting the office.” In the same vein, the clerk noted that “because of the nature of his comments and language that he use[d],” her staff was fearful of defendant. Defendant filed criminal charges against the clerk for official misconduct, but those charges eventually were dismissed.

*540

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
796 A.2d 164, 171 N.J. 532, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amoresano-v-laufgas-nj-2002.