Bethel Borgeson v. Brett Haas

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 20, 2025
DocketA-0147-24
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bethel Borgeson v. Brett Haas (Bethel Borgeson v. Brett Haas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bethel Borgeson v. Brett Haas, (N.J. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited . R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-0147-24

BETHEL BORGESON, f/k/a BETHEL HAAS,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

BRETT HAAS,

Defendant-Appellant. ________________________

Argued October 29, 2025 – Decided November 20, 2025

Before Judges Paganelli and Vanek.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Monmouth County, Docket No. L-2414-04.

Brett Haas, appellant, argued the cause pro se.

Gregg F. Paster argued the cause for respondent.

PER CURIAM After several monetary judgments were entered against defendant Brett

Haas in connection with the parties' acrimonious 2003 divorce, plaintiff Bethel

Borgeson filed two motions to turnover funds escrowed by Trident Abstract

Title Agency, LLC (Trident) on sale of real property owned by Haas. Haas

appeals from an order granting Borgeson's motions and compelling Trident to

release $48,075.49 to her in satisfaction of two of the judgments against him.

We affirm.

I.

When judgment liens against Haas appeared on a search prepared in

connection with the sale of real property he owned, Haas entered an agreement

with the buyers, Borgeson and Trident requiring $58,000 in sales proceeds to be

escrowed to satisfy the judgments against him. Two of the judgments were

entered in favor of Borgeson: DJ265481-05 for $7,125 (the 2005 Judgment) and

DJ107345-04 for $22,440.28 (the 2004 Judgment) (collectively, the Judgments).

The Judgments are subject to post-judgment interest.

Borgeson filed two motions to turnover escrowed funds to satisfy the

Judgments. The trial court held a consolidated plenary hearing on Borgeson's

motions, which spanned four days between July 2023 and May 2024. A pretrial

A-0147-24 2 order required the parties to mark all documents they sought to use at least

twenty days prior to the hearing.

When Borgeson appeared virtually at the beginning of the hearing, the

judge told her attorney that it was his decision whether to proffer his client's

testimony, stating, "I don't know if we really need your client . . . it's up to you."

Neither Borgeson's counsel nor Haas's attorney called her to testify at the

hearing.

Borgeson's counsel called Borgeson's divorce attorney, Jennifer Stone

Hall, Esq., to testify. Stone Hall testified Haas had made payments to her firm

toward other judgments, which were credited to Borgeson's account, but her firm

had not received payment from Haas for the 2004 or 2005 Judgments. Stone

Hall denied Haas's allegation that she personally had received payment from

him and stated, "there was no way [she] was going to be . . . alone with Haas,"

as she alleged he had made "threats" towards the attorneys during the divorce

litigation that prompted police involvement. Stone Hall added, "if [Haas] had

produced any money, [the firm] would have absolutely provided a receipt and a

credit or proof."

Haas's attorney proffered his client's testimony in opposition to the

motions. Haas testified that the Judgments had been satisfied. Haas conceded

A-0147-24 3 that he had never made payments to Borgeson directly but contended he satisfied

the 2004 Judgment by hand-delivering checks to Stone Hall on June 10, 2004.

He presented copies of two checks dated June 9, 2004, to corroborate his

testimony, but they were not made payable to Borgeson or her attorneys and did

not correspond in amount to either the 2004 or 2005 Judgment. Haas testified

that he had delivered these checks "under threat of jail" because Borgeson's

attorneys sought his arrest for failure to pay the Judgments.

Haas submitted various accounting ledgers from Borgeson's counsel (the

McKenna ledgers), which he claimed showed payments toward the Judgments.

He also relied on certifications by Borgeson and Stone Hall, along with a letter

allegedly drafted by Stone Hall confirming certain payments had been received.

Haas asserted he had requested bank records to evidence payments he

allegedly made in 2004 but was told by his bank it retains records for only ten

years. Haas relied on the McKenna ledgers, which showed a payment of $19,750

received in 2004, and he contended that the failure to attribute to him that

payment was an accounting error.

The judge allowed Haas's attorney to recall Stone Hall to testify regarding

an August 9, 2004 letter Haas alleged confirmed receipt of the $19,750 payment

he had made in June 2004. Stone Hall testified she had no independent

A-0147-24 4 recollection of the letter, which was dated nineteen years earlier and did not bear

her signature or her secretary's initials. Stone Hall further explained that in

2004, her firm did not use digital letterhead and any unsigned correspondence

would have at least borne her secretary's initials. When asked about the $19,750

payment credited to Borgeson's account in June 2004 as shown in the McKenna

ledgers, Stone Hall testified, "I agree . . . that there is a ledger notation of a

payment being made, but it doesn't say it was made by . . . Haas," and the

payment could have been made by Borgeson, by someone on her behalf, or by

Haas.

Haas's attorney called Stone Hall's law partner, Edward McKenna, Esq.,

to testify. McKenna testified the firm's protocol was to reflect the payor's name

in the ledger. He stated that if Haas had paid the judgment in full, the firm

would have prepared a warrant of satisfaction and filed it. McKenna testified

the $19,750 payment on June 10, 2004, was designated as having been received

from Borgeson. He asserted the August 9, 2004 letter purporting to show Haas

paid $19,750 was "fraudulent."

During the hearing, the judge allowed Haas to utilize additional

documents not marked in accordance with the pretrial order, over the objection

of Borgeson's counsel. During cross-examination, Haas requested permission

A-0147-24 5 to personally conduct questioning in lieu of his attorney. The judge denied the

request, prompting Haas to move formally to substitute himself as counsel. The

judge denied that motion.

The judge relied on N.J.R.E. 611 to deny Haas's request to provide rebuttal

testimony. The judge required counsel to give closing arguments orally and

denied the request by counsel for Haas to submit a written summation.

After considering the evidence presented and the arguments of counsel,

the judge issued an oral decision granting Borgeson's motions to compel Trident

to turnover escrowed funds to satisfy the Judgments. The judge relied on the

evidence presented at the four-day hearing, finding neither the McKenna ledgers

nor the cancelled checks showed that Haas had made the 2004 payments to

Borgeson's attorneys. The judge considered the record unclear as to who had

made the payments to Borgeson's counsel in 2004. The judge found the

McKenna ledgers showed three payments on June 10, 2004, which totaled

$19,750 and were titled "Bethel Haas – PMT." The judge found that even if

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