Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde (073353)

121 A.3d 862, 223 N.J. 218, 40 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1199, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 887
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 22, 2015
DocketA-93-13
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 121 A.3d 862 (Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde (073353)) 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
Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde (073353), 121 A.3d 862, 223 N.J. 218, 40 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1199, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 887 (N.J. 2015).

Opinion

Justice PATTERSON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we determine whether a court may order the equitable disgorgement of an employee’s compensation when the *221 employee has breached his or her duty of loyalty to his or her employer, but the employer has not sustained economic loss as a consequence of that breach.

This matter arose from a dispute between Bruce Kaye (Kaye), who managed several timeshare business entities, and Alan Rosefielde (Rosefielde), an attorney whom Kaye initially retained as outside counsel and later hired as an employee. For approximately two years, Rosefielde served as Chief Operating Officer (COO) of some of Kaye’s timeshare businesses, and functioned, in effect, as those entities’ General Counsel. In that capacity, Rosefielde committed serious misconduct by acting on his own behalf instead of acting for his employers’ benefit and exposing his employers to potential liability. That misconduct, among other issues, led to Rosefielde’s dismissal and this litigation.

Kaye, in his individual capacity and as trustee of two trusts, Kaye’s son Jason Kaye, and business entities that Kaye owned sued Rosefielde and several entities. Plaintiffs asserted claims based on Rosefielde’s breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, legal malpractice, unlicensed practice of law, and breach of the duty of loyalty. Following a lengthy bench trial, the trial court found that Rosefielde engaged in egregious conduct constituting a breach of his duty of loyalty, breach of his fiduciary duty, legal malpractice, and civil fraud.

The trial court rescinded Rosefielde’s interest in several entities, awarded compensatory damages, punitive damages, and legal fees, and dismissed Rosefielde’s counterclaims. It declined, however, to order the equitable disgorgement of Rosefielde’s salary as a remedy for his breach of the duty of loyalty, on the ground that his breach did not result in damage or loss to the entities that employed him. The Appellate Division affirmed that determination, and this Court granted certification on the issue of equitable disgorgement.

Relying on this Court’s holding in Cameco, Inc. v. Gedicke, 157 N.J. 504, 724 A.2d 783 (1999), and other authority, we hold that the remedy of equitable disgorgement is available to a trial court *222 even absent a finding that the employer sustained economic loss by virtue of the employee’s disloyal conduct. In accordance with the broad discretion afforded to courts fashioning equitable remedies that are fair and practical, a trial court may order disgorgement of an employee’s compensation as a remedy for a breach of loyalty in an appropriate case. If a court determines that disgorgement is an appropriate equitable remedy, it should apportion that compensation and compel disgorgement of only the compensation that the employee received during pay periods in which he or she acted in violation of the duty of loyalty.

Accordingly, we reverse the determination of the Appellate Division on this issue and remand to the trial court to determine whether the remedy of disgorgement should be imposed in this case.

I.

A.

We derive our account of the dispute that led to this litigation from the trial court’s factual findings. 1 Kaye is the controlling principal of three entities created to sell and manage timeshare interests in resort properties in Atlantic County: plaintiff Flagship Resort Development Corporation (Flagship), plaintiff Atlantic Palace Development, LLC (Atlantic Palace), and plaintiff La Sammana Ventures, LLC (La Sammana Ventures). In 1997, Kaye retained Rosefielde, an attorney admitted to practice law in New York, but not New Jersey, to represent him personally on tax and estate planning matters, and to provide legal services to some of the business entities he owned.

*223 In 2002, Rosefielde accepted an offer from Kaye to work for his business entities as a full-time, salaried employee. In December 2002, after Rosefielde had been working closely with Kaye for approximately four months, Kaye and Rosefielde entered into a formal agreement. Under the terms of that agreement, Rosefielde would earn an annual salary of $500,000, to be paid to his company, defendant Plumrose Company, Inc. (Plumrose), on a monthly basis, in equal shares by Flagship and Atlantic Palace. 2 The trial court found that Rosefielde served as both COO and General Counsel of Flagship and Atlantic Palace, and that his two roles were “inextricably intertwined.” Based on the trial court’s findings, Rosefielde committed serious misconduct in his handling of several transactions during his two-year tenure as an employee of these entities.

The first incident of misconduct was the creation in February 2003 of a separate entity, La Sammana Management, LLC (La Sammana Management), to manage the timeshare interests owned by La Sammana Ventures. According to Kaye and other witnesses, Rosefielde urged Kaye to form this new entity. However, instead of precisely following Kaye’s instructions for the allocation of interests in La Sammana Management, Rosefielde drafted the operating agreement so as to increase his personal interest in the company and that of one of his companies, defendant Rose Associates, Inc. (Rose Associates), beyond the interest that had been agreed to by Kaye. The trial court also found that, between December 2003 and July 2004, Rosefielde orchestrated the diversion of another employee’s ten percent interest in La Sammana *224 Ventures to himself, contrary to Kaye’s wishes; that diversion was not discovered until nearly two years later, when Rosefielde’s employment was terminated.

Second, in September 2004, unbeknownst to Kaye, Rosefielde created a new entity, defendant BA Management, LLC (BA Management), in which his company Rose Associates had a twenty percent ownership interest. Though Rosefielde testified that BA Management would manage the sale of only La Sammana Ventures timeshares, its operating agreement recited that the company was established to “manage the sale of timeshare units throughout the world.” Rosefielde further testified that it would manage those timeshares in exchange for a ten percent management fee. According to the trial court’s factual findings, Rosefielde obtained the signatures of Kaye and his son Jason Kaye on the operating agreement by “false pretenses.” He presented them with a signature page, advising them that their signatures were needed for a document relating to the son’s trusts; they did not realize until later that they had agreed to form a new entity to Rosefielde’s benefit.

Third, following defaults in 2003 and 2004 by timeshare unit owners who could not be located, Rosefielde decided not to pursue costly foreclosure proceedings. Instead, throughout 2003 and 2004, Rosefielde arranged for the signatures of defaulting timeshare owners to be forged on false quitclaim deeds, and reassured employees who were suspicious of the deeds that they were valid.

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Bluebook (online)
121 A.3d 862, 223 N.J. 218, 40 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1199, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-kaye-v-alan-p-rosefielde-073353-nj-2015.