Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 29, 2024
DocketA-0690-21
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde (Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde) 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
Bruce Kaye v. Alan P. Rosefielde, (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-0690-21

BRUCE KAYE, individually and as trustee of THE BRUCE KAYE REVOCABLE TRUST and THE BRUCE KAYE DYNASTY TRUST, JASON KAYE, FLAGSHIP RESORT DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, FIRST RESORTS MANAGEMENT COMPANY, INC., ATLANTIC PALACE DEVELOPMENT, LLC, and LA SAMMANA VENTURES, LLC,

Plaintiffs-Respondents,

v.

ALAN P. ROSEFIELDE, PLUMROSE COMPANY, INC., ROSE ASSOCIATES, INC. OF MIAMI, LA SAMMANA MANAGEMENT, LLC, and BA MANAGEMENT, LLC,

Defendants/Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellants,

DEBORAH KAYE, 2000 BRUCE KAYE DYNASTY TRUST, HOWARD ALTER, SUSAN TUNNEY, MICHAEL VALENTI, RONNIE STRANSKY, KENNETH WOLFE, and DENNIS RICHARD,

Third-Party Defendants. ______________________________

Argued November 28, 2023 – Decided January 29, 2024

Before Judges Whipple, Mayer and Enright.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Atlantic County, C-000017-05.

Andrew W. Rubin argued the cause for appellants.

Jordan L. Barbone argued the cause for respondents (Jacobs & Barbone, PA, attorneys; Jordan L. Barbone, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

The case returns to us for the third time, after having been remanded to

the trial court, by this court and the Supreme Court, for further consideration of

certain issues. We affirm the September 23, 2023 judgment in its entirety.

This litigation commenced in 2005. The facts of this case were well-

chronicled in our prior opinions, Kaye v. Rosefielde (Kaye I), 432 N.J. Super.

421, 435-59 (App. Div. 2013), and Kaye v. Rosefielde (Kaye III), No. A-149-17

(App. Div. Oct. 7, 2019), and in the Supreme Court's opinion in Kaye v.

Rosefielde (Kaye II), 223 N.J. 218, 222-27 (2015), and need not be fully

A-0690-21 2 repeated to understand the orders currently under review. The case stems from

a failed business relationship between plaintiff Bruce Kaye and defendant Alan

Rosefielde and their affiliated entities. Kaye employed Rosefielde for a period

of two years, between January 2003 and January 2005, paying him $500,000 per

year to run three timeshare businesses in Atlantic City and Brigantine, New

Jersey, that Kaye principally owned or controlled. Kaye alleged that during

those two years, Rosefielde "was an unfaithful servant who plundered his

companies, caused his companies to suffer considerable losses as the result of

his nonfeasance and misfeasance, and fraudulently acquired ownership and

income interest in three of the companies."

The case was tried before the court over several months in 2007. On July

9, 2007, the court issued an oral ruling from the bench. On November 1, 2007,

the court entered a final judgment and issued a written post-trial opinion, as well

as a separate opinion on counsel fees and punitive damages. The court largely

found in favor of plaintiffs on their causes of action.

The court awarded equitable remedies that rescinded transactions through

which Rosefielde had acquired financial interests in the plaintiff entities,

awarded plaintiffs' requests for counsel fees and costs on the legal malpractice

and fraud claims in the amount of $803,189.99, awarded $250,000 punitive

A-0690-21 3 damages on the fraud claims, and awarded $4,000 in compensatory damages.

However, the court denied plaintiffs' request for disgorgement on the unfaithful

servant claim because it believed, as a legal matter, that it could not award

disgorgement in the absence of a quantifiable loss; otherwise, the court would

have required disgorgement. The court awarded defendants $86,514.23 in

counsel fees and costs. Ultimately, net of the award to defendants, the court

awarded $966,675.76 to plaintiffs.

Both parties appealed. In November 2012, before we issued our first

opinion, the parties entered into a settlement agreement but did not notify the

court about the settlement. The settlement agreement referenced the then

pending appeal from the trial court's award of $966,675.76 plus interest to

plaintiffs by its docket number (A-1120-07) and labeled it the "New Jersey

Action." The settlement agreement also referenced actions in Florida and New

York, wherein plaintiffs were seeking enforcement and recovery on the

judgment, as well as an additional litigation and an arbitration in Florida.

The parties expressed their desire to "resolve all disputes among the

parties, finally dismiss the Actions with prejudice, and release each other from

potential claims, known or unknown, including those raised or that could have

been raised in the Actions, except as expressly provided in this Agreement ."

A-0690-21 4 In August 2013, not having been advised of the settlement, we issued a

written opinion. Kaye I, 432 N.J. Super. 421 (App. Div. 2013).

We affirmed the equitable relief of rescission awarded to plaintiffs, by

which the trial court rescinded Rosefielde's ownership interests in La Sammana,

La Sammana Management, and BA Management; we also affirmed the award of

compensatory damages on these rescinded transactions. Id. at 433, 494-95. We

also affirmed the findings that Rosefielde committed legal malpractice and civil

fraud. Id. at 433, 495. We vacated the award of counsel fees to plaintiffs based

upon those claims, however, because plaintiffs "were unable to prove that

Rosefielde's legal malpractice and fraudulent conduct proximately caused any

compensable damages to them." Id. at 434; see also id. at 495. The court

remanded "for the trial court to reconsider and, if necessary, recalculate the

amount of counsel fees, if any, that plaintiffs are entitled to receive under the

circumstances presented." Ibid.

We vacated an award of punitive damages and remanded for

reconsideration of whether the award of punitive damages was "sustainable

based only on the compensatory damages correctly awarded for Rosefielde's

improper use of corporate funds to pay for his personal trip to Las Vegas." Ibid.

A-0690-21 5 Finally, on plaintiffs' cross-appeal, we affirmed the trial court's denial of

the remedies of disgorgement and forfeiture. Id. at 434, 494-95.

Plaintiffs filed a petition for certification, and defendants moved to

dismiss the petition based upon the settlement. By order dated March 11, 2014,

the Supreme Court denied the motion without explanation, but the Court granted

the petition, in May 2014, limited to the issue of whether we erred by affirming

the trial court's holding that economic damage is a necessary prerequisite for

disgorgement of the employee's salary.

Meanwhile, in 2013, Rosefielde had filed an action in Florida to enforce

the settlement agreement and obtain payments pursuant to the agreement,

arguing that he had prevailed in the New Jersey appellate proceedings. In

response, in March 2014, Kaye moved for summary judgment, arguing that

Rosefielde's claims were premature because the New Jersey proceedings were

not yet concluded. The court granted Kaye's motion, agreeing with his

interpretation of the settlement agreement: that it required the conclusion of all

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