Bukurie Llugani v. Arben Toska

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 30, 2024
DocketA-3267-21
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bukurie Llugani v. Arben Toska (Bukurie Llugani v. Arben Toska) 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
Bukurie Llugani v. Arben Toska, (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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-3267-21

BUKURIE LLUGANI,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

ARBEN TOSKA,

Defendant-Respondent. ________________________

Submitted April 24, 2024 – Decided July 30, 2024

Before Judges Vernoia and Gummer.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Camden County, Docket No. FD-04-0814-19.

Hark & Hark, attorneys for appellant (Michael J. Collis, on the brief).

Respondent has not filed a brief.

PER CURIAM

Plaintiff Bukurie Llugani appeals from a July 12, 2022 order granting the

motion of defendant Arben Toska to reduce his child-support obligation. Plaintiff challenges only the denials of her motions for the appointment of a

forensic accountant. Perceiving no abuse of discretion, we affirm.

The parties have a child who was born in 2016. Defendant's weekly child-

support obligation initially was set at $319.1 In September 2020, defendant

moved for a reduction in his child-support obligation based on his expenses

associated with two other children who were in his custody full-time and a

purported loss of income due to unemployment and the dissolution of his

"clothing sales" business allegedly caused by the pandemic. In the certification

he submitted in support of the motion, defendant asserted the business had

"closed," having had "zero revenue since March [2020]," and that he had not

been paid by the business since the May 29, 2020 pay period.

On December 3, 2020, the parties placed on the record a "consent

agreement," in which they agreed to temporarily reduce defendant's weekly

child-support obligation to $108 and "to conduct discovery, which includes

interrogatories, request for admissions, document requests, and depositions."

The court set deadlines for the service of discovery requests and responses,

1 We take that number from a decision the Family Part judge placed on the record on May 18, 2022. In a certification submitted in support of his modification motion, defendant represented he had been paying $296 weekly in child support pursuant to a May 16, 2019 order. We were not provided with a copy of that order. A-3267-21 2 scheduled a follow-up conference, and asked counsel to submit a form of order.

Plaintiff did not include a copy of that order in the appellate record.

On April 29, 2021, defendant moved to dismiss plaintiff's opposition to

his motion due to her alleged failure to comply with discovery orders and to

compel her to produce a case information statement and certain documents.

Plaintiff cross-moved for the appointment of "a forensic accountant for a

business valuation/cash flow analysis of [d]efendant's business, RUCS4, LLC,"

with defendant paying the accountant's fees or, alternatively, each party paying

fifty percent of those fees. In support of her cross-motion, plaintiff submitted

her certification in which she asserted a review of defendant's business credit-

card statements and checking-account statements demonstrated defendant had

not been truthful to the court about his business being dissolved. She

highlighted the amount of money deposited and withdrawn from his business

checking-account between January 2020 and March 2021 and the charges on his

business credit-card statements that seemed to indicate the business was still

operating. Defendant submitted a certification in reply; we were not provided

with a copy of that certification.

During oral argument on June 24, 2021, defense counsel represented that

"not one iota of proof shows any money from the business going to [defendant]"

A-3267-21 3 and "[h]is cousin is running the business." The judge held that he was "not

ordering a forensic accountant right now." The judge explained:

My recollection from the prior motion . . . was that there was an ownership issue involving the corporation . . . . And I'm not about to order a forensic accountant unless there is some proof of ownership. If your client hasn't been traveling for the business, you know, a deposition is going to bring this all out. A deposition is likely to incur a couple of hours of prep time and a couple of hours . . . which is going to be significantly less than a forensic accountant. If there is the information that comes out of the deposition that may justify a forensic account, then I may allow it. And I'm not sure what the allocation will be.

Plaintiff's counsel asked if plaintiff could "refile" her motion for the

appointment of a forensic accountant after the parties were deposed. The judge

appeared to grant that request on the record. In an order issued that day, the

judge ordered plaintiff to provide certain documents by July 26, 2021, and the

parties to complete depositions by August 6, 2021.

In September 2021, plaintiff apparently again moved for the appointment

of a forensic accountant. Plaintiff did not include copies of that motion in the

appellate record. At oral argument on February 22, 2022, before a different

Family Part judge, plaintiff's counsel indicated defendant testified during his

deposition that his "old business closed" and that he was no longer a part of that

business. She highlighted the following information in support of plaintiff's

A-3267-21 4 motion: the business's operating agreement had not been amended to show he

was no longer an owner; the business credit card under his name was still being

used; defendant had traveled with his family to Europe while receiving

unemployment benefits; money was flowing in and out of the business; and

defendant no longer received a salary from the company because he was

collecting unemployment benefits and the salary was being paid instead to his

cousin, who had not previously received a salary. Defense counsel asserted

defendant had produced personal bank statements and credit-card statements and

that in those personal records and in the business records "not one item of proof,

nothing, has been shown . . . that [defendant] is receiving some type of extra

income."

After hearing argument, the judge denied the motion, finding:

I do not see that there is a need for a forensic accounting in this matter based on all of the information that has been submitted already. And that there has been no – no proof that there is any malfeasance on behalf of the business. There's, certainly, no accounts that have been, you know, hidden or there's no money that [defendant] is, at least on paper, hiding. So, the motion to have a forensic accounting is denied.

After rendering that decision, the judge conducted a plenary hearing

regarding defendant's modification motion. Both parties testified. On May 18,

2022, the judge placed a decision on the record. The judge referenced plaintiff's

A-3267-21 5 "second application" for the appointment of a forensic accountant "made . . . in

September of 2021" and his denial of that motion on February 22, 2022. Finding

defendant credible and plaintiff not credible, the judge imputed salary to

defendant in the amount of $52,000, "as consented to and agreed upon by the

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