Conforti v. Guliadis

608 A.2d 225, 128 N.J. 318, 1992 N.J. LEXIS 388
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 23, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 608 A.2d 225 (Conforti v. Guliadis) 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
Conforti v. Guliadis, 608 A.2d 225, 128 N.J. 318, 1992 N.J. LEXIS 388 (N.J. 1992).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court is delivered by

HANDLER, J.

In conjunction with their impending divorce, George Guliadis and Maria Confortó (formerly Guliadis) entered into a property settlement agreement. The agreement included a lease that was executed separately. When the couple divorced, the property settlement agreement and accompanying lease were incorporated into the final divorce judgment. Five years after the divorce judgment, Confortó sought reformation of the lease, contending that it was based on mutual mistake and was unfair as written. This cáse requires the Court to determine the *320 standards that govern the enforceability of a lease executed as part of a property settlement agreement incorporated in a judgment of divorce. That determination requires consideration of whether those standards should be resolved by principles of matrimonial law applicable to the modification of judgments of divorce or principles of contract law applicable to the reformation of lease agreements.

I

Plaintiff Conforti and defendant Guliadis were married on December 30, 1979. Together they owned and operated a business, the Garden State Deli, at 1207 Anderson Avenue in Fort Lee. The couple also owned the building in which the business was located, a two-story structure with retail space at street level and two. apartments on the second floor. The couple’s only child, a daughter, was born just over three years after they were married.

Conforti and Guliadis were divorced by a judgment entered on June 25, 1984. Incorporated into the final divorce judgment was a property settlement agreement in which each party waived any alimony claim against the other. Pursuant to the agreement, Conforti transferred her interest in the building to Guliadis and Guliadis transferred his interest in the delicatessen to Conforti. In addition, Conforti paid $20,000 to Guliadis, apparently because the delicatessen was worth more than the building which housed it. Custody of the daughter was awarded to Conforti, and, as stipulated in the property settlement agreement, Guliadis pays twenty-five dollars per week in child support.

Paragraph 3C of the property settlement agreement provided that Guliadis would lease the retail space occupied by the delicatessen to Conforti for fifteen years, and that Conforti would receive a five-year option to renew. The agreement and the accompanying lease were signed on the same day.

*321 A rider to the lease provided that Guliadis could terminate the lease if he sold the building. The rider also gave Confortó the right of first refusal. The rider provision stated:

2. It is further agreed that this Lease shall be subject to termination at any time in the event that Lessor shall desire to sell the demised premises and shall have a bona fide offer for the purchase thereof. In such event Lessee shall have the option for a period of_tion [sic] from Lessor to meet the terms and conditions of such offer. If Lessee fails to accept the terms and conditions of sale during the said_day period, [sic] the option shall be of no further force and Lessor shall be free to sell the premises to third persons.

On May 19, 1989, approximately five years after the parties signed the property settlement agreement and the accompanying lease, Guliadis’s attorney sent Confortó a letter informing her that his client had received a bona fide offer of $850,000 to purchase the building. The letter warned Confortó that if she failed to execute her right of first refusal, Guliadis would sell the building and terminate her lease.

On August 24, 1989, Confortó filed a petition and order to show cause in the Chancery Division, Family Part. She sought, among other things, deletion of the provision in the rider that purports to terminate the lease upon sale of the building. She alleged that the termination provision was inconsistent with the property settlement agreement as a whole, that it was inserted as a result of mutual mistake, and that enforcing it would be unfair. In the alternative, she claimed that if Guliadis actually had intended the provision to read as it did, he induced her to agree to it through fraud. Guliadis filed a certification which denied Conforti’s allegations. According to Guliadis, the termination provision accorded with the parties’ intent, Confortó understood the provision and its implications, and the provision was consistent with the property settlement agreement read as a single unit.

The trial court denied Conforti’s application for a plenary hearing. It declared that in the event that she failed to exercise her right of first refusal within sixty days, Guliadis would have the right to sell the building and terminate the lease. The court viewed Conforti’s application as both a motion *322 pursuant to Rule 4:50-l(f) for relief from judgment of divorce and as a complaint for equitable reformation of the lease. It ruled that relief would not be granted under Rule 4:50 — 1(f) because the five years that had elapsed since the lease was executed were more than the “reasonable time” permitted under the Rule. The court denied Confortó a plenary hearing on her equitable claim because her certifications did not present the “clear and convincing proof” required for equitable reformation. The court concluded that the sufficiency of Conforti’s proofs could be assessed solely on the basis of the parties’ certifications and that no further taking of evidence was needed.

Confortó appealed from the trial court’s denial of a plenary hearing and the Appellate Division reversed. 245 N.J.Super. 561, 586 A.2d 318 (1991). The Appellate Division did not dispute that Confortó would have to prove her case by clear and convincing evidence. Id. at 566, 586 A.2d 318. Conceding that Conforti’s claim ultimately might fail, a majority of the Appellate Division said that the claim should not have been dismissed solely on the basis of the papers presented. Id. at 566-67, 586 A.2d 318. It explained that “a holding which authorizes a trial court to decide contested issues of material fact on the basis of conflicting affidavits, without considering the demeanor of witnesses, is contrary to fundamental principles of our legal system.” Id. at 565, 586 A.2d 318. The dissenting judge agreed with the trial court that a plenary hearing was not required. 245 N.J.Super. at 567, 586 A.2d 318. The Appellate Division also unanimously agreed with the trial court that Conforti’s application under Rule 4:50 — 1(f) had not been brought within a reasonable time. Having found that her only viable claim for relief was an equitable claim for reformation of the lease, the court remanded the case to the Chancery Division, General Equity, rather than to the Family Part where the case had originated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 A.2d 225, 128 N.J. 318, 1992 N.J. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conforti-v-guliadis-nj-1992.