Conklin v. Weisman

658 A.2d 322, 281 N.J. Super. 448, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 184
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 23, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 658 A.2d 322 (Conklin v. Weisman) 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
Conklin v. Weisman, 658 A.2d 322, 281 N.J. Super. 448, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 184 (N.J. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BRODY, P.J.A.D.

This is an action for legal malpractice. We granted defendants’ motion for leave to appeal from an order for a partial new trial. After an eleven-week trial, the jury found by its answers to special interrogatories that there was malpractice, but that the malprac[452]*452tice did not proximately cause plaintiffs’ losses. The trial judge concluded that the issue of proximate cause must be retried because his instructions may have misled the jury. We now affirm with some modification and a sharpening of the analysis.

Defendant Carleton Kemph, Esq. (hereinafter defendant), on behalf of his law firm, defendant Hannoch Weisman, P.C.,1 represented a partnership (hereinafter plaintiffs), trading as Conklin Farms, in the sale of 117 acres of undeveloped land in Montville Township. One of the partners, Frank Conklin, has since died. His estate is represented in this action by its executrix. Plaintiffs were using the property profitably for mining sand and gravel when the Township indicated a willingness to rezone it to satisfy its legal obligation to provide space for low and middle income housing. The rezoning presented an opportunity to sell the property at a premium price.

Under the contract of sale, Longview Estates, the buyer, agreed to pay $12,000,000 for the property, $3,000,000 to be paid in cash at or before closing. The balance was to be secured by a purchase-money mortgage to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs agreed to subordinate their mortgage to one or more institutional construction-money mortgages and, by amendment to the contract, to a mortgage that secured a loan the buyer obtained to raise the cash due at closing. Plaintiffs were also secured by personal guarantees of the buyer’s principals.

The sale closed without incident. The development, however, failed. The property was foreclosed by mortgage lenders who benefited from plaintiffs’ subordination agreement. The foreclosure sale left no equity for plaintiffs. Meanwhile, plaintiffs’ buyer and the guarantors all filed for bankruptcy protection. As a result, plaintiffs sustained a substantial loss.

The major claim in this action is that defendant’s explanations to plaintiffs of the meaning and risks of the subordination agree[453]*453ment were inadequate and inaccurate. Plaintiffs also blamed defendant for failing to assure them more protection in the subordination agreement. They claim that defendant should have insisted during negotiations that there be a cap on the amount of the construction loans and that the property subject to the construction mortgages be limited to that portion of the property under immediate construction.

The jury absolved defendant and his firm of malpractice respecting the level of protection afforded plaintiffs in the subordination agreement. As to the claim of inadequate explanations, the jury answered “yes” to the following special interrogatory:

Were Carleton R. Kemph and Hannoch Weisman negligent in representing the Conklin Farm partnership in connection with explaining subordination and the risks associated with subordination?

However, the jury answered “no” to the next interrogatory:

Was the negligence of Carleton R. Kemph and Hannoch Weisman a proximate cause of damage suffered by the Conklin Farm partnership?

Most of the judge’s charge on the issue of proximate causation, which included an explanation of “intervening cause,” was abstract “boiler plate.” Although technically correct, that portion of the charge had limited value to the jury because it did not apply difficult abstract concepts to the facts of the case. The trial judge concluded that he may have misled the jury in the brief portion of the charge in which he related these concepts to the facts of this case. That portion is as follows:

Thus, for example, if you as jurors find that the proximate cause of plaintiffs’ alleged losses was the bankruptcy of Longview Estates [and its principals], then you may not find Kemph liable for malpractice because his acts or omissions, even if you conclude they were deviations from accepted standards of practice, were not the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ losses.

The judge was concerned that the jury erroneously understood from this portion of the charge that defendant’s malpractice could not be considered a proximate cause of plaintiffs’ losses if those losses were also approximately caused by the bankruptcy or by the dramatic downturn in the real estate market that may have contributed to the development’s failure.

[454]*454The judge also concluded that a later addition to the charge, made the following day before the jury first began its deliberations, did not overcome the misleading effect of the original charge. The later charge added:

However, the defendant is not relieved from liability for his negligence by the intervention of acts of third persons if those acts were reasonably foreseeable, such as the occurrence of the default, foreclosure and bankruptcy and the defendant failed to advise about the possibility of same. Neither is the defendant relieved from liability by the intervening acts of third persons where his own prior negligence was ah efficient cause of the damage.

We agree with the trial judge’s appraisal of the situation. In the absence of an express statement to the jury that the original charge was incorrect, the additional charge merely left the jury with unresolved conflicting instructions of the law in the critical portion of the charge that relates difficult abstract concepts to the facts of the case. Ellis v. Caprice, 96 N.J.Super. 539, 549-50, 233 A.2d 654 (App.Div.), certif. denied, 50 N.J. 409, 235 A.2d 901 (1967).

Aside from the foregoing, the essence of a coherent jury instruction on the issue of proximate causation in this kind of case was not recognized at trial. There is a distinction between whether defendant’s conduct caused the foreclosure and bankruptcies, and whether it caused plaintiffs’ losses resulting from those events. Although defendant’s conduct obviously did not cause the foreclosure and bankruptcies, if plaintiffs’ losses were caused by his failure to warn them adequately of these risks, defendant was negligent. That negligence does not turn on whether the risks were reasonably foreseeable when he was advising plaintiffs. After all, the whole point of a subordination is to assume risks that others are unwilling to assume regardless of whether those risks are likely to occur. Thus the supplemental charge erroneously instructed the jury to determine whether the risks “were reasonably foreseeable.”

As an attorney, defendant had a legal duty to explain to plaintiffs the meaning of a subordination agreement and to alert [455]*455them of its risks, reasonably foreseeable or not. See In re Loring, 73 N.J. 282, 290, 374 A.2d 466 (1977) (“Inherent in that [attorney-client] trust is the duty to advise the client fully, frankly, and truthfully of all material and significant information.”). Defendant did not deny that he had such a duty to his clients. His defense was that he had adequately discharged that duty. The jury found otherwise.

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Related

Conklin v. Weisman
678 A.2d 1060 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1996)
Petrolia v. Estate of Nova
666 A.2d 163 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
658 A.2d 322, 281 N.J. Super. 448, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conklin-v-weisman-njsuperctappdiv-1995.