Goldschmidt v. Paley Rothman Goldstein Rosenberg & Cooper, Chartered

935 A.2d 362, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 659, 2007 WL 3284012
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 2007
Docket03-CV-1367, 04-CV-240, 04-CV-241, 04-CV-1118
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 935 A.2d 362 (Goldschmidt v. Paley Rothman Goldstein Rosenberg & Cooper, Chartered) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldschmidt v. Paley Rothman Goldstein Rosenberg & Cooper, Chartered, 935 A.2d 362, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 659, 2007 WL 3284012 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

FISHER, Associate Judge:

Benson J. Fischer sued Howard L. Flax; the law firm which represented him (Paley, Rothman, Goldstein, Rosenberg & Cooper (“Paley Rothman”)); and Paley Rothman attorney Alan S. Mark for tor-tious interference with a proposed financial transaction that did not materialize. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Paley Rothman and Mark. After a brief trial, the court then awarded Paley Rothman, Flax, 1 and Mark nearly $1 million in damages on their counterclaims asserting that Fischer had engaged in bad-faith litigation. A jury also awarded Flax $300,000 on his quantum meruit claim. We affirmed these judgments in Fischer v. Estate of Flax, 816 A.2d 1 (D.C.2003) (Fischer I).

These consolidated appeals involve further disputes related to those judgments. First, the trial court denied Fischer’s motion to set aside the judgments awarding damages against him for bad-faith litigation. Second, the court denied a motion by Paley Rothman and Mark to enforce a writ of attachment served upon Montgomery Bakers, Inc. (MBI), a closely held corporation in which Fischer was a shareholder and an officer. Finally, the court sanctioned Fischer’s attorneys, Stanley H. Goldschmidt and Arthur G. Kahn, for their part in facilitating Fischer’s bad-faith litigation. We remand for further proceedings with respect to the writ of attachment, but otherwise affirm.

I. Background

We thoroughly discussed the origins of this litigation in Fischer I, and offer an abbreviated version here. When Benson Fischer, a principal owner of Fischer Brewing Company, needed financing to expand the marketing and production of his products, his friend, Howard Flax, agreed to seek investors in exchange for a finder’s fee. Flax and Fischer memorialized the arrangement in a Letter Agreement giving Flax the right to acquire up to 15% of the company’s authorized stock if he found financing. Flax contacted Laidlaw & Co., an investment banking firm, which offered to underwrite an initial public offering of Fischer Brewing Company stock in exchange for a commission. After Laidlaw expressed interest, Fischer was informed that the fair practice rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) would prevent him from paying more than 15% of the gross offering proceeds to Flax and Laidlaw combined. Thus, Fischer could not compensate Laid-law without either breaching his agreement with Flax or violating the NASD rules. After the Laidlaw deal fell through, *367 Fischer’s company went out of business. Fischer then filed a complaint blaming Flax and Flax’s attorney, Alan Mark of Paley Rothman, for the collapse of the Laidlaw deal.

Fischer complained that Flax, Paley Rothman, and Mark tortiously interfered with Fischer’s potential deal with Laidlaw. Flax, Paley Rothman, and Mark responded by asserting claims against Fischer for abuse of process (bad faith litigation). Flax filed a counterclaim for quantum me-ruit damages to recover the fair value of the services he provided to Fischer before the Laidlaw deal fell through. Paley Roth-man and Mark also sought Rule 11 sanctions against Fischer’s attorneys, Kahn and Goldschmidt, 2 alleging that they lacked a good faith basis in fact for making the claims in the complaint. The court initially denied the motion for Rule 11 sanctions, noting that it was premature to make a decision. After a lengthy period of discovery, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Paley Rothman and Mark, finding “there is no legally viable theory or evidence” to support Fischer’s claim for tortious interference.

Speaking through his attorney, Gold-schmidt, Fischer refused to proceed with trial on the remainder of his case. As a result, the court entered judgment against Fischer on each of his claims against Flax and, after a brief jury trial, entered judgment in the amount of $300,000 on Flax’s claim for quantum meruit damages. Following a bench trial on the bad faith litigation counterclaims, which Fischer did not attend and in which Goldschmidt did not participate, the court awarded Paley Roth-man, Mark, and Flax some $930,000 in attorney’s fees and costs, together with $40,000 in punitive damages.

Almost one year after we decided Fischer I, and over three years after the trial court entered the judgments against him, Fischer filed a motion to set aside the bad faith litigation and quantum meruit judgments. That motion was denied. In an effort to collect on its judgment, which remains unpaid, Paley Rothman served a writ of attachment upon MBI, a family-owned corporation of which Fischer was an officer and shareholder. After two days of hearings, the trial court denied the motion to enforce the writ of attachment.

Paley Rothman and Mark renewed their motion for Rule 11 sanctions after summary judgment was entered against Fischer on his tortious interference claim. Once all of the judgments against Fischer were affirmed, the trial court held a hearing on the renewed Rule 11 motion. On December 1, 2003, the court imposed sanctions against Goldschmidt and Kahn in the amount of $50,000 each. These appeals followed.

II. The Rule 60(b)(6) Motion

Fischer asks, us to reverse the decision denying his motion to vacate, asserting that his attorney was suffering from a mental infirmity when he refused to attend the trials himself and advised Fischer that he need not attend either.

A. Facts

Trials were scheduled on the counterclaims filed by Flax, Paley Rothman, and Mark on dates between November 1999 and May 2000, but Fischer claimed that he was too ill to attend. Although the court previously had granted a seven-week postponement at Fischer’s request, it refused to approve further continuances without *368 credible evidence of Fischer’s illness. Goldschmidt failed to offer such proof and refused to proceed without his client present. Thus, trials were conducted in the absence of Goldschmidt or Fischer on the defendants’ counterclaims, with the results described above.

Fischer argues that the judgments should be vacated because, unbeknownst to him, Goldschmidt was suffering from a mental illness at the time the trials were scheduled to occur. Fischer attached an affidavit to his motion, swearing that he was not aware that Goldschmidt declined an opportunity to defend against these claims in Fischer’s absence. Based on several' material inconsistencies in affidavits that Fischer previously had submitted to the court, Judge Graae concluded that Fischer’s affidavits “are not worth the paper they are written on.” Judge Graae also noted that “Mr. Fischer comes with filthy hands seeking equity,” citing instances where “he knowingly made false allegations against Mr. Flax, fabricated documents, tampered with witnesses, suborned perjury, and engaged in an elaborate cover-up to hide his misconduct.”

B. Standard of Review

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Bluebook (online)
935 A.2d 362, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 659, 2007 WL 3284012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldschmidt-v-paley-rothman-goldstein-rosenberg-cooper-chartered-dc-2007.