In re the Estate of Balgar

944 A.2d 734, 399 N.J. Super. 426, 2007 N.J. Super. LEXIS 383
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 18, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 944 A.2d 734 (In re the Estate of Balgar) 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
In re the Estate of Balgar, 944 A.2d 734, 399 N.J. Super. 426, 2007 N.J. Super. LEXIS 383 (N.J. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

RIVA, J.S.C.

Sarnia Balgar (“decedent”) died on May 13, 2003, leaving her five daughters as her only heirs. Following decedent’s death, Nina Balgar (“defendant”), who is one of decedent’s daughters, filed with the Passaic County Surrogate the will decedent executed on April 15,1995. In her will, decedent appointed defendant as executrix and directed that her estate be shared equally by defendant and her other four daughters (“plaintiffs”).

Plaintiffs filed a caveat against the probate of the will. In September 2003, defendant filed a complaint and order to show cause, seeking to admit the will to probate. Plaintiffs filed an answer initially denying the validity of the will. In October 2003, the parties entered into a settlement in which the will was admitted to probate and defendant was directed to provide plaintiffs with an accounting of the assets, subject to their right to object to the accounting. The settlement also provided that the executrix would serve without commission and bond. The terms of the settlement were incorporated in a judgment entered in November 2003 by Judge Susan L. Reisner.

In May 2004, plaintiffs filed a complaint and order to show cause against defendant. This complaint was later amended in June 2004. The key allegation of the amended complaint was that defendant had coerced her mother into transferring most of her [431]*431assets into joint bank accounts which would pass to defendant on her mother’s death, instead of going to each daughter equally.1 The complaint also alleged that defendant had not provided an accounting of certain jewelry and personal items. In July 2004, the parties executed a consent order in which defendant agreed, pending trial of the issues, not to take further action with respect to any assets and that she would provide the requested accounting.

The issue of the disposition of the joint bank accounts was tried before Judge Margaret Mary McVeigh between February and May 2005 (“the joint accounts litigation”). Mary WanderPolo, who had been retained by defendant to represent the estate, represented defendant in this litigation. She argued that the proceeds of the joint accounts belonged to defendant as the surviving joint tenant. The trial took eight trial days and approximately fifteen witnesses testified. In June 2005, Judge McVeigh issued an oral opinion concluding that defendant had failed to rebut the presumption that she had unduly influenced her mother’s establishment of the joint accounts. Judgment was entered accordingly.

Prior to the entry of judgment, the attorneys forwarded to the court competing forms of the judgment. Judge McVeigh ultimately signed the proposed judgment submitted by WanderPolo, which provided that the court retained jurisdiction to determine questions concerning administration of the estate, including the issue of whether legal fees and costs incurred by the parties should be paid by the estate.

Defendant appealed Judge McVeigh’s decision. On appeal, defendant’s sole argument was that the judgment was flawed by legal error in the application of the governing standard and by erroneous factual findings. The Appellate Division affirmed. In [432]*432re Estate of Samia Balgar, No. A-6621-04T5, 2007 WL 1147081 (App.Div. April 19, 2007).

In the meantime, in July 2005, defendant retained Diane Aeciavatti to replace WanderPolo as counsel. Notably, defendant refused to pay WanderPolo’s outstanding legal fees dating back to July 2004.2

In late July 2005, plaintiffs filed a post-judgment motion seeking, among other things, clarification relating to plaintiffs’ application for attorneys fees and removal of defendant as executrix. The motion was resolved by consent order entered in August 2006. The order states, in pertinent part, that “[t]he [cjourt considered the issue of attorneys fees and has determined that each party shall pay its own attorneys fees and that the [ejstate shall not be responsible for either parties’ attorneys fees.”

In December 2006, Judge McVeigh signed an order to show cause upon complaint filed by WanderPolo for an award of legal fees from the estate pursuant to R. 4:42-9 and to establish the fees as a priority lien against the estate. WanderPolo contended that she was entitled to fees from the estate as the initial estate attorney. She argued, alternatively, that attorneys fees related to an estate are properly paid from the estate, even if a court decides to apportion fees, and that she had a charging lien pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:13-5 on at least the portion of the estate that belongs to defendant. No petition for a charging lien was filed. Both plaintiffs and defendant opposed the application for fees from the estate. Defendant contended that the issue of legal fees had already been adjudicated by the court in August 2006 and that the estate was not responsible for payment of the fees.

On February 20, 2007, Judge McVeigh ordered that the estate pay WanderPolo’s fees from the date of the first visit with defendant through the entry of Judge Reisner’s judgment in November 2003, and that all other fees be paid by defendant. The judge previously articulated the reasons for her decision on the [433]*433record on February 9, 2007. On that day, she stated that the relief sought by WanderPolo was “to require the estate of [decedent] to pay the legal fees of LWanderPolo].” She also noted that “[a]t the conclusion of that case [referring to the joint accounts litigation], this court ruled that each side was responsible for their own attorneys fees. This court still takes that position.”

In March 2007, WanderPolo moved for reconsideration of Judge McVeigh’s February 20, 2007 order — a motion that is currently pending. She claimed the order was deficient because it failed to specify not only the amount of the fee that defendant was responsible to pay to her, but also whether her application to have her fee paid from defendant’s share of the estate was granted or denied.

Because of the Appellate Division’s April 2007 decision, the restraints imposed by Judge McVeigh in July 2004 and later in August 2006 expired. Thus, in May 2007, plaintiffs moved for an interim distribution from the estate of $150,000 each. In response, WanderPolo cross-moved for partial temporary restraints and a charging lien pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:13-5. Once again, no petition for a charging lien was filed.

On June 1, 2007, Judge McVeigh approved an interim distribution of $100,000 to each of the five beneficiaries, but ordered that $50,000 of defendant’s share be held in an attorney trust account pending a decision and entry of an order on the cross-motion. On that same day, defendant filed a legal malpractice complaint in the Essex County Law Division relating to WanderPolo’s handling of the joint accounts litigation. In July 2007, WanderPolo filed an answer. The answer does not assert a counterclaim for the claimed outstanding legal fees.

At some point, Judge McVeigh recused herself leaving for my consideration the two pending motions.

I.

I address first the motion for reconsideration. At the outset, I note that WanderPolo does not claim that Judge McVeigh over[434]*434looked controlling decisions or erred in deciding that each side was responsible for payment of their own legal fees. See R. 4:49-2 and Cummings v. Bahr, 295 N.J.Super.

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944 A.2d 734, 399 N.J. Super. 426, 2007 N.J. Super. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-balgar-njsuperctappdiv-2007.