Lazzarino v. Kenton Associates, Ltd.
This text of 998 F. Supp. 364 (Lazzarino v. Kenton Associates, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
It has always been axiomatic that in the assertion of a claim in a complaint, the pleader should have some good faith basis, and it has regrettably become necessary, in recent years, to make that principle explicit in the Federal Rules. 1 The law firm of Belkin Burden Wenig & Goldman, LLP, formerly a defendant herein, has moved under Rule 11 of the Federal -Rules of Civil Procedure for sanctions against pro se plaintiff Tony Lazzarino and his prior counsel, Jeremiah B. McKenna.
On October 17, 1996, plaintiff, represented by McKenna, commenced an action under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (“RICO”) statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., alleging a widespread conspiracy concerning events in the management and operation of the Apthorp apartment building, where plaintiff resides. This was far from the first action involving the plaintiff in this situation. Prior actions, both by him and against him, are all in state court, including one for his failure to pay the Apthorp rent for more than five years. The defendants named here included the owners, managers and agents of the Apthorp building; the estates- of two deceased individuals who were connected with the company which manages the Apthorp; several individual tenants of the building, including one who is a psychiatrist with the Criminal Justice Department; 2 two government agencies: the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and the New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal; 3 and the said Belkin Burden, the law firm which represented the owner of the building in landlord-tenant matters. A first amended complaint came a week after the filing of the original complaint. Belkin Burden thereupon sent a letter to the Court requesting a conference with regard to the said first- amended complaint, which it claimed was frivolous and intended to harass.
A conference was held, with a reporter present, on December 20, 1996. 4 At that *366 conference, Belkin Burden argued that the parts of the first amended complaint which alleged that Belkin Burden was a part of the conspiracy failed to allege any conduct which would qualify as predicate acts under the RICO statute. Belkin Burden, along with the other defendants, sought a dismissal of the complaint. I agreed that the first amended complaint’s overall thrust lacked the requisite specificity and dismissed from the bench, granting, however, leave to replead, “subject to the sanctions of Rule 11 in terms of alleging sufficient facts for which there is a good faith basis.” 5
On February 3, 1997, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint. 6 With the exception of one paragraph, the allegations with respect to Belkin Burden in the second amended complaint were almost identical to those in the first amended complaint. 7 Belkin Burden again requested a conference with the Court, claiming that the second amended complaint “contains no meaningful substantive change from the prior complaint.” In addition, Belkin Burden sent separate letters to both plaintiff and McKenna, 8 warning them that Belkin Burden would ask for Rule 11 sanctions if the second amended complaint were not "withdrawn. 9
I held another conference, again with a reporter, on April 4, 1997. At this conference, plaintiff, now pro se, 10 was asked to provide factual substantiation for his allegation that Belkin Burden advised 390 West *367 End Associates to use coercive eviction in order to maximize rents; Ms response was that Belkin Burden must have done so because the evictions took place after Belkin Burden began to represent 390 West End Associates and because the evicted tenants had been notified by Belkin Burden attorneys. Because the allegations m the second amended complaint still failed to meet the specificity requirements for a RICO action, I again dismissed the complaint as to Belkin Burden, this time with prejudice, stating that “I find nothing there to hold your law firm in this case that’s alleged in this complaint ____” The RICO complaint was also dismissed as to certain other defendants, including the city and state agencies and their commissioners, who had been named as RICO defendants for “wilfull (sic) and deliberate refusal to enforce the laws.” The complaint was also dismissed as to the estate of one of the deceased defendants and the Criminal Justice Department psychiatrist. The dismissal was memorialized in my Memorandum and Order of April 24,1997. While the complaint was left standing at that point on the basis of allegations as to the owners and certain others, on May 6,1997 the plaintiff unexpectedly voluntarily dismissed as to all remaining defendants, thus completely dropping the action.
It is apparent to me from plaintiffs inability to substantiate his claims with respect to many of the defendants — the law firm and the governmental agencies in particular — that plaintiff and Ms counsel chose the objects, of this RICO lawsuit with little if any regard for the basis of conclusory allegations or the harm which a wrongfully-named defendant might suffer. Even though Lazzarino and McKenna were advised that an action would not lie — and that there might be sanctions — if they did not plead with greater particularity and base their complaint on necessary allegations for which there was some good faith basis, they filed a second amended complaint which differed from the first in only the slightest respects. Lazzarino and McKenna completely disregarded my • instructions and appear not to have considered, or at least not heeded, that the pleading’s “allegations and other factual contentions [must] have evidentiary support, or if specifically so identified, [must be] likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportumty for further investigation or discovery.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(b)(3). 11 Lazzarino and McKenna thus caused Belkm Burden (and other defendants) to incur not only the expense of defending against this frivolous complaint but also the reputational damage that can and here did come from being publicly and groundlessly labelled a racketeer. As a Belkin Burden partner stated at oral argument, “I had clients, your Honor, institutional clients, who do not typically engage lawyers who are being accused of racketeer-mg offenses as their lawyers, questioning exactly why it was that I was a racketeering defendant.”
In the course of tMs proceeding, Belkm Burden asserted in response to the Court’s question that it incurred attorneys’ fees of some $5,000.
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998 F. Supp. 364, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3875, 1998 WL 142351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lazzarino-v-kenton-associates-ltd-nysd-1998.