Loigman v. TP. COMMITTEE OF MIDDLETOWN

889 A.2d 426, 185 N.J. 566, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 18, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 889 A.2d 426 (Loigman v. TP. COMMITTEE OF MIDDLETOWN) 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
Loigman v. TP. COMMITTEE OF MIDDLETOWN, 889 A.2d 426, 185 N.J. 566, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 34 (N.J. 2006).

Opinion

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we must determine whether the litigation privilege shields a lawyer from a civil suit charging him with the improper use of a sequestration motion to exclude a spectator from a public hearing. Plaintiff Larry Loigman, Esq. filed a federal civil rights lawsuit under 42 U.S.C.A § 1983, alleging that *572 defendants Thomas J. Savage, Esq. 1 and the Township of Middle-town (Township) violated his First Amendment right to attend an administrative law hearing. The gist of the lawsuit is that Savage, the Township’s specially retained labor attorney, persuaded the Administrative Law Judge to enter a sequestration order barring Loigman from the courtroom by pretending that Loigman was a potential witness in the case. In a jury trial on the § 1988 action, Loigman obtained a judgment against Savage and the Township. Both the trial court and Appellate Division rejected defendants’ claim that Savage’s request for a sequestration order was protected by the litigation privilege, thereby giving defendants absolute immunity from a § 1983 lawsuit. In addition, both courts determined that, under § 1983, Savage was acting as a “policymaker” in his capacity as the Township’s lawyer in the case, thus making the Township vicariously liable for Savage’s violation of Loigman’s rights.

We now reverse. We hold that the litigation privilege protects Savage and the Township from being haled into a civil court to face a damages judgment as a result of Savage’s sequestration motion. We also hold that Savage’s role as special counsel for the Township at the administrative hearing did not transform him into a municipal “policymaker” under § 1983.

I.

A.

Our case begins with a civil service appeal filed by Robert Oches, a Middletown Township police officer who claimed that the Township wrongly denied him promotion to Chief of Police. Och-es, who ranked number one on the Department of Personnel’s promotion list, was promoted from Lieutenant to Deputy Chief of Police. He then filed an appeal with the Merit System Board, challenging the Township’s promotion of a lower-scoring officer to *573 Police Chief. Oches asserted that the Township bypassed him for politically motivated reasons. The Merit Board transferred the matter to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL), where an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) conducted hearings over twenty-three non-consecutive days.

On March 25, 1999, the first hearing day, the ALJ granted Oches’ motion to sequester all witnesses in the case, with the exception of two Township witnesses who were assisting Savage in the presentation of the Township’s case. Savage, the Township’s special counsel, requested that Loigman, who was present, “be excused from the room as a potential witness.” He contended that Loigman might be called during the Township’s defense or rebuttal case. Loigman had not been listed as a witness or subpoenaed by either party. The ALJ reserved his decision and advised Savage to provide a summary of Loigman’s expected testimony.

The following day, Savage renewed his sequestration motion and asked permission to amend the Township’s Answers to Interrogatories to include Loigman as a potential witness. Savage maintained that Loigman, who had been a candidate for Township office, had information bearing on Oches’ political retaliation claim. We need not discuss the merits of Savage’s request for sequestration because Savage’s alleged bad faith in seeking Loigman’s removal from the courtroom is not important to the disposition of this appeal. 2

Suffice it to say that based on Savage’s representations, the ALJ ordered that Loigman be sequestered. Loigman, who was in attendance, denied that he was a witness and stated that he had never received a subpoena. He submitted that he “would never respond to a subpoena issued by Mr. Savage [who] would have to *574 go to Superior Court to enforce it.” Loigman remarked that he had no relevant information, that Savage’s representations were “completely untrue,” and that he had “no intention on testifying.” Despite Loigman’s argument, the ALJ ordered him to leave the hearing. The ALJ, however, voiced his belief that he was powerless to enforce his order. In defiance of the sequestration order, Loigman continued to attend the hearings.

Five months later, on October 1, 1999, the ALJ confirmed in a written order his earlier sequestration ruling and his belief that he lacked authority to enforce that ruling. He provided, however, that “if the subject matter of Loigman’s potential testimony arose during Mr. Loigman’s attendance, [he] would consider a request by [Savage] to suspend the hearing in order to permit an application to the Superior Court for enforcement of the order of sequestration.” The ALJ noted in his written order that Loigman “has continued to attend the hearing as a spectator on a sporadic basis.”

Notably, a day before the entry of that order, Loigman appeared in the public gallery of the hearing room. Savage asked the ALJ to direct Loigman to leave and, if Loigman did not comply, to adjourn the hearing to permit him to obtain a Superior Court order enforcing the sequestration ruling. In the face of that threat, which if carried out held the certainty of delaying the proceedings, Loigman chose to “voluntarily withdraw.”

Several days later, in a letter to the Department of Personnel, Loigman requested that the Agency conduct an interlocutory review of the sequestration order. A week later, the Commissioner denied the request because Loigman was neither a party nor a party’s attorney in the Oches matter. See N.J.A.C. l:l-14.10(a). The Appellate Division rejected Loigman’s motion for leave to appeal.

Unbowed by those rulings, Loigman continued to attend the hearings. For example, on the July 31, 2000 hearing date, Loig-man refused to remove himself from the courtroom at the request of the ALJ. Despite all the sound and fury, Savage never sought *575 to enforce the sequestration order in the Superior Court and never called Loigman as a witness during the hearings.

B.

On January 31, 2000, Loigman filed a five-count verified complaint in lieu of prerogative writs in the Superior Court, Law Division, alleging various theories of liability against Savage, the Township, and others. The first four counts, which are not relevant to this appeal, were dismissed. The fifth count named only Savage and the Township as defendants and alleged that Savage deliberately made false statements to the ALJ with the improper design of having the ALJ exclude Loigman from the OAL hearings.

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Bluebook (online)
889 A.2d 426, 185 N.J. 566, 2006 N.J. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loigman-v-tp-committee-of-middletown-nj-2006.