Mateo v. Mateo

656 A.2d 846, 281 N.J. Super. 73
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedApril 20, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 656 A.2d 846 (Mateo v. Mateo) 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
Mateo v. Mateo, 656 A.2d 846, 281 N.J. Super. 73 (N.J. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

281 N.J. Super. 73 (1995)
656 A.2d 846

PETRA MATEO, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
v.
MANOLIN MATEO, GRACE R. GARRETT AND ERNEST GARRETT, DEFENDANTS, AND DARRELL FINEMAN, RESPONDENT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Submitted February 22, 1995.
Decided April 20, 1995.

*74 Before Judges BRODY, LONG and A.M. STEIN.

Petra Mateo, appellant, filed a pro se brief.

Capizola, Fineman & Lapham, attorneys for respondent (Barbara R. Lapham, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by BRODY, P.J.A.D.

The dispute in this appeal is between plaintiff and Darrell Fineman, Esq., the attorney who represented her when she commenced this personal-injury automobile negligence action. Plaintiff appeals from an order restraining her from continuing a proceeding she had commenced against Fineman in the Fee Arbitration Committee pursuant to R. 1:20A-3. The trial judge based his order on plaintiff's failure to appeal to this court from a provision of an earlier order that fixed Fineman's fee even though, contrary to R. 1:20A-6, Fineman had failed to advise plaintiff of her right to submit the dispute to the Fee Committee. The earlier order also relieved Fineman from representing plaintiff *75 and established an attorney's lien for the fee. We reverse the restraining order because of Fineman's violation of the Rule.

Plaintiff was a passenger in an automobile operated by her husband, defendant Manolin Mateo. When her husband suddenly stopped the vehicle, it was struck from behind by an automobile owned by defendant Ernest Garrett and operated by defendant Grace Garrett. Plaintiff was seriously injured by the impact. The Mateos' automobile policy provided defendant Manolin Mateo $100,000 liability coverage for the accident. The Garretts were essentially judgment proof; their automobile policy provided only $15,000 liability coverage for the accident.

We are told that plaintiff engaged Fineman to represent her for a contingent fee.[1] He then commenced two actions in 1988 on her behalf. One was the present action against the two drivers and the owner of the Garrett vehicle. The Garretts' insurer deposited in court the full amount of its coverage as an offer of settlement. Any additional recovery depended on whether defendant Manolin Mateo would be found negligent for stopping suddenly.

Fineman brought the other action against the Automobile Full Insurance Underwriting Association (JUA), its servicing carrier, and the carrier's agent through whom the Mateos purchased their policy. Plaintiff claimed in that action that the agent negligently failed to write the policy with more than $15,000 under-insured motorist coverage. In a separate count, plaintiff claimed that she was entitled to greater personal injury protection (PIP) payments for essential services than the JUA was willing to pay.

It appears from the sketchy record presented to us, that plaintiff refused to settle the actions for less than $100,000, a sum far in excess of what Fineman thought her case was worth.[2]

*76 In 1989 Fineman moved in both cases "for an Order relieving Darrell Fineman, Esq. and [his firm] as attorneys for Petra Mateo and impressing a lien for attorney's fees in the amount deposited with the Court in the matter of Mateo v. Garrett." Fineman supported the motions with his certification in which he stated the reasons for asking to be relieved as counsel.

As to the claim against the insurance agent, he stated that he had a conflict of interest. The agent had filed for bankruptcy and Fineman represented another client who had a claim against the same agent. Fineman claimed that the two clients would be competing for the agent's limited assets. As to the claim for additional PIP benefits, he stated that he needed the testimony of a medical doctor to prove that plaintiff was entitled to the additional benefits she claimed, but plaintiff ignored his demand for "a $1,500 retainer so that I could pay for the doctor's testimony at trial."

As to the present negligence action, he stated only:

This case is further complicated by the fact that Mrs. Mateo was rear-ended, and the $15,000 policy of the rear-ending defendant, Garrett, was placed in Court. Her husband, who was the driver, may or may not have liability.

We assume the foregoing was meant to suggest that plaintiff was being unreasonable in not settling the entire case for $15,000.

Attached to Fineman's certification was a copy of two computer-generated bills that he addressed to plaintiff. One refers to the present action and contains an itemization of time for legal services at hourly rates that total $3,085 attorney's fees, an itemization of "expenditures" of $1,274.27, and unitemized "miscellaneous charges" for "telephone calls, photocopies, postage and travel" of $154.25. The total claimed for this action was $4,513.52. The other bill refers to the insurance action and contains an itemization *77 of time for legal services at hourly rates that total $2,525.50 attorney's fees, fax charges of $2.00 and unitemized "miscellaneous charges" for "telephone calls, photocopies, postage and travel" of $126.28. The total claimed for the insurance action was $2,653.78.

We gather that plaintiff did not appear on the return day of the motions and did not submit any material to the court. The judge granted both motions. The orders relieved Fineman as counsel in both cases and awarded fees and expenditures in the amount he had requested. The order entered in the present action provides in part:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a lien is hereby impressed for attorney's fees of $4,513.52 in the amount deposited with the Court in the within matter.

The order entered in the insurance action provides in part:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a lien is hereby impressed for attorney's fees of $2,653.78 in the amount deposited with the Court in the matter of Mateo v. Garrett.

Stanley Drinkwater, Esq., represented plaintiff at the trial of this action three years later, which resulted in a judgment against Manolin Mateo and Grace Garrett in the amount of $119,041. After the matter was settled for $88,000, plaintiff refused to sign the settlement check because she challenged the amount of Fineman's fee. In an effort to settle that dispute, a draft agreement, which plaintiff also refused to sign, was prepared in June 1993 that contains the following provision:

The parties to this Agreement also acknowledge that the plaintiff Petra Mateo has previously refused to sign the settlement check as she was desirous of disputing the fee amount to [Fineman's law firm] and having a determination as to the fee made by the fee arbitration process. The [said law firm] and the plaintiff Petra Mateo have arrived at a compromised settlement of this fee dispute. The [said] law firm .. . agrees to accept the sum of $5,000 as settlement of all claims arising from their motion originally returnable on June 11, 1993. Such settlement shall be paid from the proceeds of the third party settlement currently being handled by Stanley Drinkwater, Esquire. Petra Mateo agrees to pay this sum to her prior law firm and agrees that she will not further dispute the payment of this amount and specifically will not submit a claim to fee arbitration.

Fineman had made the motion referred to in the draft "for an Order directing plaintiff to pay the attorney's lien entered in favor

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
656 A.2d 846, 281 N.J. Super. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mateo-v-mateo-njsuperctappdiv-1995.