Mendelsohn v. Ferber

26 Misc. 3d 190
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 3d 190 (Mendelsohn v. Ferber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendelsohn v. Ferber, 26 Misc. 3d 190 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas F. Whelan, J.

Ordered that the motion by defendants for summary judgment dismissing the complaint is granted to the extent set forth herein, and is otherwise denied.

This action arises out of an employment relationship between plaintiff Jennifer Mendelsohn, an attorney, and defendant law firm Siben & Ferber, LLB that ended in October 2004 when Mendelsohn was terminated from her position as an associate. Thereafter, plaintiff started her own law practice and allegedly was hired by more than 60 clients of Siben & Ferber to represent them in matrimonial or family court matters. Following her termination from the law firm, plaintiff made repeated demands to defendants that they forward to her any unused retainer money previously paid to Siben & Ferber by those former clients that had retained her to represent them. According to plaintiff, the unused retainer money paid by the former clients of Siben & Ferber totaled more than $118,000 as of the date her employment with the firm was terminated. A dispute also arose between the parties as to whether plaintiff was owed additional money under the terms of her employment contract. Meanwhile, in January 2005, the assets of Siben & Ferber allegedly were transferred to defendant Steven B. Ferber, EC.

The first cause of action in the complaint alleges defendants are liable for failing to “forward unearned retainer fees received and held for matrimonial or family law work,” and seeks judgment against defendants in the sum of $118,468, plus interest from October 24, 2004. The second cause of action alleges that defendants breached an agreement entered into at the time she was hired that plaintiffs compensation would consist of a base salary plus “40% of all fees earned from [plaintiffs] clients and 33.33% of any fee earned from an outside attorney that referred a client to [plaintiff],” and that such breach has caused dam[193]*193ages in the sum of $39,992, plus interest from October 24, 2004. The third cause of action alleges that, “by failing to forward unearned retainer fees received and held for matrimonial or family law work” to plaintiff, defendants violated the fiduciary duties owed to plaintiff and to the clients that changed attorneys after she left the law firm, and Code of Professional Responsibility DR 9-102 (22 NYCRR 1200.46). Plaintiff seeks $118,466 in compensatory damages and $355,404 in punitive damages on the third cause of action. The answer asserts as affirmative defenses that plaintiff is not a proper party to the action, that the claims are barred by the applicable statute of limitations, and that there was an accord and satisfaction between the parties. It also interposes counterclaims against plaintiff sounding in breach of contract, conversion, and unjust enrichment, as well as a counterclaim for an accounting.

By order dated December 11, 2008, this court denied an application by plaintiff for, inter alia, summary judgment in her favor on the first and third causes of action, finding triable issues existed as to whether plaintiff was an intended beneficiary of the subject retainer agreements, and as to whether any fiduciary duty was owed to her by defendants with respect to the money paid on the retainer agreements by former Siben & Berber’s former clients. The order also denied a cross motion by defendant for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and for leave to leave to amend the answer on the ground that defendants failed to comply with the notice requirements set forth in CPLR 2214. The court further determined that, in any event, defendants’ submissions were insufficient to establish the defense of accord and satisfaction.

Defendants now move again for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Defendants argue, among other things, that plaintiff lacks standing to assert the claims contained in the first and third causes of action. Defendants also assert that they are entitled to judgment in their favor on the second cause of action, as the evidence shows the parties reached an accord and satisfaction after plaintiff left the firm and that, pursuant to such agreement, plaintiff collected the receivables earned from her clients prior to her termination from the law firm, as well as some money owed to Siben & Ferber. Plaintiff opposes the motion, arguing, for the first time, that the first cause of action is for money had and received, not for breach of contract, and that “defendants should not be permitted to keep unearned retainer fees when [plaintiff] did all of the legal work.” As to [194]*194the second cause of action, plaintiff alleges the issue of whether there was an accord and satisfaction was previously litigated as part of the defendants’ prior motion for summary judgment, and that defendants again failed to demonstrate as a matter of law the existence of such an agreement between the parties. She also asserts that the third cause of action alleges defendants breached a fiduciary duty owed to her “pursuant to rule 1.15 (a) of the Rules of Professional Conduct (22 NYCRR 1200.15 [a]) formerly DR 9-102 [a] [sic],” and that such provision imposes “a fiduciary responsibility to any third party to not misappropriate or commingle funds received incident to the practice of law.” Plaintiff contends that, as the retainer fees paid by Siben & Ferber’s former clients were not exhausted when she was hired to represent such clients, defendants’ refusal to transfer that money to plaintiff was a misappropriation of money received incident to the practice of law and “violated their fiduciary responsibility to [plaintiff] under Rule 1.15 (a).”

Defendants’ application for summary judgment dismissing the first and third causes of action on the ground that plaintiff does not have standing to assert claims respecting the retainer fees paid to Siben & Ferber by its former clients is granted. Initially, the court notes that while there is a general proscription against successive summary judgment motions based on facts and evidence available to the movant at the time of the original motion for summary judgment (see Tolpygina v Teper, 63 AD3d 722 [2d Dept 2009]; Taylor v Brooklyn Hosp., 187 AD2d 714 [2d Dept 1992]; Marine Midland Bank v Fisher, 85 AD2d 905 [4th Dept 1981]), a court may entertain a subsequent summary judgment motion if such motion “is substantively valid and the granting of [it] will further the ends of justice while eliminating an unnecessary burden on the resources of the courts” (Detko v McDonald’s Rests. of N.Y., 198 AD2d 208, 209 [2d Dept 1993], lv denied 83 NY2d 752 [1994]; see Rose v Horton Med. Ctr., 29 AD3d 977 [2d Dept 2006]). Here, the order issued in December 2008 did not address the threshold question raised by defendants’ instant motion of whether plaintiff lacks standing to bring the first and third causes of action, nor did it address defendants’ claim that no fiduciary duty was owed to plaintiff with respect to money collected on retainer agreements entered into while she was an associate at the law firm.

“A plaintiff has standing to maintain an action upon alleging an injury in fact that falls within his or her zone of interest” (Silver v Pataki, 96 NY2d 532, 539 [2001]). The requirement [195]*195that a litigant asserting a claim have an injury-in-fact — an actual stake in the matter being adjudicated — ensures that a person seeking judicial review has some concrete interest in prosecuting the action, which casts the dispute in a form capable of judicial resolution (Society of Plastics Indus. v County of Suffolk,

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Related

Mendelsohn v. Ferber
73 A.D.3d 1139 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 3d 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendelsohn-v-ferber-nysupct-2009.