Molovinsky v. Fair Employment Council of Greater Washington, Inc.

839 A.2d 755, 154 Md. App. 262, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 181
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 22, 2003
Docket949, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 839 A.2d 755 (Molovinsky v. Fair Employment Council of Greater Washington, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molovinsky v. Fair Employment Council of Greater Washington, Inc., 839 A.2d 755, 154 Md. App. 262, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 181 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

BARBERA, Judge.

Appellants, Gale S. and Arlene M. Molovinsky, appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County awarding appellees, The Fair Employment Council of Greater Washington, Inc., et al., (“the Council”), $152,628.78 in attorneys’ fees and costs. The Molovinskys present nine questions for our review which, with the exception of minor stylistic changes, we set forth as they appear in the Molovinskys’ brief:

I. Whether the transfer of assets from the testamentary trust established under the last will and testament of Ruth Irene Molovinsky and pursuant to a trust termination agreement dated December 17, 1998, to Arlene Molovinsky, a contingent beneficiary of the trust, constituted a “conveyance” from Gale Molovinsky to Arlene Molovinsky, his wife, within the meaning of Sections 15-201, 15-204, 15-206 and 15-207 of the Maryland Fraudulent Conveyance Act.
II. If the transfer was a conveyance to Arlene Molovin-sky, whether under Sections 15-204 and 15-206 of the Act, Arlene Molovinsky gave consideration, fair or otherwise, as defined in Section 15-203 of the Act, for the conveyance of the trust assets to her.
*266 III. If Arlene Molovinsky did not give consideration, fair or otherwise, for the conveyance of the trust assets to her, was consideration required under the circumstances of the transaction complained of by the Molovinskys.
IV. Whether Gale Molovinsky was insolvent at the time he renounced his interest in the trust.
V. Whether the Council was barred from the relief sought by equitable reasons, inter alia, by the failure to bring a petition for attorneys’ fees for nearly six (6) years after the underlying case was decided, and by the failure to serve Gale Molovinsky with the petition for attorneys’ fees in the underlying action.
VI. Whether the Council was barred from the relief sought by the doctrine of accord and satisfaction.
VII. Whether the Council was barred from the relief sought by perpetrating a fraud upon Gale Molovin-sky, to wit, by procuring a settlement of the underlying judgment without disclosing the claim for attorneys’ fees.
VIII. Whether the trial court erred in awarding a money judgment in favor of the Council when the relief sought was an order setting aside the alleged “conveyance.”
IX. Whether the trial court erred in permitting, over objection, the testimony of Donald LaBarre, through the reading of his deposition taken in a prior action, thereby denying the Molovinskys’ counsel the opportunity to cross-examine said witness.

' For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

The litigation underlying this appeal commenced in 1991, when the Council sued Gale Molovinsky for violations of the District of Columbia Human Rights Act (“the Act”), relating *267 to Molovinsky 1 s operation of his employment counseling business. A 1993 jury trial resulted in a verdict for the Council against Molovinsky in the amount of $79,000.00 (“the original judgment”). Molovinsky appealed the original judgment to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.

While the appeal was pending, the Council filed, on April 1, 1994, a fee petition pursuant to the Act, seeking an award of fees and expenses of $72,000.00. This amount represented services rendered up to and including the jury trial. The superior court stayed action on the petition pending resolution of the appeal.

On October 3, 1996, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed the jury’s verdict. Molovinsky v. Fair Employment Council of Greater Washington, Inc., 683 A.2d 142 (D.C.1996). One week later, on October 10,1996, Molovin-sky directed Lafayette Federal Credit Union to remove his name from savings account No. 2822005, which he held jointly with his wife, Arlene.

In 1997, the Council commenced discovery in aid of execution of the original judgment. In the course of discovery, the Council issued interrogatories, a document request, and deposed Molovinsky about his assets.

The Trust

Gale Molovinsky was a beneficiary of a testamentary trust established under the will of his mother, Ruth Irene Molovin-sky. By its terms, the trust’s income was to be paid to Melvin Molovinsky, Gale’s father, for the balance of his life, then to Gale, until he reached age sixty. At that time, the trust was to terminate and the corpus distributed to Gale. The trust further provided that if Gale died before reaching age sixty, the income would go to his wife, Arlene, for the balance of her life and, upon her death, the entire proceeds were to be distributed per stirpes to their children. The trustee was Donald LaBarre, a Pennsylvania lawyer who had represented Ruth and Melvin Molovinsky.

*268 Melvin Molovinsky died in 1994, at which time Gale became the sole income beneficiary of the trust. The trust contained about $500,000.00 in municipal bonds, and the trust income distributed to Gale amounted to approximately $35,000.00 annually. 1

Events Leading to the Termination of the Trust

In May 1997, LaBarre produced, at Gale’s behest, a first draft of the trust termination agreement. Under this draft, the trust was to be terminated and the entire proceeds placed in a new Merrill Lynch account in the joint names of Gale and Arlene Molovinsky. According to the deposition testimony of LaBarre offered at trial in this case, Gale was concerned that his creditors could reach the Merrill Lynch account if it was registered under the joint names of his wife and himself. Gale sought LaBarre’s opinion as to whether the assets would be immune from his creditors if the account was in the Molovin-skys’ joint names.

Sometime in 1997, Gale informed LaBarre that the District of Columbia Court of Appeals had affirmed the 1993 jury verdict. In light of the now-final unpaid judgment, LaBarre declined to proceed with the trust termination agreement.

In February 1998, the Council took Gale’s deposition in aid of execution of the judgment. At the deposition, the Council learned that Melvin Molovinsky had died four years earlier, that Gale had become the sole income beneficiary of the trust, and that he was entitled to receive the monthly income from it.

Three months later, the Council instituted garnishment proceedings against LaBarre, as trustee of the trust. In response, LaBarre notified Gale that, “until this matter gets resolved,” LaBarre would have to cease sending him payments of trust income.

*269

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Bluebook (online)
839 A.2d 755, 154 Md. App. 262, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molovinsky-v-fair-employment-council-of-greater-washington-inc-mdctspecapp-2003.