Patrick Boyle v. Carol Huff

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 30, 2024
DocketA-42-22
StatusPublished

This text of Patrick Boyle v. Carol Huff (Patrick Boyle v. Carol Huff) 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
Patrick Boyle v. Carol Huff, (N.J. 2024).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.

Patrick Boyle v. Carol Huff (A-42-22) (087900)

Argued November 8, 2023 -- Decided May 30, 2024

NORIEGA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.

In this appeal, the Court considers whether an indemnification clause in a condominium association’s bylaws applies to an indemnitee’s first-party claim for attorneys’ fees and costs against the association.

Plaintiff Patrick Boyle owns one of the approximately 750 units of the Ocean Club Condominium (OC Condominium). As a unit owner, Boyle is afforded membership in the Ocean Club Condominium Association, which oversees OC Condominium affairs in accordance with the OC Condominium Master Deed and By-laws (bylaws). The Association is managed by a Board of Trustees (Board), comprised of seven members, who are all unit owners. Trustees are indemnified by the Association in accordance with Article VI, Section 1 of the bylaws.

Boyle was appointed to a seat on the Board. Following a bitter dispute between Boyle and his fellow trustees over the financial management of the Association, the Board adopted a special resolution to expel Boyle as a trustee.

Boyle filed a complaint challenging his removal. The trial court reinstated him as a trustee, holding that the Board violated the bylaws and relevant regulations by failing to provide adequate notice of the vote to consider Boyle’s expulsion. Boyle filed an amended complaint, adding additional claims including for indemnification. He later filed a third amended complaint, bringing a derivative claim on behalf of the Association and alleging that the trustee defendants breached their fiduciary duties; he sought indemnification for that claim as well.

Boyle was defeated in the next Board election, after which both sides moved for summary judgment. The trial court held in relevant part that the plain language of the bylaws entitled Boyle to counsel fees and costs. The Appellate Division found that the indemnification provision covered the fees and costs Boyle incurred in his action to be reinstated as trustee but not in his derivative action claim. The Court granted certification. 253 N.J. 589 (2023).

1 HELD: The ambiguous indemnification provision at issue here must be construed against the indemnitee, and the Court therefore reverses the Appellate Division’s judgment. Prospectively, parties to a contract intending to extend indemnification to first parties should include express language to achieve such an agreement.

1. When the meaning of an indemnification clause is ambiguous, the provision is strictly construed against the indemnitee because (1) a party is ordinarily responsible for its own negligence, and shifting liability to an indemnitor must be accomplished only through express and unequivocal language, and (2) under the “American Rule,” absent statutory or judicial authority or express contractual language to the contrary, each party is responsible for its own attorney’s fees. (p. 12)

2. The Court reviews in detail the three-sentence indemnification provision in the Association’s bylaws. The second sentence expressly provides that “[t]he Association shall indemnify every Trustee . . . against all loss, costs and expenses, including counsel fees, reasonably incurred by him in connection with any action, suit, or proceeding to which he may be a party by reason of his being or having been a Trustee,” absent willful misconduct or bad faith. Read in isolation, that sentence could support indemnification here, as Boyle argues and the Appellate Division found. But the interplay between the third sentence, in which the Association’s counsel must judge the indemnitee trustee’s behavior -- an assessment that would be illogical if the second sentence were to extend indemnification to suits in which the Association and the trustees were adverse -- and the first sentence, which provides that trustees “shall not be liable to the Unit Owners,” suggests that the reasonable interpretation of the second sentence is that the agreement was meant to cover any and all actions by unit owners who bring actions against trustees in their capacity as trustees. At minimum, the indemnification provision is ambiguous and must therefore be construed against Boyle as the indemnitee. (pp. 13-17)

3. Parties are free to determine whether to extend indemnification provisions to first-party actions or limit them solely to third-party actions. Although the Court has never previously held that a contract should contain express language to permit indemnification of first-party claims, its prior decisions support such a conclusion. The Court thus encourages parties seeking to permit indemnification of first-party claims to include express language to do so. Otherwise, any ambiguity will continue to be construed against the indemnitee. (pp. 17-19)

REVERSED.

CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES PATTERSON, SOLOMON, PIERRE-LOUIS, and WAINER APTER join in JUSTICE NORIEGA’s opinion. JUSTICE FASCIALE did not participate.

2 SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY A-42 September Term 2022 087900

Patrick Boyle, individually and derivatively on behalf of the Ocean Club Condominium Association,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

Carol Huff, Diane Miller, Tommy Harrell, Joseph Roehrig, and Seny Belete- Levin,

Defendants,

and

Ocean Club Condominium Association,

Nominal Defendant-Appellant.

On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.

Argued Decided November 8, 2023 May 30, 2024

Craig D. Gottilla argued the cause for appellant (Ansell, Grimm & Aaron, attorneys; Craig D. Gottilla and Nicole D. Miller, on the brief).

1 Barry J. Pollack (Harris St. Laurent & Wechsler) of the District of Columbia bar, admitted pro hac vice, argued the cause for respondent (McCarter & English, attorneys); Gary M. Fellner and Caitlin M. Nolan, on the brief (Porzio, Bromberg & Newman).

JUSTICE NORIEGA delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal we consider whether an indemnification clause in a

condominium association’s bylaws applies to an indemnitee’s first-party claim

for attorneys’ fees and costs against the association.

Here, a trustee of a condominium association filed a complaint seeking

to enjoin the association from removing him from his position. As part of his

complaint, the trustee sought indemnification from the association for all

attorneys’ fees and expenses arising from the litigation, relying on a provision

of the bylaws under which trustees were declared not liable to unit owners and

the association was generally bound to indemnify trustees for legal expenses

incurred due to their role as trustees. The trial court granted summary

judgment and awarded the trustee the fees and expenses sought. The Appellate

Division affirmed the judgment but remanded the matter for reconsideration of

the ultimate amount of attorneys’ fees.

We hold that the ambiguous indemnification provision at issue here must

be construed against the indemnitee, and therefore reverse the Appellate

2 Division’s judgment. Prospectively, parties to a contract intending to extend

indemnification to first parties should include express language to achieve

such an agreement.

I.

A.

We rely upon the following facts derived from plaintiff’s third amended

complaint, filed in 2021.

Plaintiff Patrick Boyle owns one of the approximately 750 units of the

Ocean Club Condominium (OC Condominium), in Atlantic City, where he

resides with his wife.

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Patrick Boyle v. Carol Huff, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-boyle-v-carol-huff-nj-2024.