Sakow v. Columbia Bagel, Inc.

6 Misc. 3d 939
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 2004
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Misc. 3d 939 (Sakow v. Columbia Bagel, Inc.) 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
Sakow v. Columbia Bagel, Inc., 6 Misc. 3d 939 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

[940]*940OPINION OF THE COURT

Robert D. Lippmann, J.

This court held a hearing regarding the sanctions to be imposed upon plaintiff Marion Sakow and her counsel, by reason of their conduct in the underlying litigation. In this action, plaintiff alleged that defendants Arthur Cutler and Jeffrey Baynon had misappropriated for their use funds belonging to Columbia Bagel, Inc. On February 10, 2004, Justice Ramos dismissed plaintiffs claims, finding that there was no proof to support the allegations that Cutler and Baynon had converted or misappropriated Columbia’s funds for their personal use. This court then held a two-day hearing on sanctions, beginning on April 2, 2004. The scope of the hearing was to determine the extent of damages resulting from pretrial rules violations by plaintiff that Justice Ramos held were sanctionable, and to determine whether sanctions were warranted against plaintiff Marion and her counsel, Morton Robson and his firm Robson, Ferber, Frost, Chan & Essner, LLP (collectively Robson), by reason of other alleged misconduct in the prosecution of this action. The only witness at the hearing who testified on behalf of plaintiff was Robson. Neither Marion nor her husband Walter Sakow testified.

The instant action had been pending since 1991. In 1995, the Sakows had their son, Marcus, personally conduct discovery in this action by going to the offices of Kaplan, Thomashower & Landau LLP to inspect, copy and Bates-stamp Columbia’s documents over a period of approximately two weeks. Marcus assembled and then photocopied and Bates-stamped various documents, including the daily cash reports of Columbia (reports) with their annexed backup documents, including bank deposit tickets and invoices for cash purchases of supplies. Marcus scanned the documents into a computer and created computer images for them. In preparing exhibits for trial, Marcus deleted the Bates numbers from the reports and removed the backup documents from them. In rebutting defendants’ papers, Marcus explains that, since many of the documents were small, he placed several of them on the photocopy machine at the same time and thus ending up with numerous pages that had photocopies of multiple documents. He Bates-stamped each page as it was copied.

At the trial before Justice Ramos, Marion and Robson attempted to leave the impression that cash was unaccounted for in Columbia’s records, when in fact this was not the case.

[941]*941In one example, Robson attempted to introduce reports for January 1992 (exhibit 34). Exhibit 34, like other exhibits that Marion sought to introduce, isolated each day’s report on a separate page without its supporting documents.

A substantial portion of the trial was consumed with Marion’s unsuccessful attempts to admit various exhibits that were excluded on such grounds as incompleteness, hearsay and lack of foundation.

The Commercial Division Operating Statement mandates that the parties must “cooperate with each other . . . for the purpose of conserving time and limiting expenses during the pre-trial and trial phases of the case.” Marion and Robson violated the rule in several ways. They demanded that defendants update their 1993 document production on the eve of trial; although defendants located the necessary documents, Robson never sought to copy or inspect them. They served an “Expert Designation” five days past the deadline, designating Dennis Rosenzweig. Robson had previously agreed to produce Rosenzweig for a deposition, but then failed to produce him, claiming that Rosenzweig was ill. Defendants then moved to compel the deposition. In response, Robson served a notice to take Rosenzweig’s deposition, four days before trial, purportedly to preserve the testimony in the event that the expert was too ill to appear at trial. Justice Ramos permitted the deposition and directed Robson to provide a doctor’s note to explain the possible unavailability of Rosenzweig, but no note was ever produced. Robson never produced Rosenzweig for deposition. Ultimately, after a conference with Justice Ramos, Robson withdrew Rosenzweig as an expert.

According to defendants, plaintiff engaged in flawed analysis of the sales of Columbia. Although plaintiff focused on the number of bagels sold, defendants showed that the wholesale dollar sales of bagels, not the number of bagels actually sold at wholesale, were a material part of Columbia’s sales.

Robson failed to submit copies of contested exhibits to the court and to defendants within the time frame required by rule 30 of the Rules of the Justices of the Commercial Division, Supreme Court, New York County. When Robson finally served a list of contested exhibits, he did not include copies of the documents. Robson never filed any charts or schedules.

On December 8, 2003, Justice Ramos held that Robson had violated the Rules and precluded Marion from offering any charts. Moreover, Justice Ramos granted the defendants’ mo[942]*942tion to suppress statements made by Arthur Cutler at a 1989 global settlement meeting. Robson later filed a posttrial brief which sought to reargue the admissibility of the Cutler statements. That brief claimed that the Cutler statements were not part of the settlement, without revealing that Walter had signed an affidavit swearing that the statements were made at a settlement discussion.

Also on December 8, 2003, Justice Ramos stated that in the event that defendants sustained prejudice or were forced to engage in extra work by reason of plaintiffs failure to submit exhibits in a timely fashion, plaintiffs counsel was to be sanctioned.

Robson’s posttrial brief contended that Justice Ramos had wrongly quashed a subpoena served on defendant Baynon, but improperly attached a different subpoena from the one actually served on Baynon.

In an affidavit filed in opposition to defendants’ motion to dismiss the action, Robson attempted to introduce records purporting to show that $234,475 had been taken out of Columbia. It turned out, however, that these documents were not those of Columbia, but related to another business owned by Arthur Cutler, Murray’s Sturgeon Shop. Although Robson did not learn until November 26, 2003 that the documents were those of Murray’s, he continued to use them after that date. Robson contends, however, that such use was inadvertent.

On December 10, 2003, shortly after the trial began, Justice Ramos quashed a subpoena which Robson had attempted to serve upon John Thomas. Although the subpoena was served on a woman who claimed to be Mrs. Thomas at his home on Friday, December 5, it was not mailed to Mr. Thomas until December 8, 2003, which rendered service untimely. Justice Ramos issued sanctions of $2,000 against both Robson and plaintiff.

Under 22 NYCRR 130-1.1, the court has discretion to award sanctions for frivolous conduct. This is defined as conduct which is completely without merit in law and cannot be supported by a reasonable argument for an extension, modification or reversal of existing law; which is undertaken primarily to delay or prolong the resolution of the litigation, or to harass or maliciously injure another; or which involves the assertion of materially false factual statements.

Defendants are not basing their demand for sanctions upon the mere commencement of this action. They are seeking sane[943]*943tions only for the pretrial proceedings from October 10, 2003 through the trial and the posttrial submissions.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Misc. 3d 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sakow-v-columbia-bagel-inc-nysupct-2004.