Silverman v. Clark

35 A.D.3d 1, 822 N.Y.S.2d 9
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 26, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 35 A.D.3d 1 (Silverman v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silverman v. Clark, 35 A.D.3d 1, 822 N.Y.S.2d 9 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Gonzalez, J.

In this action for defamation and breach of contract, we must decide whether letters written by defendant Bruce Clark to two former clients disparaging the professional competence of plaintiff, his former associate attorney who had recently resigned from the firm and taken clients with her, are protected by the absolute defense of truth, or by a qualified or absolute privilege. We find that although neither privilege is applicable under the present circumstances, the defamation causes of action must be dismissed because plaintiff failed to raise a triable issue of fact as to the statements’ falsity. We also conclude that plaintiffs claim for breach of an oral agreement to pay bonuses should have been dismissed.

The action was brought by plaintiff against her former employers, the law firm of Bruce G. Clark & Associates, EC. and [4]*4Bruce G. Clark, Esq. (Clark), the firm’s principal.1 Plaintiff worked as a nurse from 1979 until 1993, when she enrolled in law school. She graduated in 1996 and was admitted to the bar shortly thereafter. She briefly worked for a New Jersey law firm and then commenced employment with the defendant firm in November 1997. The firm’s practice consisted primarily of representing plaintiffs in personal injury litigation, and plaintiff worked as an associate there until June 2001 when she resigned. In her resignation letter, plaintiff cited irreconcilable conflict of interest arising from the fact that she would likely be called as a witness in a future disciplinary proceeding against the firm. In fact, it was plaintiff herself who had filed the complaint with the disciplinary committee alleging that Clark had committed multiple instances of unethical conduct in operating his law practice.2

After plaintiff resigned, several clients with pending cases terminated their relationship with the firm and engaged plaintiff as their attorney. Defendants accuse plaintiff of “poaching” these clients and, in several instances, of removing these clients’ case files without the firm’s permission. In the months following, the parties continued to have disputes over the transfer of files and the firm’s claim for its share of legal fees.

In September 2002, plaintiff commenced the instant action alleging that after she resigned from the firm, Clark sent letters to former clients, submitted affidavits in support of attorney lien applications and made comments to various individuals that accused plaintiff of professional incompetence. Plaintiff alleges that these statements by Clark were false and defamatory.

Only three of plaintiffs original causes of action are at issue on this appeal, the first and second cause of action alleging libel per se, and the tenth cause of action alleging breach of an oral agreement to pay bonuses.3 The libel claims are based on letters sent by Clark to two former clients in November 2001, which [5]*5essentially disparage plaintiffs legal experience and suggest that those clients would be better served by switching back to his firm.

One letter was to a client named Garrett, which stated in pertinent part:

£T am sorry to have received your Consent to Change Attorneys appointing Ms. Silverman as your attorney. I will honor that and turn over your file upon Ms. Silverman reimbursing me for my disbursements and recognizing that I have a lien against the attorney’s fee for the amount of work done by my office. Unfortunately, she and I have not been able to agree on the division of fees on any cases and must ask a court to decide. . . .
“You should be aware that Ms. Silverman has been an attorney barely five years. In the three and a half years she was with my firm she won only two cases. In each of those cases there was no defendant to defend against her allegations. In one, the doctor was in a mental institution and in the other she was suing a hospital for its emergency room practices. Both of those cases had been prepared for years by my office before Ms. Silverman became involved. I disbursed approximately $50,000 for disbursements on one of the cases.
“While she was with me Ms. Silverman lost four cases she took to verdict. She has gone on record as describing her own representation of a client in a childbirth case as ‘woefully inadequate.’
“The first case she tried after she left my office was a major case in which she was representing a young law professor who is dying of cancer that his urologist failed to diagnose. This is the first case she tried where she personally did all of the legal work on the case. I was present at a conference when the judge laughed at Ms. Silverman for misrepresenting that her client was too sick to appear at a deposition when the defendant had surveillance photos showing him teaching a class and traveling to his vacation home in Montreal. Ms. Silverman lost that case. The defendant’s attorney told me that Ms. Silver-man had not prepared her major witness. The wit[6]*6ness was unfamiliar with the medical records when questioned on cross examination. It is unfortunate that that client has paid the cost of Ms. Silverman’s inexperience and lack of preparation.
“On November 7, on your case, a meeting was scheduled among Justice McKeon, the defendant’s attorney and the person authorized by the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation to set an amount for settlement and to settle the case. I was also present to discuss Ms. Silverman’s motion to become your attorney. Ms. Silverman was not present. The judge’s clerk stated that every time he had attempted to call her, there was no one in her office and her answering machine was full. My calendar person also tried several times without success. We then sent Ms. Silverman a letter telling her that the case was scheduled before Judge McKeon for November 7. I can only conclude that, as Ms. Silverman was notified by my office by letter of the date, that she chose not to be present. Had she been present, the case may well have been settled. It is possible that she chose not to show up because a settlement would have occurred when she had done no work as your attorney of record and would, therefore, only been entitled to a very small fee. If this is true, she placed her own interests above those of yours.
“Because of her unexplained absence, the case was adjourned for over a month. This type of incident sends a message to the defense attorney that if plaintiffs attorney is so low on funds that she cannot afford a secretary and a good answering machine, she might not be able to finance the lawsuit and, therefore, may be easy to negotiate with and settle for a lower figure.
“As I will receive a portion of the fee in your case if Ms. Silverman is able to be successful for you, it is in my interest that you receive the best possible settlement. As I have told you, I represented another client who has essentially the same injury as you. I tried her case and obtained a verdict of $3,500,000. The case was sent back for a new trial by the appellate court. The second time I obtained a verdict of $3,400,000. I tried the case in Nassau [7]*7County, a jurisdiction that is much more hostile to plaintiffs than the Bronx. You, therefore, have a very valuable case. Please, for both your sake and mine, take the following precautions:
“1. Ask Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A.D.3d 1, 822 N.Y.S.2d 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silverman-v-clark-nyappdiv-2006.