Tanzman v. Tanzman

191 Misc. 2d 215, 740 N.Y.S.2d 584, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 119
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2002
StatusPublished

This text of 191 Misc. 2d 215 (Tanzman v. Tanzman) 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
Tanzman v. Tanzman, 191 Misc. 2d 215, 740 N.Y.S.2d 584, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 119 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John W. Sweeny, Jr., J.

This is a matrimonial action. The parties were married on September 9, 1974. This action was commenced on April 20, 2000. There are no children. The parties are physically separated.

Plaintiff is an attorney whose practice consists almost exclusively of plaintiff’s personal injury cases. Defendant works part time at a Home Depot store.

At the time of their marriage plaintiff was a high school teacher. During the course of the marriage he attended law school, graduating in 1978 and began practice thereafter. Since 1985 he has been in a partnership with the firm known as Tanzman and Cerbone in White Plains, New York. There is no written partnership agreement.

The parties have stipulated on a number of issues. This includes that plaintiff will pay defendant $18,000 a year in maintenance until defendant reaches the age of 65. There has also been agreements reached on, inter alia, division of the marital home, stock, the cars and marital debt. Counsel may set these forth with particularity in the judgment to be submitted at the end of this case.

The parties retained John Johnson of the firm of Bollam, Sheedy, Torani and Co. LLP, CPAs to value plaintiffs partnership interest in the practice. It was found to have a net tangible asset value of $18,000 of which one half or $9,000 was assigned to Mr. Tanzman. Mr. Johnson also valued Mr. Tanzman’s law license (all of which was obtained during the course of the marriage) between $204,000 and $238,000. The parties agreed they would take the average of the two figures for the purpose [217]*217of computation. Mr. Johnson also concluded that plaintiff had an annualized net pretax earning as an attorney of $99,500. His net base line earnings had he remained a teacher was calculated to be $60,000; therefore making an enhanced earnings capacity of $39,500 a year.

The major area where the parties are not in agreement concerns the valuation and the equitable distribution of the plaintiffs personal injury cases.

The parties agree that pending in plaintiffs office at the commencement of this action were 146 personal injury cases, all in different stages of preparation. The parties also agree that these cases constitute marital property (Grundfeld v Grund-feld, 94 NY2d 696 [2000]; Litman v Litman, 61 NY2d 918 [1984]; Block v Block, 258 AD2d 324 [1st Dept 1999]). To be determined is the value of these cases and what portion of the ultimate recovery in each is for defendant’s benefit.

The parties have stipulated to submit this issue on papers. They have even agreed on a listing of the pending cases including the type of case, the retainer agreement, if there was a referral fee and so forth. The cases have been categorized by the plaintiff as either (1) retained and/or subject to investigation; (2) pleadings having been prepared and/or served; (3) bill of particulars served; (4) a request for judicial intervention (RJI) having been filed; and (5) cases on the trial calendar with a note of issue having been filed. It was further stipulated that cases already resolved and the fees received at the time of the commencement of the action would be held in escrow pending the determination of the issue herein.

The parties have also agreed to the following: to resolve the question of tax impacting by making a one-third adjustment on all fees recovered; any recovery will be first adjusted for any fees owed to a referring attorney. Disbursements incurred before the commencement of this action will not be part of any calculation in distributing a fee. Disbursements incurred after commencement of this action (and subject to recovery) will be calculated as part of the fee.

Before the court addresses the defendant’s interest in the personal injury cases, there are related issues to be addressed. One is whether there should be a downward adjustment on any recovery for defendant for overhead expenses attributable to plaintiffs law firm incurred subsequent to the commencement of this divorce. The plaintiff wants to deduct that overhead. Defendant claims he is not entitled to. This court agrees with defendant.

[218]*218Plaintiff’s argument is that since the defendant wife would be receiving a percentage of the fees obtained by the plaintiff from contingency fee cases that she should therefore also have to contribute towards the overhead costs that were incurred in the operation of the law office; overhead expenses which were necessary to help generate the contingency fees. Plaintiff argues that not to do this would give defendant a greater percentage of the fees as her marital share than the plaintiff.

First of all, the court is not satisfied with the numbers for overhead that were given to John Johnson. A review of his report shows an extremely high percentage for overhead (a five-year average of 72% with a high of 80% in 1999) which seriously brings into question the accuracy of the expenses for a personal injury law practice. So also, defendant’s recovery will be based on the value of the cases as of the commencement of this action. She is not getting a percentage based on the full value at the end of the case, therefore she should not pay for a deduction for expenses incurred after commencement.

In support of her position that the recovery should not be adjusted for overhead, defendant submitted a letter by Joel Ra-kower of Financial Appraisal Services Limited. In response to the written question of should there be an adjustment for overhead expenses in the recovery of contingency fees Rakower stated:

“Initially one must recognize that accounts receivable, and work in process represent work that has already been done in a matter at a specific point in time. The expense of the firm in completing work to that point in time has been recognized. Allocating the amount of work in process of a contingency fee case is no different. One is assigning the fees (revenue) to be recognized to this off balance sheet asset, as of a specific date. One can argue that the firm will incur expenses to collect the funds, however, this argument has been traditionally dismissed * * * .”

It is interesting to note that Mr. Rakower treats the contingency fee cases as accounts receivable where at the date of commencement of the matrimonial the overhead has already been fully incurred by the firm. The court disagrees. The cases cannot be deemed accounts receivable because being contingent in nature, an express value cannot be put on those cases unless and until a recovery is obtained.

[219]*219Notwithstanding that disagreement, the court still cannot accept plaintiffs reasoning that a set amount for overhead expenses should be deducted before defendant’s fee is determined. As stated, the court cannot accept the high percentage for overhead sought by plaintiff in the first place. It should be noted that even Mr. Johnson stated that some of the money was given back for personal use by Mr. Tanzman and his partner. There is also no clear way to determine how much overhead was actually incurred for these particular cases which are the subject of this action, how much for the general operation of the office including other matters such as real estate files, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Misc. 2d 215, 740 N.Y.S.2d 584, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanzman-v-tanzman-nysupct-2002.