Court vacates $10.6 million malpractice judgment against Bryan Cave
A New York appeals court has vacated a verdict in which a jury found that the law firm Bryan Cave must pay $10.6 million for malpractice.
September 13, 2012 at 06:47 AM
24 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.com
A New York appeals court has vacated a verdict in which a jury found that the law firm Bryan Cave must pay $10.6 million for malpractice.
The reversal is the latest development in a long, twisted legal scuffle between two former business partners, Herbert Feinberg and Norman Katz, who co-owned a women's apparel company.
In 1996, Feinberg decided to buy out Katz's share of the business. The deal was partly based on accounting firm Mahoney Cohen Rashbart & Pockart's 1995 audit of the company's financial statements. But Mahoney Cohen found that the company's documents had overstated the value of the company by $10 million.
Feinberg initiated arbitration against Katz, seeking to cancel his buyout offer due to the flawed financial statements. But an arbitrator—Bryan Cave Partner Jerome Boros, who now is of counsel at Jaspan Schlesinger—found that Feinberg hadn't relied on the 1995 financial statements when he decided to buy Katz out.
Feinberg then sued Mahoney Cohen for the faulty audit. Mahoney Cohen moved for summary judgment on the grounds that collateral estoppel, which prevents parties from relitigating issues that already have been arbitrated, barred any lawsuit against it because the arbitrator had already found that Feinberg didn't rely on its audit. Feinberg's suit was tossed.
Next, Feinberg sued Boros and Bryan Cave for malpractice and failing to advise him that he could've entered into a post-arbitration agreement with Katz that would have blocked Mahoney Cohen's collateral estoppel defense. A jury sided with Feinberg and ordered Bryan Cave to pay him $10.6 million in damages.
But yesterday, the Appellate Division, First Department, said the jury's verdict against Bryan Cave was wrong. The court decided 3-2 that parties in an arbitration can only sign agreements limiting estoppel in cases in which the issues haven't been fully litigated.
Read Thomson Reuters for more about the appeals court's decision.
Read more InsideCounsel stories about law firms facing lawsuits:
A
The reversal is the latest development in a long, twisted legal scuffle between two former business partners, Herbert Feinberg and Norman Katz, who co-owned a women's apparel company.
In 1996, Feinberg decided to buy out Katz's share of the business. The deal was partly based on accounting firm Mahoney Cohen Rashbart & Pockart's 1995 audit of the company's financial statements. But Mahoney Cohen found that the company's documents had overstated the value of the company by $10 million.
Feinberg initiated arbitration against Katz, seeking to cancel his buyout offer due to the flawed financial statements. But an arbitrator—
Feinberg then sued Mahoney Cohen for the faulty audit. Mahoney Cohen moved for summary judgment on the grounds that collateral estoppel, which prevents parties from relitigating issues that already have been arbitrated, barred any lawsuit against it because the arbitrator had already found that Feinberg didn't rely on its audit. Feinberg's suit was tossed.
Next, Feinberg sued Boros and
But yesterday, the Appellate Division, First Department, said the jury's verdict against
Read Thomson Reuters for more about the appeals court's decision.
Read more InsideCounsel stories about law firms facing lawsuits:
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