PER CURIAM.
Plaintiff Virginia McDonald appeals from the summary judgment dismissal of her legal malpractice complaint against her former attorney, defendant Bettina Munson, and her law firm, Lomurro, Davison, Eastman and Munoz, P.A. On defendants' motion, the Law Division judge concluded plaintiff's expert rendered a net opinion when analyzing plaintiff's claims of negligence related to her divorce. On appeal, plaintiff challenges the court's determination as error. We disagree and affirm.
These facts are taken from the motion record, viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiff.
Almost four years later, plaintiff reinitiated divorce proceedings. Because the PSA was unenforceable, the parties began negotiating new settlement terms. Initially, Mazauskas requested plaintiff pay him $150,000, insisting "[a]nything less than this amount would be an insult." On December 18, 2007, plaintiff emailed Munson, informing her that the day before, "I offered him $20,000 [to settle] and he said that he would settle for $40,000. I am not giving him $40,000. Let's continue forward on this matter." At that time, Mazauskas indicated he had retained an attorney. The record suggests Munson supported plaintiff's decision to reject the $40,000 settlement demand.
On January 12, 2009, the parties appeared before an Early Settlement Panel, which recommended plaintiff pay Mazauskas $250,000 in satisfaction of all claims, including alimony and equitable distribution. Thereafter, plaintiff and Munson exchanged numerous emails attempting to resolve the matter.
On January 23, 2009, plaintiff expressed to Munson her dissatisfaction with her services, stating:
On February 16, 2009, plaintiff terminated Munson's services, asserting:
Ultimately, plaintiff reached a settlement with Mazauskas, which included paying him $150,000. On February 18, 2009, two days after firing Munson, plaintiff filed a complaint against defendants alleging legal malpractice. Plaintiff's complaint alleged defendants negligently represented her in the 2003 proceedings by drafting a PSA which failed to include plaintiff's interest in a piece of real estate and failed to state the agreement would survive reconciliation.
Two years later, plaintiff provided a seven-page expert report from Arthur N. Chagaris, Esq., who opined Munson was negligent for failing; to include a clause in the 2003 PSA so that it survived reconciliation; advising plaintiff not to settle for $40,000; and failing to protect her business's real property from equitable distribution. Chagaris recognized that
Because Munson knew the parties' situation, including the duration of the marriage, their employment, there were no children, plaintiff had a pension, owned a business, and was anxious to finalize the divorce, Chagaris stated Munson's advice to reject Mazauskas's offer to settle for $40,000 constituted malpractice. Chagaris also concluded Munson was negligent in drafting the PSA. As to the business property, he opined Munson's failure to include it as an asset not subject to equitable distribution in the PSA deviated from accepted standards of legal representation because she did not conduct a careful investigation. Regarding the reconciliation clause, he claimed Munson committed legal malpractice by not including a clause stating the PSA survives reconciliation.
Chagaris further opined because Munson counseled against settling for $40,000, defendants were liable for $110,000 in damages, representing the amount paid in excess of $40,000. An additional damage claim included legal fees incurred as a result of the malpractice action.
At the conclusion of discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing Chagaris's report represents a net opinion and the record otherwise lacks evidence defendants deviated from accepted standards of care. Following oral argument, the motion judge carefully reviewed the motion record and Chagaris's report and found his opinions inadmissible as constituting a net opinion. In reaching this conclusion, the judge stated, "Mr. Chagaris neglect[ed] to provide case law, a treatise, court rules or anything similar to explain to a jury how Ms. Munson's conduct was negligent. His opinion does not provide any applicable accepted standard of conduct for matrimonial attorneys in settlement proceedings."
The judge concluded Chagaris's report was a "bare conclusion" and inadmissible net opinion because
As a result, the judge granted defendants' motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed, with plaintiff principally arguing the motion judge erred in excluding Chagaris's proffered testimony as a net opinion. We disagree.
In considering plaintiff's appeal, we acknowledge certain fundamental principles applicable to summary judgment motions. In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we apply the same standard under
To "establish legal malpractice, a plaintiff must show `(1) the existence of an attorney-client relationship creating a duty of care upon the attorney; (2) the breach of that duty; and (3) proximate causation.'"
We apply a "deferential approach to a trial court's decision to admit expert testimony, reviewing it against an abuse of discretion standard."
Expert witness opinion not reasonably supported by the factual record and an explanatory analysis may be excluded as net opinion.
"[I]f an expert cannot offer objective support for his or her opinions, but testifies only to a view about a standard that is `personal,' it fails because it is a mere net opinion."
Initially, we note plaintiff's complaint contained only two allegations of malpractice: (1) negligently omitting from the 2003 PSA the fact that plaintiff owned an interest in a piece of real property and (2) failing to include a clause stating the agreement would survive reconciliation. Both allegations concern defendants' representation of plaintiff in 2003. Relying on
Although Chagaris's report correctly recited an attorney's basic duties to a client, he then asserted, "[a]ttorneys are supposed to know the likelihood of success for types of cases they handle and are supposed to know the range of possible awards in those cases." While, noting these "principles are all applicable to the present legal malpractice case[,]" Chagaris presented no authority supporting his opinion. No reference was made to "any written document, or even unwritten custom or practice indicating that the consensus . . . of the legal community recognizing what would constitute a reasonable settlement under the facts presented in this case."
Chagaris also stated Munson's failure to include a reconciliation clause was a breach of the standard of care, without adequate explanation. Chagaris "offered no evidential support establishing the existence of a standard of care[.]"
As for causation, Chagaris seemingly presumed because, in his view, Munson committed professional negligence by failing to include a reconciliation provision, it caused plaintiff's damages. However, Chagaris failed to address the issue of enforcement of the reconciliation provision, particularly given the facts of this case, where Mazauskas was unrepresented at the time of the 2003 PSA and where the parties marriage continued for almost four years after the PSA.
In fact, the general rule in New Jersey is "reconciliation or resumption of cohabitation before a divorce abrogates the executory provisions of a separation agreement."
Chagaris's opinion that a reconciliation provision was legally enforceable is mere speculation, unsupported by the record or any authority. At the time of reconciliation, the record suggests the entire agreement remained executory and the parties did not express an intent to preserve the PSA; therefore, the PSA was likely abrogated when the parties resumed their marital relationship.
We find no basis to disturb the motion judge's conclusion that Chagaris's report was a net opinion, and, therefore, inadmissible. Having properly excluded Chagaris's testimony as a net opinion, the judge correctly granted summary judgment dismissing plaintiff's complaint, as without such expert proof, no reasonable jury could have found negligence on the part of defendants. Accordingly, summary judgment was properly granted.
Affirmed.