ANTHONY VALVANO v. STUART KRAMER

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                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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                                                         SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                         APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                         DOCKET NO. A-0355-17T1

ANTHONY VALVANO,
individually and on behalf
of KST&V,

          Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

STUART KRAMER, JEFFREY
SMITH, JAVIER TORRES, and
KRAMER, TORRES & SMITH,
LLC,

          Defendants-Respondents,

and

HOWARD BOOKBINDER,

     Defendant.
_____________________________

                    Submitted January 22, 2019 – Decided February 6, 2019

                    Before Judges Sumners and Mitterhoff.

                    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                    Division, Bergen County, Docket No. L-2026-16.
             Strasser & Associates, PC, attorneys for appellant
             (William I. Strasser, on the briefs).

             Thomas E. Maloney, Jr., attorney for respondents
             Stuart Kramer, Jeffery Smith, Javier Torres, and
             Kramer, Smith, Torres & Valvano, LLC .

PER CURIAM

      Plaintiff Anthony Valvano appeals from a final judgment entered by the

Law Division, after a bench trial, awarding defendants Stuart Kramer, Jeffrey

Smith, and Javier Torres $116,283.58 on their counterclaim against plaintiff. 1

We affirm.

      We recite the relevant facts from the record. Valvano, Kramer, Smith,

and Torres were members in a public adjusting business, Kramer, Smith, Torres

& Valvano, LLC ("KSTV"). Each member obtained business for KSTV through

solicitation or referral of clients, and all public adjusting fees collected from the

clients were to be paid to KSTV. Kramer served as KSTV's managing member

from its incorporation in 1999 until approximately 2007. Pursuant to KSTV's

operating agreement, the managing member has the "authority and power to

conduct and control the business, affairs, and operations of the Company[.]"




1
  Kramer, Smith, and Torres asserted the counterclaim individually and on
behalf of Kramer, Smith, Torres & Valvano, LLC.
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      While he was the managing member, Kramer instituted a procedure

requiring a member to submit an expense report with supporting receipts to

KSTV in order to receive reimbursement for business expenses. Using these

reports, KSTV deducted the expenses from its income when it filed income tax

returns. Kramer, Smith, and Torres routinely submitted such expense reports

and received reimbursements, but Valvano did not submit expense reports or

seek reimbursement in the usual course of business.

      In 2008, however, Valvano presented Kramer and Smith with a

handwritten document listing unpaid business expenses in excess of $275,000

for which he sought reimbursement. The document also listed public adjusting

fees totaling $68,059.96 retained by Valvano, which Valvano acknowledged

were otherwise payable to KSTV. At trial, the document was marked as D-6

and admitted into evidence. Valvano testified that he withheld the $68,059.96

to offset his unreimbursed business expenses.

      Additionally, at trial Valvano presented a document that he had prepared

in September 2016. The document listed fees totaling $48,223.62 due to KSTV

after 2009. The document was marked as D-7 and admitted into evidence.

Valvano acknowledged he owed these fees to KSTV in addition to the fees listed




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in D-6, but that he retained the fees to offset his unreimbursed business

expenses.

      In late 2012, the members agreed that KSTV would be dissolved, because

Valvano wished to pursue claims related to losses caused by Hurricane Sandy,

while the other members did not. Thereafter, on August 20, 2015, Valvano filed

a complaint in the Chancery Division seeking, among other things, an

accounting and audit of KSTV and the judicial dissolution of KSTV.2

      On October 23, 2015, Kramer, Smith, and Torres, individually and on

behalf of KSTV ("counterclaim plaintiffs"), filed an answer and counterclaim.

The counterclaim sought damages against Valvano for public adjusting fees due

to KSTV that were inappropriately waived, misapplied, or not turned over to the

company. On March 3, 2016, the Chancery Division ordered that Valvano was

entitled to examine the books and records of KSTV and conduct an audit of the

company at his own expense. The Chancery Division also dismissed Valvano's




2
  The complaint also sought an accounting and audit of Kramer, Torres & Smith,
LLC, an alleged successor to KSTV, and alleged a claim of accounting
malpractice against Howard Bookbinder. On December 15, 2015, the claim
against Kramer, Torres, & Smith LLC was dismissed without prejudice for lack
of prosecution. On February 18, 2016, the claim against Bookbinder was
dismissed without prejudice via a consent order.
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complaint without prejudice and transferred the counterclaim to the Law

Division.

      Judge James J. DeLuca conducted a bench trial on the counterclaim on

April 24 and 25, 2017. At trial, the counterclaim plaintiffs sought $515,481.29

in damages. After trial, on July 27, 2017, Judge DeLuca issued a written

decision finding that Valvano was only liable for $68,059.96 in damages. The

judge found that no provision in KSTV's operating agreement required that each

member collect fees owed to KSTV by its clients or made an individual member

liable to KSTV for a client's non-payment of fees. The judge also found that the

counterclaim plaintiffs presented insufficient evidence to prove that the sum

sought was accurate, noting that "Kramer's testimony as to the creation and

updating of the accounts receivable listing calls into question the accuracy of

the accounting."

      Judge DeLuca found, however, that Valvano had admitted that he owed

$68,059.96 to KSTV, as documented in D-6. Further, the judge found that

Valvano was not entitled to offset his claimed business expenses against the

counterclaim. The judge reasoned:

            It is uncontroverted that Kramer, Smith and Torres
            complied with the procedures established for expense
            reimbursement, while Mr. Valvano did not. The
            expense reimbursement procedure is consistent with the

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            terms of the Operating Agreement, and the expenses, as
            presented by the members, were properly deducted on
            the tax returns of KSTV. Further, except for the
            handwritten list of alleged expenses (Exhibit D-6), Mr.
            Valvano's claims for expenses are undocumented and
            not credible.

Additionally, the judge found that the counterclaim would have been barred by

the six-year statute of limitations,  N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1.6, but that Valvano had

waived the defense by failing to plead the statute of limitations as an affirmative

defense.

      Accordingly, Judge DeLuca found that the counterclaim plaintiffs were

entitled to a judgment in the sum of $68,059.96 and directed the counterclaim

plaintiffs to submit a form of judgment under the five-day rule, Rule 4:42-1(c).

On July 28, 2017, counsel for the counterclaim plaintiffs submitted a form of

judgment to the court, along with a letter requesting that the written decision

and proposed judgment be amended to reflect an additional $48,223.62 in

damages. The proposed additional damages were for fees Valvano admitted he

had retained that were due to KSTV, as reflected in D-7. On August 8, 2017,

Valvano's counsel submitted a letter to the court objecting to any amendment of

the judgment.

      On August 11, 2017, Judge DeLuca issued a supplemental written

decision finding that the counterclaims plaintiffs were entitled to recover the

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additional $48,223.62. Accordingly, the judge entered judgment in favor of the

counterclaim plaintiffs in the sum of $116,283.58. Valvano appealed the final

judgment.

      On appeal, Valvano raises the following points for our review:

            I. THE COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR
            BY FAILING TO APPLY THE DOCTRINE OF
            LACHES TO THE DEFENDANTS' CLAIMS.

            II. THE COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE
            ERROR BY FAILING TO APPLY THE DOCTRINE
            OF ESTOPPEL TO THE DEFENDANTS' CLAIMS.

            III. THE COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE
            ERROR WHEN IT FAILED TO APPLY THE
            DOCTRINE OF WAIVER TO THE DEFENDANTS'
            CLAIMS.

            IV. VALVANO DID NOT                 'CONVERT'       ANY
            PROPERTY OF KST&V.

Having reviewed the record and applicable legal principles, we affirm for

substantially the reasons expressed in Judge DeLuca's well-reasoned written

opinions. We add only the following comments.

      We decline to address Valvano's first three points, as he failed to raise the

defenses of laches, estoppel, and waiver to the trial court. See State v. Robinson,

 200 N.J. 1, 20 (2009) ("[I]t is a well-settled principle that our appellate courts

will decline to consider questions or issues not properly presented to the trial


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court when an opportunity for such a presentation is available unless the

questions so raised on appeal go to the jurisdiction of the trial court or concern

matters of great public interest." (alteration in original) (quoting Nieder v. Royal

Indem. Ins. Co.,  62 N.J. 229, 234 (1973))). Other than pleading these defenses

in his answer to the counterclaim, Valvano never raised these arguments to the

trial court. See Mancini v. Twp. of Teaneck,  179 N.J. 425, 433 (2004) ("A mere

one-time mention of laches in a defendant's answer is insufficient to preserve it

through the span of litigation."); Williams v. Bell Tel. Labs. Inc.,  132 N.J. 109,

118 (1993) (holding that defendant "waived the statute-of-limitations defense

by its failure to assert that defense at any stage of the proceedings after pleading

the statute in its [a]nswer.")

      Turning to Valvano's contention that he did not convert any property of

KSTV, we defer to the trial judge's finding that Valvano was not entitled to

retain the fees that he acknowledged were due to KSTV to offset his claimed

business expenses. See Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Inv'rs Ins. Co.,  65 N.J. 474,

484 (1974) ("Findings by the trial judge are considered binding on appeal when

supported by adequate, substantial and credible evidence."). The trial judge's

finding that Valvano was not authorized to receive reimbursement for his

claimed business expenses because he did not comply with the procedures


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established for expense reimbursement is supported by substantial credible

evidence in the record.

      To the extent we have not specifically addressed any remaining arguments

raised by Valvano, we find they lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a

written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).

      Affirmed.




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