LARRY SCHWARTZ v. NICHOLAS MENAS, ESQ

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                                                         SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                         APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                         DOCKET NO. A-3187-18T3
                                                                    A-4292-18T2

LARRY SCHWARTZ and
NJ 322, LLC,

          Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

NICHOLAS MENAS, ESQ.,
COOPER, LEVENSON, APRIL,
NIEDELMAN & WAGENHEIM, PA,
ERIC FORD and PULTE HOMES,

          Defendants-Respondents,

and

BRAD INGERMAN and MBI
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC.

     Defendants.
_______________________________

LARRY SCHWARTZ,

          Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.
NICHOLAS T. MENAS, ESQ. and
COOPER, LEVENSON, APRIL,
NIEDELMAN & WAGENHEIM, PA,

     Defendants-Respondents.
________________________________

         Argued October 14, 2020 (A-3187-18T3) and October
         22, 2020 (A-4292-18T2) – Decided November 6, 2020

         Before Judges Yannotti, Haas and Natali.

         On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
         Division, Monmouth County, Docket Nos. L-3904-11
         and L-4776-13.

         Bruce D. Greenberg and Giovanni De Pierro argued the
         cause for appellants Larry Schwartz and NJ 322, LLC
         in A-3187-18T3 (Lite DePalma Greenberg, LLC and
         De Pierro Radding, LLC, attorneys; Bruce D.
         Greenberg, Jonathan M. Carrillo, Giovanni De Pierro,
         Alberico De Pierro and David De Pierro, on the briefs).

         Giovanni De Pierro argued the case for appellant Larry
         Schwartz in A-4292-18T2 (De Pierro Radding, LLC,
         attorneys; Giovanni De Pierro and Alberico De Pierro,
         on the briefs).

         John L. Slimm argued the cause for respondents
         Nicholas Menas and Cooper Levenson, April,
         Niedelman & Wagenheim, PA, in A-3187-18T3
         (Marshall Dennehey, Warner, Coleman & Goggin,
         attorneys; John L. Slimm and Jeremy J. Zacharias, on
         the brief).

         Trevor J. Cooney argued the cause for respondents
         Pulte Homes and Eric Ford in A-3187-18T3 (Archer &


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                                   2
            Greiner, PC, attorneys; Stephen M. Fogler and Trevor
            J. Cooney, on the brief).

            Frederic L. Shenkman argued the cause for respondents
            Nicholas T. Menas, Esq. and Cooper Levenson April
            Niedelman & Wagenheim, PA in A-4292-18T2
            (Cooper Levenson, PA, attorneys; Frederic L.
            Shenkman and Jennifer B. Barr, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

      In these two appeals, calendared back-to-back and consolidated for

purposes of this opinion, plaintiffs challenge the orders of the trial court, which

granted defendants' motions to bar plaintiffs' expert reports supporting their

claims for lost profits under the "new business rule." Plaintiffs also appeal the

court's orders granting defendants' motions for summary judgment. We affirm.

                                        I.

      The parties are fully familiar with the procedural history and facts

underlying each appeal. Therefore, we need only summarize them here.

                                        A.

      Plaintiff Larry Schwartz is the owner of a dry cleaning business in Staten

Island, and has operated this enterprise as a sole proprietorship for

approximately twenty years. In his deposition testimony, Schwartz admitted he

has never owned any other businesses and that he has "never developed any

pieces of property" or real estate.

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                                        3
      However, Schwartz testified that between 2000 and 2011, he did purchase

two or three "shells" in Newark and "rehabbed them." Schwartz never disclosed

how he completed those "rehabs," that is, whether he directed and performed the

work himself or simply financed the projects. In an answer to an interrogatory,

Schwartz stated he also built three "two-family homes" in 2006 and 2007, and

"developed eight other properties which were total [rehabs] (all were in Newark)

. . ." between 2008 and 2012.        However, Schwartz provided no further

explanation concerning his role in the completion of this work and stated he did

not recall whether he earned any money from these endeavors.

      Nothing in the record indicates that Schwartz ever directed or worked on

a project where he would have to break ground, frame houses, and construct the

core and shell of each building. He had never created the infrastructure of water,

electric, sewage, roadways, parking lots, and signage for a new development.

Schwartz never claimed he owned any construction equipment or had a

workforce on hand to develop a large project. Schwartz also admitted he had no

experience constructing, planning, or financing an affordable housing project.

                                       B.

      With this background in mind, we turn first to Docket No. A-3187-18.

Schwartz alleged that in 2006, defendant Nicholas Menas, who was a member


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                                        4
of defendant Cooper, Levenson, April, Niedelman & Wagenheim, P.A.,

contacted Schwartz's friend, Salvatore Surace, about a real estate project.

According to Schwartz's deposition testimony, Surace "was a very wealthy

individual [who] had multiple years and experience of building[.]" However,

the record contains no further explanation of the nature of Surace's experience.

      According to Schwartz, Menas proposed that Schwartz and Surace

purchase a property in Monroe Township known as "Duncan Farms" an d

develop it as a mixed-use rental townhouse/commercial development. Schwartz

and Surace agreed, and Menas formed plaintiff NJ 322, LLC with Schwartz and

Surace as the sole members.      After the property was purchased, Schwartz

claimed that Menas and his law firm connived to have Duncan Farms rezoned

for affordable housing so that defendant Pulte Homes could build a mixed-used

market rate development on a different property that it owned in Monroe

Township.

      Once the nature of the Duncan Farms project changed to an affordable

housing development, Surace dropped out of the venture and sold his interest to

Schwartz. Schwartz had preliminary discussions with an individual who had

experience in obtaining financing for affordable housing projects, but this

individual did not partner with him. Schwartz asserted that thereafter Menas


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                                       5
and other defendants then prevented him from acting as the affordable housing

developer at Duncan Farms, and caused MBI Development Company to acquire

the project from Schwartz. Schwartz testified that he earned between $100,000

and $200,000 on the entire transaction.

      In their complaint, plaintiffs Schwartz and NJ 322, LLC (collectively

Schwartz) alleged legal malpractice against Menas and his law firm. Schwartz

also alleged that all the defendants conspired to commit fraud, conversion, and

tortious interference with a contract and business advantage. Schwartz sought

damages, including lost profits.

      In support of his claim for lost profits, Schwartz presented a report from

his expert, Dr. Robert Powell, Jr. Dr. Powell stated he "assess[ed] the profits

that would have likely been earned by [Schwartz] in the event that [his]

development goals and objectives in connection with the development of

[Duncan Farms] had not been frustrated by the alleged negligence and breach of

fiduciary duty of [d]efendants to" Schwartz.

      Dr. Powell identified two possible projects that could have been

constructed on the property. The first option would have involved building "100

residential townhomes for sale along with 20,000 square feet of commercial

space. The townhomes would be a mix of two and three bedroom units," and


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                                          6
would be sold at market prices. The commercial space "would feature a flexible

layout to permit multi-tenant occupancy." Dr. Powell's report did not account

for, or even mention, that Schwartz had never developed a project of this size or

complexity. Instead, the expert opined that based upon a similar project in a

neighboring municipality that had been constructed by "a national

homebuilder[,]" Schwartz would have earned a $5,135,804 profit if he had

developed this project.

      In the alternative, Dr. Powell postulated that Schwartz would have earned

a profit of $8,167,416 if he had constructed the development in the same manner

as the actual, experienced developer who completed it. That developer built 132

rental apartments "with controls designed to make such units affordable to low

and moderate income persons." Again, the expert's prognostications did not take

into account that Schwartz had never developed any project like this in the past.

                                       C.

      Schwartz raised similar allegations of legal malpractice and breach of

contract in the complaint he filed against Menas and his law firm in Docket No.

A-4292-18. In this complaint, Schwartz alleged that in order to keep him

engaged in the Duncan Farms project, Menas proposed that Schwartz purchase

two real estate properties in Egg Harbor Township and then develop them. One


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of the projects would be for affordable housing and the other would fe ature

"adult, market rate residential units."      Schwartz claims that he wanted to

undertake these projects, but Menas breached his duty to him by allowing

another individual to take over the development. Once again, Schwartz sought

damages, including lost profits.

      Dr. Powell prepared a written expert report concerning the proposed Egg

Harbor development project. Dr. Powell opined that Schwartz would have

earned: (1) a profit of $2,270,525 if he had constructed "a 'for sale,' upscale

condominium project" consisting of 208 units; (2) a profit of $3,579,724 if

Schwartz built "a 208-unit rental apartment project"; or (3) a $1,907,241 profit

if Schwartz had instead developed an age-restricted "for-sale condominium

project." As was the case with his other report, Dr. Powell did not mention

Schwartz's lack of experience in the area of real estate development in his

written opinion.

                                       II.

      After the conclusion of discovery, the defendants in each of these actions

filed motions seeking to bar Dr. Powell's reports under the new business rule.

In order to place these motions into their proper perspective, we will now discuss




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                                        8
this judicially-created restriction on the ability of a business entity to prove that

it has suffered lost profits in a business transaction.



                                         A.

        Lost profits are a measure of compensatory damages that may be

recoverable if they are capable of being established to a "reasonable degree of

certainty." Desai v. Bd. of Adjustment,  360 N.J. Super. 586, 595 (App. Div.

2003) (citing Stanley Co. of Am. v. Hercules Powder Co.,  16 N.J. 295, 314

(1954)). Anticipated profits that are too remote, uncertain, or speculative are

not recoverable. Ibid. That a plaintiff may not be able to fix its lost profits with

precision will not preclude recovery of damages, but courts require a

"reasonably accurate and fair basis for the computation of alleged lost profits."

V.A.L. Floors, Inc. v. Westminster Cmtys., Inc.,  355 N.J. Super. 416, 424 (App.

Div. 2002) (citations omitted). Thus, when the plaintiff is an ongoing business,

its past experience and success will "provide[] a reasonable basis for the

computation of lost profits . . . ." RSB Lab. Servs., Inc. v. BSI, Corp.,  368 N.J.

Super. 540, 556 (App. Div. 2004) (quoting V.A.L. Floors,  355 N.J. Super. at
 425).




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                                         9
      However, in 1936, our Supreme Court adopted the new business rule.

Weiss v. Revenue Bldg. & Loan Ass'n,  116 N.J.L. 208, 212 (E & A 1936).

Under the new business rule, "prospective profits of a new business are

considered too remote and speculative to meet the legal standard of reasonable

certainty." RSB,  368 N.J. Super. at 556 (citing In re Merritt Logan, Inc.,  901 F.2d 349, 356 (3d Cir. 1990)). As the Court of Errors and Appeals explained in

Weiss:

            There is a well-established distinction, in respect of the
            ascertainment of future probable profits, between a new
            business or venture and one in actual operation. In the
            first, the prospective profits are too remote, contingent,
            and speculative to meet the legal standard of reasonable
            certainty; while in the second, the provable data
            furnished by actual experience provides the basis for an
            estimation of the quantum of such profits with a
            satisfactory degree of definiteness.

            [Weiss,  116 N.J.L. at 212.]

      Since 1936, "[t]he vast majority of jurisdictions have rejected the new

business rule, as a per se rule of exclusion, and instead allow lost profits when

they can be proved with reasonable certainty." RSB,  368 N.J. Super. at 559

(citations omitted); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts, § 352 comment

b (1981). The Third Circuit has twice opined that if the matter were to be

addressed by our Supreme Court, the Court would no longer follow the new


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                                       10
business rule. See Lightning Lube, Inc. v. Witco Corp.,  4 F.3d 1153, 1176 (3d

Cir. 1993); Merritt Logan, 901 F.2d    at 356. However, although a plurality of

the Court hinted in 1992 that the new business rule may no longer be absolute,

Perini Corp. v. Greate Bay Hotel & Casino, Inc.,  129 N.J. 479, 484-89 (1992)

(overruled on other grounds, Tretina Printing, Inc. v. Fitzpatrick & Assocs., Inc.,

 135 N.J. 349, 358-59 (1994)), a majority of the Court has never so ruled.

      As we have made clear in a series of opinions discussing the new business

rule, "[o]ur role as an intermediate appellate court is to follow the dictates of the

Supreme Court or as in this case, its predecessor, the Court of Errors and

Appeals." RSB,  368 N.J. Super. at 560 (citing Nixon v. Lawhon,  32 N.J. Super.
 351, 355 (App. Div. 1954)); see also Bell Atl. Network Servs. v. P.M. Video

Corp.,  322 N.J. Super. 74, 98-99 (App. Div. 1999) (stating that "[w]hile the

arguments for abandonment of the 'new business rule' appear to be persuasive,

those arguments are not supported by a majority opinion of the Supreme Court");

V.A.L. Floors,  355 N.J. Super. at 425 n.8 (observing that "[i]n Bell Atlantic . . .

we adhered to the 'new business rule' of Weiss, despite the three judge plurality

opinion in Perini"). Therefore, whether or not "the time has come for our State

to join the majority of jurisdictions that have abandoned this anachronistic rule,"

we, like our predecessors, are constrained to conclude that "until the Supreme


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                                        11
Court says otherwise, the new business rule remains the law in this State." RSB,

 368 N.J. Super. at 560 (citations omitted). 1

                                        B.

      Having determined that the new business rule was in effect and binding

on the trial court when it considered defendants' motions to bar Dr. Powell's

expert report on lost profits, we address each case in turn.

      In Docket No. A-3187-18, all defendants moved for summary judgment.

In their motion, Menas and his law firm (collectively Menas) argued that

Schwartz had no experience as a developer of large residential projects and,

therefore, his claim for lost profits had to be dismissed under the new business

rule. Menas also asserted that Dr. Powell had only rendered a net opinion on

the question of lost profits.

      In written decisions rendered on August 21, 2018, the motion judge denied

defendants' motions for summary judgment. In denying Menas's motion, the

judge mentioned, but did not specifically address or resolve, Menas's argument

that Schwartz's claim for lost profits was barred by the new business rule. The




1
  Like the Appellate Division, the trial divisions of the Superior Court are also
bound by applicable Supreme Court precedent. White v. Twp. of N. Bergen,  77 N.J. 538, 549-50 (1978).
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                                       12
judge also made no express finding that Dr. Powell's report established

Schwartz's claim for lost profits with a reasonable degree of certainty.

      Instead, the motion judge merely concluded, without making any findings

of fact as required by Rule 1:7-4, that he was "satisfied that [Dr.] Powell use[d]

sound fact[s] when compiling his report as such calculations take into account

the various changes in development e.g. affordable housing and age restricted

requirements along with objective factors e.g. estimates of cost, capital

structure, sales prices and rental rates." Thus, the judge stated that Dr. Powel l's

"opinion does not constitute a net opinion."

      Because the motion judge failed to address the new business rule

argument, all defendants filed motions for reconsideration. In a written decision

rendered on September 28, 2018, the judge again declined to make any findings

concerning the applicability of the new business rule. However, the judge stated

he had been aware of the argument when he denied Menas's motion for summary

judgment, but Schwartz had "suggest[ed] there [was] a material dispute as to

whether [the new business rule] applies in this matter" in view of Schwartz's

argument that Dr. Powell's report could establish "a rational basis in which to

calculate profits with a reasonable degree of certainty." Therefore, the judge

denied Menas's motion for reconsideration.


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                                        13
        On September 12, 2018, Pulte Homes filed a specific motion to bar Dr.

Powell's report and testimony under the new business rule. Menas joined in this

motion shortly thereafter.

        By that time, the matter had been reassigned to Judge Lourdes Lucas, and

she made the motion returnable on October 12, 2018.2 Thus, Schwartz had thirty

days' notice of the motion and twenty-two days to file his response.

         Following oral argument on October 12, 2018, Judge Lucas granted

defendants' motion to bar Dr. Powell's report under the new business rule.

Directly addressing the critical issue of whether Schwartz was operating a new

business, Judge Lucas found in her oral opinion that Schwartz had never

developed a project like this in the past and admitted "he had no experience with

that." Nor was this an "expansion or a continuation of any . . . established

business."    The judge noted that Schwartz had no experience constructing

affordable housing and, although Schwartz claimed he would add a more

experienced partner to assist him, he never did so. Because Schwartz was a

"new business," Judge Lucas concluded his claim for lost profits was barred

under the Supreme Court's decision in Weiss.




2
    Judge Lucas also scheduled the trial to begin on October 29, 2018.
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                                       14
      While Judge Lucas stated that her ruling was based on the new business

rule and not grounded on N.J.R.E. 702 or N.J.R.E. 703, she nevertheless

observed that the lost profits damages discussed in Dr. Powell's report "are

somewhat speculative, because there could have been many scenarios of how

this property could have been developed." The judge continued:

                   [Dr.] Powell, when he presents his estimation of
            lost profits[,] [he] present[s] various scenarios of what
            the profits would be depending on what kind of
            development was done, if it was a mixed use
            development, if it was an affordable housing
            development, and he calculates two possible scenarios
            of lost profits, taking into consideration the different
            type of development that would have been done.

                  Again, the [c]ourt finds that this is further support
            for the contention that the calculation of lost profits in
            this new venture would have been . . . is too remote to
            calculate at this time . . . at the time.

      Schwartz filed a motion for reconsideration.        He argued he was not

operating a new business and, instead, his development of a 100 to 132 unit

project, including roads, utilities, and parking lots, was merely an extension of

his undefined prior work rehabilitating several dwellings.          Schwartz also

asserted that Judge Lucas ignored the law of the case established by the motion

judge's ruling that Dr. Powell "use[d] sound fact when compiling his report."

Finally, Schwartz alleged that defendants' motion to bar Dr. Powell's report was


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                                       15
an improper dispositive motion for summary judgment disguised as a motion in

limine. Because of this, Schwartz argued that the judge should have rejected the

motion under our decision in Cho v. Trinitas Regional Medical Center,  443 N.J.

Super. 461 (App. Div. 2015).

      Judge Lucas denied Schwartz's motion for reconsideration.            In her

November 30, 2018 oral opinion, Judge Lucas found that Schwartz's arguments

concerning whether he was a "new business" had already been considered by

her and he presented nothing new in support of them.

      In concluding that Schwartz's law of the case argument also lacked merit,

the judge found that the motion judge never made a ruling on the question of

whether Schwartz's claim for lost damages was barred by the new business rule,

despite Menas's two requests that he do so. As Judge Lucas stated, the motion

judge never ruled that Dr. Powell's report "should be admissible" and he did not

"find or make a finding or a holding that the new business rule did or did not

apply." Accordingly, there was "no basis upon which to find that any of [the

motion judge's] opinions or decisions in this case would constitute a law of the

case that would prevent this [c]ourt from finding, as it did in its decision, that

the new business applied . . . ."




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      Turning to Schwartz's contention under Cho, Judge Lucas found that the

motion to bar Dr. Powell's report on the lost damages issue was not a dispositive

one because Schwartz continued to claim he was entitled to other damages,

including the costs he incurred for attorney's fees, permit filing fees, surveys,

and other studies he was allegedly required to prepare in order to consummate

the transactions and develop the property.

      Thereafter, all defendants filed motions for summary judgment. At that

time, Schwartz conceded he could not establish any claim for actual damages.

Therefore, Judge Lucas entered summary judgment in defendants' favor. This

appeal followed in Docket No. A-3187-18.

                                       C.

      The parties' pre-trial motion practice followed a similar route in Docket

No. A-4292-18. After discovery was completed, Menas filed a motion for

summary judgment, which Judge Lucas denied on December 7, 2018 because

there were still material disputes of fact between the parties as to causation and

damages.

      On January 30, 2019, Menas filed a motion to bar Dr. Powell's report for

the same reasons it had been barred in Docket No. A-3187-18. Oral argument

on the motion was held on March 1, 2019 and, beforehand, Schwartz had ample


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                                       17
opportunity to file his response to the motion. Schwartz's opposition to the

motion was virtually identical to the positions he advanced in the earlier case.

      In her oral opinion rendered on March 1, 2019, Judge Lucas granted

Menas's motion to bar Dr. Powell's report under the new business rule. Judge

Lucas found that the rule applied to Schwartz because he had

            no experience in real estate development. He never
            developed property. [Schwartz] did no research as to
            whether there was a need for housing in Egg Harbor,
            nor did [Schwartz's] prior endeavors have any relation
            to this business. [Schwartz] didn't have any established
            track record in the development of projects and
            profitability of projects carried out by [him]. There is
            no evidence provided that [Schwartz's] business was an
            expansion or a continuation of any established
            business.

      As she did in the first case, Judge Lucas again found that Dr. Powell's

calculation of Schwartz's alleged lost profits was

            based on assumptions which . . . are too remote and
            speculative to support Dr. Powell's contentions. There
            are just too many factors and too many what ifs that
            would have to happen in order for any of these profits
            in either alternative one, two or three to . . . come to
            fruition.

Thus, the judge concluded:

                   The very fact that Dr. Powell opined that there
            could have been three possible scenarios for the
            development of the project is also indicative of the fact
            that the development of the project and any profitability

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                                      18
              of the project was, again, too speculative, as it would
              depend on how the project would be developed. And
              again, the [c]ourt won't reiterate here, but there were
              various assumptions that Dr. Powell made in coming up
              [with] his calculations that are, again, the [c]ourt finds,
              that would be remote and speculative.

        Judge Lucas also rejected Schwartz's contention that Menas's motion was

improper under Cho. The judge found that the motion to bar Dr. Powell's report

was not a dispositive motion and, just as importantly, the motion had not been

filed on the eve of trial. 3

        Thereafter, Menas filed a motion for summary judgment. After Schwartz

conceded he could not prove that he sustained any actual damages, Judge Lucas

granted the motion on April 26, 2019. This appeal followed in Docket No. A-

4292-18.

                                         III.

        In both appeals, Schwartz argues that we should determine that New

Jersey should no longer apply the new business rule when an inexperienced

entity with no proven track record in the enterprise it undertakes seeks lost

profits. In the alternative, Schwartz asserts he was not operating a new large-

scale residential real estate development business because the projects he hoped



3
    The judge stated in her opinion that the trial date was set for August 20, 2019.
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                                         19
to complete were merely extensions of his prior "business" of rehabilitating

homes. Therefore, he argues that Judge Lucas erred by barring his expert's

reports on his claims for lost profits. We disagree.

         As discussed above, it is clear that the new business rule has been

discontinued in a majority of the states. Nevertheless, our Supreme Court has

never repudiated it and, as we observed in RSB, we continue to be bound by the

Court's decision in Weiss. Therefore, we reject Schwartz's contention on this

point.

         We are also satisfied that Judge Lucas correctly barred Dr. Powell's

reports on Schwartz's lost profits claims under the new business rule. We

exercise limited review of a trial judge's decision to exclude expert testimony .

Townsend v. Pierre,  221 N.J. 36, 52-53 (2015) ("The admission or exclusion of

expert testimony is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.");

Hisenaj v. Kuehner,  194 N.J. 6, 12 (2008) (stating that the trial court's

evidentiary decision to admit expert testimony is reviewed for an abuse of

discretion).

         Here, we detect no abuse in discretion in Judge Lucas's reasoned

conclusion that Schwartz was a "new business" subject to the rule. Schwartz

testified he was not a developer and he had no direct experience or training in


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                                      20
this area. Contrary to the argument he raises on appeal, Schwartz also admitted

he had no business other than his dry cleaning operation in Staten Island. He

did not claim that he had any construction equipment on hand or employees to

operate it. He never directed the construction of a project involving dozens of

townhomes, condominiums, or apartments; had no knowledge of, or experience

in, affordable housing; and was never responsible for building roads and parking

lots or installing utilities for multiple residences.

      Judge Lucas correctly rejected Schwartz's assertion that his attempt to

develop these properties was merely an extension of his prior, unexplained

rehabilitation and building work on several homes. In this regard, Schwartz's

reliance on RSB in support of this assertion is misplaced.

      In that case, the plaintiff operated a "bleeding station" to which doctors

referred patients to have their blood drawn for later analysis at a separate

laboratory. RSB,  368 N.J. Super. at 544. The plaintiff then decided to transform

her business into a full service laboratory, using the same personnel and client

referral system. Id. at 544, 562. Under these circumstances, we concluded that

the new business rule did not apply to bar the plaintiff's claim for lost profits.

Id. at 562. We stated:

             [The] plaintiff had operated a bleeding station and
             sought to expand that business using existing clients

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                                         21
             and referring physicians, thereby resulting in readily
             ascertainable profits. [The] [p]laintiff did not need to
             find new business as in Weiss, or new customers as in
             Seaman [v. U.S. Steel Corp.,  166 N.J. Super. 467 (App.
             Div. 1979).]

             [Ibid.]

      In the present case, defendant had no existing business that he could

expand into a major land development enterprise. Whatever his role had been

in the rehab projects he claimed to have undertaken, the management of projects

of the size and scope envisioned here would be drastically different. Thus, this

case is much more like Seaman than RSB. In Seaman, the plaintiffs operated a

marine salvage business. Id. at 469. The plaintiffs determined that if they could

build a large floating crane, they could reap additional profits from the new work

they would be able to perform. Ibid. The plaintiffs bought steel from the

defendant to build the crane, but the steel was defective, and the plaintiffs could

not construct or operate the crane. Id. at 469-70.

      The plaintiffs sued the defendants for the profits they lost when they were

not able to bid on a contract that required the use of a crane. Id. at 472. In

concluding that the plaintiffs' claim was barred by the new business rule, we

found that the plaintiffs had "never operated a crane of this size in their business,

nor had they ever rented such a crane to others. It was to be a new operation in


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                                        22
their business without prior experience as to the floating crane's potential as

profit-producing equipment." Id. at 475.

      Similarly, Schwartz had never undertaken the full responsibility for a

major residential development project like that envisioned in these two cases.

He had no experience at all in completing ventures of this nature. Thus, he was

definitely engaging in an entirely new business that was completely different

from whatever his role had been in the few rehab projects he performed.

      We also reject Schwartz's argument that he could have partnered with

other individuals with more experience and completed the projects. Surace lost

interest in the Monroe Township project after it was converted to an affordable

housing development and he sold his interest to Schwartz. Although Schwartz

contacted someone who had experience in this area, he never consummated a

partnership with this individual. And, if he had done so, this would have been

further evidence that this was an entirely new enterprise from Schwartz's prior

involvement in the rehab projects.

      Because Schwartz was unquestionably a new business within the

intendment of the governing case law, his claim for lost profits was not permitted

by the new business rule. Therefore, Judge Lucas correctly barred Schwartz

from introducing Dr. Powell's reports in support of that claim.


                                                                          A-3187-18T3
                                       23
      Finally on this point, we again note that although Judge Lucas based her

decision to bar Dr. Powell's reports on the new business rule, she also found that

his opinions were highly speculative. Dr. Powell was not sure what type of

developments Schwartz would attempt to construct on the sites, made no attempt

to analyze what role Schwartz's complete lack of experience might have on the

projected profits, and based his profit projections on successful projects

undertaken by fully-experienced firms in other locations. Thus, Dr. Powell's

reports did not establish Schwartz's claims for lost profits with the reasonable

degree of certainty required by our case law. RSB,  368 N.J. Super. at 555.

                                        IV.

      In both appeals, Schwartz contends that Judge Lucas should not have

considered defendants' motions to bar Dr. Powell's reports because the motions

were actually dispositive summary judgment motions that were filed too close

to the start of trial in violation of Cho. Again, we disagree.

      In Cho, we criticized the practice of filing a motion in limine seeking the

exclusion of an expert's testimony just as the trial was about to begin. In doing

so, we stated that "[w]hen granting a motion will result in the dismissal of a

plaintiff's case or the suppression of a defendant's defenses, the motion is subject




                                                                            A-3187-18T3
                                        24
to Rule 4:46, the rule that governs summary judgment motions." Cho,  443 N.J.

Super. at 471.

      In Cho, the defendant filed a motion in limine on the eve of trial, seeking

dismissal of the defendant's claims based on the prior barring of plaintiff's

expert, which the judge granted. Id. at 465-67. We reversed and held that

            our commitment to the fair administration of justice
            demands that we protect a litigant's right to proceed to
            trial when he or she has not been afforded the
            opportunity to respond to dispositive motions at a
            meaningful time and in a meaningful manner. We
            therefore hold that . . . [the] resulting dismissal of a
            complaint deprives a plaintiff of due process of law.

            [Id. at 474-75.]

      The facts here are plainly distinguishable from Cho. In Docket No. A-

3187-18, Menas had been seeking to bar Dr. Powell's report under the new

business rule since August 2018. After the motion judge failed to consider this

issue when he denied Menas's motion for summary judgment on August 21,

2018, Menas raised the issue again in a motion for reconsideration. When the

motion judge denied the motion for reconsideration without addressing the new

business rule argument, all defendants moved on September 12, 2018 to bar Dr.

Powell's report. Judge Lucas set an October 12, 2018 return date for this motion.

Thus, Schwartz had ample notice that defendants were seeking to apply the new


                                                                         A-3187-18T3
                                      25
business rule to bar Dr. Powell's report, and ample time to respond before the

judge granted the motion on October 12.

      Schwartz had even more time to address Menas's motion to bar the report

in Docket No. A-4292-18. There, Menas filed the motion on January 30, 2019,

the motion was not argued until March 1, 2019, and the trial was not scheduled

to begin until August 20, 2019.

      Under these circumstances, we discern no basis for disturbing Judge

Lucas's decisions under Cho. In both cases, Schwartz had sufficient notice of

the motions and a full opportunity to respond to them. In addition, the summary

judgment dismissal in each matter was the product of a separate motion.

Therefore, Schwartz was not deprived of due process.

                                       V.

      In Docket No. A-3187-18, Schwartz argues that Judge Lucas's "grant of

defendants' motion to bar [Dr. Powell's report] violated the law of the case

doctrine, since [the motion judge] had previously repeatedly ruled that the new

business rule did not bar [Schwartz's] claims." This argument lacks merit.

      "The 'law of the case' doctrine embodies 'the principle that where there is

an unreversed decision of a question of law or fact made during the course of

litigation, such decision settles that [question] for all subsequent stages of the


                                                                          A-3187-18T3
                                       26
suit." L.T. v. F.M.,  438 N.J. Super. 78, 88 (App. Div. 2014) (quoting Slowinski

v. Valley Nat'l Bank,  264 N.J. Super. 172, 179 (App Div. 1993)).               The

application of the doctrine is confined to preventing "relitigation of a previously

resolved issue." In re Estate of Stockdale,  196 N.J. 275, 311 (2008). However,

the doctrine is not inflexible, and a court maintains the discretion to revisit an

earlier ruling whenever those "'factors that bear on the pursuit of justice and

particularly, the search for truth'" outweigh "the value of judicial deference for

the rulings of [the] coordinate judge." Hart v. City of Jersey City,  308 N.J.

Super. 487, 498 (App. Div. 1998) (quoting State v. Reldan,  100 N.J. 187, 205

(1985)).

      Here, Schwartz contends that the motion judge made a definitive ruling

that the new business rule did not apply to bar his claim for lost profits and that

Judge Lucas was bound to follow this ruling throughout the rest of the

proceeding. However, Schwartz's assertion fails because the motion judge made

no such ruling in his decision denying Menas's motion for summary judgment

or in his denial of Menas's motion for reconsideration.

      As discussed above, the motion judge did mention that Menas had argued

that the new business rule required the dismissal of Schwartz's claim for lost

profits. However, the judge never addressed that argument in the rest of his


                                                                           A-3187-18T3
                                       27
decision. Instead, without making any findings of fact as required by Rule 1:7-

4, the judge cryptically concluded that he was "satisfied that [Dr.] Powell use[d]

sound fact[s] when compiling his report" and, therefore, "such opinion does not

constitute a net opinion."

      Contrary to Schwartz's argument, this statement did not constitute a ruling

that the new business rule was inapplicable to Schwartz, and it was also not a

ruling that Dr. Powell had demonstrated Schwartz's alleged lost profits with a

reasonable degree of certainty as required by the governing case law. RSB,  368 N.J. Super. at 555. Because the motion judge never addressed the key issue

underlying Menas's motion for summary judgment, Judge Lucas was in no way

bound by the motion judge's prior decisions when she properly considered

defendants' motions to bar Dr. Powell's report under the new business rule.

Therefore, we reject Schwartz's contention on this point.

                                       VI.

      In sum, we affirm Judge Lucas's orders barring Dr. Powell's expert reports

in both cases, denying Schwartz's motion for reconsideration in Docket No. A -

3187-18, and granting defendants' motions for summary judgment in both cases.

      Affirmed.




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                                       28


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