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Thursday, September 26, 2019

Creditor claim against estate dismissed IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF VALMORE J. FORGETT, JR.,

IN THE MATTER OF THE
ESTATE OF VALMORE J.
FORGETT, JR.,
     Deceased.
_________________________

                Argued April 2, 2019 – Decided September 3, 2019

                Before Judges Yannotti, Rothstadt and Natali.

                On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
                Chancery Division, Passaic County, Docket No. P-
                183801.
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                           APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
 internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.




                                                     SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                     APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                     DOCKET NO. A-0443-17T4

PER CURIAM
       In this dispute over the distribution of the decedent Valmore J. Forgett

Jr.'s assets, Lisa Farina, a general judgment creditor of the estate, appeals from

the Chancery Division's August 17, 2017 order approving the final accounting

filed by the decedent's executors and awarding attorney's fees and executors'

commissions. She also appeals from earlier orders entered by the trial court in

2015, dismissing all but two of the exceptions she filed to a prior accounting,

and in 2016 dismissing her complaint to remove the Estate's co-executors.

Farina's exceptions and arguments related to the trial court's 2004 approval of a

stock purchase agreement (SPA) between the Estate and one of the co-executors,

the decedent's son, and her contention that her claim had priority over all

creditors.

      On appeal, Farina argues that the trial court erred by failing to recognize

her claim's priority over all of the Estate's other creditors, including the Internal

Revenue Service (IRS); by rejecting her claim that the SPA should be set aside

because it was the result of a breach of a fiduciary duty and fraud; and, by

concluding that she was "bound by the court approval of the [SPA]." Finally,

Farina challenges the trial court's award of executors' commissions and attorneys

fees because they were incurred in furtherance of the alleged breach of a

fiduciary duty. We find no merit to these contentions and affirm, substantially


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 for the reasons expressed by the judges who addressed Farina's claims in their

written and oral decisions that accompanied the orders under appeal.

      The nature of Farina's challenges require that we recite in detail the long

and tortuous history of her pursuit of payment from the Estate as derived from

the record. The decedent died in 2002 and his will named his son, Valmore J.

Forgett III (Val III), and a friend, Raymond Bentley, as co-executors of his

estate.

      During his lifetime, the decedent owned and operated Service Group, Ltd.

(Service Group) which had several subsidiaries, including Navy Arms Company

(Navy Arms). At one point, Gibbs Rifle Company, Inc. (Gibbs), which was

owned in part by Val III, was a selling agent for Navy Arms. The decedent also

owned a commercial building in Union City, an investment account with PNC

Bank (PNC), and a loan receivable from Gibbs. At the time of his death, the

decedent's liabilities included loans owed to PNC that were secured by liquid

assets and by a mortgage on the Union City property, and personal income taxes

for 2002.

      In early 2003, Citrin Cooperman & Company, LLP (Citrin) prepared

financial statements for Service Group for the six-month period ending in




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                                       3
 December 2002. The report stated that the company incurred net losses of about

$712,000 and that its liabilities exceeded the total assets by $1,771,000.

      Prior to the decedent's demise, in 2000, Farina was an employee of Navy

Arms. She filed a workers' compensation claim against her employer after

falling in an uninsured parking lot owned by the decedent individually. She

filed her complaint against decedent on October 4, 2002 and amended it to

include the Estate following his death. On May 27, 2005, she obtained a

judgment of $230,850 against the Estate.

      In addition to Farina, the decedent's second wife, Eleanor Seifert, also

initially maintained a claim against the Estate. Prior to their marriage, in 1997

Seifert and the decedent signed a prenuptial agreement, which contained a

provision that provided Seifert would receive "$50,000 per year" as continued

spousal support upon the decedent's passing. In May 2003, Seifert filed a

complaint against Val III and the Estate, alleging that Val III was in breach of

his fiduciary duty and was engaged in self-dealing, causing the Estate "to be

without funds with which to meet its obligations . . . ." In November 2003, the

Estate, Seifert, and Val III entered into a settlement agreement in which Val III

individually agreed to settle Seifert's claim against him and the Estate for

$400,000. In response to a motion filed by Seifert, on January 23, 2004, Judge


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 Burrell I. Humphreys approved the settlement after he found that there was no

opposition to the settlement and it was reasonable.

       Prior to Judge Humphreys' approval of the settlement agreement, Val III

pursued the SPA allegedly in order to satisfy a claim against the Estate made by

PNC. At the time, Service Group's and Navy Arms' obligations to PNC that the

decedent had personally guaranteed were in default and the Estate attempted to

find a buyer for Navy Arms. PNC had commenced two actions, one seeking to

foreclose its mortgage on the Union City property and the other seeking to take

inventory and assets from Navy Arms in which it had a security interest. When

the Estate could not find a buyer for Navy Arms, Val III offered to purchase the

stock for nominal value and assume the debt owed to PNC. The SPA provided

that Val III would pay the Estate $100 for the Service Group shares as well as

pay PNC "the sum of all principal, accrued interest and expenses thereon in full

satisfaction . . . ."

       On January 2, 2004, Bentley filed a complaint seeking "advice and

direction from the court approving" the Estate's sale of its shares in Service

Group to Val III. The complaint disclosed the allegations made by Seifert in her

complaint and that the settlement of those claims was pending at the time. It

also referred to the poor financial circumstances of the Estate. A copy of the


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                                       5
 SPA was attached to the complaint, which was served on Farina, whose claim

was also pending at that time. Farina did not challenge the proposed SPA. Judge

Humphreys approved the SPA on March 8, 2004, after he noted that no

opposition papers were filed by any party. The judge signed an order stating

"this order close[d] the case in the Chancery Division."

       In addition to having Val III through the SPA assume the then-

approximately $100,000 debt owed to PNC, the Estate sought approval for the

sale of the Union City property, which was encumbered by a mortgage held by

PNC.    Farina received notice of the proposed sale and the application for

approval. She did not file any opposition to the application.

       Judge Margaret Mary McVeigh entered an order approving the sale on

June 22, 2004. The property was sold for $611,000 on August 12, 2004. The

net proceeds totaled $561,494.29, with $130,798.03 being paid to PNC to

discharge the mortgage even though Val III assumed that debt. The Estate

applied the amount it paid to PNC from the sale to reduce the amount payable

to Val III as the assignee of Seifert's claims that the Estate valued to be in excess

of $1,000,000. After the payment to PNC, the Estate netted approximately

$400,000 from the sale.




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          As to amount owed to the IRS, the Estate retained Citrin in October 2003

to prepare and file the decedent's 2002 tax returns. Those returns indicated that

$33,050 was owed to the State on taxable income of $757,090, and $127,383 to

the IRS on taxable income of $762,939. At the time of filing, Citrin found that

the Estate did not have sufficient assets to pay the outstanding amount owed for

taxes.

         In 2005, the Estate hired Wiss & Company, LLP (Wiss) to provide a

second opinion about whether the losses and negative financial condition of

Service Group would impact the income taxes owed to the State and IRS. Wiss

concluded that the financial condition of Service Group as of December 2002

rendered a $2,434,463 loan owed to decedent by the company worthless. On

December 15, 2002, Wiss prepared an amended state income tax return, showing

no taxable income due to the loss of the written-off loan. It calculated that the

Estate was entitled to a state income tax refund of $13,050. Ultimately, the State

issued a refund of $8,229.83.

         Wiss filed an amended federal income tax return that also showed no

taxable income because of the uncollectable loan. It claimed that the Estate was

entitled to a refund of $28,827. The IRS disagreed and claimed the Estate owed

$127,383, as previously calculated, not including penalties or interest.


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       Neither PNC, the IRS, nor Farina took any action between 2005 and 2010

towards collecting any of the amounts owed to them by the Estate.

      Against this backdrop, in 2011, Farina began to pursue the collection of

the judgment she obtained against the Estate in 2005. After receiving documents

in response to an information subpoena issued to the Estate, in December 2012,

Farina filed a complaint seeking damages and equitable relief against Val III,

Bentley, and the Estate's attorneys for their alleged roles in diverting assets from

the Estate.

      Among the relief she sought in her complaint, Farina demanded that the

2004 approval of the SPA be set aside as it was a fraudulent conveyance under

N.J.S.A. 25:2-25 and that her judgment had priority over other the claims of

other creditors. However, after Judge McVeigh entered an order to show cause

on December 27, 2012, Farina voluntarily dismissed the complaint.

      Despite the dismissal, the judge directed the Estate to file a verified

complaint for judgment of insolvency and instructions. At the time, the Estate

owed money to the IRS, Farina, and Val III, the latter of whom had already

withdrawn from participating as a co-executor in matters that were central to the

Estate's administration.




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                                         8
       The Estate filed its complaint on April 30, 2013 seeking approval of its

accounting, instructions as to certain issues, and an award of administrative,

accounting and counsel fees.      Farina responded with her exceptions to the

accounting by again alleging that Val III breached his fiduciary duty and that he

and the Estate conspired to commit fraud in order to divert funds. Farina also

alleged that her claim against the Estate had priority because she filed the

complaint upon which her judgment against the Estate was based before the

decedent's death.

      In its response to Farina's contentions, the Estate maintained that Farina

and her counsel had an open offer to examine its files and asserted that Farina

was notified when the Estate applied to the court for approval of the SPA but

she never responded or otherwise objected to the application. Farina asserted

that she did not object to the application for approval because she was told that

the SPA would not affect the Estate's ability to pay her and she relied on such

statements. She also claimed she did not receive all the information requested

from the Estate regarding its ability to pay.

      On May 12, 2014, Farina filed a motion for partial summary judgment

seeking an adjudication that her claim was superior to the claims of other

creditors and an order directing Val III to pay his obligation to the Estate. In a


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                                        9
 supporting certification, Farina's counsel asserted that his client was first

informed that there may not be enough funds to pay her claim in 2011.

      After considering the parties' oral arguments in July 2014, on January 29,

2015, Judge McVeigh granted the Estate's motion to dismiss Farina's exceptions

and on April 30, 2015, dismissed the exceptions with prejudice, except for two

of them.1 In her accompanying written decision, the judge found that under Rule

4:50, there was no legal basis established and no facts provided to substantiate

allegations that in 2004 Judge Humphreys abused his discretion or was misled

when he approved the SPA. She found that he properly considered all issues

before him during his consideration of Val III's settlement with Seifert and the

SPA. Judge McVeigh specifically noted that there were no expert reports

supporting any allegation made by Farina regarding the financial condition of

the Estate or her claim of fraud. Judge McVeigh denied a subsequent motion

for reconsideration and reserved decision on the Estate's request for an interim

award of counsel fees in the amount of $210,088.




1
  The two exceptions related to the Estate's decision to charge Val III's claim
with the amount it paid to PNC rather than require him to pay the amount
himself, and whether an administrative claim for reimbursement he made was
valid.
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                                      10
       On August 14, 2015, Judge McVeigh awarded the Estate's attorneys

$39,483.75. The judge issued a written decision in which she found that Val III

still owed the Estate the $155,798 it paid to PNC, and that his administrative

claim was not valid. The judge also required a proposed distribution plan for

the Estate's remaining assets be filed. She later denied Val III's motion for

reconsideration of that order.

      On February 9, 2016, the Estate filed an amended verified final

accounting. In support of its application, it detailed claims for payment being

made by its counsel, the co-executors, the IRS, Farina and Val III. It explained

that under N.J.S.A. 3B:22-2, Farina was not a judgment creditor because her

judgment was obtained after decedent's death, rendering her a general claimant.

Farina initially responded by filing a complaint seeking the appointment of a

new executor to replace Val III and Bentley.

      After considering the parties' oral arguments on March 23, 2016, Judge

McVeigh denied Farina's application. In an oral decision placed on the record,

the judge concluded that Farina was a general judgment creditor and did not

have "extraordinary interest in what happened to this estate . . . ." She found

that removing Bentley as the "only functioning executor . . . would be gross

incompetence . . . ."


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                                      11
       After Farina filed her exceptions to the Estate's amended final accounting,

the parties once again appeared for oral argument on April 22, 2016. After

considering the parties' contentions, the judge again found that Farina was a

judgment creditor of the Estate, not entitled to priority over the IRS. The judge

stated that the "IRS stands before everybody," even though, as Farina argued,

under 26 U.S.C. § 6323, the IRS did not file a notice of federal tax lien . Judge

McVeigh ordered the Estate to file another amendment to its accounting, which

it did on August 5, 2016. In the accounting, the Estate indicated that it owed

$2,027,745.38 in liabilities, including the amount owed to Val III, but only had

$273,927.14 in assets, providing a breakdown of its proposed distribution.

Farina again filed exceptions.

      The parties appeared before Judge Bruno Mongiardo2 for oral argument

on the final accounting on August 10, 2017, before he issued his August 17,

2017 order approving the final accounting for the reasons stated in his written

decision issued on the same date. The judge concluded that the Estate's legal

fees had first priority under N.J.S.A. 3B:22-2(b). He noted that the exceptions

that Judge McVeigh did not dismiss were unrelated to legal fees and stated "[a]n



2
  Judge Mongiardo was assigned to the matter after Judge McVeigh retired in
2016.
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                                      12
 attorney's entitlement to be paid for services rendered is not merely a contractual

right but also a professional right." He found that that there was no legitimate

issue or dispute about the attorney's "time spent, hourly rates, or the

reasonableness or necessity of the charges for legal services" and that since

2013, most of the time expended was focused on addressing Farina's exceptions.

As to the executors' commissions, the judge cited to N.J.S.A. 3B:18-24 and -25

and observed that no prior court found that Val III engaged in behavior that

would justify depriving of the commission he was owed.

      Judge Mongiardo also concluded that the IRS was entitled to the balance

of the Estate's cash after all expenses were paid, including legal fees and

executor commission fees, assuming there were assets left. He too found that

Farina was not a judgment lien creditor entitled to any priority because her claim

was against the Estate, not the decedent. He noted that Judge McVeigh already

ruled on the matter of priority and reiterated that the IRS had a superior claim

to Farina's.

      The order entered by Judge Mongiardo on the same declared the Estate to

be insolvent and directed that the $273,927.14 in cash that the Estate had be

distributed pursuant to N.J.S.A. 3B:22-2. Specifically, the order approved a

previously made payment of $15,478.87 to the Passaic County Surrogate,


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                                       13
 directed that Bentley be paid $5,412.16 for co-executor commissions, the

Estate's attorneys be paid $208,531.84 in legal fees and expenses, and that a

payment of $44,504.27 be made to the IRS for partial payment of the outstanding

taxes. The order also provided that the amount owed by Val III to the Estate be

reduced by $20,412.16, in order to satisfy Val III's co-executor fees. The order

also stated that the IRS's claim had priority of all other claimants, but noted there

were not enough assets to pay the entire claim. This appeal followed.

      "The scope of appellate review of a trial court's fact-finding function is

limited" because "findings by the trial court are binding on appeal when

supported by adequate, substantial, credible evidence." Cesare v. Cesare, 
154 N.J. 394
, 411-12 (1998). We decline to disturb "factual findings and legal

conclusions of the trial judge unless . . . convinced that they are so manifestly

unsupported by or inconsistent with the competent, relevant and reasonably

credible evidence as to offend the interests of justice." Rova Farms Resort, Inc.

v. Inv'rs Ins. Co., 
65 N.J. 474
, 484 (1974) (quoting Fagliarone v. Twp. of N.

Bergen, 
78 N.J. Super. 154
, 155 (App. Div. 1963)).             On the other hand,

challenges to legal conclusions are subject to our de novo review. Estate of

Hanges v. Metro Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
202 N.J. 369
, 382-83 (2010).




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                                        14
       At the outset, we address what we consider to be the lynchpin to all of

Farina's contentions on appeal. Specifically, Farina argues that her judgment

was superior to all other creditors and that despite having received notice of the

Estate's application for approval of the SPA in 2004, she was entitled to raise a

challenge to it beginning in 2011.     We find no merit to these contentions

substantially for the reasons expressed by Judge McVeigh and Judge Mongiardo

in their thorough written and oral decisions.      We add only the following

comments.

      The appropriateness of the SPA under the circumstances that existed at

the time were considered by Judge Humphreys after notice to Farina. Bentley

properly filed a complaint for instructions because of Val III's involvement. "An

executor has the right to apply to the courts for direction and guidance in the

performance of the duties of his office or trust when he is in doubt as to the

extent of his powers and duties or as to the proper manner in which to proceed."

Fid. Union Tr. Co. v. Heller, 
16 N.J. Super. 285
, 292 (Ch. Div. 1951); see also

7 N.J. Practice, Wills and Administration § 1116 (Alfred C. Clapp & Dorothy

G. Black) (rev. 3d ed. 2019). Once Judge Humphreys decided that the SPA was




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                                       15
 bona fide, Farina was barred by N.J.S.A. 3B:14-363 from raising a challenge to

the judge's approval, absent circumstances warranting the vacating of Judge

Humphreys' judgment under Rule 4:50-1. When Farina attempted to raise a

challenge to that approval, Judge McVeigh found that there was no evidence of

any reason to vacate the 2004 approval. Her conclusion was supported by the

evidence in the record.

       In any event, and regardless of the bona fides of the SPA, Farina's repeated

contention that her judgment had priority over all creditors, including the IRS,

is without merit because it is legally incorrect. N.J.S.A. 3B:22-2 sets forth the

order of claimants to which an estate's personal representative shall make

payments where "assets of the estate are insufficient to pay all claims . . . ."


3
    N.J.S.A. 3B:14-36 states:

              Any sale or encumbrance to the fiduciary, his spouse,
              agent or attorney, or any corporation or trust in which
              he has a substantial beneficial interest, or any
              transaction which is affected by a substantial conflict
              of interest on the part of the fiduciary, is voidable by
              any person interested in the estate except one who has
              consented after fair disclosure, unless:

              a. The will or a contract entered into by the decedent
              expressly authorized the transaction; or

              b. The transaction is approved by the court after notice
              to interested persons.
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                                        16
 According to the statute, "debts and taxes" have priority over a creditor who

obtained a judgment against a decedent before his or her death, and those

creditors have priority over those who obtained a judgment against an estate or

personal representative. "A judgment against an executor[ or] administrator

. . . unlike a judgment against [a] decedent in his lifetime, is not entitled to a

preference over other claims payable out of the assets of the decedent's estate."

7 N.J. Practice, Wills and Administration § 1283 (Alfred C. Clapp & Dorothy

G. Black) (rev. 3d ed. 2019). See also Ward v. Kaycoff, 
9 N.J. Misc. 498
 (1931)

(noting that for judgments to be preferred, they must be actually entered during

decedent's lifetime); 7 N.J. Practice, Wills and Administration § 1279 (Alfred

C. Clapp & Dorothy G. Black) (rev. 3d ed. 2019). In fact, in cases such as

Farina's where the defendant dies during the litigation, our rules do not permit a

judgment to be entered against the decedent where the claim is not extinguished

by his or her death. See N.J.S.A. 2A:15-4 (eliminating the common law bar

against post-mortem suits and permitting actions against a decedent's estate);

see also R. 4:34-1(b) (addressing the substitution of representatives for deceased

parties to a litigation); Long v. Landy, 
35 N.J. 44
, 53 (1961).

   Also without merit is Farina's contention that the IRS was required to file

notice of its claim under 26 U.S.C. § 6323 in order to have priority over her


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                                       17
 claim. 26 U.S.C. § 6321 states that, "[i]f any person liable to pay any tax

neglects or refuses to pay the same after demand, the amount . . . shall be a lien

in favor of the United States upon all property and rights to property, whether

real or personal, belonging to such person." 26 U.S.C. § 6323(a) provides that

"[t]he lien imposed by section 6321 shall not be valid as against any purchaser,

holder of a security interest, mechanic's lienor, or judgment lien creditor until

notice thereof which meets the requirements of subsection (f) has been filed by

the Secretary." (Emphasis added).

   Because Farina never had a judgment against decedent, she had no lien

against his property prior to his death and was therefore a general claimant of

the Estate. See N.J.S.A. 2A:17-17 ("no real estate of any testator or intestate

shall be sold or in anywise affected by any judgment or execution against

executors or administrators"). With or without filing its lien, the IRS would thus

have priority over Farina's judgment under N.J.S.A. 3B:22-2(d).

      We also conclude that Farina's challenge to the award of commissions and

fees to the co-executors and the Estate's attorneys is without merit. We review

those awards for a "clear abuse of discretion," only "disturb[ing] a fee

determination . . . 'on the rarest of occasions . . . .'" Jacobs v. Mark Lindsay &

Son Plumbing & Heating, Inc., 
458 N.J. Super. 194
, 206 (App. Div. 2019)


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                                       18
 (quoting Packard-Bamberger & Co. v. Collier, 
167 N.J. 427
, 444 (2001)); see

also In re Estate of Summerlyn, 
327 N.J. Super. 269
, 272 (App. Div. 2000)

(quoting In re Estate of Moore, 
50 N.J. 131

, 149 (1967)) (addressing review of

awards of commissions).

      Here, Farina never pursued any challenge to the calculation of the Estate's

attorney's fees or the commissions awarded. Her only challenge was based upon

her allegation that Val III engaged in impermissible self-dealing through an

alleged conspiracy with counsel and Bentley. Both judges who considered her

claims found them to be without merit. We conclude that their findings were

supported by the evidence and their legal conclusions were correct. Because

Farina's allegations failed to establish any abuse of discretion in either the fee

award or the award of commissions, we have no reason to disturb the challenged

awards.

      Finally, to the extent that we have not specifically addressed any of

Farina's remaining arguments, we find them to be without sufficient merit to

warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).

      Affirmed.

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