It being a Friday in the Summer, we bring you legal malpractice news from the Jersey Shore, by way of Law.Com.  Legal malpractice issues arise wherever attorneys represent clients.  Clients sometimes bear some portion of the blame when cases/transactions go sour.  Here is a description of one, from Law.Com.

Charles Toutant writes: "Warning clients of their own duty to read critical documents, a New Jersey appeals court held Wednesday that a malpractice suit over Sills, Cummis & Gross’ drafting of a bank-merger agreement was time-barred and meritless.

The panel found in Sullivan v. Sills, Cummis, Zuckerman, Radin, Tischman, Epstein & Gross, A-4805-07, that the plaintiffs were experienced in the world of banking and failed to follow their lawyers’ advice to look over the agreement.

At issue was the suit by four directors of the former West Jersey Community Bank in Fairfield, N.J., who claimed they were shortchanged when Sovereign Bank of Wyomissing, Pa., bought their institution in 1995. They said their lawyers failed to incorporate into the merger agreement Sovereign’s oral promises to form a post-merger advisory board and, as a result, the plaintiffs lost out on stock options and fees they would have received from serving on the board.

The bank retained Sills Cummis in 1995 to represent it in the Sovereign negotiations. Soon after, the law firm instructed the plaintiffs and other board members in a letter that their duty of care included "carefully reviewing all documents and other items presented" and that "blind reliance on the opinions of legal or financial advisors without independent fact gathering or decision-making" was "viewed unfavorably by courts."

The merger agreement was approved on Sept. 29, 1995. It called for formation of the advisory board and for members of that board to receive stock options if the bank were to adopt a stock option plan for its main board of directors.

But Sovereign never formed the advisory board, and when it created a stock options plan for its board of directors in 1997, it never gave that benefit to the plaintiffs — John Sullivan, Peter Stewart, Raymond Durkin and Leonard Schneider.

In December 1999, the plaintiffs and two other former West Jersey directors sought to enforce the oral promises in a suit against Sovereign in federal court in Newark. Sovereign moved for dismissal for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted, and the case was dismissed in January 2001.

The plaintiffs then filed their malpractice suit against Sills Cummis and lawyers Steven Gross, Frederick Tudor and Victor Boyajian on Jan. 21, 2003. Hudson County Superior Court Judge Maurice Gallipoli granted summary judgment to the defendants, finding the suit time-barred and meritless."

 

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Andrew Lavoott Bluestone

Andrew Lavoott Bluestone has been an attorney for 40 years, with a career that spans criminal prosecution, civil litigation and appellate litigation. Mr. Bluestone became an Assistant District Attorney in Kings County in 1978, entered private practice in 1984 and in 1989 opened…

Andrew Lavoott Bluestone has been an attorney for 40 years, with a career that spans criminal prosecution, civil litigation and appellate litigation. Mr. Bluestone became an Assistant District Attorney in Kings County in 1978, entered private practice in 1984 and in 1989 opened his private law office and took his first legal malpractice case.

Since 1989, Bluestone has become a leader in the New York Plaintiff’s Legal Malpractice bar, handling a wide array of plaintiff’s legal malpractice cases arising from catastrophic personal injury, contracts, patents, commercial litigation, securities, matrimonial and custody issues, medical malpractice, insurance, product liability, real estate, landlord-tenant, foreclosures and has defended attorneys in a limited number of legal malpractice cases.

Bluestone also took an academic role in field, publishing the New York Attorney Malpractice Report from 2002-2004.  He started the “New York Attorney Malpractice Blog” in 2004, where he has published more than 4500 entries.

Mr. Bluestone has written 38 scholarly peer-reviewed articles concerning legal malpractice, many in the Outside Counsel column of the New York Law Journal. He has appeared as an Expert witness in multiple legal malpractice litigations.

Mr. Bluestone is an adjunct professor of law at St. John’s University College of Law, teaching Legal Malpractice.  Mr. Bluestone has argued legal malpractice cases in the Second Circuit, in the New York State Court of Appeals, each of the four New York Appellate Divisions, in all four of  the U.S. District Courts of New York and in Supreme Courts all over the state.  He has also been admitted pro haec vice in the states of Connecticut, New Jersey and Florida and was formally admitted to the US District Court of Connecticut and to its Bankruptcy Court all for legal malpractice matters. He has been retained by U.S. Trustees in legal malpractice cases from Bankruptcy Courts, and has represented municipalities, insurance companies, hedge funds, communications companies and international manufacturing firms. Mr. Bluestone regularly lectures in CLEs on legal malpractice.

Based upon his professional experience Bluestone was named a Diplomate and was Board Certified by the American Board of Professional Liability Attorneys in 2008 in Legal Malpractice. He remains Board Certified.  He was admitted to The Best Lawyers in America from 2012-2019.  He has been featured in Who’s Who in Law since 1993.

In the last years, Mr. Bluestone has been featured for two particularly noteworthy legal malpractice cases.  The first was a settlement of an $11.9 million dollar default legal malpractice case of Yeo v. Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman which was reported in the NYLJ on August 15, 2016. Most recently, Mr. Bluestone obtained a rare plaintiff’s verdict in a legal malpractice case on behalf of the City of White Plains v. Joseph Maria, reported in the NYLJ on February 14, 2017. It was the sole legal malpractice jury verdict in the State of New York for 2017.

Bluestone has been at the forefront of the development of legal malpractice principles and has contributed case law decisions, writing and lecturing which have been recognized by his peers.  He is regularly mentioned in academic writing, and his past cases are often cited in current legal malpractice decisions. He is recognized for his ample writings on Judiciary Law § 487, a 850 year old statute deriving from England which relates to attorney deceit.