YA GLOBAL INVESTMENTS, L.P. VS. RSM McGLADREY, INC. YA GLOBAL INVESTMENTS, L.P. VS. HOLLAND & KNIGHT LLP (L-1715-15 AND L-3685-20, UNION COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED)
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-2918-20
A-2920-20
YA GLOBAL INVESTMENTS,
L.P., formerly known as Cornell
Capital Partners, L.P., YA
GLOBAL INVESTMENTS (US),
LP, YA OFFSHORE GLOBAL
INVESTMENTS, LTD.,
YORKVILLE ADVISORS GP,
LLC, and YORKVILLE
ADVISORS, LLC,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
RSM McGLADREY, INC.,
McGLADREY LLP (now known
as RSM US LLP), McGLADREY
& PULLEN, LLP., E. GEORGE
TEIXEIRA, JEFFREY H. YAGER,
and LAURENCE KARST,
Defendants-Appellants.
_____________________________
YA GLOBAL INVESTMENTS,
L.P., formerly known as Cornell
Capital Partners, L.P., YA
GLOBAL INVESTMENTS (US),
LP, YA OFFSHORE GLOBAL
INVESTMENTS, LTD.,
YORKVILLE ADVISORS GP,
LLC, and YORKVILLE
ADVISORS, LLC,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
HOLLAND & KNIGHT LLP,
HARRISON & HELD, LLP, and
JONATHAN STROUSE,
Defendants-Appellants.
_____________________________
Argued September 14, 2021 – Decided September 21, 2021
Before Judges Fisher, DeAlmeida and Smith.
On appeal from interlocutory orders of the Superior
Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Union County,
Docket Nos. L-1715-15 and L-3685-20.
Veronica E. Callahan (Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer
LLP) of the New York bar, admitted pro hac vice
argued the cause for appellants RSM McGladrey, Inc.,
McGladrey LLP, McGladrey & Pullen, LLP, E. George
Teixeira, Jeffrey H. Yager and Laurence Karst (Archer
& Greiner, PC, Veronica E. Callahan, Kathleen A.
Reilly (Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP) of the New
York bar, admitted pro hac vice, and Muriel Raggi
(Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP) of the New York
bar, admitted pro hac vice, attorneys; Thomas J. Herten,
Veronica E. Callahan, Kathleen A. Reilly, and Muriel
Raggi on the briefs).
A-2918-20
2
Daniel M. Feeney (Miller Shakman Levine & Feldman
LLP) of the Illinois bar, admitted pro hac vice argued
the cause for appellant Holland & Knight LLP
(Lowenstein Sandler LLP, Daniel M. Feeney and Kay
L. Dawson (Miller Shakman Levine & Feldman LLP)
of the Illinois bar, admitted pro hac vice attorneys;
David M. Wissert, of counsel and on the brief; Joseph
A. Fischetti, Daniel M. Feeney and Kay L. Dawson on
the briefs).
Matthew C. Ferlazzo argued the cause for appellants
Harrison & Held, LLP and Jonathan Strouse (Hinshaw
& Culbertson LLP, attorneys; Matthew C. Ferlazzo, on
the briefs).
Peter J. Frazza argued the cause for respondents YA
Global, Investments, LP, YA Global Investments (US)
LP, YA Offshore Global Investments, LTD., Yorkville
Advisors GP, LLC and Yorkville Advisors, LLC
(Gibbons PC, attorneys; Peter J. Frazza and Allen L.
Harris, on the briefs).
PER CURIAM
We granted leave to appeal to determine whether these accounting and
attorney malpractice actions should go forward or be stayed pending the
outcome of federal tax litigation.
The older case ("the RSM case") was the subject of a prior interlocutory
appeal that raised the same question. In that appeal – decided shortly after the
case was commenced six years ago – we reversed the trial court's denial of a
motion to stay the proceedings. YA Global Inv., L.P. v. RSM McGladrey, Inc.,
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No. A-2152-15 (App. Div. Oct. 4, 2016). The complaint generally alleged
plaintiffs received faulty tax and accounting advice that prompted the Internal
Revenue Service's determination that plaintiffs owed more than $100,000,000
in taxes and penalties. After its commencement, plaintiffs sought a stay of the
RSM case in light of Grunwald v. Bronkesh, 131 N.J. 483, 499-500 (1993),
which directed a stay of an attorney malpractice action in similar circumstances.
The RSM case was thereafter stayed by a trial court order mandated by our 2016
decision.
In 2020, plaintiffs commenced a separate action against Holland & Knight
LLP, Harrison & Held, LLP, and Jonathan Strouse ("the Holland & Knight
case"), alleging their negligence in connection with events leading up to the IRS
assessment at issue in the tax litigation. After unsuccessfully moving for a
dismissal on personal jurisdiction grounds, these defendants moved in the trial
court for a stay.
On April 23, 2021, the trial judge denied the motion for a stay in the
Holland & Knight case and granted plaintiffs' motion to lift the stay in the RSM
case. We discern from the judge's oral decision that the stay was lifted in the
RSM case and denied in the Holland & Knight case because the judge agreed
with plaintiffs' argument that the potential for their taking inconsistent positions
A-2918-20
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had evaporated once the tax trial ended and is no longer a concern even though
the tax court has yet to decide the matter. We granted leave to appeal these April
23, 2021 orders, accelerated these appeals, and now reverse both orders. 1
Our 2016 decision required a stay of the RSM case "pending resolution of
the tax litigation." YA Global, slip op. at 4.2 To avoid prejudice that might have
been caused by the likelihood of a lengthy hiatus, we declared then that our
ruling was "without prejudice to an appropriate application from either side for
relief from the stay to the extent necessary to preserve discovery that might
otherwise be lost while waiting disposition of the tax litigation." Ibid. (citing
Vastano v. Algeier, 178 N.J. 230, 240-41 (2003)). We also added the following
comments:
[B]ecause so little has been presented about the nature
and scope of the tax litigation, we do not foreclose a
future revisitation of the necessity or propriety of the
1
The parties advised at oral argument here that the status of the tax litigation
has not appreciably changed since the trial judge entered the April 23, 2021
orders and since we granted leave to appeal. In short, the tax matter remains
undecided.
2
Plaintiffs argue the scope of the stay should be determined by what is stated
in the 2016 trial court order entered after our earlier decision; through their
interpretation of the trial court order, plaintiffs attempt to convince us that the
grounds for lifting the stay are broader than stated in our 2016 opinion. We
reject this. Our 2016 mandate that the trial court proceedings be stayed pending
resolution of the tax litigation controlled the grounds for a lifting of the stay
until modified by this court or overturned by a higher court.
A-2918-20
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stay that we now mandate; indeed, the trial judge should
include within the stay order a requirement that
plaintiffs seasonably provide the trial court and
defendants with reports about the tax litigation's status.
[Ibid.]
Despite our cautions and the doors left ajar by our earlier decision, there
is no doubt we intended to halt the trial court proceedings until completion of
the pending litigation involving the IRS's assessment against plaintiffs. We
emphasized – absent any demonstrated need to preserve discovery that might be
lost or absent something else not then foreseen – that the RSM case should be
stayed "pending resolution of the tax litigation." Ibid.
That was what we then ordered and that remains our view of the situation.
The event that would trigger the lifting of the stay has yet to occur and, because
it has yet to occur, the judge's rulings on the stay motions were inconsistent with
our mandate. The parties to the tax litigation may have moved the ball into the
red zone but, until the ball is driven into the end zone, many questions – such as
whether defendants' advice was negligent and, if negligent, whether defendants'
acts or omissions were a proximate cause of any injuries sustained by plaintiffs
and, if so, how much damage, if any, was sustained – remain unknown and
unknowable. Any attempt to engage in discovery or commence a trial in these
negligence actions without knowing the tax court's disposition requires the court
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and the parties to enter a world of speculation about what is relevant in these
cases and causes the unnecessary expenditure of the parties' and our courts' time,
energies, and resources.3 The trial judge's decisions to allow these cases to go
forward in the absence of a tax court decision 4 constituted an abuse of discretion.
The April 23, 2021 orders in these matters are reversed and the matters
are remanded for the entry of orders staying those cases in conformity with this
opinion.5
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
3
Plaintiffs argue there would be no burden because the parties agreed on the
designation of a special discovery master and the discovery proceedings will
take place within the master's aegis. That, however, does not eliminate the
likelihood that the parties will enter into discovery disputes before the master
that may lead them back to the trial court and, potentially, here. See R. 4:41-5.
4
We do not at this time consider whether – once a final decision of the tax court
is rendered – the stays should remain in effect until any appeal rights in the tax
matter are exhausted.
5
At the risk of inviting additional litigation, we note that our prior decision –
and today's decision – do not preclude a good faith application for partial relief
from the stay for the purpose of preserving evidence that might otherwise be lost
as the parties wait for the events that will otherwise allow a complete lifting of
the stays.
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