73 A.D.2d 595 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1979
— In two actions to recover damages for legal malpractice, defendants appeal from two judgments (one in each action) of the Supreme Court, Orange County, each entered September 18, 1978, which, after a joint trial by jury, held defendants liable to the corporate plaintiff for $30,000, and to the estate of Isidore Goodstein for $90,000. Judgments reversed, on the law and the facts, and new trial granted in accordance with the views set forth herein, with costs to abide the event. Defendants’ alleged malpractice arose out of their representation of plaintiffs in the case of Rex-Noreco, Inc. v Goodstein & Parksville Mobile Modular. Rex-Noreco, Inc., commenced that action in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, to enforce a covenant not to compete in the sale of mobile homes. In 1970 Isidore Goodstein, than an employee of Rex-Noreco, signed a covenant that upon the termination of his employment "for any reason whatsoever” and for a period of two years thereafter, he would not compete with RexNoreco in the sale of mobile homes within a 200-mile radius of any of RexNoreco’s sales lots. Early in 1974, Isidore Goodstein’s employment was terminated, and he opened his own mobile home business in Parksville, New York, in the name of Parksville Mobile Modular, Inc., a close corporation formed by Isidore Goodstein. The Parksville lot was within seven miles from the so-called "Loch Sheldrake” mobile home sales lot, formerly owned by Lock Sheldrake Mobile Home Sales, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Rex-Noreco, Inc. On April 18, 1974 Rex-Noreco commenced an action in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against Parksville and Isidore Goodstein, individually, alleging breach of the covenant not to compete and demanding, inter alia, a preliminary injunction and a permanent injunction. Isidore Goodstein retained the defendant law firm of Fabricant, Lipman, Kennedy and Sweeney, Esqs., to represent him in that action on April 22. On April 24 Fabricant filed papers in opposition to the application for a preliminary injunction. In those papers, Fabricant