OPINION OF THE COURT
In 1968, Parklane Hosiery Co., Inc. went "public.” In 1974, it went "private.” In 1978, the litigation arising out of its brief life continues on two fronts and promises to drag on for a substantial period of time.
Pending in this court is a consolidated appraisal proceeding brought pursuant to section 623 of the Business Corporation Law brought by two groups of dissenting shareholders. In addition, two Federal court actions were instituted, one by the Securities and Exchange Commission against Parklane Hosiery Co., Inc. and its president, Herbert N. Somekh (
After a trial before Judge Duffy in the SEC case, it was found that the overriding purpose of the transaction (going private) was to enable the major shareholder to repay his personal indebtedness, and that there had been material omission in the proxy material circulated (see Securities & Exch. Comm. v Parklane Hosiery Co., supra). Using these findings, the Second Circuit reversed a denial of a motion for summary judgment brought by the plaintiffs in the stockholders’ suit for damages brought by Shore and remanded for an assessment of damages (see Shore v Parklane Hosiery Co., 565 F2d 815).
Here, the proceedings before the appraiser have been ongoing since June of 1975. Some 11 witnesses have been called on behalf of petitioners. Three of these witnesses are involved in one phase of these motions. They are Dermott Noonan, Richard Pluschau (certified public accountants) and Nathanial S. Weiner (a securities analyst). All three are classified as expert witnesses.
I have before me two motions: (a) (1) by respondent Park-lane, seeking to strike the testimony thus far given by petitioners’ three expert witnesses on the ground that their testimony has been given on the basis of illegal compensation
The first request for relief I will consider is respondent’s motion to strike the testimony of Noonan, Pluschau and Weiner, the accountants hired by petitioner to testify at the proceedings before the appraiser, on the grounds that the testimony on cross-examination reveals that their fees are "contingent upon the outcome of the case”, a practice counsel argues is prohibited by virtue of Disciplinary Rule 7-109 (C) of the Code of Professional Responsibility (McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 29, Judiciary Law, Appendix, p 499). While a great deal of the extensive briefs submitted deal with the question of whether the payment agreements are, in fact, contingent, I need not make a determination with respect thereto. I have assumed, arguendo, for the purpose of this decision, that the fees, if any, their accountants will be paid are dependent upon the outcome of this litigation.
The issue before me is a limited one. It does not involve the validity of DR 7-109 (C) (see Person v Association of Bar of City of N. Y.,
The sole question before me at this time is — are experts who are being paid a contingent fee incompetent to testify in the proceeding, the result of which will determine the amount of their fees? In my opinion, the answer must be, "No.”
Obviously, for me to determine that a person may not
That an interest in the outcome of a litigation, standing alone, does not render a person incompetent to testify, is clear. (See Coleman v New York City Tr. Auth.,
I find the argument that canon 7, and more specifically DR 7-109 (C) of the Code of Professional Responsibility, which reads as follows:
"A lawyer shall not pay, offer to pay, or acquiesce in the payment of compensation to a witness contingent upon the content of his testimony or the outcome of the case. But a
"(1) Expenses reasonably incurred by a witness in attending or testifying.
"(2) Reasonable compensation to a witness for his loss of time in attending or testifying.
"(3) A reasonable fee for the professional services of an expert witness” has limited the applicability of CPLR 4512 or in any way diminished the public policy behind it, unconvincing despite what would appear to be the implications of the holding in Person (554 F2d 534, supra). That decision dealt solely with the question of the disciplinary rules’ constitutionality as applied to lawyers and its indirect effect on litigants. It is true that the Person opinion indicated (p 538) that this State’s “legislature has made a judgment that the need for discouragement of contingent fee arrangements outweighs the obstacle to financing litigation which a ban on contingent fees may create. We cannot say that this legislative judgment is irrational.” However, this reference to a "legislative judgment” is somewhat misleading in that it would seem to imply that there has been a direct legislative pronouncement in this regard. Such is not the case. Subdivision 2 of section 90 of the Judiciary Law vests the Supreme Court with the power and control over lawyers and authorizes the Appellate Division to censure, suspend or disbar lawyers who are guilty of misconduct. Misconduct is defined by the Appellate Division rules (22 NYCRR 603.2, 1st Dept; 22 NYCRR 691.2, 2d Dept) as including violations of the disciplinary rules of the Code of Professional Responsibility adopted by the State Bar Association of which DR 7-109 (C) is part. This "legislative judgment” with respect to contingent fees may be said to be indirect, and certainly cannot be said to in any way limit the applicability of CPLR 4512. In this regard, it is significant that the appellants in Person represented by the Attorney-General of this State argued in their brief that DR 7-109 (C) "does not and did not keep plaintiff from arranging with an expert to testify on a contingent fee basis.” (See Person v Association of Bar of City of N. Y., supra, p 536, n 6.) Certainly, this is some indication that DR 7-109 (C) was not intended to be a statement of strong public policy against receiving such testimony. In my opinion, the holding in Person should be interpreted as upholding the right of the Appellate Division, through its disciplinary powers over attorneys, to indirectly limit the
Counsel have been unable to furnish me with any rulings directly on point. The cases relied upon by respondent involve issues not before me, and while counsel for petitioners argue that Marine Midland Trust Co. of N. Y. v Forty Wall St. Corp. (
The nature of an expert’s fee arrangement is relevant only as to his credibility, not his competency to testify (see Coleman v New York City Tr. Auth.,
Up to this point, I have discussed only the legal aspects of this motion. I would be remiss if I did not make mention of the rather unique factual circumstances. These experts were hired at a time when DR 7-109 had been held to be unconstitutional (see Person v Association of Bar of City of N. Y,
Respondent’s motion to strike is denied.
Respondent also seeks to stay this action pending determination of the Federal court class action suit brought against respondent and its officers for damages arising out of misrepresentations made in the prospectus issued at the time of the merger (Shore v Parklane Hosiery Co., USDC, SD, NY, 74 Civ 4986, supra). The stay is sought on the grounds that a finding here as to fair market value "might collaterally estop” respondent from disputing the value in the Federal action, thereby extinguishing its constitutional right to a trial of the issue of damages by a jury in that action.
Faced with the fact that it had previously vigorously and successfully opposed an application for a stay brought on by petitioner Shore on the grounds that the Federal action was pending (see mem dec, Feb. 15, 1977, Young, J.), respondent, nevertheless, now seeks to explain away his inconsistent positions by asserting a "change” in the law with respect to the doctrine of collateral estoppel in the Federal courts. Briefly, the argument is this: When the prior motion by Shore was made, Rachal v Hill (435 F2d 59, cert den
This argument must fail for two reasons. The first being that the court in Shore had no hesitancy in depriving Park-lane and the individual defendants of their right to a jury trial despite the holding in Rachal. The second being that as early as 1973 the Second Circuit had indicated its displeasure
Therefore, respondent’s rights, if any, to seek a stay of this action have been waived by their failure to do so before this.
My decision with respect to waiver makes it unnecessary to consider the merits of a stay.
Before leaving this point that both counsel seem to have encountered difficulties with respect to anticipated holdings of appellate courts, I can sympathize with them since, on occasion, I have had the same problem.
The motion insofar as it seeks a stay is denied.
Petitioner’s motion insofar as it seeks an order requiring respondent to post security is denied, as is the request for the payment of interim allowances. The moving papers are insufficient to establish a need for the requested relief.
