Based on a story in the
Wall Street Journal, March 23, 1994, By Wade Lambert
You
may have thought that the escalation auction in class, where your
instructor auctioned a $1 bill to the highest bidder, but made the top
two bidders pay for it was amusing, but contrived. Could anything like
this ever happen in the real world? Listen up!
Ever Hear the One About the Lawyers and the Window Bars
How a $909 Dispute Generated $100,000 in Legal Fees
The story began when New York passed a law requiring window bars
for apartments with children under 10. The governing board of a co-op
housing unit at 360 W. 36th Street , a converted zipper factory in
the garment district, voted to charge the equipment to those residents
who needed it, rather than to divide the costs among all residents.
Alec and Suzi Diacou, who lived in a ninth floor loft with a small
child, were billed by the co-op for $909, the cost of installing the
window bars. They refused to pay.
Under the ownership contract of
the co-op apartments, if there was a dispute between the co-op and the
unit's owner, the loser would have to reimburse the winner's legal
fees.
The co-op board asked its lawyers to look into the matter. The
calendar of legal procedings recorded in the article is as follows:
- October, 1987--The co-op's lawyers bill the co-op for $315.
- June, 1988--After various failed attempts to reach an out-of-court
settlement, the co-op's lawyers billed the co-op for $1015. Although
this was more than the cost of the window bars, the co-op reasoned that
if the Diacou's were not forced to pay, this would set a costly example
for other residents to follow.
- By November, 1988, the co-op's
lawyers had filed suit and the co-op's legal fees had reached $5504.
- On January 26, 1989, New York Civil Court Judge Richard Lane
found that "logic and substantial justice," as well as the terms of the
lease required the Diacous to pay the $909. By this time, the co-op's
legal bill for the case had reached almost $10,000.
- The Diacous
responded with an appeal to a higher court.
- By March, 1990, the
co-op's total legal bill had reached $19,328, and an appeals court
overruled Judge Lane's verdict, saying the cost of the window bars
should be shared among all apartment residents.
- The co-op
responded with an appeal to a still higher court. By December 1990,
the co-op's total legal expenses were $43,099.
- In February, 1991,
the higher court ruled in favor of the co-op.
- The Diacou's did
not challenge the higher court's decision on the window bars. BUT they
sued to prevent their being assessed with the co-op's legal fees.
-
The legal fight over who was obliged to pay the co-op's legal fees
continued until June 1993, at which time the co-op's total legal fees
were $73,547. At this point, the two sides agreed to an arrangement
whereby the Diacous would pay $30,000 of the co-op's legal fees and
the co-op would pay the remaining $43,547.
- In addition to owing
the co-op $30,000 for its legal fees, the Diacous have paid their own
lawyers $30,000 for handling the case, and of course owe the $909 for
the window bars.
David Berkey, a lawyer for the co-op, is quoted as saying "I think
the expenditures here were appropriate and were kept pretty much to a
minimum." He said that his client is pleased with the outcome. "Every
step of the way they had an idea of what was going on... There were no
surprises in this case."
YES, FOLKS, He really said that.
Mr. Diacou is quoted as saying "I am a man converted. Anything you
can possibly do to avoid a lawsuit, do it. "