Dead Man's Hand: NY Lawyer Fighting Suspension Wins High Court Jackpot
The New York Law Journal by Joel Stashenko - June 13, 2008
New York's Dead Man's Statute does not bar an attorney from defending himself against disciplinary charges for allegedly raiding escrow account funds of a deceased client, the state Court of Appeals held Thursday. The judges found that attorney Richard A. Zalk was attempting to clear himself of charges by describing an oral agreement he had with his client to keep the escrow funds, not testifying "against the executor, administrator or survivor" of the dead person, as the Dead Man's Statute prohibits. The New York statute, CPLR §4519, was enacted in 1851. It prohibits the living from testifying about personal transactions with dead people that the decedents cannot refute in court. One of its main purposes, the court noted, was to protect estates and the survivors from the claims of others. Zalk is contesting a ruling by the Appellate Division, 1st Department, that he be suspended for two years for allegedly using the escrow funds of his late client, Ruth Gellman.
A referee for the Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial District held that the Dead Man's Statute does not apply to Zalk's testimony about the agreement the attorney said he had with Gellman. But the 1st Department found that the statute does apply and suspended him for two years without considering his testimony about the oral agreement he insists he had with Gellman prior to her 2000 death. The Court of Appeals held in Matter of Zalk, 98, that the referee was correct. "We therefore look to the language of section 4519, and reach the same conclusion as did the referee: although Zalk 'testified as a witness in his own behalf or interest,' ... he did not testify 'against the executor, administrator or survivor' of Mrs. Gellman," the court held in a per curiam ruling. "Rather, he testified against the Disciplinary Committee, which is none of these latter."
The court sent the matter back to the 1st Department for further deliberations. The disciplinary committee had recommended that Zalk be publicly censured, a sanction that was modified by the 1st Department panel in its 4-1 ruling. Zalk, a solo practitioner in Manhattan specializing in matrimonial, trust and estates and real estate law, was admitted to the Bar in New York in 1969. He secured a stay of the 1st Department's suspension and has continued to practice as his appeal is being heard. Zalk has an unblemished disciplinary record except for the allegations of wrongdoing in the Gellman matter. Gellman's two daughters, as administrators of her estate, had challenged Zalk's personal use of the escrow funds in 2003. They argued that they did not know of any oral agreement their mother had made with the attorney before her death allowing him to keep $200,000, which represented a downpayment on a 1998 sale of an apartment house in Westchester County owned by Gellman. Zalk, who had long done legal work for Gellman and her late husband Arthur, had handled the $2 million sale of the apartment house for Gellman.
Zalk testified before the disciplinary proceeding that he would typically perform legal work for the Gellmans and then charge them afterward for his services. He said he tried to turn down the $200,000 from Gellman, but that she insisted he keep the money and even joked with him a few months before her death about what he was going to spend it on. According to the court Thursday, Zalk ultimately withdrew about $100,000 from the escrow account for his own use. Zalk conceded that he did not have an agreement in writing with Gellman to keep the escrow funds, and his attorney Richard Supple acknowledged during oral arguments before the Court of Appeals that it would have been wiser for him to have done so. The disciplinary committee argued that allowing Zalk to testify about his oral agreement with Ms. Gellman was prohibited by the Dead Man's Statute because it was against the "vital interests" of her daughters. Among those interests is their possible attempt to seek restitution of the escrow account funds through the Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection or a civil suit.
The court ruled that the daughters' interests in a possible later proceeding against Zalk do not preclude his testimony at this point in the disciplinary case about his purported deal with Gellman. "The Dead Man's Statute only applies to testimony 'against the executor, administrator or survivor' of the deceased," the court ruled. "It does not foreclose testimony that potentially cuts against these parties' interest in a contingent future proceeding." Supple, of Hinshaw & Culbertson, said Thursday in an interview that, "We're pleased by the Court's ruling that the Dead Man's Statute should not have been used to preclude consideration of Mr. Zalk's credited testimony that he had a fee agreement for the money at issue with his close friend and client." Naomi F. Goldstein of the Departmental Disciplinary Committee argued against Zalk in the case. She did not immediately return a telephone call for comment Thursday.
WOW..Naomi F. Goldstein, Great Actress, she had me fooled, while she was representing the "State" DDC, on behalf of my Grievance Complaint (2005.3074) against my former attorney who allegedy sexually abused me, tried to extort oral sex by using coercion in exchange for his legal representation. Isaac locked me in his office and wanted me to try on clothing for him, grabbed my buttocks which was witnessed by two people, and this lawyer is still practicing law and has yet to be disbarred. While these so-called "sham hearings" were going on, Ms. Goldstein wanted me to perjure myself and lie under oath. There's way too much for me to list. If anyone needs to contact me, please call me at 516) 652-1639.I will be than happy to share my experience while being a witness during the "DDC" proceedings.BTW, Ms. Goldstein is currently listed as one of my Defendants in my lawsuit, Esposito v. The State of New York, et.al (07 Civ. 11612) (SAS).
ReplyDeleteNaomi Goldstein, Esq. took part in a "so-called- sham" Grievance hearing against Allen H. Isaac, Esq. She suppressed crucial evidence, and par-took in aiding and abetting Isaac's lawyer's. This evidence could have ultimately helped the Complainant get this lawyer disbarred, and probably criminally prosecuted. Originally, Ms. Goldstein pretended to be the Complainant's best friend and confidant, it was all a pretense, so the Complainant would ultimately gain her trust.
ReplyDeleteLying under oath or committing perjury is just a daily event for the OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTARTION! No one who took an oath as an attorney or judge and works for the courts, sees a problem with perjury, unless it is performed by the citizens or taxpayers!
ReplyDeleteI also have evidence of their perjury...verbal and written..material was entered into evidence verbally, after it was testified to verbally...I assume to embarrass me! OCA is so crooked, that they never realized that I could not be embarrassed by something they" made"up and tried to accuse me of saying and doing! There is no fool like a judicial fool!
You look at the slime that works inside the NYS Surrogate's Courts and you begin to understand that they are crooks, and they would sell body parts of living people if they could..... all for a buck. But they stick to abusing the legal system in the world of the dead. They will rot in hell for their actions.
ReplyDeleteWell Richard A. Zalk should be proud of himself. He figured out a way within the 'law' to steal and better yet get away with it! He hit the jackpot. Great angle Dick, hope you rot in Hell.
ReplyDeletethe Trust & Estate (T&E) bar is a small protective group that for the most part prey and steal from the dead and their families.
ReplyDeleteCharles (John Huffen) Dickens wrote at length on these matters and has anything really changed? The same grave robbers are at work. Jail is the answer to all of them.
ReplyDeleteThis is all too surreal...How could all of this be going on? I was so naive and trusting, and because of what I've endured within the last two years, I cannot trust not one single person, cops, DA's lawyers, Judges, and anyone involved in the legal and Judicial systems. I only pray and hope that this corruption is cleaned up and these thugs go away to prison for a very long time.
ReplyDeleteI used to have so much respect for the legal system, but now, everytime I see a Judge, I say to myself, um, how much did he get paid to deep-six this case.
ReplyDeletelawyers love estate because they have total control. The family of the decdent have no idea of what's going on. Basically, they run the complete show and the money. And the money becomes theirs one way or the other. That's the way the cookie crumbles. That's why I'm not shocked by this story, it happens everyday.
ReplyDeletethe people in the Westchester County Surrogate's Courts screwed my family big time. Our lawyer told us that there was nothing he could do. He had to do what Judge Scarpino wanted. First time I saw that bum Scarpino I knew he was Mobbed Up!
ReplyDelete