CPLR 5003-a

Howell v City of New York, 2018 NY Slip Op 07178 [1st Dept. 2018]

Once defendants failed to timely pay all sums due to plaintiff within ninety days of his tender of the requisite settlement documents (see CPLR 5003-a[b]), plaintiff was entitled to a judgment “for the amount set forth in the release, together with costs and lawful disbursements, and interest on the amount set forth in the release from the date that the release and stipulation discontinuing action were tendered” (CPLR 5003-a[e]). The parties no longer dispute that defendants did not timely pay plaintiff, they have stipulated to the amount of costs, disbursements, and interest plaintiff is due, and defendants have paid plaintiff that sum. Plaintiff is therefore not entitled to any further relief or monetary award.

Further, CPLR 5003-a(e) is specific about what may be contained in a judgment against a settling defendant who has not timely paid a plaintiff his settlement proceeds. Given the absence in that provision of any reference to prejudgment interest, there is no basis for departing from the “irrefutable inference … that what is omitted or not included was intended to be omitted or excluded” (McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 240).

We reject plaintiff’s argument that the term “interest,” as used in the stipulation of settlement, is unclear. Given that plaintiff was not entitled to postjudgment interest – or, for that matter, a judgment – at the time that he executed the stipulation of settlement, “interest” could [*2]not have referred to anything other than prejudgment interest. Coupled with his allocution to the settlement and the subsequent stipulation that no further costs or sanctions would be sought, we find that plaintiff unambiguously waived any right he may have had to pre-judgment interest.

Finally, since the parties have already stipulated that any judgment plaintiff was authorized by CPLR 5003-a(e) to enter has already been satisfied, and the record and briefs confirm that plaintiff has been paid all monies due to him, there is no need to grant plaintiff leave to enter a new judgment in place of the 2014 judgment.

W-9’s and Settlements: CPLR § 5003-a

CPLR § 5003-a. Prompt payment following settlement

Klee v Americas Best Bottling Co., Inc., 2010 NY Slip Op 06361 (App. Div., 2nd, 2010)

When the defendants failed to pay the sum due under the settlement agreement within 21 days of tender of the release and stipulation of discontinuance, the plaintiff sought to enter judgment against them in accordance with CPLR 5003-a. On August 11, 2009, a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff in the agreed-upon settlement amount, together with interest, costs, and disbursements. Shortly thereafter, the defendants moved, inter alia, to vacate the judgment, arguing that the Internal Revenue Code required the plaintiff's attorney to comply with their request [*2]for a completed Form W-9, and that the plaintiff had procured the judgment by misrepresenting that he had provided them with all necessary settlement documents. While the motion was pending, the plaintiff's attorney completed Form W-9, and the defendants paid the sum of $400,000 required by the settlement agreement. The plaintiff opposed vacatur of the judgment, contending that the defendants' failure to pay the settlement proceeds within 21 days after his tender of the release and stipulation of discontinuance entitled him to recover interest, costs, and disbursements pursuant to CPLR 5003-a. The plaintiff also noted that his attorney had provided the defendants with his taxpayer identification number in the cover letter accompanying the settlement documents, and argued that an attorney receiving "gross proceeds" had no obligation to certify his or her taxpayer identification number to the payor on Form W-9. The Supreme Court granted the defendants' motion, relying upon the decision of the Appellate Division, First Department, in Cely v O'Brien & Kreitzberg (45 AD3d 368) to conclude, in essence, that the plaintiff's attorney was required to provide the defendants with a completed Form W-9 as a condition precedent to payment of the settlement proceeds. We disagree.

CPLR 5003-a was enacted in 1992 to encourage prompt payment of settlements (see Cunha v Shapiro, 42 AD3d 95, 101; Siegel, Practice Commentaries, McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C5003-a: 121). To this end, the statute requires any settling defendant, subject to certain exceptions not applicable here (see CPLR 5003-a[b], [c], [d]), to pay all sums due to any settling plaintiff "within twenty-one days of tender, by the settling plaintiff to the settling defendant[s], of a duly executed release and a stipulation discontinuing [the] action executed on behalf of the settling plaintiff"(CPLR 5003-a[a]). Where, as here, the release and stipulation of discontinuance are tendered by mail, the 21-day period is measured from receipt of the documents (see Leipold v Arnot Ogden Med. Ctr., 46 AD3d 1299, 1300; Cunha v Shapiro, 42 AD3d at 101). If the settling defendant fails to pay the sum due under the settlement agreement within 21 days of tender of the required documents, the statute authorizes the plaintiff to enter, without further notice, a judgment in the amount of the settlement, which is to include interest, costs, and disbursements (see CPLR 5003-a[e]).

Here, the plaintiff fulfilled his obligations under CPLR 5003-a by tendering a duly executed release and stipulation of discontinuance to the defendants' attorney. Neither CPLR 5003-a, nor the parties' stipulation of settlement, imposed any additional requirement on the plaintiff or his attorney. Regardless of whether the defendants' request that the plaintiff's attorney complete Form W-9 certifying his tax identification number was reasonable, as they contend, there is no statutory authority for elevating the completion of this form to a condition precedent for payment of the sum due in settlement of a personal injury claim (see In re Emergency Beacon Corp., 52 B.R. 828, 830; cf. Liss v Brigham Park Coop. Apts. Sec. No. 3, 264 AD2d 717).

Although we are aware that the Appellate Division First Department, reached a contrary conclusion in Cely v O'Brien & Kreitzberg (45 AD3d 368), we do not find the rationale of that case persuasive. Compensation for personal injuries does not generally constitute gross income (see 26 USC § 104[a][2]), and the defendants made no showing that the portion of the personal injury settlement which the plaintiff's attorney may be entitled to retain as a legal fee is actually a "reportable payment" subject to the reporting requirements of the Internal Revenue Code (see 26 USC § 3406). Moreover, even assuming that the defendants' insurance carrier is mandated to report payment of the settlement proceeds to the plaintiff's attorney, the defendants have not demonstrated that the provision of Form W-9 is the sole means by which the carrier can comply with its reporting obligations. Under these circumstances, we decline to effectively amend the terms of the parties' stipulation of settlement by conditioning payment of the settlement proceeds upon completion of the form. Granting settling defendants the unilateral right to withhold payment in these circumstances would significantly undercut the statutory goal of CPLR 5003-a to ensure the prompt payment of settlement proceeds upon tender of the statutorily prescribed documents. Accordingly, the defendants' failure to timely pay the sum due under the settlement agreement entitled the plaintiff to enter judgment including interest, costs, and disbursements pursuant to CPLR 5003-a(e) (see Leipold v Arnot Ogden Med. Ctr., 46 AD3d 1299; Sealey v Jamaica Buses, Inc., 39 AD3d 526, 527; Hadier v Remington Place Assoc., 302 AD2d 428). [*3]

The defendants' contention that this appeal is barred by the doctrine of accord and satisfaction because the plaintiff cashed the settlement check while their motion to vacate the judgment was pending is without merit (see Merrill Lynch Realty/Carll Burr, Inc. v Skinner, 63 NY2d 590, 596; Pepe v Tannenbaum, 279 AD2d 620).

The bold is mine.  Head over to New York Appellate Law Blog for the short version.  5003-a is oddly similar to the no-fault regs.

CPLR § 5003-a “Tender”

CPLR § 5003-a. Prompt payment following settlement

DJS Med. Supplies, Inc. v American Tr. Ins. Co., 2008 NY Slip Op 52456(U) (App. Term, 2d)

CPLR 5003-a, enacted to encourage the prompt payment of damages in
settled actions, authorizes a settling plaintiff to enter judgment
against a settling defendant who fails to pay all sums as required by
the statute (see Cunha v Shapiro, 42 AD3d 95 [2007]). Insofar as
is relevant to the instant case, CPLR 5003-a (a) provides that the
settling defendant "shall pay all sums due to any settling plaintiff
within twenty-one days of tender, by the settling plaintiff to
the settling defendant, of a duly executed release and a stipulation
discontinuing action executed on behalf of the settling plaintiff"

(emphasis added). The term "tender," as used in the statute, is defined
as meaning "either to personally deliver or to mail, by registered or
certified mail, return receipt requested" (CPLR 5003-a [g]). Should the
settling defendant fail to make prompt payment of all sums due, the
unpaid plaintiff "may enter judgment, without further notice, against
such settling defendant who has not paid" (CPLR 5003-a [e]).
[*2]

In order to avail itself of
the enforcement mechanism of CPLR 5003-a, an unpaid settling plaintiff
must adhere to the requirements of the statute by tendering a general
release and a stipulation of discontinuance and by waiting 21 days
following such tender
(see Cunha v Shapiro, 42 AD3d 95 [2007]; see also Dobler Chevrolet v Board of Assessors,
2001 NY Slip Op 50013[U] [Sup Ct, Nassau County 2002]). In the instant
case, plaintiff's submissions in support of its motion were
insufficient to prove its tender to defendant of the release and
stipulation of discontinuance. Accordingly, the order denying
plaintiff's motion is affirmed, albeit on different grounds. We pass on
no other issue.

All the bold is mine.