Bill Text: NJ S1701 | 2012-2013 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: Limits amount of appeal bond in civil actions to the total value of the monetary judgment or $50 million, whichever is less.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2012-02-27 - Withdrawn from Consideration [S1701 Detail]

Download: New_Jersey-2012-S1701-Introduced.html

SENATE, No. 1701

STATE OF NEW JERSEY

215th LEGISLATURE

 

INTRODUCED FEBRUARY 27, 2012

 


 

Sponsored by:

Senator  GERALD CARDINALE

District 39 (Bergen and Passaic)

 

 

 

 

SYNOPSIS

     Limits amount of appeal bond in civil actions to the total value of the monetary judgment or $50 million, whichever is less.

 

CURRENT VERSION OF TEXT

     As introduced.

  


An Act concerning the posting of appeal bonds in civil actions and supplementing Title 2A of the New Jersey Statutes.

 

     Be It Enacted by the Senate and General Assembly of the State of New Jersey:

 

     1.    a.  Any supersedeas bond posted pursuant to court order during the pendency of an appeal of a civil action in connection with a stay of a judgment granting legal, equitable, or other relief shall be set in accordance with the applicable laws or Rules of Court, except that the total appeal bond or other forms of security required of all appellants collectively shall not exceed the lesser of:

     (1)   The total value of the monetary judgment; or

     (2)   $50,000,000,

together with trial costs.

     b.    Nothing in this act or in any other provision of law shall be construed to eliminate the discretion of the court, after notice and hearing and for good cause shown, to reduce the bond to a lower amount.

 

     2.    Notwithstanding the provisions of section 1 of P.L.    , c.   (C.        ) (pending before the Legislature as this act), if an appellee proves by a preponderance of the evidence that an appellant is concealing its assets, or is dissipating or diverting assets outside the ordinary course of business to avoid payment of a judgment, a court may enter orders that:

     a.     are necessary to protect the appellee; and

     b.    require the appellant to post a supersedeas bond in an amount up to the total amount of the judgment.

     As used in this section, "dissipating or diverting assets" does not include expenditures, including incentive or other payments to the owners of a business, of a kind that the appellant made in the regular course of business prior to entry of the judgment being appealed.

 

     3.    As used in this act:

     a.     "Civil action" means all cases involving individual, aggregated, class action, or otherwise joined claims; and

     b.    "Legal, equitable, or other relief" means all forms of relief, including compensatory, special, punitive, exemplary or other damages; injunctive relief; or any other form of relief.

 

     4.    This act shall take effect immediately and shall apply to all judgments entered on or after the effective date, regardless of the date the action was filed.


STATEMENT

 

     Under current law and the Rules of Court, a defendant who appeals a judgment ordering the payment of a monetary amount to the plaintiff may appeal that judgment and receive a temporary stay of the obligation to pay the monies, conditioned on posting an appeal bond.  The appeal bond, also known as a supersedeas bond, is conditioned for the satisfaction of the judgment in full, together with interest and trial costs.  This bill would limit the total amount of the appeal bond or other forms of security required of all appellants collectively in a civil action to the lesser of:  (1)  the total value of the monetary judgment, or (2) $50,000,000, in addition to trial costs.  The bill also provides that it shall not be construed to eliminate the discretion of the court, after notice and hearing and for good cause shown, to reduce the appeal bond to a lower amount.

     The bill provides that if an appellee proves by a preponderance of the evidence that an appellant is concealing its assets, or is dissipating or diverting assets outside the ordinary course of business to avoid payment of a judgment, a court may enter orders that:

     (1)   are necessary to protect the appellee; and

     (2)   require the appellant to post a supersedeas bond in an amount up to the total amount of the judgment.

     The bill provides that the phrase "dissipating or diverting assets" does not include expenditures, including incentive or other payments to the owners of a business, of a kind that the appellant made in the regular course of business prior to entry of the judgment being appealed.

     The bill defines "civil action" as all cases involving individual, aggregated, class action, or otherwise joined claims, and defines "legal, equitable, or other relief" as all forms of relief, including compensatory, special, punitive, exemplary or other damages; injunctive relief; or any other form of relief.

     The bill would apply to all judgments entered on or after the effective date, regardless of the date the action was filed.

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