12 New St., LLC v. National Wine & Spirits, Inc.

2021 NY Slip Op 04267, 196 A.D.3d 883, 151 N.Y.S.3d 515
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 8, 2021
Docket531043
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2021 NY Slip Op 04267 (12 New St., LLC v. National Wine & Spirits, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
12 New St., LLC v. National Wine & Spirits, Inc., 2021 NY Slip Op 04267, 196 A.D.3d 883, 151 N.Y.S.3d 515 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

12 New St., LLC v National Wine & Spirits, Inc. (2021 NY Slip Op 04267)
12 New St., LLC v National Wine & Spirits, Inc.
2021 NY Slip Op 04267
Decided on July 8, 2021
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered:July 8, 2021

531043

[*1]12 New Street, LLC, Appellant,

v

National Wine & Spirits, Inc., et al., Respondents.


Calendar Date:June 2, 2021
Before:Lynch, J.P., Clark, Aarons, Reynolds Fitzgerald and Colangelo, JJ.

Law Office of Steven D. Greenblatt, PLLC, Saratoga Springs (Steven D. Greenblatt of counsel), for appellant.

Dayter Volkheimer, LLP, New Baltimore (Stephen H. Volkheimer of counsel), for respondents.



Colangelo, J.

Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Catena, J.), entered January 10, 2020 in Montgomery County, which, among other things, granted defendants' motion to dismiss certain causes of action in the amended complaint.

Plaintiff owns commercial real property in Montgomery County to which it had acquired title in December 2014 by a referee's deed. Prior to that time, a nonparty, Opflex Technologies, LLC, had entered the property and taken ownership of certain collateral of a prior occupant, including equipment used in the manufacture of bun foam products.[FN1] In January 2015, shortly after it acquired title to the property, plaintiff brought an eviction proceeding (hereinafter the eviction proceeding) to dispossess Opflex. Plaintiff was successful and a warrant of eviction was obtained in February 2015. Moreover, when Opflex sought to appeal, plaintiff successfully obtained an order requiring Opflex to post a $90,000 undertaking, arguing that Opflex "operates . . . a highly profitable, 51-person foam manufacturing business on the [p]remises" and that Opflex had acquired the entire usable space of the property.

Prior to the eviction proceeding, Opflex commenced a declaratory judgment action in Supreme Court against plaintiff and others seeking, among other things, a declaration that its occupation of the property was lawful (hereinafter the Opflex action). Plaintiff answered and interposed three counterclaims, the second of which concerns us here. In that counterclaim, plaintiff sought damages due to Opflex's use and occupancy of the property, including its operation of a "substantial foam manufacturing business" at the property. By decision and order dated July 5, 2018, Supreme Court, among other things, denied that part of Opflex's motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal of the second counterclaim, ruling that plaintiff had submitted sufficient evidence to require a trial on the issue of whether Opflex occupied and damaged the property through the operation of its bun foam business.

Plaintiff then commenced the instant action against defendants. In November 2018, plaintiff served an amended complaint, focusing on damage to the property caused by defendants rather than Opflex. Plaintiff sought to charge defendants for the use and occupancy of the property and for property damages and clean-up costs relating to defendants' operation of a bun foam manufacturing business during the same time period in which plaintiff had previously maintained that Opflex occupied the property. Defendants moved to dismiss the first three causes of action alleged in the amended complaint on the ground of judicial estoppel.[FN2] As far as judicial estoppel is concerned, defendants maintained, in essence, that plaintiff was foreclosed from asserting that defendants occupied and caused damage to the property during the relevant time period since it had successfully argued in the eviction proceeding and the Opflex action that it was Opflex that occupied and [*2]caused the relevant damage to the property. Supreme Court agreed and dismissed the first three causes of action on the ground of judicial estoppel and additionally dismissed the third cause of action on the basis of collateral estoppel. The court also denied plaintiff's eleventh-hour request for leave to submit supplemental evidence because such evidence was "clearly obtainable" at or before the time of the summary judgment motion in the Opflex action. Plaintiff appeals, and we affirm.

The longstanding doctrine of judicial estoppel has been succinctly stated by this Court. "Where a party assumes a position in one legal [action or] proceeding and succeeds in maintaining that position, that party may not subsequently assume a contrary position in a second [action or] proceeding because its interests have changed" (Kittner v Eastern Mut. Ins. Co., 80 AD3d 843, 846 [2011] [internal quotation marks, brackets and citations omitted], lvs dismissed 16 NY3d 890 [2011], 18 NY3d 911 [2012]; see Davis v Wakelee, 156 US 680, 689 [1895]; Kilcer v Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 86 AD3d 682, 683 [2011]; Mikkelson v Kessler, 50 AD3d 1443, 1444 [2008]). In order for the doctrine of judicial estoppel to apply, there must be a showing that the party taking the inconsistent position had benefitted from the determination in the prior action or proceeding based upon the position it advanced there (see Matter of Bianchi v New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 5 AD3d 303, 304 [2004], lv denied 3 NY3d 601 [2004]; D & L Holdings v Goldman Co., 287 AD2d 65, 71-72 [2002], lv denied 97 NY2d 611 [2002]). "For the doctrine to apply, there must be a final determination endorsing the party's inconsistent position in the prior proceeding" (Ghatani v AGH Realty, LLC, 181 AD3d 909, 911 [2020] [citation omitted]).

Despite the somewhat convoluted facts regarding various assorted contaminants present in the property, we find, as Supreme Court recognized, that this is precisely the situation that obtains here, and plaintiff is foreclosed from now making such arguments. As the record reflects, in successfully obtaining a warrant of eviction against Opflex in the eviction proceeding, plaintiff took the position that Opflex was the sole occupant of the property — implicitly in its original petition in which it mentioned no other occupant and explicitly in its application to have Opflex post an undertaking in which it stated that Opflex alone occupied all of the property. Moreover, nowhere in the Opflex action did plaintiff suggest that any entity other than Opflex was responsible for the property damage and contamination for which plaintiff sought redress by its counterclaims therein. Indeed, as Supreme Court accurately noted, "[t]he first three causes of action contained in [plaintiff's] amended complaint . . . are the same or substantially similar to the first three counterclaims it asserted in the [Opflex] action except that the within defendants are substituted for [*3]Opflex." Moreover, plaintiff unmistakably obtained a benefit in the Opflex action and the eviction proceedings from these positions. In the Opflex action, plaintiff was able to fend off a motion for summary judgment interposed by Opflex and thus able to prosecute its second counterclaim and proceed to trial. In the eviction proceeding, plaintiff obtained precisely what it sought — a warrant of eviction against Opflex and a direction that Opflex post a substantial undertaking pending appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
2021 NY Slip Op 04267, 196 A.D.3d 883, 151 N.Y.S.3d 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/12-new-st-llc-v-national-wine-spirits-inc-nyappdiv-2021.