Altegra Credit Co. v. Tin Chu

2004 NY Slip Op 50241(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedMarch 25, 2004
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 50241(U) (Altegra Credit Co. v. Tin Chu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altegra Credit Co. v. Tin Chu, 2004 NY Slip Op 50241(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

Altegra Credit Co. v Tin Chu (2004 NY Slip Op 50241(U)) [*1]
Altegra Credit Co. v Tin Chu
2004 NY Slip Op 50241(U)
Decided on March 25, 2004
Supreme Court, Kings County,
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on March 25, 2004
Supreme Court, Kings County,


ALTEGRA CREDIT COMPANY, Plaintiff, - -

against

TIN CHU et.al., Defendants.




Index No. 25816/02

For Plaintiff: Lee S. Wiederkeher, Esq., Delbello Donnellan Weingarten

Tartaglia Wise & Wiederkeher, 1 North Lexington Avenue, White

Plains, N.Y. 10601

For Intervenor: Robert J. Smith, Esq., 420 Lexington Avenue, Suite

2300, New York, New York 10170

CAROLYN E. DEMAREST, J.

Intervenor Wing Kwan Lee Gee (aka "Chu") moves pursuant to CPLR § 3212 for summary judgment dismissing Plaintiff's complaint seeking foreclosure of a mortgage against her home which was fraudulently given by movant's son, Defendant Tin Chu, and declaring that such fraudulently obtained mortgage and the fraudulent deed upon which it was based are null and void and that the prior deed of Intervenor is valid and in full force and effect together with all real property tax exemptions appurtenant thereto.

The property at issue was purchased on February 5, 1975 by Intervenor Wing Kwan Lee Gee and her husband, Hun Goon Gee, who took title as tenants by the entirety. On February 23, 1994, Mr. Gee died, leaving Intervenor as the sole owner.

Plaintiff Altegra Credit Company ("Altegra") obtained the rights to a mortgage upon Intervenor's premises at 2246 East 12th Street, Brooklyn, New York, executed by defendant Tin Chu on November 22, 1999, to WMC Mortgage Corp. of Woodland Hills, California, by assignment to Plaintiff on November 29, 1999. The deed upon which Tin Chu premised his mortgage was also executed on November 22, 1999, purportedly by his mother, Wing Kwan Lee Gee, conveying title to said premises to her son. Intervenor first became aware of the fraudulent mortgage sometime in 2000 when mail from Plaintiff to her son Tin Chu began accumulating at her home unopened by Tin Chu. Upon further investigation, Intervenor learned that title to her home had been transferred to her eldest son, Tin Chu, without her knowledge or consent, whereupon she took her complaint to the Kings County District Attorney. The instant mortgage foreclosure action was commenced by complaint dated June 24, 2002.

Defendant Tin Chu was indicted on July 30, 2002 on charges of Grand Larceny in the Second Degree, Forgery in the Second Degree and Offering a False Instrument for Filing in the First Degree, all related to Defendant's forging of a false deed and mortgage upon his mother's [*2]home and the resultant theft of that home and the mortgage proceeds. Complainants named in the indictment were Intervenor Wing Kwan Lee Chu and WMC Mortgage Corp. ("WMC"), Plaintiff's predecessor in interest. Prior to indictment, by letter dated July 12, 2002, Assistant District Attorney Richard K. Farrell wrote to Joseph F. Abt, Esq. of Certilman Balin Adler & Hyman, Counsel to Plaintiff herein, advising of the "ongoing criminal action affecting [Tin Chu] and the [subject] real property" and relating the entire substance of Mr. Chu's confession to the crime, including that someone posing as Intervenor had actually appeared at the closing on the mortgage to WMC. Mr. Farrell enclosed a copy of the criminal complaint dated May 13, 2002, and closed by soliciting Altegra's cooperation in "a resolution of the entire situation." In addition to the District Attorney's efforts to engage Plaintiff, and even prior to his letter, Intervenor's counsel asserts that he left a telephone message for Plaintiff's counsel alerting him to Defendant's arrest.

The criminal prosecution first came before this Court on August 21, 2002. Prior to trial, at my direction, my Law Clerk communicated with Plaintiff's counsel and directed them to appear before the Court on the criminal prosecution, since Plaintiff, as successor in interest to WMC, was effectively the actual complainant or victim of the crime. Plaintiff failed to appear or ever communicate with the Court, despite the direct order of the Court to appear, until May 21, 2003.

The trial commenced on October 22, 2002, with the testimony of Intervenor Wing Kwan Lee Chu who testified that she had never transferred title to her home despite Defendant's repeated requests that she do so so that he might complete a business transaction with a woman named Mona Leung, also known to Interevenor, who had made a similar request. She swore that the signatures that appear on the deed and mortgage documents were not hers. Nancy Chan, the settlement agent for WMC from the title company, testified that Defendant told her at the closing that the woman with him was his mother, but during trial Ms. Chan was unable to recognize Intervenor who was sitting in the courtroom. Gary Bryant, a self-employed title closer who prepared the deed and notarized the signature of the grantor, did not identify Intervenor at trial.

On October 25, 2002, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of Grand Larceny in the Second Degree and Forgery in the Second Degree and the case was adjourned for sentence. After many adjournments of the sentence, finally, upon service of the Intervenor's application to intervene in the pending foreclosure matter which had also been referred to me, Lee Wiederkehr, Esq. appeared on May 21, 2003 on behalf of Washington Title for Altegra. There has never been a courtroom appearance in either case by the firm of Certilman Balin Adler & Hyman, LLP which originally commenced this action on behalf of Plaintiff. It appears that Mr. Wiederkehr, who is a member of Delbello Donnellan Weingarten Tartaglia Wise & Wiederkehr, LLP, is appearing pursuant to a title insurance policy in Plaintiff's favor.

Intervenor's motion is premised on the adjudication before this Court at Criminal Term that Defendant Tin Chu, who has not appeared in the foreclosure action, forged the documents that are the basis of Plaintiff's rights to bring this action and that title to the property was therefore never transferred from Intervenor and the mortgage is void ab initio. Intervenor argues that the doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes relitigation of the validity of the mortgage and that dismissal of the instant action is, therefore, warranted.

Plaintiff opposes the motion for summary judgment arguing that Intervenor's motion is [*3]premature in that her answer interposes a counterclaim to which, at the time the motion was made, no reply had been made. Plaintiff has since interposed its reply on June 17, 2003, long before this Court heard the argument on the merits on January 7, 2004. Such reply is contained in Plaintiff's opposition papers served July 9, 2003. The minimal procedural irregularity of which Plaintiff complains is not sufficient to defeat Intervenor's motion.

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Related

Altegra Credit Co. v. Tin Chu
29 A.D.3d 718 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
2004 NY Slip Op 50241(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altegra-credit-co-v-tin-chu-nysupctkings-2004.