Axginc Corporation v. Plaza Automall, Ltd.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 19, 2022
Docket1:14-cv-04648
StatusUnknown

This text of Axginc Corporation v. Plaza Automall, Ltd. (Axginc Corporation v. Plaza Automall, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Axginc Corporation v. Plaza Automall, Ltd., (E.D.N.Y. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK --------------------------------------------------------------------- X : AXGINC CORPORATION, f/k/a AXIS GROUP, Inc. : : Plaintiff, : 14-CV-4648 (ARR) (VMS) : -against- : NOT FOR ELECTRONIC : OR PRINT PUBLICATION PLAZA AUTOMALL, LTD., : : OPINION & ORDER Defendant, : : -and- : : JOHN ROSATTI, PLAZA MOTORS OF BROOKLYN, : INC. d/b/a PLAZA AUTO MALL and d/b/a PLAZA : HONDA, PLAZA OLDSMOBILE, LTD. d/b/a PLAZA : AUTO MALL and d/b/a PLAZA TOYOTA, PLAZA : HYUNDAI, LTD. d/b/a PLAZA AUTO MALL, : CRYSTAL BAY IMPORTS, LTD. d/b/a PLAZA : AUTO MALL and d/b/a ACURA OF BROOKLYN, and : PLAZA AUTOMOTIVE LTD., : : Respondents. : : --------------------------------------------------------------------- X

ROSS, United States District Judge:

On August 5, 2014, plaintiff commenced this action against defendant Plaza Automall, Ltd. seeking damages for, inter alia, defendant’s unpaid rent. On November 9, 2017, I entered judgment against defendant in plaintiff’s favor for $2,735,929.59. Plaintiff now moves against respondents, John Rosatti, Plaza Motors of Brooklyn d/b/a Plaza Honda (“Plaza Honda”); Plaza Oldmobile, Ltd. d/b/a Plaza Toyota (“Plaza Toyota”); Plaza Hyundai, Ltd. (“Plaza Hyundai”); Crystal Bay Imports, Ltd. d/b/a Acura of Brooklyn (“Acura of Brooklyn”), and Plaza Automotive Ltd. (“Plaza Kia”) (collectively “respondents”), for an order (1) awarding a money judgment for amounts that defendant allegedly owned and fraudulently conveyed to respondents, and (2) directing respondents to turn over these amounts to plaintiff. On February 20, 2022, I received a Report and Recommendation (“R & R”) from the Honorable Vera Scanlon, United States Magistrate Judge, addressing plaintiff’s motion for summary relief (the “turnover motion”). On March 14, 2022, plaintiff objected to Judge Scanlon’s finding that defendant and respondents had raised triable

issues of fact as to defendant’s ownership interest in the disputed funds. Plaintiff requests that I grant it a judgment against respondents for the amounts requested in its turnover motion. After de novo review, I conclude that Judge Scanlon was correct in finding that triable issues of material fact preclude granting summary relief to plaintiff. Moreover, after reviewing the portions of the R & R to which no party objected, I find no clear error. The R & R is thus adopted in full. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background Because plaintiff did not object to any of Judge Scanlon’s findings of fact, I adopt these findings as detailed in the R & R, see R & R 6–15, ECF No. 124. I summarize the facts briefly below.

Defendant sublet a parcel of land from plaintiff from 2007 to 2014. Op. & Order 3−5, ECF No. 61 (“SJ Op.”); R & R 1–4. Plaza Honda, Plaza Toyota, Plaza Hyundai, Acura of Brooklyn, and Plaza Kia (collectively, “respondent dealerships”) kept inventory on this land and at times paid plaintiff rent on defendant’s behalf. R & R 3. At relevant times, John Rosatti was CEO of defendant and respondent dealerships and the majority owner of Plaza Kia. Id. After defendant failed to pay rent pursuant to the sublease agreement, SJ Op. 4–5, plaintiff obtained a judgment against defendant from this court, Clerk’s J., ECF No. 71. To satisfy this judgment, plaintiff now seeks a turnover order against respondents. R & R 1−2; Mem. L. Supp. Pl.’s Mot. Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 69 and CPLR 5225(b) 2, ECF No. 117-2 (“Turnover Mot.”). Plaintiff seeks funds that were held in defendant’s

account with M&T Bank, arguing that defendant has an ownership interest in these funds and fraudulently conveyed them to respondents. R & R 5–6; Turnover Mot. 7–16. Defendant and respondents counter that defendant served as a mere conduit or paymaster for payments among respondents and between respondents and nonparties, and therefore did not have an ownership interest in the funds that passed through its bank account. R & R 5–6; Mem. L. Opp’n Pl.’s Mot. for

Turnover of Monies 5–18 (“Turnover Opp’n”), ECF No. 120-1. Plaintiff argues in rebuttal that defendant was not merely a conduit for the monies at issue in this motion. R & R 7−8. The funds at issue can be divided into four categories1: First, a series of one hundred and forty-eight deposits from non-parties, totaling $2,557,352.81, wired to defendant between 2014 and 2017. Id. at 8. Defendant transferred these monies to respondent dealerships in a series of transactions during the same period. Id. at 8–9. Respondents assert that these monies were proceeds from selling automobiles and automotive parts and have produced documentation showing that a subset of the deposits and transfers were for identical amounts. Id. at 9. Respondents further argue that this documentation shows that the amounts were transferred to respondents soon after they were received by defendant. Id.

Second, $800,000 held in defendant’s bank account from May 2016 to December 2017. R & R 11–12. Respondent Planet Honda transferred $800,000 to defendant on May 20, 2016. Id. at 11. A month prior, respondents Plaza Honda, Plaza Toyota, Plaza Hyundai, and Acura of Brooklyn (collectively the “settlement dealerships”) had entered into a settlement agreement with the New York State Office of the Attorney General (the “NYAG Settlement Agreement” or the “settlement agreement”) to end the Attorney General’s investigation into these respondents’ marketing of

1 Plaintiff’s motion also sought $748,324.08 of alleged proceeds from John Rosatti’s investments in nonparty Kenwood Holdings Ltd., funds that were held in defendant’s bank account for one day before being transferred to Plaza Honda. R & R 12−13, ECF No. 124. Judge Scanlon found there was a material fact issue as to ownership of these funds. Id. at 40. Neither party objected to this finding, so I review it for clear error and find none. credit-repair and identity-theft-protection services to their customers. Id. at 10. Under this agreement, these dealerships agreed to pay $800,000 into an account at M&T Bank for later distribution to affected consumers. Id. The agreement also stated that any interest earned on the $800,000 deposit belonged to the settlement dealerships. Id. Defendant declared the $800,000 as an

asset on its 2016 tax returns. Id. at 11. Over the course of 2017, defendant made payments to 1,106 eligible consumers in accordance with the settlement agreement, for a total distribution of $587,927.47. Id. at 11–12. On December 28, 2017, defendant remitted the undistributed balance— $215,037.76—to the New York State Comptroller on behalf of the settlement dealerships. Id. at 12. Third, a check for $245,000 made out by nonparty Suffolk Regional Off Track Betting Corporation (“Suffolk Betting”) to defendant but deposited by respondent Planet Honda into its own bank account. Id. at 13–14. In 2016, defendant had negotiated to purchase land from Suffolk Betting and, as part of these negotiations, Planet Honda had paid a $245,000 security deposit on defendant’s behalf. Id. at 13. The proposed purchase was not consummated, however, and, in 2018, Suffolk Betting’s attorney refunded the $245,000. Id.

Fourth, $300,000 transferred from nonparty Freedom Insurance Company Ltd. (“Freedom Insurance”) to defendant on September 15, 2016, and wired to respondent John Rosatti the following day. Id. at 14–15. Also on September 15, two nonparty reinsurance companies—of which John Rosatti is the sole owner of one and co-owner of the other—each issued a corporate resolution directing nonparty Accelerated Service International (“ASI”) to loan $150,000 to defendant. Id. at 14.

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Bluebook (online)
Axginc Corporation v. Plaza Automall, Ltd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/axginc-corporation-v-plaza-automall-ltd-nyed-2022.