Berlow v. Lomenzo

49 A.D.2d 160, 373 N.Y.S.2d 907, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10569
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 24, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 49 A.D.2d 160 (Berlow v. Lomenzo) 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
Berlow v. Lomenzo, 49 A.D.2d 160, 373 N.Y.S.2d 907, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10569 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Goldman, J.

In this article 78 proceeding petitioners Sheldon M. Berlow and Arthur H. Judelsohn, licensed real estate [162]*162brokers doing business under the name of Berlow Real Estate, seek a judicial review of a determination by respondent John P. Lomenzo, the former Secretary of State of New York, which found that petitioners had demonstrated untrustworthiness while negotiating a real estate transaction. The secretary’s order suspended petitioners’ licenses indefinitely unless by November 15, 1973 “the said brokers have filed a detailed statement with the Department of the profit they have earned as their compensation in said transactions and submit to the Department a certified or bank check payable to the Kenmore Housing Authority in full reimbursement for any and all of their share of the profits realized in the sale of the property to the Kenmore Housing Authority; that the filing of such proof after the commencement of the suspension shall terminate same”.

Petitioners seek annulment of the determination on the grounds that it is not supported by substantial evidence; that the determination was arbitrary and capricious and constituted an abuse of discretion; that the determination was the product of a procedure which denied due process of law in that petitioners did not receive a fair and adequate notice of the charge of untrustworthiness and the facts upon which the charge was based; that the hearing officer was prejudiced, thereby depriving them of a fair hearing; that the conditional suspension of petitioners’ licenses exceeded the secretary’s authority and, finally, that the measure of punishment was excessive.

A full and lengthy administrative hearing was held in which petitioners were represented by counsel. The chronology of the evidence is essential and material in the consideration of the merits of the determination. The real property which is the subject of the transactions is located in the Village of Kenmore, N.Y. and was owned by persons residing in Ohio (Ohio Sellers). In March, 1972 the owners, through their Buffalo attorney, Eugene Downey, listed the property for sale with petitioners on a nonexclusive basis. The list price was $110,000. About the same time, a public housing developer, Sanders & Associates (Sanders), was searching for a site for the Kenmore Housing Authority (Authority) for construction of a public housing facility for the elderly, subject to the approval of the Authority and the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Sanders retained a licensed real estate broker, one David Braun, to find a [163]*163suitable site which Sanders would present to the Authority for approval. Braun contacted petitioner Berlow and discussed the purchase of the subject parcel on or about April 19, 1972. At approximately the same time one Donald Serotte, who headed the group which eventually purchased the property from Ohio Sellers, contacted petitioner Judelsohn about the possible purchase of the property.

Braun testified that at an April meeting he initially offered $85,000 subject to site approval by the Authority and partial rezoning. He added that Berlow thereafter told him on May 5 that $110,000 was needed. At a subsequent meeting on May 7, Berlow assured Braun that a contract could be negotiated without problems, that he had made an appointment "with the lawyers to discuss the option and get it resolved”, and that in the interim Braun should "go ahead”. Shortly thereafter, Berlow informed Braun that a 30-day option would cost $1,500 per month with one half attributable to the purchase price, but that it was difficult to get the sellers to agree to an option contract. Berlow prepared the option in June and for the first time the names of Donald D. Serotte and Sherwood B. Freed of Buffalo appeared in the option instrument as sellers, rather than the names of Ohio Sellers. On about August 1, 1972 Braun secured execution of the option by Sanders. After this Berlow notified Braun that Ohio Sellers had contracted to sell the property to "another purchaser”. Braun testified that Berlow had never revealed the names of the owners of the property, although Braun had early learned that they resided "some place in Cleveland, Ohio”. It was not until November 22, 1972, Braun testified, that he learned that petitioners were partners in the business enterprise which was the "other purchaser”.

Berlow’s testimony was in disagreement with Braun’s on several points. He testified that he had informed Braun from the outset that the asking price was $125,000 and that attorney Downey, on behalf of Ohio Sellers, rejected Braun’s $85,-000 offer, stating that the sellers were not interested in an option contract. Berlow testified that although Braun authorized him to make an offer of $110,000, it was subject to conditions which were unacceptable to Ohio Sellers who wanted a "firm deal”. Berlow contended that it was after the rejection of the $110,000 offer that he began negotiating with Downey on behalf of the other prospective purchaser, the Serotte group. These negotiations resulted in an agreement to [164]*164sell the property to Serotte and associates for $77,500 cash with no contingencies.

Serotte testified that sometime in May, 1972 he gave petitioner Judelsohn a $70,000 purchase offer which attorney Downey rejected. Judelsohn informed Serotte that other unidentified parties were making offers and that the owners wanted $80,000 with no contingencies. An oral agreement was made between Ohio Sellers and the Serotte group to sell the property for $77,500 sometime before May 15, precisely when Berlow was assuring the representative of the other prospective purchaser that something could be worked out for $110,-000.

Downey testified that he negotiated the sale to the Serotte group through petitioner Berlow and that at the time of the contract to sell, Ohio Sellers agreed to pay a 6% commission to Berlow Real Estate. The sale was not consummated until August 4, 1972, at which time the deed named Colvin-Kenmore Associates as grantee, and the final sale price was reduced to $72,850. The reduction in price was in exchange for Berlow Real Estate’s promise not to require the sellers to pay the $4,650 for brokers’ commissions. Colvin-Kenmore Associates was a partnership formed by Serotte, Freed, a third member of the Serotte group and Berlow and Judelsohn early in June, 1972 for the express purpose of purchasing the subject property. Although a business certificate with the names of the partners was filed in Erie County Clerk’s office on August 1, 1972, Downey testified that he first learned that Berlow and Judelsohn were thus involved as purchasers was from a newspaper article in February, 1973. Serotte testified that he did not inform Sanders or Braun that Berlow and Judelsohn were principal-purchasers.

A revamped purchase offer, dated December 13, 1972 with a purchase price of $107,000 and a closing date of March 1, 1973, was finally executed by Sanders and by a partner of Colvin-Kenmore Associates.

Both Serotte and Berlow testified that after Ohio Sellers and Serotte had reached an agreement to sell for $77,500, Berlow and Judelsohn took the initiative in informing Serotte that Sanders might be interested in buying the property for $110,000. The idea for the formation of a partnership was Serotte’s in order to give petitioners a "piece of the action” and reduce the original outlay by eliminating the cost of petitioners’ commission. The partnership agreement gave pe[165]*165titioners a one-third interest and any commissions earned by petitioners were to be paid into the partnership account.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.D.2d 160, 373 N.Y.S.2d 907, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berlow-v-lomenzo-nyappdiv-1975.