Boyarsky v. Froccaro

125 Misc. 2d 352, 479 N.Y.S.2d 606, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3414
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 Misc. 2d 352 (Boyarsky v. Froccaro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyarsky v. Froccaro, 125 Misc. 2d 352, 479 N.Y.S.2d 606, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3414 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Eli Wager, J.

In this action for a judgment declaring the parties’ rights under a contract and for an injunction, the defendants Froccaro and Scotto seek a preliminary injunction similar [353]*353to that promulgated in First Nat. Stores v Yellowstone Shopping Center (21 NY2d 630). The plaintiff cross-moves for an order dismissing the defendants’ affirmative defense and counterclaims.

THE FACTS

The dispute between the parties involves construction of an agreement they entered into in August, 1981, and a subsequent modification entered into on August 27, 1983, but dated September 21,1983. Previously, in April of 1981, defendant Froccaro (together with defendant Scotto as a “silent partner”) entered into a contract with the then owner to purchase 40 acres of vacant land in the Village of Port Washington North for the sum of $1,100,000, paying $100,000 on account which they assert is a nonrefundable payment. When they were unable to obtain a mortgage loan from a bank for the balance, their attorney, defendant Lester, introduced them to plaintiff Boyarsky who agreed to pay $800,000 of the purchase price. A business certificate for partners (doing business as Dallas Realty Company) executed by Boyarsky and Lester (acting as the nominee of Froccaro and Scotto) was filed on August 17, 1981. The contract to purchase the realty was assigned to Dallas and Dallas purchased the property on August 20, 1981, with funds contributed by Boyarsky and Froccaro and Scotto pursuant to a written agreement which described Dallas as a partnership composed of Boyarsky and Lester as defendants’ nominee and states that the three have “entered into a financial arrangement to purchase * * * property” pursuant to the contract to sell assigned to Dallas. The agreement provides in relevant part as follows: Froccaro and Scotto were to invest $300,000 toward the $1,100,000 purchase price and Boyarsky $800,000; upon the sale of the property Boyarsky was to receive his original investment ($800,000) out of the first moneys deducted from the gross sales price and an additional $800,000 out of the next moneys from the gross sales price “representing his interest in the partnership;” the third $800,000 was to be split between Froccaro and Scotto and all net sales proceeds in excess of $2,400,000 were to be divided 75% to Froccaro and Scotto and 25% to Boyarsky; Froccaro and Scotto were to pay all closing costs and all maintenance [354]*354costs including taxes until such time as the property was sold; in the event the property was not sold within 24 months from the date Dallas acquired title Froccaro and Scotto were to transfer all their right, title and interest to the property to Boyarsky, but within that 24-month period they were to have an option to buy Boyarsky out for $1,600,000 plus 25% of the net proceeds in excess of $2,400,000 should the property be sold within four years thereafter. The agreement also gave Boyarsky “the right to borrow up to Six Hundred Thousand ($600,000.00) Dollars using the land as a first mortgage” and extended to him the right of first refusal other than “pending negotiations.” Froccaro and Scotto, however, had “exclusive right to sell the property on any terms they agree upon.”

It appears that Froccaro and Scotto failed to pay the real estate taxes and that the tax lien was sold in February, 1983 (at which time the taxes, penalties and interest amounted to $200,000), that the property was not sold within 24 months after Dallas took title and that at the request of Froccaro and Scotto an extension agreement was entered into on August 27, 1983. That agreement, noting the fact that $1,600,000 was then owing to Boyarsky and that Froccaro and Scotto did not wish to relinquish their rights in the land, provided that Boyarsky would grant a three-month extension through November 26, 1983, and additional three-month extensions at the option of Froccaro and Scotto up to August 26, 1986. Commencing with the second extension (effective November 27, 1983) Froccaro and Scotto were to pay Boyarsky interest in advance on his $1,600,000 capital investment in the property at 4% over the prime rate and to pay all past due real estate taxes on or before January 1,1984, Boyarsky to have the right to deny an additional extension if the real estate taxes were not paid. In addition, Boyarsky was to receive an additional $100,000 for every extension if the property were sold for more than $2,400,000.

It appears that an application submitted by Dallas and a builder to the Village of Port Washington North for a change of zoning to permit development of the property as “Planned Residential Development” was denied and that should a reapplication be granted the value of the property [355]*355would, according to Froccaro and Scotto, be “enormously increased.”

By letter dated January 6, 1983, Boyarsky’s attorney advised the defendants that Boyarsky was exercising his right to terminate their rights to the property on the ground that they had not made the payments of interest or of real estate taxes as required by the August 27, 1983 extension agreement. Boyarsky then commenced the instant action seeking a judgment declaring that he is the sole owner of the property and an injunction preventing the defendants from representing themselves as the owner and taking any action affecting title, use or occupancy.

In their answer, Froccaro and Scotto characterize the first (1981) agreement as a “mortgage loan agreement” and the August 27, 1983 extension as a “forebearance of payment of the mortgage loan.” They assert that they are the “fee owners” and Boyarsky is the “mortgagee” and that the deed and the agreements “were merely security for the mortgage loan made by Boyarsky to Froccaro and Scotto.” As a first counterclaim they seek a judgment pursuant to RPAPL article 15 declaring their rights accordingly. In a second counterclaim, they seek to enjoin Boyarsky from representing himself as the owner. In a third counterclaim they allege that the interest charged by Boyarsky upon the . $800,000 “he advanced under the Boyarsky Mortgage Loan Agreement as modified exceeds the rate permitted by Law” and they seek to enjoin Boyarsky from enforcing it. As a sixth counterclaim they seek a judgment declaring that if the “Mortgage Loan Agreement” is determined to be valid they “shall still have the option to pay Boyarsky all sums judicially determined then due under the Boyarsky Loan Agreement.” They have also interposed various cross claims against defendant Lester, alleging in essence that he breached his fiduciary duty as their attorney when he counseled them to execute the agreement knowing the rate of interest was usurious and that he acted at the direction of Boyarsky and was in fact an investor in his group.

THE INJUNCTION MOTION

Froccaro and Scotto seek an injunction pendente lite to “stay the running of the period within which [they] can pay to Boyarsky any sums that may be declared in this action [356]*356to be due and owing to him,” a stay they compare to the equitable injunctive relief afforded in landlord-tenant disputes to avoid a forfeiture of the leasehold (First Nat. Stores v Yellowstone Shopping Center, supra). They appear to analogize the extensions provided in the August 27, 1983 agreement to the notice and cure provisions of a lease and assert that their motion is timely under the Yellowstone

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 Misc. 2d 352, 479 N.Y.S.2d 606, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyarsky-v-froccaro-nysupct-1984.