Clarion Capital Corp. v. Proudfoot Reports Inc.

115 Misc. 2d 985, 454 N.Y.S.2d 357, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3502
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1981
StatusPublished

This text of 115 Misc. 2d 985 (Clarion Capital Corp. v. Proudfoot Reports Inc.) 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
Clarion Capital Corp. v. Proudfoot Reports Inc., 115 Misc. 2d 985, 454 N.Y.S.2d 357, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3502 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward J. Greenfield, J.

“Things are not always what they seem.” To what lengths must an investigator go to attempt to pierce the mask of pretense and uncover reality?

This case involves a novel question of whether a credit investigating agency can be held liable for failure to discover and report to its client the criminal record of the person being investigated, who had been given a new identity under the Federal Witness Protection Program.

This case involves the tale of a man who appeared to be a business genius and who was able to attract both sales and investment capital with great success, until it was disclosed that he had, in fact, been a major advisor and financial manipulator for the underworld before he re-channeled his efforts into legitimate business. Disclosure caused consternation, and when the guiding spirit of the business enterprise was removed, the structure he had built collapsed in ruins.

[986]*986Plaintiff, Clarion Capital Corporation, previously known as Creative Capital (hereinafter CCC), was a venture capital company investing in small businesses. In this case, it is suing Proudfoot Reports Incorporated, a commercial investigative agency which makes reports on credit worthiness and the reputation and background of persons or corporations, claiming that the defendant was guilty of breach of its agreement, intentional deception or gross negligence resulting in damages of $4,500,000.

At the nonjury trial, the evidence disclosed and the court found:

In May of 1971, CCC had loaned $100,000 to the Alvin Duskih Company, a California manufacturer of ladies sportswear, which had been having financial difficulties. One Paul Maris, an energetic go-getter who was the company’s treasurer, took over control of the company, became its president and changed its name to Paul Maris Co. Under his direction, the sales volume grew rapidly, and CCC stood by to finance its growth. By July of 1972, CCC had put $1,300,000 into the rapidly expanding company. At that time, a new group acquired control of CCC, renewed its accounts and seeking to regularize and standardize its files and procedures, requested a routine investigative and background report on Paul Maris, the principal of the company, for which CCC had put up loans and equity capital, and which represented CCC’s largest outstanding risk capital.

On July 10, 1972, Mr. Regáis, an officer of CCC, called the Proudfoot Agency, the defendant herein, and asked for a background report on Paul Maris. Regáis was told that the price for the report was $250 and that the report would be completed in about two weeks.

The investigator assigned to do the job called Maris in California to get his vital statistics, his educational background, his military service record and his business references. Maris told him that he had been born in Philadelphia, went to college in Ohio and thereafter was in the armed forces from 1958 to 1970 as a cryptographer. Thereafter, he said he had been with the United States Atomic Energy Commission as an analyst until he joined the Alvin Duskin Company in 1971.

[987]*987The investigator verified Maris’ college degree, but recognizing the difficulty in verifying his military background, since Maris told him that he had been working in highly secret cryptographic and atomic energy posts, he made no attempt to check it out further. He contacted seven people with regard to Maris’ business background and business references, all of whom reported favorably. He had not been asked to do a credit check. Having uncovered no inconsistencies or derogatory information, he proceeded to write up a favorable report and it was duly forwarded to CCC on July 21, 1972.

The report stated that Paul Maris had been born in Philadelphia, January 12, 1935; he graduated from John Bertram High School in that city in 1953; that he graduated from Baldwin-Wallace College in Ohio in 1957; that he entered the United States Army in 1958 and after service as a cryptology and analysis officer, left the service with the rank of major; and had also been employed by the United States Department of State and by the Atomic Energy Commission. The report then stated what was already known to CCC — that Maris joined the Duskin Company in 1971 and turned it around. Banking sources said he was an up and coming executive, a person of honor, integrity and business acumen. Other business contacts likewise reported general admiration for his business ability and character. The report concluded, “nowhere in the conduct of this inquiry was anything learned or developed which would reflect unfavorably upon the business or personal background of the subject.”

Reassured, CCC continued advancing money for the company’s needs. It claims to have invested an additional $1,800,000 after receipt of the Proudfoot report. After some time however, the officials at CCC were unhappy that even with the desired ever-rising sales, the Maris Company was still not making a profit. CCC, which now controlled the stock, tried to dismiss Maris in January of 1973. Maris threatened to pull out all the personnel, and CCC, in order to avoid a total closedown, was compelled to rehire him. In March of 1973, CCC tried to replace Maris with a new chief executive officer and limit Maris’ function to marketing. In [988]*988response, Maris had all the employees walk out and removed the company’s books and records.

That was the signal for the beginning of litigation. CCC sued to regain possession of the company and its records, and Maris countersued for breach of contract. It was during the course of the litigation that the truth came out. An investigator engaged by CCC recognized Maris as someone he had encountered in a criminal trial in New Jersey. It was then disclosed that Maris was in reality Gerald Martin Zelmanowitz, a former financial advisor to members of the Mafia, who had been convicted for dealing in stolen securities. He had then testified for the Government in a trial in New Jersey against Angelo (Gyp) De Carlo and others. In jeopardy for having co-operated with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (F.B.I.) and having appeared as a Government witness, Zelmanowitz was then given a new identity, complete with corroborating papers, and relocated to California under the Federal Witness Protection Program. In California, as Paul Maris, he attempted to start afresh in legitimate business.

The question here presented is whether Proudfoot, as an investigative agency, had an obligation to break through the new identity which had been provided by the Federal Government, and whether on its failure to do so, it will be liable to its client for all of the client’s financial outlays. Plaintiff contends that because of the failure of the report, for which it paid $250, to disclose the entire truth, it is entitled to recover damages of $4,500,000. Plaintiff contends that a more thorough investigation would have revealed that there was no birth record for Paul Maris in Philadelphia, that there was no record of Maris’ attendance at John Bertram High School and that although the registrar of Baldwin-Wallace College verified that Maris had been awarded a degree in 1957, the investigator had failed to obtain a written confirmation of that fact. The Proudfoot investigator also had obtained no record of Maris’ service with the United States Army, Department of State and the Atomic Energy Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
115 Misc. 2d 985, 454 N.Y.S.2d 357, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarion-capital-corp-v-proudfoot-reports-inc-nysupct-1981.