Clearview Associates, Inc. v. Clearview Gardens First Corp.

8 Misc. 2d 470, 168 N.Y.S.2d 432, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2612
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Misc. 2d 470 (Clearview Associates, Inc. v. Clearview Gardens First Corp.) 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
Clearview Associates, Inc. v. Clearview Gardens First Corp., 8 Misc. 2d 470, 168 N.Y.S.2d 432, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2612 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

Nicholas M. Pette, J.

This action was begun on October 19,

1953, and issue was joined on March 11, 1956. The complaint, containing a separately stated cause of action against each of the six Clearview Gardens corporations herein, and a seventh cause of action against defendant, Spear & Co., Inc., an eighth cause of action against defendant Dwight-Helmsley, Inc., a ninth cause of action against the individual defendants and a tenth cause of action against all the defendants, was sustained by the Appellate Division, as to all the defendants, except Spear & Co., Inc., and Dwight-Helmsley, Inc., which are no longer parties to the action (285 App. Div. 969).

This ease came on for trial before me on March 7, 1957, and was tried on that day and on 13 subsequent dates, and after [472]*472calling 8 witnesses to the stand and after reading many pages of examinations before trial, and after plaintiff’s 113 exhibits and defendants’ 38 exhibits were received in evidence, on April 10, 1957, plaintiff rested its prima facie case.

At the close of plaintiff’s prima facie case, the defendants moved to dismiss, and, on May 13, 1957, this court rendered its decision denying that motion and directing that the trial be resumed on May 20, 1957 (N. Y. L. J., May 15, 1957, p. 11, col. 3). On defendants’ application, however, the trial was set down for and was resumed on May 21, 1957.

This has been an arduous and much protracted trial of a difficult action of great importance to both sides herein. The numerous exhibits introduced in evidence and the prolix testimony elicited and read from examinations before trial during the course of this trial, together with the several memorandums and several briefs submitted by the learned counsel for the parties herein, is unusually voluminous. The court has devoted and expended many days of painstaking effort in carefully examining and considering this tremendous mass of evidence adduced before it. The excellent memorandums and briefs of counsel and the elaborate arguments advanced therein, have been of much help to the court in the consideration of the evidence so very skillfully and ably presented by counsel for both sides.

It would be superfluous at this time to restate the material facts relating to the nature and substance of the plaintiff’s causes of action herein, since the same have been sufficiently set forth in the decision rendered by this court denying the defendants’ motion to dismiss at the close of the plaintiff’s case (N. Y. L. J., May 15, 1957, p. 11, col. 3, supra).

The Appellate Division established the law of this case upon the pleadings (285 App. Div. 969) and the evidence adduced by the plaintiff, aided and amplified by testimony elicited by the defendants on cross-examination, together with the testimony of other witnesses called by the defendants in presenting their alleged defenses herein, sustained all the material allegations of the complaint. The evidence does not sustain the contentions of the defendants and it has utterly failed to overcome the right of the plaintiff to recover in this action.

Defendants’ efforts, in injecting into this case testimony and evidence tending to show that tenant shareholders of the corporate defendants, have or may have certain claims against parties, who like said tenant shareholders are not parties to this action, and against the plaintiffs, which testimony and evidence the court allowed over the plaintiff’s objection and [473]*473exception, in this court’s opinion, cannot, and does .not avail the defendants as a defense. Said testimony and evidence had no bearing upon the issues raised within the framework of the pleadings herein, and it definitely failed to establish any defense to the plaintiff’s causes of action against the defendants herein.

Succinctly stated, the defendants have sought to defeat plaintiff’s right to recover herein by contending that (A) because of alleged fraud on the part of the builders of the housing-projects involved in this action (who, incidentally, are not parties to this action), plaintiff is barred from recovering either the quarters or the patronage refunds plaintiff claims herein; (B) that the current available assets were withheld from tlae plaintiff by the defendants, in order to meet corporate obligations of the corporate defendants herein claimed to have arisen because of alleged construction defects and anticipated sewer assessments; and (C) that the testimony and evidence (either on the witness stand, or offered by stipulation of counsel in lieu of their appearance) of about 287 of the tenant shareholders, has cured the inability of the corporate defendants to now urge herein in their own defense the claims of said tenant shareholders against the plaintiff. As already stated, this testimony and evidence was allowed by the court over the plaintiff’s objection and exception, and the court again notes that none of said tenant shareholders or any of the other tenant shareholders of the corporate defendants, who all told number approximately 1,800 occupant shareholders, are parties to this action.

The defendants cite and rely upon the Northridge and Knolls decisions (2 N Y 2d 514) as authority in support of their affirmative defense of fraud in this action, which defense was contained in the amended answer interposed and submitted at the beginning of this trial.

As Judge Van Voobhis clearly stated in the opinion in the Northridge and Knolls cases (supra) both appeals in those cases were from nonfinal orders entered upon motions addressed to the complaints. In the Knolls case the motion was to dismiss several of the causes of action by summary judgment. In the Northridge case the motion was to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency and lack of legal capacity to sue, and for other complicated relief, but all that was raised on the appeal was the striking out of some of the allegations as sham.

In the opinion of this court the cases of Northridge and Knolls (supra) do not support the contentions of the defendants in the case at bar, nor do they support the propositions for [474]*474which the defendants cite them. There had been no trial at which proof to establish plaintiff’s charges had been presented for adjudication in those cases. Whether the facts which plaintiffs might be able to prove in those cases would warrant the inference and conclusions required for judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, was and still remains an undetermined question. The most that the Northridge case held was that if the promoters of the projects involved there made unreasonable profits and the tenant shareholders were damaged thereby, the promoters must account for profits of that nature. The courts have consistently held that one in a fiduciary relationship must account. However, that does not mean that by so holding the court has determined that the fiduciary is guilty of fraud. The liability, if any, of the fiduciary is not prejudiced by a judgment directing him to account, nor does it establish that he has been guilty of fraud or wrongdoing. As to this, Judge Yaw Yoobhis was very careful in the choice of the language used in his opinion.

Damage is always one of the essential elements of fraud (Hanlon v. Macfadden Pub., 302 N. Y. 502 and cases cited therein).

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Bluebook (online)
8 Misc. 2d 470, 168 N.Y.S.2d 432, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clearview-associates-inc-v-clearview-gardens-first-corp-nysupct-1957.