Herrington v. Verrilli

151 F. Supp. 2d 449, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10168, 2001 WL 823596
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 12, 2001
Docket99 Civ. 3045(CM)
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 151 F. Supp. 2d 449 (Herrington v. Verrilli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herrington v. Verrilli, 151 F. Supp. 2d 449, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10168, 2001 WL 823596 (S.D.N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, AND GRANTING IN PART PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO AMEND THE COMPLAINT

McMAHON, District Judge.

Plaintiff John B. Herrington III sues George E. Verrilli for breach of contract, trespass, conversion, negligence, declaratory and injunctive relief, and for treble *452 damages under the New York Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law § 853, for damage done to plaintiff’s organ that was being stored in a space let by defendant. Defendant counterclaims for unpaid rent.

Plaintiff moves for summary judgment on the breach of contract and conversion claims, and seeks leave to file a second amended complaint. Defendant cross-moves for summary judgment on plaintiffs claims and on his counterclaim for unpaid rent.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The sorry saga of the G.F. Adams organ (“the Adams organ”) begins at St. Thomas Episcopal Church on Fifth Avenue in New York City, one of the “cardinal parishes” of the Episcopal Diocese of New York. The home of the United States’ only residential choir school for boys, St. Thomas’ enjoys an international reputation for the excellence of its liturgical music program. Its Choir of Men and Boys performs nearly every day during the school year, tours widely, and has released a number of recordings. The choir’s concert perfor-manees are regularly reviewed in the Arts pages of The New York Times. See, e.g., Allan Kozinn, Decking out a “Messiah” But Hewing to Tradition, N.Y. Times, Dec. 21, 2000 (reviewing a Messiah performance by the St. Thomas Choir). And its organist, Gerre Hancock, is among the best-known church musicians in the United States. So it is fair to say that St. Thomas’ takes its music seriously.

At some point in the 1960s, St. Thomas’ installed a tracker 1 organ built by Gilbert F. Adams in the gallery at the rear end of the nave. In or about 1993, the Vestry (the governing board of an Episcopal church) decided to replace the Adams organ with a new instrument. And that is where the story of our lawsuit begins.

The Vestry gave the instrument to the Virginia firm Taylor and Boody, which had been hired to construct its replacement, as part of the consideration for the new instrument, on the condition that Taylor & Boody remove the Adams organ from the church at no cost to St. Thomas’. (Stein-man Aff. (Laufman Dep. at 64-66.) at Ex. B.) 2 Taylor and Boody engaged a man *453 named Alan Laufman to help them to find a buyer for the Adams organ, and passed on to Laufman the obligation to remove the instrument from St. Thomas’. There is some suggestion in the record that Taylor and Boody actually gave the Adams organ to Laufman, but no documentation of any such transfer was presented to the Court.

Because Laufman could not afford to remove the organ himself, he contacted an organ builder named Lawrence Trupiano. Trupiano in turn located and contacted plaintiff John B. Herrington, III, who expressed a willingness to pay for the removal of the organ from the church. Laufman testified that he gave the organ to Her-rington in exchange for his funding the removal of the organ. (Laufman Dep. at 65.) Plaintiff has produced an undated Indemnity Agreement in which Taylor & Boody agreed to donate the Adams organ to him in exchange for its removal and transport from the St. Thomas Church. (Herrington Aff. at Ex. 14.) 3

Laufman needed a place to store the organ after its removal from St. Thomas Church. He spoke with a restorer of church organs, Susan Tattershall, who suggested that he contact defendant George Verrilli about using his warehouse in Germantown, New York. Laufman contacted Verrilli in the spring of 1994 to inquire about the availability of storage space. Laufman determined that the third floor of defendant’s warehouse would be suitable for storage of the Adams organ on a “short term basis” until the instrument could be sold.

While Laufman was negotiating a space for the organ, Laufman and Herrington had no direct contact with one another. Herrington dealt directly with Trupiano, who dealt with Laufman. Of those three, Laufman was the only one with direct contact with defendant Verrilli. 4

In the course of one or more telephone conversations, defendant and Laufman agreed that the rental cost of the storage space was to be $1.80 per square foot and that approximately 1,000 square feet were to be rented on a short term basis. According to Laufman, Verrilli carefully described the space on the third floor of the building to him. (Laufman Dep. at 35.)

The agreement for the use of Verrilli’s space was memorialized in a July 8, 1994 letter from Verrilli to Laufman. Verrilli sent Laufman a key to the warehouse, and the letter said, in pertinent part:

Enclosed please find a key to the warehouse in Germantown. The space has been set aside (a little bit more than a thousand square feet) for the storage of the St. Thomas pipe organ_The annual rent is at $1.80 a square foot; a thousand square feet would be $1800 a year broken down into monthly payments or bimonthly payments as you wish. Those payments would be $150 a *454 month and you may send them to George Verrilli ...

(Herrington Aff. at Ex. 9.)

The key sent by Verrilli with the July 8, 1994 letter opened a padlock that directly accessed the third floor. Despite its designation, the third floor is at ground level. The building’s loading dock opens directly into the third floor, so it is not necessary to go up or down steps to access the space. Moreover, the third floor is two stories high.

For Laufman’s purposes, it was ideal, since there was room to “spread everything out so that we could organize things in a way would [sic] allow access for potential clients to get in and examine virtually every part of the organ, virtually every pipe.” (Pollack Aff. (Laufman Dep. at 22) at Ex. 12.) However, the letter did not specify that the organ would be stored on the third floor, or in any particular location. Laufman understood the contract to refer to the space on the third floor, 5 and according to Tattershall, Verrilli had “agreed to offer to store [the] G.F. Adams Organ solely on the third floor of defendant’s said warehouse.” (Tattershall Aff. at ¶3.) She also claims to have told him that the space on the ground floor of the building — which was occupied by a woodworker, and was below grade — was unacceptable space for storage of the organ, and that no owner of the organ would or could agree to permit their organ to be stored on the ground floor of the warehouse. (Id. at ¶ 4.)

Beginning in July 1994, Laufman brought the dismantled parts of the Adams organ (along with two additional pipe organs) into the third floor of defendant’s warehouse. Groups of related organ parts were segregated from other groups of related organ parts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 F. Supp. 2d 449, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10168, 2001 WL 823596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrington-v-verrilli-nysd-2001.