Maio v. Gardino
This text of 267 A.D.2d 816 (Maio v. Gardino) 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.
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Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Lynch, J.), entered September 3, 1998 in Schenectady County, which, inter alia, granted defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint as time barred.
In May 1989, plaintiffs, as executors and distributees of their mother’s estate, instituted an action against defendant Nicholas Gardino (hereinafter defendant) to recover sums due under an agreement between their mother, Jeanette Paige, and defendant, her brother. As set forth in our decision upon a prior appeal in that action (Maio v Gardino, 184 AD2d 872), Paige and her three siblings (including defendant) each inherited a one-quarter share of their father’s real property consisting of a house and 24 acres of land in the Town of Colonie, Albany County. In 1967, Paige and defendant entered into a written agreement whereby Paige transferred her one-quarter interest in said property to defendant in consideration of his payment to her of $7,000 in 1967 and, upon the sale of his interest in the property, one half of the proceeds thereof exceeding $7,000, with certain adjustments for interest, taxes and expenses. Defendant subsequently conveyed his interest in the property in three separate transactions, one in 1977 and two in 1988, for total consideration of approximately $261,000. Following Paige’s death in November 1987, plaintiffs demanded her one-half share of the sale proceeds, and upon defendant’s refusal to pay commenced the aforementioned action in May 1989. On [817]*817the prior appeal, we determined that plaintiffs were entitled to summary judgment and remitted the matter to Supreme Court for a determination of the specific monetary amount constituting one half of the net proceeds of the sales. Judgment was eventually granted in favor of plaintiffs against defendant in the amount of $189,654.72 on December 3, 1997 (id., at 874).
Relevant to the instant appeal, one parcel of the land subject to the agreement between Paige and defendant was sold by defendant in 1988 to New Hope Gospel Fellowship for the sum of $150,000, for which defendant took back a purchase money mortgage in the amount of $115,000. In March 1989, defendant assigned this purchase money mortgage to defendants Lois Lansing and Jean Adams for the sum of $10. Three months after the entry of the judgment in their favor, plaintiffs commenced the instant action against defendant, Lansing and Adams seeking to set aside defendant’s assignment to Lansing and Adams as a fraudulent conveyance so as to enable plaintiffs to satisfy a portion of their judgment against him.
Before answering, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that plaintiffs’ action was based on fraud that had allegedly occurred in 1989 and was thus barred by the six-year Statute of Limitations (see, CPLR 213 [8]). Opposing the motion, plaintiffs maintained that their action was in the nature of an enforcement proceeding and thus subject to either the 10-year limitations period of CPLR 5203 or the 20-year limitations period in CPLR 211 (b). Plaintiffs also cross-moved for an order compelling the New Hope Gospel Fellowship to place future mortgage payments in escrow. Determining that plaintiffs’ complaint sounded in fraud and was not an action to enforce a judgment, Supreme Court denied plaintiffs’ cross motion and dismissed the complaint as time barred. This appeal by plaintiffs ensued.
Whether this action is viewed as one to set aside a fraudulent conveyance or as one to enforce a money judgment, there must be an affirmance of the dismissal of this complaint. The 10 or 20-year Statute of Limitations relied on by plaintiffs (with certain exceptions not herein germane) do not operate to make ineffective the transfer by the judgment debtor of an interest in real property until the docketing of the judgment or from the filing of a notice of levy pursuant to an execution until the execution is returned (see, CPLR 5203 [a]; 211 [b]). As noted, the judgment was docketed December 3, 1997. The interest in property which plaintiffs seek to reach involves a [818]*818mortgage assigned by defendant, the judgment debtor, on March 3, 1989. The record is devoid of any proof that defendant has a current interest in the mortgage, and such an interest would only arise upon a determination that the assignment was fraudulent as to plaintiffs, the judgment creditors. The six-year Statute of Limitations found in CPLR 213 (8) is a bar to this claim (see, Siegman v Rosen, 248 AD2d 180). Since the core relief that plaintiffs seek, regardless of how the pleading is viewed, is to set aside this assignment of mortgage as fraudulent, Supreme Court correctly dismissed the complaint as time barred.
Crew III, Yesawich Jr. and Spain, JJ., concur.
Our decision on the prior appeal was rendered in June 1992; the reason for the 51/2-year delay is not apparent from the record.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
267 A.D.2d 816, 700 N.Y.S.2d 509, 1999 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maio-v-gardino-nyappdiv-1999.