Nisenzon v. Sadowski

689 A.2d 1037, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 52, 1997 WL 75548
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 20, 1997
Docket94-263-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 689 A.2d 1037 (Nisenzon v. Sadowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nisenzon v. Sadowski, 689 A.2d 1037, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 52, 1997 WL 75548 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

We begin with the moral of this story: lawyers who help to separate insolvent debtors from their assets by acquiring those assets for inadequate consideration soon become debtors themselves.

I

Parties

The defendants, Park City Capital (Park City), a Rhode Island general partnership, and James D. Levitt (Levitt), a Rhode Island attorney and one of Park City’s general partners, appeal from a $30,000 judgment entered against them by the Superior Court in favor of plaintiffs, Nellya and Iosif Nisenzon (the Nisenzons). After a jury-waived trial, a Superior Court justice found Levitt liable for common-law fraud and Levitt and Park City hable for fraudulently transferring a certain parcel of real estate that was half owned by the Nisenzons. Although unnamed as parties and unserved as defendants, Levitt’s other Park City partners, Leo J. Gannon, John J. Ridlon, Fred S. Hashway, Jr., and Stephen A Gordon (collectively the unnamed Park City partners), also appeal from the judgment below, claiming they were improperly added to the judgment after the trial had concluded.

For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment in all respects except one: we vacate any portion of the judgment that includes the unnamed Park City partners in their individual capacities.

II

Facts and Travel of the Case

On January 5, 1987, the Nisenzons gave Arthur Sadowski (Sadowski) $20,000 to become a co-owner with him of a waterfront lot on Gordon Avenue in Warwick, Rhode Island (the property). 1 Sadowski solicited this in *1040 vestment from Iosif Nisenzon (Nisenzon) and prepared a document on January 5,1987, for Nisenzon to sign that read:

“This letter that I Arthur Sadowski am buying lot 377 on Gordon Ave.[,] Warwick, R.I. with Iosif Nisenzon. Iosif will pay $20,000.00 twenty thousand dollars for his share. All profit will be 50% for Iosif and 50% for Arthur Sadowski on whatever we do.”

Although both Sadowski and Nisenzon signed this document, Nisenzon did so without knowing that Sadowski had already purchased the property in his own name on December 31, 1986. Levitt, Sadowski’s real estate attorney, notarized Sadowski’s quitclaim deed to the property. Neither Sadow-ski nor Levitt ever amended this deed to reflect the Nisenzons’ co-ownership interest, nor did they record the January 5, 1987 document showing the Nisenzons’ interest in the property in Warwick’s land evidence records.

Approximately one year later, on January 10, 1988, Sadowski requested more money from the Nisenzons — this time a $10,000 loan. In response the Nisenzons borrowed $10,000 and lent it to Sadowski at 20 percent interest with the understanding that the loan was to be repaid in one year. 2

Notwithstanding Sadowski’s representations to the Nisenzons that the property’s value had increased, by the summer of 1988 the Nisenzons had become sufficiently concerned about their money that Iosif informed Sadowski that they were considering Consulting an attorney. But Sadowski convinced him to desist by telling him that doing so would only complicate matters. In fact Sa-dowski had other plans for the property.

On September 27, 1988, Sadowski conveyed the property to his attorney, Levitt, without having informed the Nisenzons that he would be doing so. Levitt, whose legal practice had been concentrated in real estate for over twenty years, acquired the property via a quitclaim deed that stated that “the consideration is such that no revenue stamps need be affixed.” At trial, Levitt testified that the consideration for this transfer was a $17,000 loan that he made to Sadowski and that he was merely holding the property to secure this loan. 3 However, no written documentation or other written evidence of the loan or any other alleged consideration for the property’s transfer to Levitt was ever offered at trial or produced through discovery — despite discovery requests from the Ni-senzons to defendants to produce such documentation if it existed.

Eventually, in January or February of 1989, the Nisenzons’ concerns about what Sadowski had done with their money led them to consult John DeVito (DeVito), a Massachusetts attorney. On March 9, 1989, DeVito sent a letter to Levitt in which he described the Nisenzons’ interests in the property (identified as “Lot 377 on Gordon Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island”), referenced Sadowski’s additional $10,000 debt to the Nisenzons, and expressed an interest in obtaining security for the money owed to them.

Shortly thereafter, on May 1, 1989, Hugh E. Barry (Barry), an attorney associated with Levitt’s law firm, prepared a reply to DeVito’s letter on behalf of the firm of Gordon & Levitt. The letter reflected that it was “READ AND ASSENTED TO” by the firm’s client, Sadowski, who also signed it. 4 *1041 In a June 15,1989 reply to this letter, DeVito told Barry that “[i]t was some assurance to my clients to have Mr. Sadowski acknowledge the debt.” He further stated that the Nisenzons were willing to delay receiving any payment until October but that they requested a realistic payment plan in writing and executed by Sadowski. DeVito also stated that “[i]n fairness” Sadowski should agree to pay interest on the moneys advanced to him by the Nisenzons, and he requested that Barry discuss the contents of the letter with Sadowski.

Meanwhile, notwithstanding his knowledge of the Nisenzons’ claims against Sadowski and of their interest in the property, Levitt conveyed the property to his Park City partnership on August 1, 1989. The deed once again reflected that the consideration was such that no revenue stamps need be affixed. Unbeknownst to the Nisenzons, that same day Park City also granted a mortgage on the property to Omega Financial Corporation (Omega) to secure the repayment of a $150,-000 loan. The trial justice refused to allow Levitt to testify in regard to the alleged consideration for these transfers because of the very limited response he had given (only the deeds were provided) to the Nisenzons’ discovery requests regarding these transactions. 5

On September 25, 1989, DeVito wrote a letter to Levitt, stating that he had held off on filing suit in reliance on the payment assurances DeVito had received from Levitt’s law firm as set forth in Barry’s May 1 letter but that he had heard nothing from Levitt or his firm since having received that letter. He requested that Levitt contact him concerning the promised repayment of Sadow-ski’s debt. On January 17, 1990, Levitt wrote DeVito about Sadowski’s financial situation and his inability to repay the Nisenzons before some of his other creditors. Once again Levitt made no mention of his interest in the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
689 A.2d 1037, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 52, 1997 WL 75548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nisenzon-v-sadowski-ri-1997.