P. S. & A. Realties, Inc. v. Lodge Gate Forest, Inc.

205 Misc. 245, 127 N.Y.S.2d 315, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1947
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 205 Misc. 245 (P. S. & A. Realties, Inc. v. Lodge Gate Forest, 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
P. S. & A. Realties, Inc. v. Lodge Gate Forest, Inc., 205 Misc. 245, 127 N.Y.S.2d 315, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1947 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Walter, J.

By written contract of October 4, 1952, defendant Lodge Gate Forest, Inc., agreed to sell to plaintiff William Proopis a plot of ground improved by a one-story building containing seven retail stores, known as 525-537 Piándome Road, Manhasset, Long Island, for $251,000, of which $12,500 was paid upon the signing of the contract, $37,500 was to be paid upon delivery of the deed, $130,000 was to be paid by taking title subject to a mortgage for that amount which the seller was then arranging to obtain from a savings bank, and for the balance of which the purchaser was to give the seller a bond or note for $71,000 secured by a second mortgage upon the property. In so contracting Proopis was acting for himself and for plaintiffs David T. Sommer and Adolph Austin and the seller was advised of that fact.

The contract was assigned to plaintiff P. S. & A. Realties, Inc., a corporation organized and controlled by the individual plaintiffs, and the purchase was consummated on November 7, 1952, by payment of the $37,500 and the execution of the $71,000 bond and mortgage, and the conveyance of the property to plaintiff P. S. & A. Realties, Inc., which simultaneously conveyed the premises to the individual plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs assert that the purchase was induced by false representations with respect to the tenants of the stores and the terms of their leases, and by this action they seek rescission of the transaction on that ground.

[248]*248The property was first brought to the attention of Proopis by brokers employed by Lodge Gate Forest, Inc., who gave him a typewritten statement, based on statements made to them by defendant Deitch, describing the property and setting forth that the rent roll” of the stores was as follows:

1. Records and Music

2. Bookshop

3. Klix Cleaners (chain)

4. Rhea Nichols Shoes (chain)

5. Kiddy Fair

6. Longley Dresses

7. Grand Prix Foreign Motors

$3,000 to 6/ 1/56

4,200 to 6/ 1/57

2,400 to 1/31/57

4,200 to 1/31/57

3,180 to 2/28/57

4,200 to 7/ 1/56

8,400 to 10/ 1/53,

$9,000 to

$29,580 10/ 1/54

Proopis and the brokers drove to the property and looked at it from the outside. It was dark and rainy and the stores were closed, but Proopis says he could see that six of the stores were occupied and one was not occupied.

Proopis and the brokers then went to the home of defendant Deitch, who owned and controlled defendant Lodge Gate Forest, Inc., and who, in answer to the request of Proopis for all information about the property, said, among other things, that the empty store had been rented to Rosemary Crawford, an experienced woman competent to run a bookshop, who had a lease and had paid rent since July, but was then sick in Paris and had cabled him to prepare the store for her occupancy at the end of the month, that the tenants and occupants of the other stores were all good tenants doing good business and paid their rent promptly, and that there were no modifications of or concessions from the existing written leases.

At the conference at the office of the seller’s attorney on October 4, 1952, which resulted in the signing of the written contract of purchase, the seller exhibited to the purchaser, and the purchaser initialed, seven leases by the seller to the following tenants on the following terms:

Morec Mail, Inc., 525 Piándome Road, for sale of records and musical instruments, five years, May 1, 1951, to April 30, 1956, $3,000 per year;

Rosemary Crawford, doing business as Crawford Book Shop, 527 Piándome Road, for bookshop, greeting cards, stationery and gifts, five years, July 1, 1952, to June 30, 1957, $4,200 per year;

[249]*249Klix Cleaners, 529 Piándome Road, for dry cleaning, five years, February 1,1952, to January 31,1957, $2,400 per year;

Rhea Nichols Enterprises, Inc., 531 Piándome Road, for shoe-shop, five years, February 1, 1952, to January 31, 1957, $4,200 per year;

Irene Hanrahan, 533 Piándome Road, children’s and infants’ wear and accessories, five years, March 1, 1952, to February 28, 1957, $3,180 per year;

Mildred E. Longley, doing business as Marion Flack Dress Shop, 535 Piándome Road, dress shop and women’s apparel, five years, July 1,1951, to June 30,1956, $4,200 per year;

Charles J. P. Kotchan & Co., Inc., 537 Piándome Road, automobile showroom, three years, October 1,1951, to September 30, 1954, $8,400 per year for first and second years, and $9,000 for third year.

At the closing of title on November 7,1952, Deitch told Proopis that Rosemary Crawford had found she would be unable to open her bookshop because she had found that she would not be able to obtain a certain line of cards for sale therein, but that he had done Proopis a great favor by getting for him a first-class, highly responsible tenant, Furniture Factory Outlet Corp., which was owned by Mr. Simmons, the head of Simmons Furniture Co.; that a lease of the Crawford store to Furniture Factory Outlet Corp. had been signed but had been inadvertently left at his office and would be sent to him the next day; and Deitch thereupon produced the Crawford lease with a notation on the back signed by Deitch stating that a new lease on the same terms had been executed with Furniture Factory Outlet Corp. It was not until long after the closing, however, that the lease to Furniture Factory Outlet Corp. was actually supplied to the buyers.

Those representations were false in many material respects. The lease to Rhea Nichols Enterprises, Inc., had been accompanied by a letter fixing the rent thereunder at $250 per month for the first year instead of $350 per month, and at $300 per month for the second year instead of $350 per month. The lease to Mrs. Hanrahan had been accompanied by a letter fixing her rental at $200 per month up to February 26, 1953. Charles J. P. Kotchan & Co. had been given a letter waiving rent of their store for October, November and December, 1951, and reducing their rent for the first year of their lease to $600 per month. Rosemary Crawford had not paid any rent and it is at least doubtful if she had signed any lease or ever had any intention of opening a store. She was married to defendant [250]*250Deitch on December 18, 1952, and it is at least a fair inference that she and Deitch were contemplating marriage at least as early as October 1, 1952. Deitch says that he was paying the rent for her. Furniture Factory Outlet Corp. was not owned by a Mr. Simmons who was the head of Simmons Furniture Co. It was in reality nothing but another name for defendant Deitch, and what was represented as a lease to it was not in reality a real lease to anyone. Klix Cleaners, also, had been given a concession of $25 per month from the rent stated in the written lease, and they actually had paid $175 per month instead of the $200 specified in the written lease. Mrs. Longley, tenant of No. 535 under lease calling for $4,200 per year, actually had paid no rent other than $150 paid as a deposit when she moved into the store.

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Bluebook (online)
205 Misc. 245, 127 N.Y.S.2d 315, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-s-a-realties-inc-v-lodge-gate-forest-inc-nysupct-1954.