Perrotti v. Becker, Glynn, Melamed & Muffly LLP

82 A.D.3d 495, 918 N.Y.2d 423
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 10, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 82 A.D.3d 495 (Perrotti v. Becker, Glynn, Melamed & Muffly LLP) 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.

Bluebook
Perrotti v. Becker, Glynn, Melamed & Muffly LLP, 82 A.D.3d 495, 918 N.Y.2d 423 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Plaintiff and defendants Garcia and Lobato jointly owned several investment advisory businesses incorporated in the Cayman Islands. In May 2006, the parties entered into a stock buyout and consulting agreement (SBCA), in which Garcia and Lobato agreed to purchase plaintiff’s shares in the entities for a total of $70,000. The agreement further provided that Linda Macarena (Macarena), a Panamanian company owned by plaintiff, would provide consulting services to two of the entities subject to the stock sale as well as a third entity, and that those companies would pay Macarena $2,088,000 in the aggregate.

Contemporaneous with the execution of the SBCA, plaintiff, Macarena, Garcia, Lobato and defendant Becker, Glynn, Melamed & Muffly LLP (BGMM), a law firm, executed a stock pledge and escrow agreement. Richard N. Chassin, a partner of BGMM, signed that agreement on behalf of the firm. Pursuant to that instrument, Garcia and Lobato agreed to deliver, and BGMM agreed, as escrow agent, to hold, “duly executed share transfer forms representing all of the shares” of the entities which plaintiff had agreed to sell to Garcia and Lobato.

Garcia and Lobato made all required payments for plaintiffs shares of stock. However, in January 2007, the entities which were required by the SBCA to make payments to Macarena for consulting services went into voluntary liquidation in the Cayman Islands, and stopped making the payments.

Plaintiff filed a complaint alleging that Garcia, Lobato, and the three entities which were subject to the consulting provi[496]*496sions of the SBCA, had breached the SBCA. He claimed that Garcia and Lobato had individually agreed to pay him (personally and as assignee of Macarena) $2,155,750 for his shares in the three advisory firms. He did not explain in the complaint how he reached this figure, where the SBCA clearly stated that the purchase price was only $70,000. The complaint also named two additional entities which plaintiff alleged were successors in interest to two of the entities that were party to the SBCA. Plaintiff alleged that Garcia and Lobato “each personally used the five defendant corporations as an ‘alter ego,’ and dominated and controlled the corporations for their own benefit, so that the corporate ‘veil’ should be pierced.”

The complaint also asserted a cause of action against BGMM and Chassin, both denominated as “escrow agent.” Plaintiff alleged that those defendants violated the stock pledge and escrow agreement “by failing to maintain for plaintiffs security, the subject stock and/or indicia of stock ownership.” He further claimed that the conduct of BGMM and Chassin “constituted ‘bad faith’ and ‘gross negligence’ on their part,” and compelled judgment against them for the balance of amounts due plaintiff under the SBCA.

BGMM and Chassin moved pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (7) to dismiss the complaint as against them. In support of the motion, Chassin submitted an affirmation in which he asserted that “BGMM, as escrow agent continues to retain each of the three pledged share transfer forms in escrow in accordance with the terms of the Stock Pledge and Escrow Agreement.” Garcia and Lobato separately moved to dismiss. They argued that nothing in the SBCA required Garcia and Lobato to pay plaintiff anything more than $70,000 for his shares of stock in the advisory firms, and that they were current on those payments.

Plaintiff cross-moved to amend his complaint. His proposed amended complaint contained several factual allegations which were absent from the original complaint. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that he originally entered into an oral agreement with Garcia and Lobato, pursuant to which he agreed to sell them his shares in the advisory firms for $2,125,000, and that an attorney representing Garcia and Lobato prepared a writing memorializing that arrangement. Plaintiff further asserted that, after he reviewed the document, but before it was executed, Garcia and Lobato proposed to him that the payment terms be restructured so that a substantial percentage of the stock purchase price would be characterized as consulting fees. This change, they allegedly assured plaintiff, was for tax planning purposes and would have no effect on plaintiffs ability to collect [497]*497the agreed amount of $2,125,000. Plaintiff asserted that Garcia and Lobato further represented to him that additional changes, such as placing the obligation to pay the “consulting fees” on two of the advisory firms and a new, third entity, as well as designating an entity controlled by plaintiff, but not plaintiff himself, as the recipient of the “consulting fees,” were for the “internal benefit” of Garcia and Lobato and would have no adverse impact on plaintiff. Indeed, plaintiff claimed that Garcia and Lobato’s internal accounting records demonstrated that they characterized all payments as being for the stock purchase, and that they made all payments to him in his individual capacity, not to Macarena.

The proposed pleading asserted a claim for fraudulent inducement against Garcia and Lobato, based on these new allegations. It contained the same cause of action against BGMM and Chassin as in the original complaint. Finally, the new pleading sought recovery from only one of the five entities named in the original complaint, Southport Capital Alternative Investments Ltd. Plaintiff alleged that Southport Capital was the successor-in-interest to Swiss Cayman Capital, one of the firms which was party to the SBCA. He further asserted that Southport Capital was liable to him because “Garcia and Lobato each personally dominated and controlled Swiss Cayman Capital, and caused Southport Capital to be its successor in interest.” Plaintiff further relied on a provision of the SBCA which makes all its obligations binding on corporate successors.

The IAS court granted defendants’ motions to dismiss and denied plaintiff’s cross motion to amend. With respect to BGMM, the court observed that the stock pledge and escrow agreement was clear and unambiguous. As such, it stated that it was required to enforce it in accordance with its plain meaning. Since the agreement merely required BGMM to hold the “share transfer forms” for the stock in the three advisory firms, and not the shares themselves, the court held that BGMM could not be held liable for retaining the former and not the latter. The court further held that the claim against Chassin had no merit, since he signed on behalf of BGMM and did not express any intent to be personally liable as an escrow agent. The court dismissed the breach of contract claim. It held that the SBCA placed no personal obligation on Garcia and Lobato to pay consulting fees to plaintiff, because any such obligation was reserved to the various entities. The court further found that plaintiff had not made sufficient factual allegations to pierce the corporate veil.

The IAS court also refused to grant plaintiff leave to amend [498]*498the complaint. It held that the executed SBCA rendered unviable the fraud claim against Garcia and Lobato. This was because that agreement “meaningfully contradicted” the oral misrepresentations upon which plaintiff claimed to have relied. The court found lacking in merit the claim against Southport Capital, stating that plaintiffs attempt to pierce the corporate veil remained “completely unsubstantiated.”

On this appeal, plaintiff focuses only on his proposed amended complaint. In doing so, he urges this Court to put aside any questions it may have regarding the merits of his proposed amended complaint, and give him leave to replead as required by CPLR 3025 (b).

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Bluebook (online)
82 A.D.3d 495, 918 N.Y.2d 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perrotti-v-becker-glynn-melamed-muffly-llp-nyappdiv-2011.