Pires v. Bowery Presents, LLC

44 Misc. 3d 704, 988 N.Y.S.2d 467
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Misc. 3d 704 (Pires v. Bowery Presents, LLC) 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
Pires v. Bowery Presents, LLC, 44 Misc. 3d 704, 988 N.Y.S.2d 467 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Saliann Scarpulla, J.

In this putative class action, plaintiff Ligia Pires seeks damages and injunctive relief based on the defendant’s alleged violation of Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c), which requires certain operators of places of entertainment to sell paperless tickets that can be independently and freely transferred. The defendant, The Bowery Presents, LLC, moves to dismiss the complaint based on CPLR 3211 (a) (7). In the alternative, Bowery moves, pursuant to CPLR 2201, to stay this action pending the resolution of a related arbitration, and for attorney’s fees.

In the complaint, Pires alleges that she purchased a ticket from Bowery, via the Ticketmaster website, to attend a performance of the “The Temper Trap” at the Bowery Ballroom on March 28, 2012.1 At the time that Pires purchased the ticket, the website stated that tickets for this event were “non-transferable” and “can only be picked up at the will call on the night of the show.”

[707]*707Pires alleges that, a day before the event, she attempted to transfer her ticket to a friend by contacting Ticketmaster. However, she was allegedly informed by Ticketmaster that the ticket could not be transferred, and that only she could use the ticket to attend the event. Pires alleges that Bowery never issued any tickets at the will call box on the night of the show, but instead admitted people to the event by checking their identification cards at the door against a list of people who originally purchased tickets.

Pires argues that Bowery violated Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c) by employing a paperless ticket system that did not give her the option to purchase a paperless ticket, or another form of ticket, that could be independently transferred as required under the statute.2 Pires further alleges that Bowery is engaged in an ongoing practice of violating Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c). Pires seeks, on behalf of herself and others similarly situated, actual damages and an injunction to restrain Bowery from any further violation. The proposed class is comprised of persons who purchased tickets between July 2, 2010 and June 28, 2013 from Bowery, or its agents, for entertainment events in New York where Bowery employed a paperless ticketing system without the option to purchase a ticket that could be independently and freely transferred.

In the current motion, Bowery argues that the complaint should be dismissed because Pires does not have standing to assert her claim. Bowery contends that Pires presents no case or controversy because she does not allege any direct injury. According to Bowery, Pires only alleges a derivative injury to her friend who was unable to attend the concert. Bowery also argues that Pires could not have suffered any pecuniary harm to recover actual damages because she did not attempt to resell her ticket.

Bowery also claims that Pires’s claim for an injunction is moot because the event already occurred, and Pires’s allegations that Bowery is continuing to violate Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c) are vague and speculative. Lastly, Bowery argues that CPLR 901 (b) bars class actions under Arts [708]*708and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c), and that Pires may not waive the statutory minimum level of recovery in order to maintain the class action.

In the alternative, Bowery seeks to stay this action pending the resolution of a consolidated arbitration before Justice Betty W. Ellerin at JAMS.3 Bowery argues that staying this action would serve the interests of judicial economy because the claimants in the consolidated arbitration seek the same injunctive relief as Pires, and any injunctive award issued against Ticketmaster at arbitration would effectively preclude Bowery from any further violation of Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c). Bowery contends that it would be bound by the arbitration award because Ticketmaster retains the right to sell tickets to Bowery’s events.

In opposing the motion, Pires contends that she adequately alleges a direct injury and actual damages, based on the violation of her right to transfer her ticket. Pires also claims that she adequately alleges continual wrongdoing to support her claim for an injunction, and that this case should not be dismissed for mootness because it is capable of repetition and evades review.

Further, Pires claims that CPLR 901 (b) does not bar this class action because she waived her right to the statutory minimum amount of recovery, and she seeks only actual damages on behalf of the class, and any class member has the right to opt out of the class.

Pires also opposes a stay in this action on the grounds that any arbitration award will not bind Bowery because neither she nor Bowery are parties to the arbitration. She further argues that Bowery should be judicially estopped from seeking to invoke any arbitration because it obtained a permanent stay of the arbitration that Pires originally commenced against Bowery. In the event that the court dismisses the complaint, Pires seeks leave to replead.

Discussion

In 2010, the legislature amended the Arts and Cultural Affairs Law to include provisions governing the sale of paperless tickets to entertainment events. Paperless tickets allow at[709]*709tendees of an event to purchase a ticket on a website, and gain admittance to the event by verifying their identity upon arrival, rather than by handing in a paper ticket. (Elizabeth Block, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 3B, Arts and Cultural Affairs Law, tit G, art 25 at 211.)

To ensure that paperless tickets can be freely and independently transferred, the legislature passed Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c), which prohibits any operator of a place of entertainment, or its agent, from employing a paperless ticketing system “unless the consumer is given an option to purchase paperless tickets that the consumer can transfer at any price, and at any time, and without additional fees, independent of the operator or operator’s agent.” If an operator employs a paperless ticketing system that does not allow for independent transferability, the operator must provide “an option at the time of initial sale to purchase the same tickets in some other form that is transferrable independent of the operator or operator’s agent including, but not limited to, paper tickets or e-tickets.” (Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 [1] [c].)

A consumer injured by a violation of Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.30 (1) (c) “may bring an action in his or her own name to enjoin such unlawful act, an action to recover his or her actual damages or fifty dollars, whichever is greater, or both such actions” and may also be awarded reasonable attorney’s fees as a prevailing plaintiff. (Arts and Cultural Affairs Law § 25.33.)

I. Standing

In its motion to dismiss, Bowery first argues that the complaint should be dismissed because Pires does not allege any direct injury, but only a derivative injury to her friend. Bowery contends that Pires’s injury consists solely of the disappointment to her friend who was unable to attend the event because the ticket could not be transferred.

Based on the allegations in the complaint, Pires has standing to assert her claim.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Misc. 3d 704, 988 N.Y.S.2d 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pires-v-bowery-presents-llc-nysupct-2014.