Rosenzweig v. Givens

62 A.D.3d 1, 879 N.Y.S.2d 387
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 8, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 A.D.3d 1 (Rosenzweig v. Givens) 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
Rosenzweig v. Givens, 62 A.D.3d 1, 879 N.Y.S.2d 387 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Moskowitz, J.

Given the highly unusual circumstances of this case, we do not believe that the motion court should have granted summary judgment to plaintiff at this early juncture, prior to discovery. Plaintiff Joseph Rosenzweig commenced this action to foreclose on two mortgages he issued to defendant Radiah Givens on May 10, 2002, in connection with the balance due on defendant’s alleged purchase of a condominium apartment. The apartment secured the loans. It is undisputed that defendant herself has never made a mortgage payment.

However, these were no ordinary, arm’s length mortgages. At the time plaintiff, an attorney, issued the mortgages, he was involved in a romantic relationship with defendant, a student 19 years younger. Unlike most mortgage transactions, it was plaintiff who paid the 10% down payment on the property. After the closing, plaintiff also paid the carrying costs on the apartment and most household expenses.

Plaintiff had his long-term friend and colleague, attorney Thomas Gazianis, represent defendant at the apartment’s closing and both plaintiff and defendant in connection with the loans. At or directly after the May 10, 2002 closing, the parties signed a letter, as “accepted and agreed to,” acknowledging Gazianis’s joint representation in connection with plaintiffs loans to defendant, and of defendant in connection with her purchase of the apartment. Gazianis noted in the letter that he had a prior social and working relationship with plaintiff and recommended that both parties obtain separate counsel as a potential conflict existed. The letter also described the transaction between the parties as two mortgage loans being made to defendant “by Joseph I. Rosenzweig, in the combined amount of $285,300, and in connection with the mortgage and Note [defendant] has given to Mr. Rosenzweig therewith.”

Unbeknownst to defendant at the time, plaintiff was married with children.

Almost two years later, on or about April 13, 2004, the parties married in Jamaica. Plaintiff was still married to another [4]*4woman. The marriage register reflects that plaintiff identified himself as a bachelor and attorney. On April 19, 2005, plaintiff forged defendant’s signature on a loan application for $150,000 that the apartment was to secure.

Plaintiff did not record the second mortgage until July 7, 2005, over three years after the closing. Defendant contends that plaintiff did this after she had found out that he had forged her signature on the loan application and after plaintiff’s bigamous marriage became known to plaintiff’s first wife. Plaintiff contends that he did not record the second mortgage until three years later to avoid certain taxes.

Eventually, defendant discovered that plaintiff was already married. In February 2007, the parties’ bigamous marriage was annulled.

Defendant contends that the apartment was a gift to her from plaintiff. She contends that she was a student at the time of the transaction and that plaintiff knew she could not make the monthly payments. In support, defendant points out that the plaintiff paid the monthly expenses on the apartment including maintenance, household and related charges. Defendant also notes that plaintiff never asked her for mortgage payments until after she discovered his duplicity. Defendant explains that plaintiff induced her to sign the mortgage documents by claiming her signature was necessary to effectuate the gift. She says she never questioned this because he was a lawyer and she loved and trusted him. She claims she never would have signed had she known these were mortgage documents because she could not afford to make the monthly payments.

In her answer, defendant asserted affirmative defenses sounding in fraud and bad faith and two counterclaims. The first counterclaim is for fraudulent inducement to marry. The second counterclaim relates to plaintiffs fraud in inducing her to enter into the mortgage agreements and his forgery of her name on a bank loan.

Plaintiff argues that the mortgage terms are clear and unambiguous and cannot be reasonably read to indicate anything other than a loan. However, “Agreements between spouses, unlike ordinary business contracts, involve a fiduciary relationship requiring the utmost of good faith” (Christian v Christian, 42 NY2d 63, 72 [1977]). Thus, courts exercise strict surveillance of agreements between spouses (see e.g. Levine v Levine, 56 NY2d 42, 47 [1982]; Barchella v Barchella, 44 AD3d 696, 697 [2007]). Although the parties were not married on the [5]*5day defendant signed the mortgage agreements, their relationship, as their eventual marriage demonstrates, was sufficiently analogous to at least raise a question as to whether or not a fiduciary relationship existed to raise the level of scrutiny of this transaction to one of strict surveillance (see Matter of Greiff, 92 NY2d 341, 347 [1998] [noting “the unique character of the inchoate bond between prospective spouses” and that “these relationships are almost universally beyond the pale of ordinary commercial transactions,” Court required “exceptional scrutiny” in evaluating prenuptial agreement]; Brody v Brody, 20 Misc 3d 350, 356-357 [Sup Ct, Nassau County 2008] [applying standard to prenuptial agreement]). Thus, defendant has detailed circumstances that raise an issue of fact about whether a fiduciary relationship existed between the parties, including their romantic involvement that resulted in a marriage (albeit a sham one because plaintiff was a bigamist), their age difference and that plaintiff was a lawyer.

Reasoning that these were mortgage documents, the motion court, without discovery, dismissed defendant’s claims that she was fraudulently induced to sign them on the ground that her allegations did not rise to the level of fraud. However, this analysis fails to take into account the highly unusual circumstances of this case and fails to apply the level of scrutiny appropriate considering the relationship between these parties. Given the surrounding circumstances, especially the nature of the parties’ relationship, defendant has sufficiently raised an issue of fact about whether plaintiff tricked her into signing the mortgage documents by claiming they were merely a formality to effectuate his gift to her. That defendant did not have her own lawyer, but relied on a friend of plaintiff, further raises questions about this transaction (see Bartlett v Bartlett, 84 AD2d 800 [1981] [separation agreement was product of “overreaching” where one attorney represented both husband and wife but acted “essentially as the defendant husband’s attorney”]). At the very least, the motion court should not have granted summary judgment without affording defendant discovery.

The dissent argues that defendant fully understood the nature of the transaction because she signed a letter, dated May 10, 2002, from plaintiffs attorney/friend that informed her about the nature of the transaction and advised her to obtain separate counsel. However, as cases have repeatedly held, agreements between spouses or prospective spouses, unlike ordinary business contracts, involve a fiduciary relationship requiring the utmost [6]*6good faith (see Christian v Christian, 42 NY2d 63, 72 [1977]; see also Matter of Greiff, 92 NY2d 341, 347 [1998]; Colello v Colello, 9 AD3d 855, 859 [2004]).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A.D.3d 1, 879 N.Y.S.2d 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenzweig-v-givens-nyappdiv-2009.