Sage Realty Corp. v. Proskauer Rose L. L. P.

275 A.D.2d 11, 713 N.Y.S.2d 155, 2000 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9025
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 7, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 275 A.D.2d 11 (Sage Realty Corp. v. Proskauer Rose L. L. P.) 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
Sage Realty Corp. v. Proskauer Rose L. L. P., 275 A.D.2d 11, 713 N.Y.S.2d 155, 2000 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9025 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Tom, J.

The issue before us is whether plaintiffs intentionally and in bad faith destroyed tape recordings relevant to their claims and, if so, what is the proper remedy for plaintiffs’ spoliation of evidence.

Defendant Proskauer was legal counsel for Robert and Melvyn Kaufman in connection with a complex mortgage-backed securities transaction. The Kaufman brothers were principals of plaintiff Sage Realty Corporation and various related real estate entities that are parties to the present action. Defendant Nomura Securities International (NSI) acted as broker-dealer and Proskauer acted as the plaintiffs’ legal advisor. The purpose of the transaction was to refinance certain real estate holdings- and to thus acquire new equity capital. The loan portion of the transaction closed on February 9, 1995; the securitization portion of the transaction took place on April 4, 1995. Plaintiffs contend that their goal was to enter into only leasehold, and not fee, mortgages.

In 1996, plaintiffs discharged Proskauer. The discharge led to some initial litigation over Proskauer’s retention of its work product documentation (Matter of Sage Realty Corp. v Proskauer Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn, 91 NY2d 30), and plaintiffs hired Nixon Peabody. Plaintiffs then sued Proskauer and NSI in the present case, asserting claims sounding in legal malpractice, breach of fiduciary duty and breach of contract, in connection with the terms of the transaction. Generally, plaintiffs, experienced real estate businessmen, contended that [13]*13defendants had failed to explain numerous loan documents to plaintiffs, failed to ensure that only leasehold mortgages were created, failed to ensure that the defeasance provisions of the transaction worked as intended, and generally failed to advise, and that Proskauer failed to reveal a putative conflict in that it had represented NSI in another matter. Defendants, though, claim that the fee mortgage and defeasance matters were amply discussed in many conversations with plaintiffs’ principals, who were advised of all relevant aspects of the transaction.

Defendants’ initial motion for summary judgment was denied pending further discovery. During discovery, defendants demanded production of the tape recordings that are presently in issue. The Kaufmans concede, as they must, that they and other senior executives tape-recorded business discussions with other parties, including their counsel, regarding complex or important matters, with the result that hundreds of tapes were stored in Melvyn Kaufman’s office. Among those recordings were tapes pertaining to discussions with defendants regarding this transaction. Obviously, to the extent that defendants’ advice to plaintiffs was thus memorialized on tape, that advice has critical importance to the basic thrust of plaintiffs’ entire complaint that the necessary advice was not imparted. Apparently, though, plaintiffs were less than willing to release the tapes.

When plaintiffs received the demands during April and May 1999, their first response was that compliance would be unduly burdensome, but that they would try to locate “any non-privileged, relevant recordings of telephone or other conversations specifically responsive to [the] demand.” Defendants subsequently had to demand the tapes again, and plaintiffs again responded that they were trying to locate them. During a one-week period at the end of June 1999, on the eve of depositions, three batches of tapes were produced totaling 13 tapes (eventually two more were produced) encompassing 16 conversations. With the exception of one tape, these conversations did not allude to the fee mortgage or defeasance issues that were being litigated, and as to that one, as the IAS Court indicated, Melvyn Kaufman seemed surprised that it even existed. Three tapes recorded conversations with Proskauer employees and two contained conversations with NSI employees. Yet defendants claimed to have had numerous other conversations with plaintiffs. When defendants requested further tapes, plaintiffs’ counsel responded that they were not aware of any more.

[14]*14As a result, Proskauer refused to produce its first witness for depositions. Defendants moved to compel production of all relevant tape recordings, and plaintiffs cross-moved to compel Proskauer to produce purportedly missing work product files. In connection with the motions, Melvyn Kaufman submitted an affidavit averring his familiarity with the legal requirement that relevant evidence may not be destroyed or altered in anticipation of litigation, that plaintiffs and their employees had “extensively, thoroughly and diligently” searched for, and located, over several weeks “all available tape recordings and transcriptions of tape recordings sought by the defendants to be produced to them,” and that all tapes had been turned over to counsel. Kaufman also averred that “[t]o the best of my knowledge, no such tape recordings or transcripts were so destroyed or altered. Also, I am not aware of any requested tape recorded conversation not located and produced * * * and therefore, I do not believe any tape was even inadvertently discarded or altered.” The IAS Court then directed depositions on the issue whether tapes were altered or destroyed.

After initially failing to respond to interrogatories as to the taping process and who would be knowledgeable, plaintiffs, under court order, provided a very short list of individual names — five besides the Kaufmans. However, they omitted the names of former personnel who had been primarily responsible for filing and maintaining the tapes. The court then ordered a more complete answer, so that plaintiffs now supplied a very long list of names — 159—of personnel who might know something, but omitted any description of how each individual might have been involved in recording or filing tapes, or how they could be located, insofar as all addresses and phone numbers were also omitted. At the depositions, plaintiffs’ witnesses were directed by counsel not to answer questions regarding whether certain conversations were taped. The dodging and weaving by now was blatant.

Several former employees provided testimony on this issue significantly at variance with plaintiffs’ position and especially undermining key aspects of Kaufman’s affidavit. Former personnel established that the protocol was to tape all conversations, including telephone conversations. Although one witness described the taping as selective rather than routine, that person recalled that Melvyn had had phone conversations regarding the securitization transaction. Another former employee recalled witnessing Melvyn having numerous phone conversations regarding that transaction, during which the [15]*15mortgage of fee interests was discussed, and that she had listened to a dozen, or perhaps fewer, tapes relating to those conversations. Melvyn Kaufman’s secretary testified that she had taped “several” conversations on a daily basis during the relevant time period, and that from 1994 to 1996, covering the time period of Proskauer’s representation of plaintiffs giving rise to the underlying dispute, 3 or 4 file cabinets, each holding about 100 tapes with more piled on top, were located in Kaufman’s office; some of these were Proskauer tapes. To her knowledge, none had been discarded when she left that employment. However, another employee recalled that several tapes were disposed of during the summer of 1999 — the coincidence of the timing is, of course, remarkable.

Melvyn Kaufman also was deposed.

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Bluebook (online)
275 A.D.2d 11, 713 N.Y.S.2d 155, 2000 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sage-realty-corp-v-proskauer-rose-l-l-p-nyappdiv-2000.