Sica v. Gimma

12 Misc. 2d 699, 175 N.Y.S.2d 779, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3321
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Misc. 2d 699 (Sica v. Gimma) 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
Sica v. Gimma, 12 Misc. 2d 699, 175 N.Y.S.2d 779, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3321 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Henry Epstein, J.

This is an action for an accounting, to compel turnover of property and for damages allegedly due on such accounting. Defendants are the former husband of plaintiff, his brother, a member of the stock brokerage firm of Hornblower & Weeks, also a defendant. The wife of the broker (Licia Albanese, wife of Joseph Gimma) is also a defendant. The transactions on which the claims of plaintiff are based cover a period from 1946 to 1954. Since Joseph Gimma was first a customers’ man and later a partner in defendant, Hornblower & Weeks, the claim of a fiduciary relationship is is made. Separate causes of action are stated against defendant Mario Gimma (the ex-husband of plaintiff) for unrepaid loans, failure to support and for conversion of a Cadillac automobile.

[701]*701The verified answers constitute general denials, with pleas of Statute of Limitations as a partial defense, and a counterclaim by defendant Mario Gimma as well as a defense based on a Florida divorce decree by plaintiff against said Mario Gimma (procured by plaintiff in 1954). The typewritten record of this case comprises over 3,000 pages and the court has received some eight or nine briefs from the parties which have been helpful. While there has been much said on both sides of the controversy, analysis reveals no great dispute on the facts deemed vital to decision. Pretrial examinations exposed almost all the documentary evidence produced at the trial. A review of certain facts will clarify the analysis moving the court to its conclusion.

Plaintiff, Dorothy Sica, was in 1946 a widow with substantial means inherited from her husband. An attractive woman in her middle years, she was “in the market ” for a husband and her friends were cognizant of this frame of mind. Over the Labor Day weekend in 1946, Mario Gimma, associated with Lawrence Turnure-BIyth Bonner brokerage firm, was procured as an escort for plaintiff. Mario Gimma was then living with his parents in Piándome, Long Island, not far from plaintiff’s residence — and he was then living separate and apart from his wife. There is little doubt that this was a fortuitous meeting for Mario Gimma — a fortune hunter, and an unfortunate one for Dorothy Sica, who so readily succumbed to Mario’s blandishments. If she had any sound sense of either men or money, they were wholly submerged in her eagerness to find a husband. Mario had done a rather finished job of “ casing” both the customer and the house. Both were to his liking and he acted with despatch.

At first plaintiff followed Mario’s recommendations and purchased 200 shares each of International Telephone, Electric Bond and Share, Electric Power and Light, and International Hydro-Electric A. The cost was $11,550.56, and when the confirmations were received from the Lawrence Turnure firm, plaintiff brought out a batch of 10, 20 and 100 dollar bills and counted out $12,485 which she handed to Mario. This included an item of $917.13 representing 50 shares of I. T. & T. purchased for Julie 'Chieco, plaintiff’s sister-in-law. This substantial cash sum came out of a $20,000 fund kept by plaintiff in cash in her bedroom. All this plaintiff desired to be kept secret from her brother-in-law, who handled the estate of her deceased husband and the business in which they had been associated. Thus began the friendly, frequent and continuous relationship of plaintiff and Mario. So sure was he of his [702]*702prospective bride and customer that Mario unhesitatingly told her of his domestic troubles, his meager income from earnings, and his very limited trading account at Credit Suisse. ' Again on October 4, plaintiff purchased from the Trunure firm through Mario an added 300 shares of I. T. & T., and paid by check for $5,584.26 on her Port Washington (L. I.) bank, to which sum was added the credit balance of $17.13 left from the prior transaction.

A second phase of the financial history now began: — Out of their increasingly friendly relationship came a joint trading in the Credit Suisse account to which plaintiff through Mario contributed 200 shares each of Electric Bond and Share and Electric Power and Light and 100 shares of I. T. & T. Mario then opened a checking account for himself in the Underwriters Trust with $4,500 taken from Credit Suisse as a loan. He drew a check for $3,000 to Dorothy’s order which she herself deposited in her own account. Additional shares were purchased and delivered to plaintiff from the Turnare firm. All this occurred in the period between September and December, 1946. Mario was now well on his way. The securities purchased from Turnure were handed to Mario and by him pledged at Credit Suisse. Before the summer of 1947 loans were made by Mario and in all this plaintiff’s name did not appear. However, she never complained and it would seem she was kept informed of such transactions.

By this time (early in 1947) plaintiff and Mario were “in love ” and saw each other every evening. They were planning marriage as soon as the obstacle (Mario’s wife) could be overcome. Mario then learned through friends that he could obtain a divorce in Georgia after a year’s residence. With the resources supplied by plaintiff the purchase of a night club restaurant in Darien, Georgia, known as the “ Ridgeway ” was effected for $15,000, all cash. Arrangements were made through Joseph, Mario’s brother, to obtain the needed funds with a loan from Credit Suisse in the name of Licia, Joseph’s wife. The collateral (plaintiff’s bonds to the amount of $15,000) was deposited on June 6, 1947. Also during this interval Mario brought plaintiff and her daughters to meet his and Joseph’s parents. When the closing on Ridgeway was imminent Joseph and his wife Licia had gone to Europe. Plaintiff then gave to Mario $10,000 United States Treasury bonds on which Mario obtained an $8,000 loan from Credit Suisse. The deal for Ridgeway was closed in August and Mario opened his own account in the Darien, Georgia bank. Title to Ridgeway was taken by plaintiff in her own name. She was not wholly devoid [703]*703of some sense of self-protection. And further to safeguard her funds from any claim by Mario’s wife, the account was set up as Licia Albanese account No. 2 in Credit Suisse. This was handled by Joseph at the request of plaintiff and with Licia’s consent. We are now in August (20), 1947 and the $15,000 in government bonds, formerly in the Licia regular account at Credit Suisse were transferred to the Licia No. 2 account. In none of these matters was defendant Hornblower & Weeks involved.

The Ridgeway investment proved unprofitable and except for providing Mario with a residence for purpose of his divorce, it yielded nothing but a living for Mario and a place to visit for plaintiff. The romance did, however, continue and in 1948 Mario and plaintiff came to New York, where she deposited $15,000 more United States Treasury bonds (plaintiff’s property) with Hornblower & Weeks, drew down the proceeds of $12,000 which Mario deposited in the Darien bank. Mario and plaintiff were now in the shrimp business. First one boat, then a second boat was bought for something like $20,000. These, too, were in plaintiff’s name. There was some anchor to windward. In October, 1948, Mario had his divorce from his wife. Plaintiff and Mario filed joint tax returns for 1949. They were not married until March, 1950. Prior to the ceremony Mario gave plaintiff a full release of all claim to her estate. Once more plaintiff shows a modicum of self-protection. The shrimp business was now transferred to St. Augustine, Florida (late 1949) and was discontinued in January, 1950.

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Related

Sica v. Gimma
13 A.D.2d 462 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Misc. 2d 699, 175 N.Y.S.2d 779, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sica-v-gimma-nysupct-1958.