Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. v. Luckie
This text of 245 A.D.2d 17 (Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. v. Luckie) 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.
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As is here relevant, petitioner sought to stay arbitration of respondents’ claims upon the ground that the claims had not been timely interposed. Supreme Court denied the petition, holding that respondents’ claims were in fact timely under New York law. We, thereafter, affirmed the denial of the petition (198 AD2d 87), but did so without passing upon the timeliness of respondents’ claims; we held instead that arbitration should proceed because the parties had agreed to arbitrate “any controversy between [them] arising out of or relating to [their] contract or the breach thereof’ and had thus signaled their consent to the submission of all contractually related disputes, among them disputes over the timeliness of claims relating to the contract or its breach, to arbitration. A different result, we thought, would not have been consonant with the policies underlying the Federal Arbitration Act (9 USC § 1 et seq.). The Court of Appeals, however, disagreed and reversed [18]*18(85 NY2d 193, supra), holding in the course of so doing that where, as in the present case, the parties had agreed that their contract would be governed by the laws of New York State, the timeliness of the claims sought to be arbitrated was, pursuant to New York law (CPLR 7502 [b]), a matter for the court, not the arbitrator (supra, at 202). The Court saw no conflict between this application of New York law and the policies of the Federal Arbitration Act (supra, at 203-206).
The matter was remitted to us with the instruction that we address the merit of petitioner’s allegations that respondents’ claims are time-barred (supra, at 207). We now do so, having until recently stayed consideration of the appeal while related litigation was ongoing in the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals (see, Kahn v Smith Barney Shearson, 115 F3d 930).
Respondents’ claims were interposed in April 1989 and relate to violations which, on the record before us, cannot be said to have occurred subsequent to August 1984. Respondents are Florida residents and their claims undoubtedly accrued in Florida. This being the case, determination of the governing limitations period under New York law requires application of New York’s borrowing statute (CPLR 202; Kidder, Peabody & Co. v McArtor, 223 AD2d 502). Pursuant to that statute, as between the limitation period applicable under New York law and that of the foreign jurisdiction, it is the shorter period that governs (McCarthy v Bristol Labs., 86 AD2d 279, 283, appeal dismissed 58 NY2d 780). It follows that respondents’ claims are, without exception, untimely.
Respondents’ claims for violation of securities laws, both Federal and State, are barred by the two-year limitation set forth for Florida’s Blue Sky laws (Fla Stat Annot § 95.11 [4] [e]). To the extent that Federal securities law violations are alleged, the Florida Blue Sky limitation period is applicable because in this pre-Lampf case (see, Lampf v Gilbertson, 501 US 350 [1991]), it is the limitations period of the forum State which governs (see, e.g., Armstrong v McAlpin, 699 F2d 79, 87)
Indeed, we note that the result in this case would not be different even if Lampf (supra) were retroactively applied since under Lampf the uniformly applicable limitations period for Federal securities law claims such as those asserted by respondents cannot exceed three years.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
245 A.D.2d 17, 665 N.Y.S.2d 74, 1997 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-barney-harris-upham-co-v-luckie-nyappdiv-1997.