Toporovsky v. Toporovsky

2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Bronx County
DecidedJanuary 12, 2026
DocketIndex No. 817070/25E
StatusUnpublished
AuthorFidel E. Gomez

This text of 2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U) (Toporovsky v. Toporovsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toporovsky v. Toporovsky, 2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

Toporovsky v Toporovsky (2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U)) [*1]
Toporovsky v Toporovsky
2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U)
Decided on January 12, 2026
Supreme Court, Bronx County
Gomez, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on January 12, 2026
Supreme Court, Bronx County


Juana Toporovsky, Plaintiff(s),

against

Arie Toporovsky, ASHER TOPOROVSKY, ESTHER TOPOROVSKY, ARTHUR COURT REALTY MGT. CORP, ARIE TOPOROVSKY, ASHER TOPOROVSKY, AND ESTHER TOPOROVSKY AS EXECUTORS OF THE ESTATE OF RINALDO TOPOROVSKY, VAN COURTLANDT ASSETSLLC AND JOHN GOJCAJ, Defendant(s).




Index No. 817070/25E

Counsel for plaintiff: Cuddy & Feder LLP

Counsel for defendants: Meister Seelig & Fein PLLC
Fidel E. Gomez, J.

In this action for, inter alia, declaratory judgment, defendants ARIE TOPOROVSKY (Arie), ASHER TOPOROVSKY (Asther), ESTHER TOPOROVSKY (Esther) ARTHUR COURT REALTY MGT. CORP (Arthur), ARIE TOPOROVSKY, ASHER TOPOROVSKY, and ESTHER TOPOROVSKY AS Executors OF THE ESTATE OF RINALDO TOPOROVSKY (ERT), and VAN COURTLANDT ASSETS LLC (Van Courtland) move seeking an order pursuant to CPLR § 6514 cancelling the notice of pendency filed by plaintiff in this action. The foregoing defendants aver that insofar as plaintiff only owns an interest in Van Courtland, which owns the property encumbered by the notice of pendency, the notice of pendency was improperly filed and should be cancelled. The instant motion is unopposed [FN1] .

For the reasons that follow hereinafter, moving defendants' motion is denied, on default and without opposition.

The instant action is for equitable accounting, declaratory judgment, and permanent injunction. The amended complaint, filed on December 2, 2025, alleges that in 1999, Van Courtland was formed for the purposes of, inter alia, acquiring and owning real property located at 155-165 Mosholu Parkway North and 171 East Mosholu Parkway North, Bronx, NY (the properties). Initially, Van Courtland's members were nonparty O.T. Company L.P. (OT), its general partner Arthur, and nonparty 2863 Morris Avenue LLC (2863). Plaintiff and her brother, deceased nonparty Rinaldo Toporovsky (Rinaldo) were the beneficial owners of Van Courtland's original members and plaintiff provided the hard money funding to purchase OT and 2863's [*2]assets. In 2007, plaintiff, Arthur and Rinaldo acquired all interest in Van Courtland and, at the time, plaintiff owned 30% of the membership interest in Van Courtland, Rinaldo owned 62.5% of the membership interest in Van Courtland, and Arthur owned 7.5% of the membership interest in Van Courtland. As of 2022, per Van Courtland's tax returns, Rinaldo owned 69% of the membership interest in Van Courtland, Esther owned 1% and Arthur no longer owned any membership interest in Van Courtland. In 2025, Rinaldo passed away and his estate now owns 69% of the membership interest in Van Courtland. Since Rinaldo's passing, Arie and Asher, Rinaldo's children and plaintiff's nephews, have been acting as Van Courtland's managers, and they also control Arthur. Esther, Rinaldo's wife, and Arie and Asher's mother, and Arie and Asher are the executors of ERT. Pursuant to Van Courtland's Operating Agreement (1) transfers of a member's membership interest in Van Courtland to anyone other than a member's immediate family is prohibited unless other members are offered an opportunity to purchase the same; (2) Van Courtland's manager is required to prepare and distribute an operational budget to all members and must also prepare and distribute a balance sheet and a statement of profit/loss for Van Courtland; and (3) pursuant to Section 6, requires, inter alia, that if the properties are to be sold, members holding the majority of Van Courtland's shares must notify all other members of the intent to sell the properties in writing, and if all members cannot agree on a sale price, requires the retention of an appraiser, and upon determination of the value of the properties, any member other than those desiring to sell the properties must be given an opportunity to purchase the properties. In recent years, plaintiff has been denied access to information regarding Van Courtland the properties have been neglected and, Van Courtland has been the subject of at least one federal law suit, wherein a contractor sued it for $850,000. In 2017, Van Courtland obtained a loan for $9.8 million and, per a mortgage, pledged the properties as collateral. A portion of the foregoing loan was used to pay a then existing mortgage and thereafter, Van Courtland was left with $4.2 million. Although plaintiff received $600,000 from the foregoing sum, this amount represented less than her proportionate share. Rinaldo, Arie, and Asher have never accounted for how the rest of the remaining funds, totaling $2 million, were used. In 2024, despite having at least $1 million in cash, Rinaldo, Asher, and Arie ceased making payments on the aforementioned loan. In 2024, Rinaldo, Asher, and Arie began to take steps to sell the properties. They contacted brokers, and appraisals of the properties valued them at between $10-14 million. On July 2025, Arie, on behalf of Van Courtland, executed a contract to sell the properties to defendant JOHN GOJCAJ (Gojcaj) for $8.5 million, with a closing date 90 days therefrom. Plaintiff was never apprised of the intent to sell the properties in writing, as required by the Operating Agreement, nor was she provided with any of the appraisals. The prime motivation for the foregoing sale is to discharge ERT's obligation as guarantor for Van Courtland's loan. Based on the foregoing, plaintiff interposes three causes of action. The first cause of action is for equitable accounting, wherein it is alleged that Rinaldo, Arthur, Asher, and Arie, as the Van Courtland's majority members, owe plaintiff a fiduciary duty and that because they control Van Courtland, they are required to equitably account for how Van Courtland's funds and resources have been used. The second cause of action is for declaratory judgment, wherein it is alleged that because, in executing the agreement to sell the properties to Gojcaj, Asher and Arie failed to, inter alia, notify plaintiff in writing when they decided to sell the properties, they violated the Operating Agreement, such that the Court should declare that the agreement to sell the properties is void. The last cause of action is for permanent injunction, wherein it is alleged in contracting to sell the properties to Gojcaj, Asher and Arie failed to comply with the Operating Agreement, such that they should be permanently enjoined from selling the properties to Gojcaj.

Applicable Law

Pursuant CPLR § 6501, in an action where a judgment "would affect the title to, or the possession, use or enjoyment of, real property", "[a] notice of pendency may be filed." The notice of pendency provides "constructive notice, from the time of filing of the notice only, to a purchaser from, or incumbrancer against, any defendant named in a notice of pendency (id.). The purpose of such notice is to ensure that the property - the object of the law suit - is not alienated [*3]by a defendant during the pendency of the action (Israelson v Bradley

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Related

Toporovsky v. Toporovsky
2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U) (New York Supreme Court, Bronx County, 2026)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2026 NY Slip Op 50028(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toporovsky-v-toporovsky-nysupctbrnx-2026.