Velez v. Hunts Point Multi-Service Center, Inc.

29 A.D.3d 104, 811 N.Y.S.2d 5
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 9, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 29 A.D.3d 104 (Velez v. Hunts Point Multi-Service Center, Inc.) 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
Velez v. Hunts Point Multi-Service Center, Inc., 29 A.D.3d 104, 811 N.Y.S.2d 5 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Andrias, J.P.

The principal issue on this appeal is whether, in the circumstances presented, the motion court properly granted motions to quash certain nonparty subpoenas duces tecum on the ground that they were defective on their face because they failed to comply with CPLR 3101 (a) (4), which requires that a request for disclosure from “any other person,” i.e., a nonparty witness, be “upon notice stating the circumstances or reasons such disclosure is sought or required.” For the following reasons, we reverse the motion court’s order to the extent appealed from and hold that the motions to quash the subpoenas should have been denied in all respects.

This is an action by the guardian of the person and property of Ramon S. Velez, the founder and former president and chief executive officer of defendant and third-party plaintiff Hunts [106]*106Point Multi-Service Center (Hunts Point), a not-for-profit corporation formed in 1968 to deliver various health-related and other services to the poor in the South Bronx. The suit includes claims for, among other things, breach of contract, an accounting of deferred compensation deposited into a trust account for Mr. Velez, liquidated damages, and breach of Hunts Point’s obligation to pay Mr. Velez’s medical expenses and retirement benefits.

Hunts Point answered the complaint, denying the material allegations therein, and commenced a third-party action against the Ramon S. Velez Family Trust, established by the members of Mr. Velez’s family, in which it alleges, inter alia, that Mr. Velez engaged in various acts of self-dealing and malfeasance, including improper maintenance of time records and misuse of corporate funds and credit cards for certain personal expenses for hotels, trips and gifts. According to Hunts Point, Mr. Velez previously obtained substantial payments and benefits from it and now seeks additional compensation based on unverified, inaccurate and unreliable time records, as well as unauthorized benefits and insurance policies for himself and others. It is Hunts Point’s position that Mr. Velez forfeited his rights to any deferred compensation, life insurance policies or other benefits, and that Hunts Point is entitled to set aside any unlawful conveyances or wrongful transfers of corporate assets, including any transfers of interests in life insurance policies to the family trust, and to impose a constructive trust on the insurance policies and all proceeds relating thereto. Hunts Point also seeks damages and/or an offset against all amounts sought by plaintiff, plus a return of prior payments made to, or on behalf of, Mr. Velez during the period he breached his fiduciary duties, including disgorgement of assets transferred by Mr. Velez to the family trust.

In March and April 2004, Hunts Point served a total of 13 subpoenas duces tecum on nonparties, including nonparty movants South Bronx Community Management Company (South Bronx), Bronx Computing Systems and Services (Bronx Computing), and Don Pancho Development Corporation (Don Pancho), seeking, inter alia, production of all documents concerning Mr. Velez’s relationship to the nonparty movants, any business trips taken by him on behalf of the nonparty movants, and the employment or equity interest of any member of his family in the nonparty movants. The subpoenas also sought all documents regarding any equity interest of Khaimraj Issurdatt, [107]*107Hunts Point’s former comptroller, and the payment of salary, benefits and dividends to Mr. Issurdatt in connection with his relationship to the nonparty movants. Finally, the subpoenas sought all documents concerning any contracts between the nonparty movants and Hunts Point.

Plaintiff and the Velez Family Trust moved, pursuant to CPLR 3103, for a protective order quashing all 13 nonparty subpoenas issued by Hunts Point on the grounds, inter alia, that the subpoenas were facially defective and thus unenforceable because they did not contain a notice setting forth the reasons why such disclosure was sought, as required by CPLR 3101 (a) (4), and that they lacked specificity and were overly broad in that they contained “scattergun demands for all manner of records without showing any relationship to the issues framed by the pleadings in this action.”

In opposition, Hunts Point maintained that the documents sought from the nonparties were necessary and material to prove that Mr. Velez was not entitled to hundreds of thousands of dollars of compensation and benefits that he sought in the lawsuit, and were further necessary to provide specific documentary support for its affirmative defenses and counterclaims that Mr. Velez was liable to it for damages and forfeiture of compensation and benefits due to his actions and omissions as president of Hunts Point.

Thereafter, by notice of motion dated May 18, 2004, nonparties South Bronx, Bronx Computing and Don Pancho also moved pursuant to CPLR 2304 to quash the subpoenas served upon them on the additional grounds that they were unduly burdensome, lacked the requisite specificity and inappropriately sought to broaden the scope of discovery, citing Hunts Point’s failure to meet its burden of showing inability to obtain the records otherwise, i.e., “special circumstances.” Hunts Point responded, inter alia, that the records sought were relevant to show that Mr. Velez was conducting the business of the nonparty movants and not Hunts Point and that he or his family members worked for the nonparty movants with which Hunts Point had contractual relationships. It also asserted that the subpoenaed records were critical to its defenses and counterclaims especially in light of the fact that Mr. Velez suffers from Alzheimer’s disease and will be unable to provide any testimony regarding the subjects of the subpoenas and that plaintiff claims to have no knowledge or documents regarding these issues critical to its defense and counterclaims.

[108]*108By “so ordered” stipulation dated June 30, 2004, the nonparty movants agreed, inter alia, to provide within 30 days documents regarding positions held by any Velez and Issurdatt family members, business transactions between the nonparties and Hunts Point, and business trips taken by Ramon S. Velez. The court was left to decide whether the nonparty movants must provide compensation records for Mr. Velez, his son, daughter and wife, and Mr. Issurdatt.

The motion court, finding that none of the subpoenas served by Hunts Point provide the notice required by CPLR 3101 (a) (4) to the nonparties from whom discovery is sought and are thus facially invalid, granted plaintiffs and the family trust’s motion and quashed the subpoenas served on all nonparties, except those that had already been complied with during the pendency of the motion. The court also granted the remainder of the nonparty movants’ motion to quash the portions of the subpoenas seeking to discover compensation records for Mr. Velez’s family and for Mr. Issurdatt on the ground that such records, regardless from whom they are requested, are patently irrelevant. However, it denied that portion of the nonparty movants’ motion seeking to quash the portion of the subpoenas that sought discovery of compensation records for Mr. Velez.

Hunts Point now appeals from so much of the order as granted the motions to quash the nonparty subpoenas duces tecum served upon South Bronx, Bronx Computing and Don Pancho insofar as they sought all records showing the compensation received by Mr. Velez and his family members and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
29 A.D.3d 104, 811 N.Y.S.2d 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/velez-v-hunts-point-multi-service-center-inc-nyappdiv-2006.