West Side Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Hirschfeld

101 A.D.2d 380, 476 N.Y.S.2d 292, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17830
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 10, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 101 A.D.2d 380 (West Side Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Hirschfeld) 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
West Side Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Hirschfeld, 101 A.D.2d 380, 476 N.Y.S.2d 292, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17830 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lynch, J.

These are cross appeals from a judgment after a nonjury trial in this action to rescind a mortgage on the ground of fraud and conspiracy. The plaintiff appeals so much of the judgment that implicitly denied its motion to conform its pleadings to its proof to assert a claim of mutual mistake and that dismissed the action against the defendant Hirschfeld. The defendant State Street Garage Corp. (State Street) appeals from so much of the judgment that failed to dismiss the action against it, that adjudged that the plaintiff’s loan to it of $1,500,000 secured by a mortgage be [382]*382rescinded, and that adjudged that an accounting be had to determine the amount to be paid by it to the plaintiff to effect the rescission of the mortgage agreement. The judgment must be affirmed.

On October 12, 1971, Hirschfeld, widely experienced in the specialized field of building parking garages, leased for 12 years a yet-to-be-built garage to APCOA, a division of a nationwide operator of parking garages. By the lease, the garage was to contain “parking space for at least 528 standard-sized American made passenger cars on an attendant-park basis”, with the proviso that if it did not contain 475 spaces the lessee could cancel. APCOA’s rent was tied to its gross receipts.

On August 10, 1972, Hirschfeld applied to the plaintiff for a loan of $1,500,000 to be secured by a mortgage on the garage. The application stated that the garage had 500 parking spaces. It listed APCOA, which the plaintiff knew was an experienced garage operator, as the major source of income from the property, and described Hirschfeld himself as the owner of over 20 parking garages in New York City. The plaintiff’s independent appraiser valued the property at $2,115,000. It arrived at this figure by capitalizing the expected income, concerning which the appraisal stated, “[all] projections are predicated on 500 attended parking spaces as reported by the garage owner”. The loan was approved under an arrangement whereby Hirschfeld was first to transfer the property to a corporation, the defendant State Street of which he is the president and sole stockholder. On December 21, 1972, the mortgage was closed with State Street which assigned all the leases to the plaintiff.

In 1974, the United States District Court granted APCOA a judgment terminating its lease on the ground that Hirschfeld had failed to provide the requisite number of parking spaces. The court found that the garage was able to accommodate but 402 cars. The judgment was affirmed on appeal. The plaintiff here then commenced an action to foreclose its mortgage. This has been stayed pending the determination of the instant action. Sine 1975, the plaintiff has occupied the parking garage, running it through another operator.

[383]*383The gravamen of the plaintiff’s complaint is the defendants’ alleged overstatement of the number of parking spaces. The trial court found that while the plaintiff had proved misrepresentation — it held the defendants collaterally estopped from challenging the Federal court’s finding of an insufficient number of parking spaces — there was no proof of scienter, that is, no proof that Hirschfeld knew of the insufficient number when the mortgage application was made.

At the end of the plaintiff’s case at trial, it moved to conform its pleadings to the proof to seek rescission on the ground of mutual mistake. The court reserved decision and the defendants rested without presenting any testimony. In its decision, the court held that granting the motion to conform to assert this new cause of action would prejudice defendants who had, over the six years since the commencement of the action, prepared a defense only to fraud and conspiracy. The court, however, did find that a liberal construction of the plaintiff’s pleadings established a cause of action for rescission on the ground of innocent misrepresentation. It held that the proof warranted judgment for the plaintiff on that cause of action: that Hirschfeld misrepresented that there were at least 475 parking spaces directly on the mortgage application and indirectly by way of the APCOA lease; that the representation was material and that it was justifiably relied upon because the capacity of an attended parking garage is a matter of expert judgment, with Hirschfeld being an expert; that, given these circumstances, the plaintiff was not required to hire an expert of its own.

The plaintiff asserts that by dismissing the action against Hirschfeld the court limited the relief to which it was entitled as a matter of equity. It was the plaintiff, however, who acceded to Hirschfeld being supplanted by a corporation, the defendant State Street. The plaintiff accepted the corporation’s note and a mortgage on its property. The corporate veil may be pierced where it is used to cloak illegality (see Jenkins v Moyse, 254 NY 319), but the corporate form was not used here for an illicit purpose. It was used in a legal fashion to accomplish a result sought by all of the parties.

[384]*384The defendant State Street contends: that the trial court, for the same reason it refused to sanction a claim for mutual mistake, should not have construed the pleadings to find a claim of innocent misrepresentation; that, having done so, it should not have found any false representation by Hirschfeld; that, were it false, it was not material nor was there justifiable reliance on it. It also argues that the plaintiff is barred from rescission, having accepted the benefits of the mortgage agreement, taken possession of the property, and commenced foreclosure of the mortgage.

While the plaintiff’s notice of appeal raises the trial court’s denial of its claim of mutual mistake, the point has apparently been abandoned, not having been asserted in the brief which, on this score, maintains only that there was sufficient evidence to support either mutual mistake or innocent misrepresentation. Whether or not the disallowance of mutual mistake was error, the trial court properly construed the pleadings to allow a claim of innocent misrepresentation. There was a time when plaintiffs were .limited by whatever theory of recovery was stated in their complaint, e.g., “[a] party must recover not only according to his proofs but according to his pleadings” (Walrath v Hanover Fire Ins. Co., 216 NY 220, 225). That day has passed. We are not enjoined to “grant any type of relief within [our] jurisdiction appropriate to the proof whether or not demanded, imposing such terms as may be just” (CPLR 3017, subd [a]).

If we subtract from fraud the element of scienter, the remainder constitutes the tort of innocent misrepresentation (Emerson Elec. Mfg. Co. v Printed Motors, 252 NYS2d 600, 607). We can, therefore, find no prejudice to the defendants when they knew or should have known for six years prior to the trial that the claim of fraud confronting them charged also those elements adding to innocent misrepresentation. The defendants claim prejudice in that they would not have rested after the plaintiff’s case if they had known that they would be faced with a different theory of recovery since they rested secure in the knowledge that the plaintiff had failed to prove one element of fraud, scienter. This claim is easily disproved. When the defendants rested without offering testimony, the trial court had [385]

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Bluebook (online)
101 A.D.2d 380, 476 N.Y.S.2d 292, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-side-federal-savings-loan-assn-v-hirschfeld-nyappdiv-1984.