Citation Numbers: 82 A.D.3d 515, 918 N.Y.2d 438
Filed Date: 3/15/2011
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
The fraud cause of action, which alleges that defendant aided its client, Vargas, in selling Skyllas an interest in a real estate company that Vargas did not possess, fails to state with particularity any knowing or reckless misrepresentation of a material fact by defendant (see Eurycleia Partners, LP v Seward & Kissel, LLP, 12 NY3d 553, 559 [2009]). Plaintiffs allege that defendant relied on a fraudulent operating agreement supplied to it by Vargas, took no further steps to verify the actual ownership of the company in drafting the relevant transactional documents, and represented to Skyllas’s counsel in e-mails that Vargas had stated that he had an interest in the company and that it (defendant) would account for the origins of that interest and confirm that the interest was free of liens and encumbrances. However, these are either misrepresentations attributable to Vargas or statements of future intention, not statements of present material facts known to be false at the time they were made (see ESBE Holdings, Inc. v Vanquish Acquisition Partners, LLC, 50 AD3d 397, 398 [2008]; Sheth v New York Life Ins. Co., 273 AD2d 72, 73-74 [2000]).
To the extent plaintiffs contend that defendant made actionable misrepresentations in the transactional documents it drafted by incorporating Vargas’s misrepresentations into the documents, they are alleging substantial assistance by defendant to aid and abet Vargas’s fraud (see Oster v Kirschner, 77 AD3d 51, 54-57 [2010]; National Westminster Bank v Weksel, 124 AD2d 144, 147-150 [1987], lv denied 70 NY2d 604 [1987]). However, the complaint fails to state a cause of action for aiding and abetting because it does not allege that defendant had actual knowledge of any fraud perpetrated by Vargas (see Oster, 77 AD3d at 55; Weksel, 124 AD2d at 148-150).
Nor does the complaint adequately allege that defendant reasonably could and should have foreseen that a class of persons like plaintiffs would act in reliance on the alleged misrepresentations (see e.g. Houbigant, Inc. v Deloitte & Touche, 303 AD2d 92, 100 [2003]; Wey v New York Stock Exch., Inc., 15 Misc 3d 1127[A], 2007 NY Slip Op 50880[U] [2007]). It fails to explain with sufficient particularity how defendant should have known or had reason to believe that anyone other than Skyllas would rely on its alleged misstatements in the relevant documents or in e-mails sent to Skyllas’s counsel during negotiations.
Plaintiffs fail sufficiently to allege that defendant’s misrepresentations were the direct and proximate cause of their claimed loss of the $3.8 million they loaned to Skyllas (see Friedman v Anderson, 23 AD3d 163, 167 [2005]; Laub v Faessel, 297 AD2d 28, 30-31 [2002]). While the complaint alleges a sufficient causal link between defendant’s alleged misrepresentations and Skyllas’s loss of his $1 million advance payment to Vargas to acquire the initial option, it acknowledges that at least three events occurred between the alleged misrepresentations and plaintiffs’ loan to Skyllas: Skyllas declined to exercise the option (the only transaction in which defendant was involved), Skyllas and Vargas subsequently negotiated and consummated on their own and without defendant’s assistance, the transfer of 49% of Vargas’s purported interest in the company to Skyllas, and the holder of the mortgage on another of Skyllas’s buildings demanded immediate payment of a substantial portion of the principal. These events constitute superseding causes that broke the chain of causation (see generally Derdiarian v Felix Contr. Corp., 51 NY2d 308, 315 [1980]; see e.g. Aronoff v Ernst & Young, 1999 WL 458779, *3-5, 1999 NY Misc LEXIS 665, *8-13 [1999]). Concur — Tom, J.P, Mazzarelli, Freedman and ManzanetDaniels, JJ.