OPINION OF THE COURT
A notice of pendency, commonly known as a “lis pendens,” can be a potent shield to protect litigants claiming an interest in real property. The powerful impact that this device has on the alienability of property, when conjoined with the facility with which it may be obtained, calls for its narrow application to only those lawsuits directly affecting title to, or the possession, use or
I
This action arises out of plaintiff’s unsuccessful attempt to purchase an office building and its land in Manhattan. The fee owner of this property was a limited partnership, defendant, 41 Fifth Ave. Associates (“Associates”). Defendants Fruchthandler Brothers Enterprises and Edward J. Minskoff were the limited partners in Associates, owning a 3% interest between them. The remaining 97% was owned by the general partner, defendant 41 Fifth Ave. Realty Corp. (“Realty Corporation”), which, in turn, was wholly owned by defendant O & Y Equity Corp.
After extended negotiations, plaintiff and O & Y Equity reached an agreement to convey the property. Rather than an outright transfer of the title by deed, the transaction was constructed in terms of a sale of stock. This was allegedly done at defendants’ request in order to avoid the Nevz York City Real Property Transfer Tax. The contract provided that O & Y Equity would sell its shares in Realty Corporation and would cause the limited partners in Associates to convey their interests as well. The limited partners also signed this contract, agreeing to perform all acts required of them to consummate the transaction.
The contract was a lengthy document running over 40 pages, not including a number of extensive schedules. It expressly specified that Realty Corporation’s sole business was owning the general partnership in Associates and that Associates’ sole business was owning and operating the office building that plaintiff wished to acquire. The sale of the stock and title to the property were linked throughout the contract, which provided for title warranties and insurance, real estate tax protests, cancellation or adjustment upon taking by condemnation, and representations as to the stattis of the rents and leases in the building. Article 10 of the contract governed how the building would be operated pending closing. Paragraph 10.03 restricted Associates’ power to execute new leases and required O & Y Equity to have an experienced person “expend a reasonable
The closing never took place, and plaintiff’s $500,000 deposit was paid to defendants out of the escrow account. Plaintiff commenced this suit, alleging that defendants had failed to carry out their obligations under paragraph 10.03, which would cause irreparable injury to plaintiff and make it impossible to close title pursuant to the contract. The complaint further alleged that defendants refused to perform their other obligations. In its prayer for relief, plaintiff requested that defendants be ordered “to specifically perform the Contract specifically to comply with paragraphs 10.03(b) and 10.03(c) thereof and within a reasonable time thereafter, which time is to be set out by the Court to deliver title to the Property to plaintiff or its assignee;” plaintiff also sought an alternative remedy of money damages in the amount of $4,500,000, as well as judgment for $500,000 against defendant Bachner, Tally & Mantell.
Plaintiff filed the complaint and immediately filed a notice of pendency against the property owned by Associates. The notice described the underlying action as one to enforce a contract to sell the fee ownership in the property and to deliver its possession. Defendants moved to cancel the notice. While the motion was pending, plaintiff filed an amended complaint that added allegations of fraudulent conduct by defendants. Supreme Court denied the motion, without considering the effect of the amended complaint, on the ground that the original complaint was sufficient to sustain the notice of pendency. The Appellate Division, First Department, affirmed, with two Justices dissenting.
II
The question presented on this appeal concerns the right to obtain a provisional remedy authorized by the Legislature. Specifically, we are asked to decide whether an action to enforce a contract to sell the ownership interest in a realty-owning entity may be accompanied by a notice of pendency pursuant to CPLR 6501. Because the terms of the statute and its history do not support plaintiff’s claimed right to this provisional remedy, this court must reverse the decisions below and order that plaintiff’s notice of pendency be canceled.
A
The authority and requirements for securing a valid notice of pendency against real estate are set forth in CPLR article 65. CPLR 6501 provides: “A notice of pendency may be filed in any
This, of course, is not a recent innovation. CPLR 6501 cam trace its lineage directly back to the Code of Procedure enacted in 1848 (see L 1848, ch 379, § 111). A still earlier law required a notice of pendency in mortgage foreclosures (see L 1840, ch 342, §§ 8, 9, as amd by L 1844, ch 346, §§ 4, 5). These statutes, however, merely evolved from the common-law doctrine of lis pendens.
The doctrine of lis pendens is long livéd. It was first formal ly recognized in New York by Chancellor Kent in 1815 (Murray v Ballou, 1 Johns Ch 566; see 2 Reeves, Real Property, § 750, p 1045). It can be traced at least to rule 12 of Lord Chancellor Bacon’s Ordinances for the Government of the Court of Chancery, adopted in 1618 (see Murray v Blatchford, 1 Wend 583, 594; Bennett, Lis Pendens, pp 57, 437). The doctrine was applied in actions concerning real property before Lord Bacon prescribed its use in chancery (see Bennett, op. cit., at pp 59, 96), and one commentator ascribed the rule’s remote derivation to Roman Law (see id., § 9, pp 62-63).
The rule itself provided substantially the same protection as the modern statute. The doctrine of lis pendens — the pendency of a suit — “was, of itself, notice to the purchaser * * * It is no more than an adoption of the rule in a real action at common law, where, if the defendant aliens after the pendency of the writ, the judgment in the real action will overreach such alienation” (Murray v Ballou, supra, at p 577; see Leitch v Wells, 48 Barb 637, 649, revd
The purpose of the doctrine was to assure that a court retained its ability to effect justice by preserving its power over the property, regardless of whether a purchaser had any notice of the pending suit. Courts and commentators acknowledged the doctrine’s potentially harsh impact on innocent purchasers, but they willingly accepted this as a necessary concomitant to preserving the judicial power (see Leitch v Wells, supra, at pp 608-609; Murray v Ballou, supra, at pp 576-577; Bennett, op. cit., §§ 12, 14; 5 Tiffany, Real Property [3d ed], § 1294, p 82). Some justification for the doctrine’s rugged application was found by reference to the rule of caveat emptor (see Murray v Ballou, supra, at p 577; Bennett, op. cit., § 21, p 82). The statutes diminished this effect by requiring that a notice of pendency be filed in a central registry.
B
Determining the substantive scope of the notice of pendency, as embodied in CPLR 6501, cannot be divorced from consideration of the relative procedural ease with which it can be imposed throughout the duration of a lawsuit. Basically, a plaintiff can cloud a defendant’s title merely by serving a summons and filing a proper complaint and notice of pendency stating the names of the parties, the object of the action, and a description of the property (CPLR 6511, subds [a], [b]; see Israelson v Bradley,
Usually, there is little a court may do to provide relief to the property owner. If the procedures prescribed in article 65 have not been followed or if the action has not been commenced or prosecuted in good faith, the notice must be canceled in the first instance and it may be in the second (see Israelson v Bradley, supra; CPLR 6514, subds [a], [b]). If the notice of pendency is valid, the court may, in its discretion, cancel the notice, but the moving party will generally have to post an undertaking (CPLR 6515).
To counterbalance the ease with which a party may hinder another’s right to transfer property, this court has required strict compliance with the statutory procedural requirements (see Israelson v Bradley,
In entertaining a motion to cancel, the court essentially is limited to reviewing the pleading to ascertain whether the action falls within the scope of CPLR 6501 (see Interboro Operating Corp. v Commonwealth Security & Mtge. Corp., supra; Keating v Hammerstein, supra; Jones v Armenia Ins. Co.,
The same considerations that require strict compliance with the procedural prerequisites also mandate a narrow interpretation in reviewing whether an action is one affecting “the title to, or the possession, use or enjoyment of, real property” (CPLR 6501). Thus, a court is not to investigate the underlying transaction in determining whether a complaint comes within the scope of CPLR 6501. Instead, in accordance with historical practice, the court’s analysis is to be limited to the pleading’s face.
C
The courts have willingly given effect to the statute’s broad coverage of actions concerning land. Importantly, however, they have restricted its application by requiring that the relief requested be directly related to the statutory terms (see Aron, NY Real Property Law, p 205). Thus, attempts to impose a lis pendens against personal property in suits entirely unrelated to real property have been defeated (see Holbrook v New Jersey Zinc Co.,
The courts have been frequently confronted by attempts to file a notice of pendency in controversies that more or less referred to real property, but which did not necessarily seek to directly affect title to or possession of the land. In the absence of this direct relationship, the remedy was denied. For example, an action brought under a will for an accounting and for a determination of rights to and sale of real property supported filing a notice of pendency (Kunz v Bachman, 61 How Prac 519, supra). In contrast, a trespass action seeking money damages only did not justify a notice of pendency as the judgment would not affect title to or possession of the realty (Hailey v Ano,
Two other cases demonstrate the niceties of the distinction involved in applying the doctrine. In Moeller v Wolkenberg (
This court has affirmed this strict approach. In Braunston v Anchorage Woods (
Ill
The “direct relationship” requirement has received its fines t application when the action concerns the transfer of a chose in action or other personal property which represents the beneficial ownership of realty. This has most commonly arisen in situations, such as the present, when the transaction was for the sale of stock in a corporation whose sole or primary asset was real estate. Lower courts have placed such suits outside the
As has been shown, the notice of pendency is derived from the lis pendens. The common-law rule’s potentially harsh effect against innocent purchasers has been alleviated by the statutory filing requirements. Its impact on alienability has also been diminished by authorizing the court to require an undertaking to be posted by the party who files the notice of pendency (CPLR 6515). Nevertheless, many of the concerns over the effect of the lis pendens still exist. Consequently, in interpreting the statute, the courts have continued to apply the same, narrow analysis as was invoked at common law. Thus the drastic impact of the notice of pendency authorized by CPLR 6501 requires a strict application of that statute.
In the present action, plaintiff cannot have the advantage of a notice of pendency. Although the prayer for relief seeks a transfer of title, the court must examine the complaint in its entirety. It is apparent from the allegations that the true action is to enforce a contract to sell stock. It is well settled that the property interests of a shareholder and the corporation are distinct. “[T]he corporation in respect of corporate property and rights is entirely distinct from the stockholders who are the ultimate or equitable owners of its assets * * * even complete ownership of capital stock does not operate to transfer the title to corporate property and * * * ownership of capital stock is by no means identical with or equivalent to ownership of corporate property.” (Brock v Poor,
Other considerations militate against permitting a notice of pendency when the actual subject of the conveyance is stock. It might be easy to justify the notice in the present case where i;he parties are transferring all of the ownership interest in an entity whose sole business is owning and operating a single office building, but the rule would be far more difficult to apply in other situations. For example, how great an interest must be purchased before a notice of pendency would be permitted? Would 90, 75, or more than 50% be required? Would enough to obtain effective control of the corporation be a sufficiently large interest? Or would any amount, even less than 5%, be adequate? Furthermore, what is to be done if the corporate business is diversified so that its realty ownership is only one facet of its operations? Indeed, the corporate real estate may be only incidental to its primary business (e.g., a manufacturer which owns its factory). To allow a would-be purchaser of stock, particularly of a minority interest, to tie up the corporate real estate merely by filing a complaint and a notice of pendency would be unreasonable.* ******
There is another reason for denying a notice of pendency in cases such as the present. One of this court’s paramount goalsi is
IV
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and defendants’ motion to cancel the notice of pendency should be granted. The question certified is answered in the negative.
Jasen, J. (dissenting). I respectfully dissent for the reasons stated in the memorandum opinion of the majority at the Appellate Division (
I would only add that, pursuant to CPLR 6501, “[a] notice of pendency may be filed in any action in a court of the state or of the United States in which the judgment demanded would affect the title to, or the possession, use or enjoyment of, real property.” It is not disputed that the judgment demanded — specific performance of a contract to compel defendant to transfer full beneficial ownership of 475 Fifth Avenue — would inescapably affect the title to, and the possession, use and enjoyment of a specific parcel of real property. The essence of the instant transaction does not concern recovery of legal tender, securities, or articles of ordinary commerce, but, rather, the conveyance of real property. In recognition of the hybridization of modern applications of corporate law and traditional protections accorded to realty transfers, courts have sought to render such potentially divergent approaches complementary, rather than mutually exclusive. (See, e.g., Grossfeld v Beck,
The view of the majority, that a lis pendens is inapplicable to a sale of stock representing an interest in real property, constitutes an unwarranted elevation of form over substance, with broad ramifications for the transfer of realty in this State. In an analogous context, the United States Supreme Court has held that the name or label given to a transaction is not dispositive,
By failing to take cognizance of the economic realities involved in this commercial transaction, the majority’s view may serve to render inapplicable other devices designed to limit purchaser risks. Inasmuch as the sale of stock representing realty is not a transaction involving real property under the majority’s rationale, nor is a sale of shares of stock representing realty considered a transfer of a chattel real (Matter of State Tax Comm. v Shor,
Accordingly, I would affirm the order of the Appellate Division denying defendant’s motion to vacate the lis pendens.
Judges Jones, Wachtler, Meyer, Simons and Kaye concur with Chief Judge Cooke; Judge Jasen dissents and votes to affirm in a separate opinion.
Order reversed, etc.
Notes
. The remaining defendant, Bachner, Tally & Mantell, was defendants’ counsel who acted as escrow agent and is claimed to have improperly disbursed escrow funds to the other defendants. Unless otherwise specified, the term “defendants” in this opinion will not include Bachner, Tally & Mantell.
. As the reader will have noted, the statutes refer to a “notice of pendency,” in contrast to the term “lis pendens” used at common law. This distinction will be employed throughout this opinion.
. Notwithstanding the sometimes vehement disavowal of any reliance on the law of notice to explain the rule (see Bennett, Lis Pendens, § 17; 5 Tiffany, Real Property [3d ed], § 1294, p 82; see, also, Leitch v Wells,
. Lusker v Tannen (
. Moreover, in a trespass action, alienation of the property would not effectively prevent the court from ultimately awarding the relief requested (Hailey v Ano,
. Plaintiff’s reliance on Lusher v Tannen (
. We have no occasion to consider, as the dissent would invite us to do, whether the special nature of shares in cooperative apartment buildings might require a different result (cf. Lawlor v Densmore-Compton Bldg. Co.,
The concerns expressed by the dissent appear to be unfounded. Firstly, nothing in the Insurance Law provisions cited (Insurance Law, § 46, subd 18; § 432, subd 2) even suggest that there must be a transfer of title by deed before an interested party can obtain a title insurance policy. Secondly, whether the present transaction, had it been consummated, would have been subject to the Recording Act is not before the court, but it is noted that the very purpose of this type of business deal often is to avoid the transfer of title to realty (which would require compliance with the Recording Act) by instead transferring fc.tle to personalty. Lastly, all of the authorities cited by the dissent for the Statute of Frauds question concern cooperative apartments, which, as noted, is not the present situation.
. That a notice of pendency was permitted in a shareholder’s derivative suit (see Grossfeld v Beck,
