Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Appellant Frank DeCicco contends that invocation of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to each of the 110 allegations of the complaint precludes the award of summary judgment against him. Unlike a criminal prosecution, assertion of the privilege in civil proceedings does not relieve a defendant of the obligation to put in a defense. As appellant has failed to tender admissible evidence requiring trial of any issue of fact, summary judgment was properly entered against him.
The complaint asserts that plaintiff Access Capital, Inc. was induced to advance $600,000 in working capital to defendant Corporate Management Services (CMS) in exchange for the right to collect payment for certain accounts receivable. The accounts comprise two invoices in the total amount of $715,500, purportedly representing ticket and travel packages to the 1999 Super Bowl game purchased by Bear Stearns from CMS. The transaction is documented by a purchase and sale agreement dated February 19, 1999. On that date, Paul C. Mehring, plaintiff’s senior vice-president, prior to signing the agreement with the principals of CMS, placed a call to the brokerage at a telephone number they provided in order to verify Bear Stearns’ obligation to pay the invoices. The call was taken by someone identifying himself as Michael Macalary, whose name appears on both invoices. He confirmed the outstanding obligation and provided a fax number to which Mr. Mehring could send confirmation slips for signature. These were returned, also by facsimile transmission, in about an hour, affirming the accuracy of the invoices and assuring that “there are no offsets or defenses to payment.” Mr. Mehring also had a telephone conversation with an individual identifying herself as Annette D’fiore of the accounts payable department, who assured him that payment should be expected within 30 days.
On March 5, 1999, Paul Mehring again placed a telephone call to the accounts payable department at Bear Stearns and left a voice mail message inquiring when payment would be forthcoming. Some time later, he received a call made from a
Plaintiff then demanded immediate repayment of the monies loaned to defendant CMS under the factoring agreement. In a series of checks in the amount of $75,000, CMS made weekly installment payments aggregating $450,000 before they were discontinued in May 1999. Plaintiff then instituted this action for the balance due against defendant CMS and its principals, individually, Bear Stearns, “Michael Macalary” and “Annette D’fiore” alleging, inter alia, breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, common-law fraud and conspiracy. CMS and its principals failed to appear, and plaintiff has obtained a default judgment against them. Plaintiff has settled the matter with defendant Bear Stearns, and the person named in the complaint as “Annette D’fiore” has never been identified.
In December 2000, appellant Frank DeCicco, together with CMS and its principals, were indicted in the Superior Court of New Jersey on various charges of theft by deception, conspiracy and money laundering. Appellant DeCicco was named in count three of the indictment, which makes specific reference to the accounts receivable from Bear Steams. He faces charges of theft by deception in the second degree. Plaintiff thereupon served an amended complaint, by leave of court, naming DeCicco as a defendant. The fourth cause of action for common-law fraud and conspiracy alleges that it was DeCicco who assured Mehring of Bear Stearns’ intention to pay the CMS invoices and sent him the confirmatory fax.
In his answer, appellant asserts his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to each of the 110 allegations of the complaint. The answer contains a laundry list of affirmative defenses and asserts, by way of cross claim, that his codefendants’ actions “were the primary, proximate and sole cause of the Plaintiff’s damages.”
Plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the ground that negative inferences may be drawn against appellant from the assertion of his Fifth Amendment privilege, eliminating any
On appeal, as on the motion, appellant takes the position that summary judgment is inappropriate where a defendant asserts the privilege against self-incrimination. In support of his argument, appellant relies on this Court’s decision in Britt v International Bus Servs. (
Appellant’s interpretation of the protection afforded by the Fifth Amendment in the context of a civil matter is overly expansive. While a party may not be compelled to answer questions that might adversely affect his criminal interest, the privilege does not relieve the party of the usual evidentiary burden attendant upon a civil proceeding; nor does it afford any protection against the consequences of failing to submit competent evidence (United States v Rylander,
The Court of Appeals has “decline [d] to extend to civil cases a rule originally designed as a safeguard in criminal proseen
The appropriate analogy under the circumstances of this matter, in which defendant failed to answer any of the complaint’s 110 allegations, is a default in answering. It is settled that such a default admits all traversable allegations contained in the complaint (McClelland v Climax Hosiery Mills,
There is no merit to appellant DeCicco’s alternative argument that a stay should be granted on equitable grounds because his discovery efforts will be impeded until the criminal proceeding against him is resolved. It is settled that invoking the privilege against self-incrimination is generally an insufficient basis for precluding discovery in a civil matter (see State of New York v Carey Resources,
*53 “When a defendant fails to present evidence on his own behalf in a civil case * * * but chooses instead to assert his constitutional privilege, he places himself at an obvious disadvantage. Moreover * * * the courts need not permit a defendant to avoid this difficulty by staying the civil action until a pending criminal prosecution has been terminated. (See Langemyr v. Campbell,21 NY2d 796 ; cf. Oleshko v. New York State Liq. Auth.,21 NY2d 778 .) The fact that a defendant in a civil suit assumes a substantial risk when he chooses to assert his privilege does not, however, mean that the plaintiff is relieved of his obligation to prove a case before he becomes entitled to a judgment.”
The record is sufficient to sustain the award of summary judgment against appellant. Though the evidence implicating him in the conspiracy to induce plaintiff to extend financing based upon the fabricated invoices is circumstantial, it is nevertheless compelling. Plaintiff’s senior vice-president stated that he placed a call to Bear Stearns to verify the legitimacy of the invoices. The party who answered identified himself, both on the telephone and in two confirmations sent to plaintiff by facsimile transmission, as “Michael Macalary, Equities Trading Manager.” The fax bears the legend “dividends” and is imprinted with the telephone number of a fax machine located in Bear Stearns’ dividends department. While Bear Stearns never employed anyone named Michael Macalary, it did employ appellant Frank DeCicco as the head of its dividends department. Finally, the record contains the log of some 280 telephone calls placed from appellant DeCicco’s personal line at Bear Stearns to defendant Jeffrey S. Burd, the vice-president of defendant CMS.
In the absence of any explanation for these remarkable coincidences, the evidence is sufficient to permit the conclusion that it was Frank DeCicco who provided the certification of the invoices to Paul Mehring, plaintiff’s senior vice-president. The damages sustained by plaintiff are established by documentary evidence including the subject invoices, canceled checks for the amount of the working capital extended to CMS and checks issued by CMS to plaintiff in partial repayment for the amounts obtained by means of the fictitious invoices. Thus, appellant has failed to raise any material question of fact by tendering admissible evidence requiring the trial of any issue, and summary judgment was properly entered against him (Zuckerman v City of New York,
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Ira Gammerman, J.), entered September 10, 2001, which granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and denied defendant-appellant’s cross motion to stay the proceedings pending resolution of criminal proceedings against appellant in New Jersey, should be affirmed, without costs.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). In granting and affirming summary judgment to plaintiff, the trial court and the majority rely on the defendant’s assertion of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to the allegations of the complaint and ignore the implications of what the majority characterizes as defendant’s “laundry list of affirmative defenses.” The plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment completely ignored the affirmative defenses. The motion court did not, in its oral decision, refer to them at all. On this ground alone, summary judgment was inappropriate.
Further, among those affirmative defenses were defendant’s assertions that he did not inflict or proximately cause plaintiff’s alleged injuries and that he committed no misrepresentation or fraudulent concealment of any material facts upon which plaintiff could have relied. Those averments, although denominated “affirmative defenses,” are essentially denials of material elements of the causes of action asserted against him. Questions of fact thus exist which are not appropriate for summary
The law is clear that adverse inferences may be drawn against a defendant who invokes the privilege in a civil case (see Baxter v Palmigiano,
While Mehring’s affidavit and other documentary evidence submitted by plaintiff may establish that a fraud was perpetrated upon plaintiff, it does not make out a prima facie case that defendant was indeed “Michael Macalary” or that he took part in the fraud. Mehring stated: “I later found out that there was in fact no one named Michael Macalary at Bear Stearns, but rather that it was defendant * * * who pretended to be Michael Macalary.” There is nothing in Mehring’s affidavit establishing his personal knowledge that defendant was indeed Michael Macalary, nor is there anything identifying the source from which Mehring assertedly “found out” that information. The only other document annexed to the moving papers that makes any reference to defendant is the New Jersey indictment, which, given the constitutional presumption of innocence, cannot serve as evidence in support of plaintiffs summary judgment motion against defendant.
Federal courts have held that a party who asserts the privilege against self-incrimination in a civil case must bear the consequence of lack of evidence, and a claim of privilege will not prevent an adverse finding or even summary judgment if the litigant does not present sufficient evidence to satisfy his evidentiary burden (see e.g. United States v Certain Real Prop. & Premises Known as 4003-4005 5th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.,
Moreover, the Second Circuit, in describing the tensions that exist between the assertion of Fifth Amendment rights on the one hand and the rights of parties who seek civil recompense
“through inappropriate procedural remedies or unwarranted sanctions, unduly burden [ ] litigants’ valid attempts to seek the protection that the privilege against self-incrimination provides * * * [W]hen there is nothing to suggest that the Fifth Amendment * * * was used abusively or to gain an unfair tactical advantage * * * a trial court [should] consider [ ] the relevant factors and act[ ] with moderation to accommodate both a litigant’s valid Fifth Amendment interests and the opposing parties’ needs in having litigation conducted fairly * * * ” (Id. at 85.)
Application of the Second Circuit’s cogent and balanced advice leads to the conclusion that the motion court abused its discretion in denying defendant’s cross motion for a stay, limited in whatever way would be most appropriate, pending resolution of the New Jersey criminal case, as we have previously determined, in similar circumstances, is the appropriate course of action (see Britt v International Bus Servs.,
Mazzarelli, J.P., and Gonzalez, J., concur with Rubin, J.; Rosenberger, J., dissents in a separate opinion.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County entered September 10, 2001, affirmed, without costs.
