In an action, inter alia, to recover damages for breach of contract, the defendant New Rochelle Revitalization, LLC, appeals, as limited by its brief, from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Westchester County (Rudolph, J.), entered June 9, 2009, as granted those branches of the plaintiffs motion which were for leave to serve and file a second amended verified complaint adding as defendants the City of New Rochelle and Noam Bramson, as Mayor of the City of New Rochelle, and for leave to renew its opposition to .the prior motion of the defendant New Rochelle Revitalization, LLC, to compel arbitration, which had been determined in an order of the same court entered December 15, 2008, and, upon renewal, in effect, vacated the prior order and thereupon denied its motion to compel arbitration.
Ordered that the order entered June 9, 2009, is modified, on
On June 13, 2006, the plaintiff and the defendant, New Rochelle Revitalization, LLC (hereinafter NRR), entered into an “Exchange Agreement” which contained an arbitration clause providing for arbitration of “any disagreement, deadlock, interpretation or dispute [which] shall arise under any provision of this Agreement.” Pursuant to that agreement, the plaintiff agreed to sell its property to NRR: the closing was to take place once NRR secured site plan approval from the City of New Rochelle. The contract gave the plaintiff the right to select one of three options in exchange for its property, which included either sharing space in a “Loft Building” to be constructed on the site, or the payment of $5,000,000 by NRR to the plaintiff outright.
When the City failed to approve a site plan, allegedly because NRR changed the proposed site plan numerous times, the plaintiff commenced this action against NRR, contending it was acting in bad faith, and committed fraud in the inducement. NRR moved pursuant to the arbitration clause to compel arbitration, and its motion was granted in an order entered December 15, 2008.
Meanwhile, according to the plaintiff, in December 2008, the Mayor of the City informed one of the plaintiffs principals that site plan approval would not be granted unless NRR purchased and made part of the site plan certain property owned by the United States Postal Service (hereinafter USPS) and occupied by a post office. The plaintiff claims that as a result of this disclosure, it moved, inter alia, for leave to serve and file a second amended verified complaint adding the City and its Mayor, Noam Bramson, as defendants, and for leave to renew its opposition to NRR’s prior motion to compel arbitration, on the ground that the dispute now involved two parties who were not signatories to the agreement to arbitrate.
In the order appealed from, the Supreme Court granted those branches of the plaintiffs motion which were for leave to serve and file a second amended verified complaint and for leave to renew and, upon renewal, denied NRR’s motion to compel arbitration.
In support of that branch of its motion which was for leave to renew, the plaintiff alleged new facts not offered on the prior motion, i.e., that the Mayor informed it that no site plan approval would issue until NRR purchased the property owned by the USPS and included it in its site plan, and that the plaintiff was seeking leave to amend its complaint to add the Mayor and the City as defendants (see CPLR 2221 [e] [2]).
On the question of whether the instant dispute should be submitted to arbitration, in Matter of Weinrott (Carp) (
The issue of fraud in the inducement affects the validity of the arbitration clause only when the fraud relates to the arbitration provision itself, or was “part of a grand scheme that permeated the entire contract” (Matter of Weinrott [Carp],
With respect to the second ground for forgoing arbitration— that the City and its Mayor are parties to the action but not signatories to the arbitration agreement — the City and its Mayor cannot be compelled to participate in the arbitration (see Mionis v Bank Julius Baer & Co.,
NRR’s remaining contentions are without merit.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court, upon granting renewal, should have adhered to the original determination directing the plaintiff and NRR to proceed to arbitration, and thereupon stayed prosecution of the action pending a determination in the arbitration. Santucci, J.P., Angiolillo, Leventhal and Lott, JJ., concur.
