Garner Bannister, Appellant, v Patricia Agard, Defendant, and K & DZ Corp. et al., Respondents.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
5 NYS3d 114
Ordered that the order is affirmed insofar as appealed from, with costs.
In September 2010, the plaintiff entered into a sales agreement (hereafter the agreement) to purchase certain real property from the defendant Patricia Agard. The agreement provided that the plaintiff would pay a deposit of $40,000 to Agard, to be held in escrow pending the closing, and that the closing was to take place no later than July 2011. According to
In October 2012, the defendants K & DZ Corp. and Buckingham Development Corp. (hereinafter together the corporate defendants), as joint venture partners, purchased the subject property from Agard for $590,000 and recorded a deed as the new owners of the property. Thereafter, the plaintiff commenced this action against Agard and the corporate defendants, and subsequently served an amended complaint asserting causes of action to recover damages, among other things, for fraud and collusion, as well as in quantum meruit, against both the corporate defendants and Agard. The pleadings allege that the corporate defendants colluded with Agard to fraudulently conceal from the plaintiff, to his detriment, their purchase of the property from Agard. The corporate defendants moved, inter alia, pursuant to
To properly plead a cause of action for fraud, a plaintiff must allege all of the following requisite elements: (1) the defendant made a misrepresentation or a material omission of fact which was false and which the defendant knew to be false; (2) the misrepresentation was made for the purpose of inducing the plaintiff to rely upon it; (3) the plaintiff justifiably relied on the misrepresentation or material omission; and (4) injury (see Northeast Steel Prods., Inc. v John Little Designs, Inc., 80 AD3d 585, 585 [2011]; E.B. v Liberation Publs., 7 AD3d 566, 567 [2004]; Shao v 39 Coll. Point Corp., 309 AD2d 850, 851 [2003]). To sustain a cause of action for fraudulent concealment, the plaintiff must further allege a fifth element, namely, that the defendant had a duty to disclose the material information (see E.B. v Liberation Publs., 7 AD3d at 567; P.T. Bank Cent. Asia, N.Y. Branch v ABN AMRO Bank N.V., 301 AD2d 373, 376 [2003]).
Affording the amended complaint a liberal construction, ac
The plaintiff‘s remaining contentions are either not properly before the Court or without merit.
Dillon, J.P., Chambers, Duffy and Barros, JJ., concur.
