MARK CENTI, Respondent, v MICHAEL McGILLIN, Appellant.
524695
Appellate Division, Third Department, New York
November 30, 2017
2017 NY Slip Op 08430
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to
Calendar Date: September 8, 2017
Before: McCarthy, J.P., Egan Jr., Lynch, Devine and Pritzker, JJ.
Flink Smith Law, LLC, Albany (Edward B. Flink of counsel), for appellant.
Feeney and Centi, Albany (Daniel J. Centi of counsel), for respondent.
Devine, J.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (J. Sise, J.), entered March 3, 2016 in Montgomery County, upon decisions of the court in favor of plaintiff.
This action, commenced in May 2010, stems from an oral agreement between plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff claimed that in 2003, he loaned defendant $170,000 to be repaid in 131 installments at an interest rate of 3.95%. In his answer, defendant denied that he borrowed any money from plaintiff. After a nonjury trial in March 2015, Supreme Court determined that defendant defaulted on the loan and entered a judgment in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $131,484.93, together with prejudgment interest. Defendant now appeals.
Generally, upon an appeal from a determination made after a nonjury trial, in which our authority is as broad as the trial court, we “independently consider the probative weight of the evidence and the inferences to be drawn therefrom, but we defer to the factual findings made by the trial court, particularly where they are based upon credibility assessments” (Kelly v Bensen, 151 AD3d 1312, 1313 (2017) [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]; see Mills v Chauvin, 103 AD3d 1041, 1050 (2013)). Further, where, as here, there is a dispute regarding the existence of an oral agreement, “the court looks not to the parties’ after-the-fact professed subjective intent, but rather at their objective intent as manifested by their expressed words and conduct at the time of the agreement” (Danka Off. Imaging Co. v General Bus. Supply, 303 AD2d 883, 884 (2003) [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]).
At trial, plaintiff testified that he and defendant were friends and that they were both involved in bookmaking. According to plaintiff, in 2003, defendant asked him for a loan to pay
For his part, defendant testified that in January 2005, plaintiff asked him to hold $210,000 of his money and to pay him $400 spending money each week, payable every four weeks. Defendant acknowledged that it was his handwriting on the paper exhibits but explained that, for reasons unknown, he did the calculations at plaintiff‘s request. Defendant explained that he and plaintiff had a falling out after plaintiff allegedly interfered in defendant‘s effort to purchase a liquor store. Consequently, defendant testified that, in September 2007, he returned all of plaintiff‘s remaining cash, together with envelopes that were empty, but inexplicably marked with payment and balance amounts.
We are mindful that plaintiff testified that the source of the loan proceeds was cash obtained through his illegal bookmaking activities. Indeed, both plaintiff and defendant were convicted of promoting gambling and required to pay fines in the amount of $100,000 and $50,000, respectively. Although plaintiff asserted his
We also find that defendant waived his right to challenge the loan on the basis of illegality because it was not raised as an affirmative defense (see
McCarthy, J.P., and Pritzker, J., concur.
Egan Jr., J. (dissenting).
We do not disagree with Supreme Court and our colleagues’ finding that plaintiff loaned defendant $170,000 and that defendant thereafter partially repaid this money to plaintiff, prior to the parties subsequent falling out, thereby providing ample evidence with respect to the existence of the subject loan agreement. In our opinion, however, because the parties’ transaction amounts to money laundering, it is unenforceable as a matter of public policy and we would reverse the judgment and dismiss the complaint.
The record establishes, by plaintiff‘s own admission, the following: that he is in the business of bookmaking, that he had accumulated from this illegal business approximately $500,000 in cash, that he kept this money in a safe at his sister‘s house, that he agreed to lend to defendant $170,000, to be repaid with interest over 11 years and, finally, that the monies he lent to defendant came directly from his illegal activities. Accordingly, in our view, even though the subject contract may not have been intrinsically illegal, the fact that the money plaintiff loaned to defendant was garnered directly from the fruits of an illegal bookmaking operation, the loan constitutes money laundering, and public policy and the fundamental concepts of morality and fair dealing should preclude plaintiff from accessing the court in order that he may obtain additional profit from the proceeds of his criminal activities (see generally McConnell v Commonwealth Pictures Corp., 7 NY2d 465, 469-471 (1960)).
Lynch, J., concurs.
ORDERED that the judgment is affirmed, with costs.
