DDJ MANAGEMENT, LLC, et al., Respondents, v RHONE GROUP L.L.C. et al., Appellants, et al., Defendants.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, First Department
2010
78 AD3d 442 | 911 NYS2d 7
Upon remittitur from the Court of Appeals (15 NY3d 147 [2010]) for consideration of issues raised but not determined in this Court, order, Supreme Court, New York County (Helen E. Freedman, J.), entered April 28, 2008, which denied the motions of defendants-appellants to dismiss plaintiffs’ fraud cause of action, unanimously affirmed, with costs.
The prior decision of this Court (60 AD3d 421 [2009]), having dismissed the fraud claim on the ground of lack of reasonable reliance by plaintiffs, did not address the alternative argument by corporate and individual defendants, those other than PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), that plaintiffs failed to otherwise sufficiently plead the elements of fraud, particularly scienter. We now address that issue. As the dismissal of the claims against PwC was affirmed in the prior decision of this Court, and not addressed by the Court of Appeals, that determination is unaffected.
It is alleged that plaintiffs loaned the now-defunct American
As an initial matter, we reject the argument that, at most, the complaint alleges that Quilvest America, not all Quilvest entities, elected defendants deVogel and Uhrig to the ARI board of directors. Quilvest also asserts, in a footnote, that, while Three Cities Holdings Limited (now named Quilvest Services Ltd.) is a Quilvest entity, Scott Duncan was an employee of Three Cities Research, Inc., which is not a Quilvest entity. Moreover, the reference to the management agreement in the 2003 audited financial statement refers to a fee paid to defendant Rhone and Three Cities Research, not Three Cities Holdings. Nevertheless, for the proposition that defendant Duncan is not an employee of
The complaint also describes the “ARI Control Defendants” as the Rhone defendants and the “Quilvest/Three Cities” defendants, and describes deVogel and Uhrig as agents of both Quilvest America and “Quilvest.” It further describes Three Cities Holdings, which is controlled and directed by “Quilvest,” as controlling and directing the business of Three Cities Research, Inc. Given these allegations, and nothing definitive to negate them, Quilvest cannot dissociate itself from Quilvest America, Three Cities Research or Scott Duncan for purposes of these pleadings.
Plaintiffs have also sufficiently alleged fraud against the individual and corporate defendants, based, in part, on the corporate positions and titles of the individual defendants with ARI and/or with the corporate defendants (see Oster v Kirschner, supra; Houbigant, Inc. v Deloitte & Touche, 303 AD2d 92, 98 [2003] [complaint only needs to demonstrate some “rational basis” to infer that alleged misrepresentation was knowingly made]; JP Morgan Chase Bank v Winnick, 350 F Supp 2d 393, 400 [SD NY 2004] [“At the pleading stage, it is appropriate to allow the plaintiffs’ claims to proceed against these defendants on the assumption that persons occupying such positions in the company would have knowledge of both the fraud and the substantive terms of the Credit Agreement when they signed the borrowing requests“]; Pludeman, 40 AD3d at 367 [“At this early juncture, according plaintiffs’ complaint the most favorable inferences, one can readily deduce, given the corporate positions and titles of the individual defendants, that these individuals actually operate the day-to-day business of corporate defendant, and consequently were involved in or knew about the alleged fraudulent concealment“]), also raising a reasonable inference that they acted on behalf of their corporate employers, the owners, shareholders and managers of ARI (see Osipoff v City of New York, 286 NY 422, 428 [1941] [“a corporation is liable, as an individual, for tort committed by its servants or agents acting within the scope of their service or agency“]). These inferences are supported by the surrounding circumstances, as well as numerous e-mails tending to establish the individual defendants’
The decision and order of this Court entered herein on July 6,
