139 A.D.2d 323 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1988
OPINION OF THE COURT
This is. a special proceeding pursuant to CPLR 7502 (c) in which petitioner-appellant Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated seeks an order of attachment prior to arbitration. It is petitioner’s contention that the attachment is required to provide security for a claim by Drexel against respondents Heinz Ruebsamen, Jr., and Werner Ruebsamen in a pending arbitration proceeding. Although the parties agree that the dispute between them will be resolved in arbitration, the locale of the arbitration is not entirely settled. The American Arbitration Association initially decided upon New York as the appropriate forum, but respondents, who insist that the hearing should take place in West Germany, requested reconsideration, and the AAA has now determined that Frankfurt, West Germany, is the appropriate site for the hearing. The purpose of the prospective arbitration is an attempt by Drexel to recover a liquidated debit balance of approximately $230,-000 in a securities account maintained by respondents with Drexel from early 1983 through most of 1987.
The Ruebsamens are citizens of West Germany and opened an account to engage in options transactions with petitioner’s office in Brussels, Belgium. Drexel asserts that the Brussels location is merely a sales office, that the trading was actually carried out in the United States, that the securities were kept in New York and that account statements and other account documents were prepared in New York. The account agree
Petitioner commenced this proceeding on November 16, 1987 by procuring an ex parte restraining order attaching $250,000 of respondents’ assets in a separate and unrelated brokerage account on condition that Drexel post an undertaking in the sum of $12,500. According to petitioner’s supporting papers, "[i]nasmuch as Drexel has a valid claim against the Ruebsamens for $230,433.28 and inasmuch as the Ruebsamens apparently are non-residents who have recently suffered substantial losses, it is respectfully submitted that the award to which Drexel is entitled in the arbitration proceeding may be rendered ineffectual unless an order of attachment is granted.” Petitioner also alleged that there was an "urgent necessity to obtain security for the award that may be recovered in the arbitration proceeding.” Respondents then cross-moved to vacate the temporary restraining order on the ground that there was an insufficient basis for attachment under CPLR 7502 (c) in that Drexel could not show that any future award would be ineffectual without an attachment, that there was no
Respondents’ version of the circumstances surrounding the liquidation of their account was thereafter challenged by petitioner, which asserted an additional basis for the attachment — that West German law precludes enforcement of debts arising out of options and margin trading by nonregistered merchants such as respondents herein. It was, thus, argued that the Ruebsamens’ substantial property and assets in West Germany will not serve to protect Drexel in connection with any arbitration award which the latter might obtain. In that regard, while respondents claim that petitioner has known or should have known about this facet of West German law for some time, they do not dispute that the operation of West German law would bar recovery by petitioner in West Germany. Respondents also urge that by choosing to engage in a highly lucrative trading relationship with them, Drexel assumed the risk attendant thereon and should not now be permitted to circumvent the consequences of its decision to do business with citizens of West Germany. Moreover, respondents point out, they themselves have taken no action to undermine any forthcoming arbitration award, such as removing from this jurisdiction their remaining assets in New York.
In denying the petition and dismissing the proceeding (138 Misc 2d 884), the Supreme Court held that the grounds available for attachments in aid of arbitration are limited to the situation described in CPLR 6201 (3), which provides that "the defendant, with intent to defraud his creditors or frustrate the enforcement of a judgment that might be rendered in plaintiff’s favor, has assigned, disposed of, encumbered or secreted property, or removed it from the state or is about to do any of these acts”. Therefore, the court found, the provisional remedy of attachment could be granted only if the prospective arbitration award might become ineffectual because of some act threatened or performed by respondents. The court observed that "[i]n the case at bar, neither the ground advanced in the petition nor the possible impact of German law amounts to action that respondents are taking to render the arbitration award ineffectual” (supra, at 886). The court then proceeded to discern an additional reason for denying the discretionary remedy of attachment. In the view of the court:
"The doctrine of unclean hands should be as much relevant
"If the German law is in fact what petitioner claims it to be, barring West German non-merchants from trading in options and futures, the application for this attachment, in effect, is an effort to circumvent that law. Indeed, the petitioner, who in its Brussels office accepted this account from respondents, knowing they were West German nationals and residents of Nuremberg, is deemed to have known of the West German prohibition. Therefore, petitioner took a risk, after years of profitable transactions, that a time would come that it could not collect a debit balance against respondents in the courts of their own country.”
Although the court thereafter amended its decision to correct its misconstruction of Drexel’s explanation of the content of West German law to "barring enforcement of judgments or awards arising from debit balances from trading in options and futures by West German nonmerchants” (supra, 138 Misc 2d, at 886), it did not alter its conclusion concerning the inequity of relieving Drexel from the consequences of the risk which it had assumed.
Pursuant to CPLR 7502 (c): "The supreme court in the county in which an arbitration is pending, or, if not yet commenced, in a county specified in subdivision (a), may entertain an application for an order of attachment or for a preliminary injunction in connection with an arbitrable controversy, but only upon the ground that the award to which the applicant may be entitled may be rendered ineffectual without such provisional relief. The provisions of articles 62 and 63 of this chapter shall apply to the application, including those relating to undertakings and to the time for commencement of an action (arbitration shall be deemed an action for this purpose) if the application is made before commencement, except that the sole ground for the granting of the remedy shall be as stated above.”
A plain reading of this provision indicates that, contrary to the interpretation given thereto by the Supreme Court, the language of the statute neither limits an order of attachment in aid of arbitration to the narrow circumstances set forth in CPLR 6201 (3) nor requires that the petitioner demonstrate any affirmative conduct on the part of respondents). Indeed, although CPLR articles 62 and 63, wherein they relate to such matters as undertakings and to the time for commencement of
It should be noted, however, that upon a motion to vacate or modify an order of attachment pursuant to CPLR 6223, "the plaintiff shall have the burden of establishing the grounds for the attachment, the need for continuing the levy and the probability that he will succeed on the merits” (subd [b]). In the instant matter, the Supreme Court did not find that the attachment was not needed, only that it was not available, and, in fact, an examination of the record herein reveals that petitioner has adequately established the elements necessary for such provisional relief, including, arguably, the likelihood of success on the merits. Finally, the Supreme Court’s theory of unclean hands/assumption of risk must also be rejected. It is not illegal for West German nonmerchants to engage in options trading, and Drexel does not appear to be guilty of any immoral or unconscionable behavior. In addition, it is no more inequitable for petitioner to endeavor to circumvent West German law by seeking to collect in New York the debit balance in the securities account in question than it is for respondents to attempt to avoid the risks of their own options trading by invoking the protection of West German law.
Accordingly, "[t]he court of a Contracting State, when seized of an action in a matter in respect of which the parties have made an agreement within the meaning of this article, shall, at the request of one of the parties, refer the parties to arbitration, unless it finds that the said agreement is null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed” (Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, art II, § 3, 21 UST 2517, 2519, reprinted in USCS Administrative Rules of Procedure). Moreover, foreign arbitration awards are to be enforced on the same terms as domestic
All of the requirements for activating the UN Convention are present here. There is a written agreement to arbitrate between petitioner and respondents; the site of the arbitration is to be either West Germany, Belgium or the United States, all of which are signatories to the Convention. In addition, the account agreement in question created a legal commercial relationship, and the Ruebsamens are West German citizens. Therefore, this court is constrained by Cooper v Ateliers de la Motobecane (supra) to find that prearbitration attachment is not available to Drexel. Petitioner, besides expressing severe criticism of that decision, endeavors to distinguish the situation therein from the one before us now, stating that the instant matter is analogous to the one in Intermar Overseas v Argocean (117 AD2d 492). However, in Intermar Overseas v Argocean (supra), "the countries in which the parties to the agreements here in dispute reside and do business are not signatories to the U.N. Convention” (at 495-496). The court also noted that "Federal law applies, even in this New York State court action, since this is a maritime action (Lerner v Karageorgis Lines, 66 NY2d 479). The Federal courts, applying maritime law, have permitted attachment even in cases where arbitration was directed, subject to the U.N. Convention, as noted in Cooper and the cases cited therein” (supra, at 496).
In the view of petitioner, the holding in Cooper v Ateliers de
Consequently, the order and judgment (one paper) of the Supreme Court, New York County (Stephen G. Crane, J.), entered on March 17, 1988, which, inter alia, denied the petition and dismissed the proceeding for an order of attachment pursuant to CPLR 7502 (c), should be affirmed, with costs and disbursements.
Kupferman, J. P., Carro, Ellerin and Wallach, JJ., concur.
Order and judgment (one paper), Supreme Court, New York County, entered on March 17, 1988, unanimously affirmed. Respondents shall recover of appellant $75 costs and disbursements of this appeal.