OPINION OF THE COURT
Plаintiff First Bank of the Americas (First Bank) and defendant Motor Car Funding, Inc. (MCF) entered into a sale and purchase agreement (the Agreement) dated August 19, 1994, which established the terms under which MCF would sell used car loans to First Bank. The Agreement provided that MCF would periodically offer First Bank the option tо purchase various loans. The Agreement contained warranties to the effect that the loans would comply with certain underwriting guidelines. First Bank could refuse to purchase any loans that did not satisfy these criteria. Defendant Nicholas Pirrera is the sole owner and chief еxecutive of MCF.
In the course of offering the loans to First Bank, MCF made representations about the quality of the collateral, the individual borrowers’ credit history and the amount of the borrowers’ down payments. First Bank now claims that many of these representations were false and that MCF thereby induced it to buy less valuable loans, which First Bank would have rejected if it had known the truth.
First Bank also contends that the Agreement required MCF to provide it with original title and lien documents naming First Bank as the lienholder on the cars that secured the purchased loans and that MCF breaсhed the Agreement by failing to produce these documents (the Title Documents) for 115 of the several hundred loans it sold. In opposition, defendants claim that the parties’ established practice during the two years of dealing under the Agreement was for MCF to provide only assignments of MCF’s lien in favor of First Bank.
First Bank’s original complaint against defendants, dated February 4, 1997, contained two causes of action, seeking $1.5 million in damages. The first cause of action charged MCF with breaching the contract by failing to provide the aforemen
Meanwhile, on April 10, plaintiff had served an amended complaint, adding four new causes of action and seeking $8 million in damages. The six causеs of action were as follows: (1) breach of contract by MCF for failure to deliver the Title Documents; (2) breach for refusal to buy back from First Bank the contracts of car buyers who never made the original loan payment; (3) fraud in the packaging of the loans; (4) deceptivе practices under General Business Law § 349;
On June 17, another conference was held before the court and the matter was adjourned to June 30 and then adjourned
The issue of damages was referred to a Referee, who recommended $2.6 million. The court directed an inquest to be held on October 9, 1997. On October 6, Pirrera moved for summary judgment, arguing that First Bank had failed to offer any evidence that justified piercing the corporate veil. The following day, both defendants moved for renewal and reargument. In its oral decision on March 3, 1998, the court denied the motion for renewal, on the grounds that it was not based on newly discovered evidence and that the proper рrocedure would have been a motion to vacate the finding that the defendants were in default with respect to discovery. The court also reiterated its prior conclusion that striking the answer was an appropriate sanction for defendants’ discovery noncompliance under CPLR 3126. As a result of the failure to produce documents, moreover, questions of fact existed as to whether the corporate veil should be pierced, necessitating“the denial of Pirrera’s motion. Finally, the court dismissed plaintiff’s third and fourth causes of actiоn. As regards the fraud cause of action, the court considered it duplicative of the breach of contract claims.
It was error to dismiss the third cause of action for fraud. A fraud claim should be dismissed as redundant when it merely restates a breach of contract claim, i.e., when the only fraud alleged is that the defendant was not sincere when it promised to perform under the contract (Gordon v Dino De Laurentiis Corp.,
Here, plaintiffs fraud claim is premised on allegations that defendants misrepresented various pertinent facts about the individual loans that plaintiff purchased under the Agreement. This cannot be characterized merely as an insincere promise of future performance (see, Tompkins PLC v Bangor Punta Consol. Corp.,
The motion court also erred in striking defendants’ answer. Our review of this issue is complicated by the fact that defendants appeаled only from the denial of renewal, not from the original order. Ordinarily, our review would be limited to deciding whether the renewal motion was based on new and previously undiscoverable material facts. If not, then we would not reach the merits of the original order (Serbalik v General Motors Corp.,
Turning to the merits, it was entirely inappropriate to strike defendants’ answer. At the very least, MCF’s well-documented efforts to induce third parties to execute new title and lien documents in favor of First Bank casts doubt on the motion court’s summary conclusion that MCF possessed the documents already but was dishonestly and capriciously withholding them (see, Citibank [S.D.] v Johnson,
We affirm the denial of summary judgment to Pirrera because discovery is not complete. First Bank sought documents relating to Pirrera’s relationship with MCF, the obsеrvance of corporate formalities, and financial records that could shed light on whether MCF was Pirrera’s alter ego. First Bank alleges that defendants did not comply with these discovery requests. Due to its impatience to resolve the issue of the Title Documents, the motion court did not allow discovery to proceed further, nor did it address the parties’ dispute about the sufficiency of each other’s document production. Under CPLR 3212
Defendants point out that a corporate officer cannot be held persоnally liable for the corporation’s breach of contract simply because the officer took the challenged actions on the corporation’s behalf (Murtha v Yonkers Child Care Assn.,
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Ira Gammerman, J.), entered March 5, 1998, which, insofar as appealed from by plaintiff, granted defendant Pirrera’s motion to dismiss the third cause of action for fraud, and which, insofar as cross-appealed from by defendants, denied defendant Pirrera’s motion to dismiss the first, second, fifth and sixth causes of action, and denied defendants’ motion for renewal of the court’s prior order dated July 15, 1997 striking their answer, should be modified, on the law and the facts, to reinstate plaintiff’s third cause of action for fraud and to reinstate defendants’ answer, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
Williams, Andrias, Saxe and Buckley, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered March 5,
Notes
Plaintiff does not appeal the dismissal of this cause of action.
