680 N.Y.S.2d 539 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1998
Lead Opinion
—Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Lorraine Miller, J.), entered January 8, 1998, which, insofar as appealed from, denied defendants’ motion to renew their prior motion to compel production of plaintiffs 1993 and 1994 corporate income tax returns, reversed, on the law, without costs, the motion granted and plaintiffs directed to produce their 1993 and 1994 corporate income tax returns.
While tax returns are not discoverable absent a showing of overriding necessity (Matthews Indus. Piping Co. v Mobil Oil Corp., 114 AD2d 772), here, defendants have made the requisite showing. That there was a substantial variance be
Dissenting Opinion
dissent in a memorandum by Tom, J., as follows: The issue before us is whether there exists an overriding necessity, the standard we have consistently articulated, justifying the disclosure of the plaintiff’s corporate tax returns. Respectfully, I conclude that there is not.
Plaintiff owns and operates a jewelry store located in defendant’s building. The store was burglarized in June 1994, during which jewelry was stolen from a storage vault. Plaintiffs insurance policy limit was $150,000, which it has been paid, minus the deductible. In 1996, plaintiff commenced this action, sounding in negligence, breach of contract and fraud, against the building owner to recover the value of jewelry that was unreimbursed by insurance proceeds, on the theory that defendant breached its lease by failing to provide for a secure vault and was lax in providing security. The ad damnum clause in the complaint alleges that plaintiff believed the theft to have exceeded $1 million. Appraisers, hired by plaintiffs insurer, valued the inventory on December 31, 1992 at $2,794,875, and plaintiff submitted a valuation of $450,000 on March 31, 1993 in connection with the insurance application, upon which value defendant presently seizes. Presumably to challenge the damages claimed in the complaint, defendant now seeks disclosure of plaintiffs corporate tax returns for 1993 and 1994 to establish the inventory for those years. However, other discovery materials establishing valuation of the inventory at the time of the theft, such as detailed inventory sheets, monthly purchase and sales invoices for 1993-1994, and additional materials, apparently were provided by the date of the order under review.
In view of the confidential nature of tax returns, “a party seeking to compel their production must make a strong show
The majority finds salience in the disparity between the December 31, 1992 and March 31, 1993 inventory valuations. These were points in time approximately a year and a half before the June 1994 theft, during which period inventory presumably fluctuated depending on the fnarket or plaintiffs business sales, so that I fail to see the reliability of these early valuations as evidence of the actual inventory on the date of the theft. Moreover, even the relation of the December 1992 valuation to the March 1993 valuation is inconclusive — inventory could well have moved during that three month period due to business transactions, especially since it is not unknown
In the July 21, 1997 order underlying the present order under review denying renewal, the motion court, while finding the tax returns to be presently neither relevant nor necessary, indicated that defendant was free to renew the request upon an adequate showing of need. Although upon renewal the court adhered to its original conclusion, it nevertheless showed that it would be flexible were an adequate showing to be made. Hence, there is no indication that the court failed to exercise its discretion, the applicable standard when reviewing discovery rulings.
Nor do the denials by plaintiffs principal and manager of their personal knowledge of the pre-incident inventory value, or their personal involvement in either of the two valuations, suggest anything amiss. Plaintiffs employees were available for further discovery and the firm that conducted the appraisal was available for a deposition.
Accordingly, I would affirm the order on appeal.