692 N.Y.S.2d 61 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1999
—Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Stephen Crane, J.), entered December 18, 1997, which granted defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (1) and (7), unanimously affirmed, without costs.
Defendant, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Skysat Communications Network Corporation (Skysat), a start-up corporation engaged in developing new communications technology, induced plaintiff, his neighbor, to purchase stock in the company in February 1994, prior to a contemplated initial public offering (IPO) of Skysat’s stock. The purpose was to provide a portion of the bridge financing for Skysat until completion of the IPO. Plaintiff was further told that he could roll over his initial investment in order to purchase additional Skysat securities in the IPO in June 1994. After the price of Skysat stock fell in 1995, and plaintiff was informed by defendant that his shares were restricted from sale, plaintiff commenced this action against defendant seeking to recover his losses.
Supreme Court properly granted defendant’s motion to dismiss. In light of the undisputed documentary evidence and plaintiffs admissions, none of the misstatements alleged by plaintiff can support his causes of action for fraud, fraudulent
Plaintiffs additional claims that, in making his original decision to invest prior to the IPO, he materially relied on defendant’s alleged representations that defendant would not receive a salary until Skysat began to earn operating income, and that defendant had invested more than $300,000 of his own money in the venture, are conclusively rebutted by plaintiffs election to purchase additional Skysat securities in the IPO, when any prior misrepresentations as to such matters were cured by disclosures in the prospectus disseminated in connection with the IPO. Any purported misrepresentations concerning the number and percentage of shares plaintiff was purchasing in his initial investment were negated by a term sheet, which plaintiff implicitly admits receiving shortly after delivering the checks for purchase of the shares, and plaintiff thereafter ratified the transaction by knowingly acquiescing therein, and accepting the benefit thereof, without protest (see, e.g., Richardson Greenshields Sec. v Mui-Hin Lau, 819 F Supp 1246, 1259; 2A NY Jur 2d, Agency, §§ 186, 187, 190).
The dismissal of plaintiffs cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty was also correct, inasmuch as the agreement for defendant to act as plaintiff’s agent was very limited and terminated as soon as that transaction was consummated, and any fiduciary duty that arose from such agency terminated simultaneously with the agency (see, Smallwood Estates v Nikola, 163 AD2d 763, 764). Nor would any of the other facts alleged by plaintiff, including that the parties had been neighbors for 20 years, give rise to any fiduciary duties. We have