JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., as Trustee for the Registered Holders of ABFS Mortgage Loan Trust 2001-1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2001-1, Appellant-Respondent, v MICHAEL P. MALARKEY JR., Also Known as MICHAEL PHILIP MALARKEY JR., et al., Respondents-Appellants, et al., Defendants.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Third Department
October 22, 2009
884 N.Y.S.2d 787
In 2001, defendants Michael P. Malarkey Jr. and Donna Marie Malarkey (hereinafter collectively referred to as defendants) borrowed $170,000 from American Business Credit, Inc. (hereinafter ABC) and promised to repay the principal with 16.25% interest over 15 years. The loan was secured by mortgages on real property located in Broome County. Defendants failed to make the required payments under the note and mortgages and plaintiff, ABC‘s assignee, commenced the present mortgage foreclosure action.
Defendants answered and thereafter moved for partial summary judgment dismissing the complaint on the ground that the note and mortgages were usurious. Plaintiff opposed the motion and argued, among other things, that New York‘s usury statute (see
Beginning with defendants’ challenge to the grant of plaintiff‘s motion to renew, we agree that it should not have been granted. A motion seeking leave “to renew must be based upon newly
No dispute exists that the 16.25% interest rate on ABC‘s loan to defendants is usurious under New York law (see
At issue, therefore, is whether plaintiff demonstrated that it made or invested more than $1,000,000 in residential real estate loans in 2001. Plaintiff submitted proof of six notes demonstrating loans made by ABC totaling in excess of $1,000,000 but, in opposition to defendants’ motion, it provided no evidence that these loans were secured by mortgages on residential real estate.
Plaintiff also relies on ABFS‘s 2001 and 2002 earnings reports which demonstrate that ABC itself had three subsidiaries, two of which originated over $1,000,000,000 in home equity loans in the fiscal years ending June 30, 2001 and June 30, 2002. Even assuming that ABC can properly be considered a creditor with regard to investments it made in loans actually made by its subsidiaries, we find no reason to depart from “the general rule in this [s]tate that in no legal sense can . . . the business of a subsidiary corporation be said to be that of a parent” (Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co. v Superintendent of Ins. of State of N.Y., 10 NY2d 42, 50 [1961]). As the two are distinct entities, “[a] corporate parent which owns the shares of a subsidiary does not . . . own or have legal title to the assets of the subsidiary” (Dole Food Co. v Patrickson, 538 US 468, 475 [2003]). Moreover, “a corporation cannot pierce its own corporate veil to benefit either the parent or a subsidiary” and there is no obvious reason to allow plaintiff to do so on ABC‘s behalf (Matter of Disston Co. [Aktiebolag], 187 AD2d 283 [1992], lv dismissed 81 NY2d 835 [1993]). Given the lack of any proof that ABC specifically invested in the mortgage assets of its subsidiaries or otherwise had some right to claim them as its own, we hold that plaintiff failed to raise a question of fact as to whether federal preemption applies in this case.
Finally, although we find that Supreme Court acted within its sound discretion in granting plaintiff‘s motion to reargue (see Peak v Northway Travel Trailers, 260 AD2d 840, 842 [1999]), we reject plaintiff‘s contention that the court should have departed from its original disposition. Indeed, the court initially applied the wrong standard to determine DIDMCA preemption; specifically, the court indicated that the $1,000,000 aggregate loan amount be of loans that are first liens on residential real property where, in fact, only the loan at issue needs to be, as here, a first lien (see
Cardona, P.J., Rose, Kane and Garry, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order entered October 25, 2007 is affirmed, with costs to defendants Michael P. Malarkey Jr. and Donna Marie Malarkey. Ordered that the order entered September 12, 2008 is modified, on the law, by reversing so much thereof as granted plaintiff‘s motion for renewal; motion denied; and, as so modified, affirmed.
