MURRAY BRESKY CONSULTANTS, LTD, Respondent, v NEW YORK COMPENSATION MANAGER‘S INC., Defendants, and JAMES E. RANSOM et al., Appellants.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Third Department, New York
May 16, 2013
106 AD3d 1255 | 968 NYS2d 595
MURRAY BRESKY CONSULTANTS, LTD, Respondent, v NEW YORK COMPENSATION MANAGER‘S INC., Defendants, and JAMES E. RANSOM et al., Appellants. [968 NYS2d 595]—
Plaintiff was an employer member of the Manufacturing Self-Insurance Trust (hereinafter the trust), a workers’ compensation group self-insured trust formed to provide required workers’ compensation coverage to employees of trust members (see
When plaintiff joined the trust in 2001, it signed a participation agreement binding itself to the terms of the trust agreement, and agreeing that it would be jointly and severally liable for all workers’ compensation obligations of the trust during the time that it remained a member, and that it might be required to pay additional contributions or assessments for trust deficiencies. In 2004, trust members were notified that a Workers’ Compensation Board audit disclosed that the trust was underfunded. Thereafter, an action plan put in place to restore the trust‘s financial stability was unsuccessful, special assessments
Plaintiff thereafter commenced this action in 2011 against, as relevant herein, NYCM and certain alleged former trustees, defendants James F. Trombino, D. Scott Jaquith and James E. Ransom (hereinafter collectively referred to as the trustee defendants), asserting causes of action for, among others, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duties and common-law indemnification. Trombino moved to dismiss the complaint based upon statutes of limitations and failure to state a cause of action (see
Supreme Court partially granted the trustee defendants’ motions, by dismissing the breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty claims as time-barred, with the breach of contract claim against Ransom held to be time-barred only to the extent that it alleges actions occurring more than six years before this action was commenced. The trustee defendants’ motions for dismissal with regard to plaintiff‘s common-law indemnification claims were denied, and their subsequent motions to reargue were also denied in a written amended decision and order making certain factual corrections. The trustee defendants now appeal the partial denial of their respective motions, and Trombino appeals from the denial of his motion to reargue.
The trustee defendants argue that plaintiff fails to state a claim for common-law indemnification and, thus, Supreme Court erred in denying their motions seeking dismissal for failure to state a cause of action.* Plaintiff‘s complaint alleges that the trustee defendants failed, among other shortcomings, to fulfill their contractual, statutory and fiduciary duties by failing to oversee the trust and NYCM, the fund administrator, so as to ensure that employer contribution rates and trust reserves were adequate to pay trust expenses and obligations; failed to ensure
In considering a motion to dismiss based upon failure to state a cause of action, the complaint is liberally construed, the facts as alleged are accepted as true and the plaintiff is accorded the benefit of every favorable inference (see
Supreme Court correctly determined that plaintiff has a cause
Notably, contrary to the trustee defendants’ claim, the fact that plaintiff was by statute (see
Further, plaintiff‘s claim for indemnification implied by law does not require that it specify the amount of damages attributable to each trustee defendant‘s time as trustee, only that it specify that it paid a common obligation that the trustee defendants ought to have paid. Plaintiff indicated the amount of the settlement ($1.2 million) it paid to satisfy its obligation for the deficiency, and indicated in its complaint that the precise amount attributable to each trustee defendant is “not immediately ascertainable” but expected to be indemnified in an amount “no less than the sum of $2 [million].” The complaint cannot, in our view, be interpreted as seeking indemnification from the trustee defendants for periods before or after their respective tenures as trustees, as Trombino suggests. Supreme
Turning to Jaquith‘s argument that he was entitled to summary judgment on the common-law indemnification claim because plaintiff failed to offer evidence that he was ever formally appointed a trustee or ever acted in that capacity, we find that Supreme Court properly denied his motion given the presence of material questions of fact thereon (see Smalls v AJI Indus., Inc., 10 NY3d 733, 735 [2008]). In support of his motion, Jaquith submitted an affidavit admitting that while he signed certain documents that state he did so as a trustee, he had no recollection of being so appointed and did not understand the position of trustee. Jaquith also submitted a letter dated November 27, 2002 in which he resigned from the “Board of Directors” of NYCM, which he claims reflects his misunderstanding of his role. The foregoing was insufficient to meet his initial burden, as movant, of demonstrating entitlement to judgment as a matter of law with evidence establishing the absence of any material issues of fact regarding whether, and for what period, he was appointed or was a de facto trustee (see Smalls v AJI Indus., Inc., 10 NY3d at 735). Similarly, plaintiff‘s complaint and bill of particulars allege actionable conduct by Jaquith related to his responsibilities as a trustee prior to his purported 2002 letter of resignation; while plaintiff was unsure when the deficit began, the Workers’ Compensation Board determination regarding the cumulative deficit left open the possibility that the deficiency was incurred partially during Jaquith‘s tenure, which further discovery would disclose. Jaquith offered no evidence other than a blanket denial to eliminate the factual questions regarding whether his conduct when he was allegedly at least acting as a trustee contributed to the deficiency. Thus, his motion for summary judgment was properly denied (see Hickey v Arnot-Ogden Med. Ctr., 79 AD3d 1400, 1401-1402 [2010]).
Next, Jaquith and Ransom contend that the complaint should have been dismissed as to them on the ground that the exculpatory clause in the trust agreements exempted them from all liability. Having not raised this issue in their motions, it was not addressed by Supreme Court and is unpreserved for our review (see
Finally, Ransom contends that plaintiff failed to state a cause of action against him for breach of contract because there was no contract between them. At this procedural juncture, we accept the facts as alleged in the complaint as true (see
Finally, Trombino‘s appeal from the order denying his motion to reargue must be dismissed, as no appeal lies from the denial
Lahtinen, J.P., Stein and Garry, JJ., concur. Ordered that order and amended order entered December 19, 2011 are affirmed, with costs. Ordered that the appeal from the amended order entered June 18, 2012 is dismissed.
