Thе extent of the relationship between parties to support the equitable remedy of unjust enrichment has been the focus of several recent Court of Appeals cases. The latest of these cases, Georgia Malone & Co., Inc. v Rieder (
The law of unjust enrichment was not changed by Georgia Malone. Rather, the Court, by engaging in a detailed discussion of the relevant cases, merely added clarity to the law, which Court of Appeals cases often do. Accordingly, the motion court properly denied defendants’ motion to renew the portion of their motion that sought dismissal of the unjust enrichment claim. In any event, plaintiff properly alleged a “relationship between the parties that could have caused reliance or inducement” to support an unjust enrichment claim (
Plaintiff investment company entered into a joint venture with defendants Louis and Lisa Pektor to purchase a portfolio of cоmmercial properties from nonparty Liberty Property. During due diligence, plaintiff discovered that one of the properties had a critical flaw that made its purchase or inclusion in the sale unviable. The venture then еntered into discussions with Liberty to purchase the remaining properties (the viable properties). The deal with the venture did not go forward. Subsequently, however, plaintiff learned that the Pektors had created
Plaintiff brought suit against, inter alia, the Pektors and the partnership defendants. The complaint included a claim for unjust enrichment against the partnership defendants. All defendants moved to dismiss. The motion court granted the motion to dismiss in part, and granted leave to amend to replead the dismissed claims. One of the claims that was not dismissed was the unjust enrichment claim against the partnership defendants.
Approximately one month after the court’s denial of dismissal of the unjust enrichment claim, the Court of Appeals handed down Georgia Malone. Therе, the Court stated that a plaintiff alleging unjust enrichment must plead some relationship with the defendant sufficient to give rise to a finding that retention of the benefits are unjust (
The partnership defendants moved to renew, arguing that Georgia Malone changed the law, which justified renewal (and excused their failure to make this argument on the original motion to dismiss). They also argued that were Georgia Malone applied to the complaint here, the unjust enrichment claim would have to be dismissed. Plaintiff opposed, arguing that Georgia Malone did no more than restate, albeit more сlearly, settled precedent of the Court of Appeals on precisely this issue. The court denied the motion to renew and we now affirm. We agree with plaintiff that Georgia Malone merely clarified existing law.
Indeed, a review of Sperry v Crompton Corp. (
The Court dismissed the unjust enrichment claim for lack of any allegation of a connection or relationship between the chemical maker and the plaintiff:
“While we agree with Sperry that a plaintiff need*5 not be in privity with the defendant to state a claim for unjust enrichment, we nevertheless conclude that such a claim does not lie under the circumstances of this case. Here, the connection between the purchaser of tires and the producers of chemicals used in the rubber-making process is simply too attenuated to support such a claim” (8 NY3d at 215-216 [emphasis added]).
Likewise, in Mandarin, the plaintiff sought to buy a famous painting for the purpose of selling it at auction. The plaintiff received an appraisаl letter from a famous art expert stating his opinion that the painting was worth some $15 to $17 million; the letter was addressed to a person whose role in the transaction was not explained by the parties, and the complaint did nоt indicate the purpose of the letter, who had requested it, or how the plaintiff purchaser had obtained it. The plaintiff purchased the painting for $11.3 million; but was unable to sell the painting for even the amount of the purchase price. Plaintiff subsequently learned that the art expert who wrote the appraisal letter had an ownership interest in the painting, and in fact received over $8 million of the $11.3 million purchase price. The plaintiff sued the seller and the art expert for breach of contract, fraud, and unjust enrichment.
The Court upheld the dismissal of the unjust enrichment claim against the art expert. It noted that the letter was not addressed to anyone, and nothing indicated that it was for a particular purpose. Indeed, there was no allegation in the complaint of a relationship between the plaintiff and the expert, or that the expert was even aware of the plaintiff when he gаve the letter. As the Court said:
“Moreover, under the facts alleged, there are no indicia of an enrichment that was unjust where the pleadings failed to indicate a relationship between the parties that could have caused reliance or inducement. Withоut further allegations, the mere existence of a letter that happens to find a path to a prospective purchaser does not render this transaction one of equitable injustice requiring a remedy to balance a wrong. Without sufficient facts, conclusory allegations that fail to establish that a defendant was unjustly enriched at the expense of a plaintiff warrant dismissal” (16 NY3d at 182-183 [emphasis added]).
The plaintiff sued Rosewood, the other broker, for unjust еnrichment. However, the Court, much as it had in Sperry and Mandarin, focused on the lack of any allegation that the other broker knew the materials were confidential or that the developer had not paid the plaintiff for the materials. The Court further noted that there were no dealings between the plaintiff and the other broker:
“Similar to Sperry and Mandarin, the relationship between Malone and Rosewood is too attenuated because they simply had no dealings with each other. . . . [T]he сomplaint does not contain sufficient allegations to support an unjust enrichment claim against Rosewood. In particular, the complaint does not assert that Rosewood and Malone had any contact regаrding the purchase transaction. And, although the complaint states that Rosewood ‘knew at all times’ that Malone produced the due diligence reports and provided them to CenterRock with the expectation that it wоuld be compensated in the event a purchase agreement was reached, there is no allegation that Rosewood was aware that Malone and CenterRock had agreed to the confidential nature оf the due diligence information or that Rosewood knew that CenterRock had failed to pay Malone before the documents were conveyed to Rosewood. Indeed, Jungreis’s [a broker in the Rosewood firm] e-mail cоmmunications submitted by Malone in opposition to the motions to dismiss allude to Rosewood’s offer to pay the Rieders [Ralph Reider was CenterRock’s managing member and Elie*7 Rieder an officer] for the ‘due diligence costs’ they ‘laid out,’ suggesting that Rosewood believed that the Rieders had compensated Malone for its services” (19 NY3d at 517-518 ).
Thus, contrary to defendants’ assertion, the Court of Appeals decision in Georgia Malone did not change the law. Its expansive discussion of its prior holdings in Sperry and Mandarin merely helped to add clarity with respect to the relationship between the parties necessary to support a claim for unjust enrichment (see Georgia Malone,
Were we to reach the merits of the motion to dismiss, we would find that the motion court correctly denied that portion of the motion seeking dismissal of the claim for unjust enrichment against defendants-appellants. It is well established that to successfully plead unjust enrichment “[a] plaintiff must allege ‘that (1) the other party was enriched, (2) at that party’s expense, and (3) that it is against equity and good conscience to permit the othеr party to retain what is sought to be recovered’ ” (Georgia Malone at 516, quoting Mandarin Trading Ltd.,
A plaintiff is not required to allege privity. It must, however, “assert a connection between the parties that [is] not tоo attenuated” (Georgia Malone,
Here, plaintiff alleged a sufficient relationship with the partnership defendants to survive a motion to dismiss, namely that its joint venturers, the Pektors, created the partnership defendants as vehicles to appropriate the venture’s business opportunity of buying the viable properties. All of the Pektors’ knowledge and scheming is, under this theory, imputable to the partnership defendants. As such, there is far more of a relation
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Eileen Bransten, J.), entered June 11, 2013, which denied the partnership defendants’ motion to renew so much of their prior motion as sought to dismiss the unjust enrichment claim as against them, should be affirmed, without costs.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered June 11, 2013, affirmed, without costs.
