807 N.Y.S.2d 58 | N.Y. App. Div. | 2006
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Karla Moskowitz, J.), entered June 10, 2004, which granted the separate motions of defendants UBS PaineWebber Inc., Rani Merkel, Alberto Muro and Leon Lipkin to dismiss the amended complaint against them as barred by the statute of limitations, unanimously reversed, on the law, with costs, the motions denied and the amended complaint reinstated.
An action alleging a cause of action for fraud must be commenced within six years from the time of the fraud or within two years from the time the fraud was discovered or, with reasonable diligence, could have been discovered (see CPLR 213 [8]; 203 [g]; Miller v Polow, 14 AD3d 368 [2005]; Yatter v William Morris Agency, 268 AD2d 335 [2000]). In New York, “the
This inquiry involves a mixed question of law and fact, and, where it does not conclusively appear that a plaintiff had knowledge of facts from which the alleged fraud might be reasonably inferred, the cause of action should not be disposed of summarily on statute of limitations grounds. Instead, the question is one for the trier-of-fact (see Trepuk v Frank, 44 NY2d 723 [1978]; Erbe v Lincoln Rochester Trust Co., 3 NY2d 321, 326 [1957]). Indeed, “[w]hether a person had sufficient knowledge to discover a fraud necessarily involves a dispute over state of mind and conflicting interpretations of perceived events” (K&E Trading, 174 AD2d at 347).
The record fails to “disclose a sufficient basis for imputing a knowledge of the fraud” (Erbe, 3 NY2d at 326) on a date earlier than two years before plaintiff, a Panama investment company, commenced this action on October 7, 2002. Rather, issues abound regarding when and whether plaintiffs owner had sufficient information from which she could have reasonably inferred that respondents participated in defendant Marc Rousso’s “pump and dump” stock fraud scheme in which plaintiff lost millions. Although respondents contend that plaintiffs owner should have discovered the fraud at the very latest by May 1997 when plaintiff lost almost all of its investments— made on Rousso’s advice—and should have known that Rousso’s representations regarding the investments were untrue, plaintiffs owner maintains that at the time she learned of the devastating losses, she filed a criminal complaint against Jacques Heyer—plaintiffs director and principal of plaintiffs portfolio manager Heyer Management, SA of Geneva, Switzerland—but had no information which would have put her on notice that respondents were also involved in the fraud. It was only in February 2002 that plaintiffs owner learned through her Swiss counsel that respondents had pleaded guilty in the United States to their involvement in a stock fraud scheme.
These competing factual contentions preclude summary resolution of the statute of limitations issue (see Trepuk v Frank, supra; Lavin v Kaufman, Greenhut, Lebowitz & Forman, 226
Accordingly, the court should have denied the respective motions (cf. Ghandour v Shearson Lehman Bros., 213 AD2d 304, 305 [1995], lv denied 86 NY2d 710 [1995]).
We need not reach plaintiffs remaining contentions in light of our determination. Concur—Saxe, J.P., Marlow, Nardelli, Gonzalez and Sweeny, JJ.