STATE OF NEW YORK, by Eliot Spitzer, Appellant, v DAICEL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES, LTD., et al., Respondents.
First Department, New York
July 5, 2007
[840 NYS2d 8]
Plaintiff New York State Attorney General asserts that between January 1979 and June 1997, defendants, who manufacture food additives called sorbates, which are preservatives used to extend the shelf life of commercially sold food products, engaged in an illegal conspiracy to fix and inflate the price of sorbates. Indeed, many of the defendants have pleaded guilty to
In this action, commenced in October 2002, plaintiff pleaded causes of action under (1) the
In dismissing the first cause of action, which alleged
However, unlike the portion of the
As to defendants’ contention that the complaint failed to allege acts in New York State as required by
Plaintiff‘s second and third causes of action, under
The
Similarly, the unjust enrichment claim must fail. While privity is not required for an unjust enrichment claim, the end users of the products, in whose interest plaintiff is acting, are too attenuated from the producers of the chemicals which are among the ingredients of those products (see Sperry v Crompton Corp., 8 NY3d 204, 215-216 [2007]).
Concur—Mazzarelli, J.P., Saxe, Marlow, Sullivan and Williams, JJ.
