TRANSPORT WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA LOCAL 100 AFL-CIO et al., Appellants, v ALAN G. SCHWARTZ et al., Respondents, et al., Defendants. (Action No. 1.) TRANSPORT WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA LOCAL 100 AFL-CIO et al., Appellants-Respondents, v RICHARD L. O‘HARA, Respondent-Appellant. (Action No. 2.)
Action No. 1; Action No. 2
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, New York
821 N.Y.S.2d 53
Concur—Tom, J.P., Friedman, Nardelli, Sweeny and Malone, JJ.
On February 21, 1985, plaintiff Transport Workers Union of America Local 100 AFL-CIO (collectively, with its coplaintiffs, TWU) entered into a final agreement to sell its real property at 1980 Broadway in Manhattan to Stephen M. Ross, in exchange for consideration (comprising cash and another building, 80 West End Avenue) worth $13.5 million. This transaction (the Exchange Transaction) closed on March 12, 1985. The real property portion of the Exchange Transaction was structured as an exchange between TWU and Ross of the stock of the corporate entities that respectively held title to the two buildings. Thus,
The real estate broker who represented TWU in the Exchange Transaction was defendant Alan G. Schwartz of the brokerage firm of Sylvan Lawrence Company, Inc. (SLC). Shortly before the Exchange Transaction closed, Schwartz resigned from SLC and started a new brokerage firm of his own, defendant Glen Allen Associates, Ltd. (Glen Allen). Upon the closing of the Exchange Transaction, 80 WETH and Glen Allen entered into an agreement for Glen Allen to serve as the exclusive leasing agent for 80 West End Avenue. Subsequently, Glen Allen was replaced as leasing agent by another entity controlled by Schwartz, defendant Glen Equities, Ltd. (Glen Equities). Ultimately, Schwartz acted as the exclusive leasing agent for 80 West End Avenue, first through Glen Allen and then through Glen Equities, from the closing of the Exchange Transaction until June 2000. During this periоd, Schwartz and his two entities represented 80 WETH in a number of transactions involving the leasing of space in 80 West End Avenue, and in 80 WETH‘s sale and subsequent repurchase of a condominium unit in the building.
In May 1985, a few weeks after the Exchange Transaction closed, Ross agreed to sell 1980 Broadway to the American Broadcasting Cоmpany (ABC), and the sale of the building to ABC closed later that year. TWU contends that, in 2001, it learned for the first time that ABC agreed to pay Ross $29 million for 1980 Broadway, which was more than twice the $13.5 million that Ross had paid TWU for the same property only weeks before. TWU further contends that it also first learned in 2001 that, in a letter dated February 21, 1985 (the same date as that of the final agreement between TWU and Ross), Ross agreed to pay Glen Allen, Schwartz‘s new company, a fee of $200,000 for unspecified “consulting” services, plus an additional $50,000 “[i]f the ABC deal goes through.”
In 2003, TWU commenced the above-captioned Action No. 1 (the Schwartz Action) against Schwartz, Glen Allen and Glen Equities (collectively, the Schwartz defendants), as well as SLC and Ross (against whom the action has since been discontinued). In the course of litigating the Schwartz Action, TWU learned from SLC that Richard L. O‘Hara, Esq., the attorney who had represented TWU in the Exchange Transaction, had entered into a letter agreement with the president of SLC, dated February 25, 1985, under which SLC agreed to remit $100,000 of its
Appeal in the Schwartz Action
In the Schwartz Action order under review, the IAS court granted the Schwartz defendants summary judgment dismissing TWU‘s first cause of action (breach of fiduciary duty), its second cause of action (breach of contract), and its fourth cause of action (constructive fraud). Each of these causes of action was dismissed on the basis of the statute of limitations.
On appeal, TWU recognizes that the three causes of action at issue do not benefit from the discovery accrual rule of
The continuous representation doctrine tolls the running of the statute of limitations on a cause of action against a professional defendant only so long as the defendant continues to represent the plaintiff “in connection with the particular transaction which is the subject of the action and not merely during the continuation of a general professional relationship” (Zaref v Berk & Michaels, 192 AD2d 346, 348 [1993] [citations omitted]; see also CLP Leasing Co., LP v Nessen, 12 AD3d 226 [2004]; Dignelli v Berman, 293 AD2d 565, 566 [2002]). Here, the evidence developed through discovery establishes that the Schwartz defendants’ representation of TWU subsequent to March 1985 was not substantially related to the transaction giving rise to the instant lawsuit, nаmely, the Exchange Transaction. Rather, the record establishes that the Schwartz defendants’ representation of TWU (or, to be more precise, 80 WETH) after the Exchange Transaction “related to a series of discrete and severable transactions” (Parlato v Equitable Life Assur. Socy. of U.S., 299 AD2d 108, 115 [2002], lv denied 99 NY2d 508 [2003]; cf.
We also reject the argument that the Schwartz dеfendants are equitably estopped to assert the statute of limitations as a defense to TWU‘s cause of action for breach of contract. It is true that equitable estoppel may bar a defendant‘s assertion of the statute of limitations “where plaintiff was induced by fraud, misrepresentations or dеception to refrain from filing a timely action” (Simcuski v Saeli, 44 NY2d 442, 449 [1978]). Equitable estoppel does not apply, however, where the misrepresentation or act of concealment underlying the estoppel claim is the same act forming the basis of the underlying substantive cause of action (see Rizk v Cohen, 73 NY2d 98, 105-106 [1989]). Here, the only basis for an estoppel offered by TWU is Schwartz‘s testimony that, in February 1985 (before the closing of the TWU-Ross transaction), he told TWU‘s president that he (Schwartz) was entering into an engagement with Ross to work on “new development opportunities” that were “unrelated” to the Exchange Transaction. This deception, if it occurred, is one of the acts forming the basis of TWU‘s breach of contract claim, namely, Schwartz‘s failure to fully disclose, and obtain TWU‘s consent to, his personal deal to receive a substantial fee from Ross that would be increased in the event of the consummation of Ross‘s deal to sell 1980 Broadway tо ABC. Accordingly, the Schwartz defendants are not estopped to assert the statute of limitations as a defense to TWU‘s cause of action for breach of
Finally, our decision on the prior appeal in this case (17 AD3d 218 [2005]) held only that TWU‘s complaint in the Schwartz Action sufficiently alleged the applicability of the doctrines of continuous representation and equitable estoppel to avoid dismissal on statute-of-limitations grounds at the pleading stage. That decision does not constitute law of the case with respect to the different question presented by this appeal, namely, whether the record that has been developed after discovery affords sufficient evidence to raise a triable issue as to the applicability of these doctrines (see Riddick v City of New York, 4 AD3d 242, 245 [2004]).
Appeal in the O‘Hara Action
The theory of TWU‘s case against O‘Hara, its attorney in the Exchange Transaction, is that O‘Hara failed to disclose to TWU that he would be receiving $100,000 of SLC‘s brokerage fee. According to TWU, O‘Hara‘s expectation of this payment compromised his loyalty to TWU by giving him an interest in seeing the Exchange Transaction consummated, whether or not the deal was truly in TWU‘s interest. O‘Hara, for his part, testified that, prior to entering into the deal with SLC, he orally disclosed it to TWU‘s then-president, the late John Lawe, and that Lawe gave his consent to the deal, which, O‘Hara claims, was meant to relieve TWU of the burden of some of O‘Hara‘s legal fees. Significantly, as previously noted, the payment in question went to O‘Harа personally, not his law firm, and it is undisputed that the invoices O‘Hara‘s firm sent to TWU do not reflect any reduction of the amount due on account of O‘Hara‘s arrangement with SLC. As the IAS court correctly concluded, O‘Hara‘s self-interested testimony, which is not corroborated either by documentary evidence or by the tеstimony of any other witness, does not provide a basis for granting him summary judgment.
The IAS court did, however, grant O‘Hara‘s summary judgment motion to the extent of dismissing, on statute-of-limitations grounds, TWU‘s first and second causes of action against O‘Hara, both of which are for breach of fiduciary duty.4 This determination was correct. Here, as in the Schwartz Action, TWU, recognizing that the discovery accruаl rule does not apply to causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, relies on the continuous representation doctrine to save its first and
Finally, O‘Hara cross-appeals from the IAS court‘s denial of his summary judgment motion to the extent it sought dismissal of TWU‘s fourth cause of action, for actual fraud. This determination, based on the application of the discovery accrual rule, was also correct. At the outset, we note that this appeal does not present, and we therefore do not address, the question of when TWU had information from which Schwartz‘s alleged fraud in the Exchange Transaction “could with reasonable diligence have [been] discovered” (
