764 N.Y.S.2d 236 | N.Y. App. Div. | 2003
OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiff commenced this action against his former employer, Reliance Insurance Company (RIC), its parent, Reliance Group Holdings, Inc. (RGH), and several officers and directors of those companies, for, inter alia, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud by concealment, an accounting, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment, arising out of a written “key management incentive benefit plan.” Pursuant to the plan, administered by a compensation committee of the board of directors of RIC, consisting of individual defendants Saul P. Steinberg, Robert M. Steinberg and George E. Bello, participants earned “units” each policy year from a bonus pool derived from a calculation of the pretax operating profits of Reliance National, an operating unit of RIC. However, benefits were paid out over a multiyear period, during which profitability could be reassessed and the bonus pool and benefits could be recalculated. The plan also provided that losses in a plan year could offset benefits from other plan years. The complaint alleges that defendants used “inaccurate and improper” accounting methods, and that some of the individual defendants manipulated the company’s profits by diverting income to themselves, in order to reduce the plan bonus pool, which deprived plaintiff of benefits.
An employer-employee relationship providing for the division of profits will not give rise to a fiduciary obligation on the part of the employer absent an agreement to also share losses (see Michnick v Parkell Prods., 215 AD2d 462 [1995]; Reichert v MacFarland Bldrs., 85 AD2d 767 [1981]; Byrne v Blaker Adv. Agency, 239 App Div 395 [1933]; Hathaway v Clendening Co., 135 App Div 407 [1909]; see also Freedman v Pearlman, 271
The fact that plaintiff was dependent upon his employers to calculate the profits and benefits did not transform the relationship from one of employment into a fiduciary one (see Freedman, 271 AD2d at 305 [employee’s “trust” that his employer would “treat him fairly” did not give rise to a fiduciary duty]). For example, in Michnick (215 AD2d at 462), there was no fiduciary obligation, even though the employer had agreed to pay a 5% commission on each product that the employee originated or evaluated and that was sold as part of the employer’s line. Similarly, in Reichert (85 AD2d at 768), there was no fiduciary relationship where the employee was to receive a bonus of 5% of the gross profit of new work, defined as the final contract price less the cost of construction, including the plaintiff employee’s salary for time spent on the project. As explained in Hathaway (135 App Div at 408): “An agreement made by an employer that [an employee] shall share in the profits of [the] business, as entire or partial compensation for his services * * * [is] a contract * * * of mere hiring and providing for compensation in a particular manner supposedly
Plaintiff nevertheless seeks, under the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil, to proceed on his claims for breach of the plan agreement by the five remaining individual defendants, Saul P. Steinberg, Robert M. Steinberg and George E. Bello (members of the boards and compensation committees of RGH and RIG), as well as Lowell C. Freiberg and Howard E. Steinberg (members of the RGH board).
Plaintiff alleges that the individual defendants, RGH and RIG used improper and inaccurate accounting methods to systematically reduce the plan bonus pool, and that those defendants removed Dennis Busti from his position as President and CEO of Reliance National solely to prevent him from carrying out his intention to exclude the unprofitable 1998 plan year from the bonus pool, as he was allowed to do under the written terms of the plan. According to the complaint, defendants engaged in such activities in order to reduce the liabilities of RIG and Reliance National to make the companies more attractive to prospective purchasers. Furthermore, the individual defendants allegedly “attributed more income to themselves and less income to the Plan, thereby converting income to them that would otherwise have been paid to [plaintiff] and other Plan participants” (complaint U 96).
According to plaintiff himself, both the purported accounting improprieties and the removal of Busti were effected in order to assist RGH in its desired sale of RIG and/or Reliance National; therefore, although RGH would have benefitted from a sale or a higher sales price, and may have acted as the alter ego of RIC/Reliance National, there is no allegation that the individual defendants would have benefitted from such a transaction, and thus no showing that they used the company as “a vehicle for purely personal rather than corporate ends” (Bonanni v Straight Arrow Publs., 133 AD2d 585, 587 [1987]; see Matter of Kummerfeld [Sakai], 186 AD2d 90, 91 [1992] , lv dismissed and denied 82 NY2d 682 [1993]). To the extent plaintiff avers that the diversion of income to the individual defendants was accomplished so that RGH could consummate a favorable sale of RIG and/or Reliance National, the assertion suffers from the same defect as the pleadings concerning ac
Finally, the existence of the plan agreement, an express contract governing the subject matter of plaintiffs claims, also bars the unjust enrichment cause of action as against the individual defendants, notwithstanding the fact that they were not signatories to that agreement (see Bellino Schwartz Padob Adv. v Solaris Mktg. Group, 222 AD2d 313 [1995]; Feigen v Advance Capital Mgt. Corp., 150 AD2d 281, 283 [1989], lv dismissed and denied 74 NY2d 874 [1989]).
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Helen Freedman, J.), entered May 4, 2001, insofar as it declined to dismiss the remaining causes of action as against the individual defendants, should be reversed, on the law, without costs, the action as against the corporate defendants having been stayed pursuant to bankruptcy and liquidation proceedings. The Clerk is directed to enter judgment in favor of defendants Saul P. Steinberg, Robert M. Steinberg, George E. Bello, Lowell C. Freiberg and Howard E. Steinberg, dismissing the complaint as against them.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered May 4, 2001, reversed, on the law, without costs, and the remaining causes of action against the individual defendants dismissed. The Clerk is directed to enter judgment in favor of defendants Saul P. Steinberg, Robert M. Steinberg, George E. Bello, Lowell C. Freiberg and Howard E. Steinberg, dismissing the complaint as against them.