SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department
725
CA 14-02184
PRESENT: CENTRA, J.P., LINDLEY, VALENTINO, AND DEJOSEPH, JJ.
SIMPSON & SIMPSON, PLLC, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
V MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
LIPPES MATHIAS WEXLER FRIEDMAN LLP, GERALD S.
LIPPES, WILLIAM E. MATHIAS, II, AND SCOTT E.
FRIEDMAN, DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.
LAW OFFICES OF LARRY KERMAN, TONAWANDA (LARRY KERMAN OF COUNSEL), FOR
PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT.
CONNORS & VILARDO, LLP, BUFFALO (TERRENCE M. CONNORS OF COUNSEL), FOR
DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Erie County (John A.
Michalek, J.), entered June 24, 2014. The order granted defendants’
motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
It is hereby ORDERED that the order so appealed from is
unanimously reversed on the law without costs, the motion is denied,
and the first and second causes of action are reinstated.
Memorandum: Defendants, a law firm and its three managing
partners, formerly employed a lead bookkeeper and business manager
(hereafter, employee) from May 2000 until February 2008, when the
employee resigned. Thereafter, the employee began to work in a
similar position for plaintiff. Approximately one year following her
resignation from defendant law firm, defendants discovered that the
employee had embezzled over $270,000 from defendant law firm’s bank
accounts. After that discovery, one of the defendant managing
partners contacted the employee at plaintiff, and she admitted the
theft and executed a promissory note requiring payment in the full
amount of the embezzled funds. The employee thereafter embezzled
money from plaintiff in order to pay defendants’ promissory note.
When plaintiff discovered that defendants were the recipients of funds
embezzled from plaintiff, plaintiff demanded defendants return the
funds, but defendants refused to return the full amount demanded.
Plaintiff commenced this action asserting causes of action for
conversion, unjust enrichment and intentional infliction of emotional
distress, seeking judgment “of not less than $210,000.” Prior to the
motion at issue in this appeal, defendants moved separately to dismiss
the complaint and for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
Supreme Court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss in part and
dismissed the third cause of action, for intentional infliction of
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emotional distress, and denied the summary judgment motion. Following
depositions, the court granted defendants’ successive motion for
summary judgment dismissing the remaining causes of action. Plaintiff
appeals from the order granting the successive motion, and we reverse.
Contrary to plaintiff’s contention, the court properly
entertained defendants’ successive motion for summary judgment.
Although “multiple summary judgment motions should be discouraged in
the absence of newly discovered evidence or sufficient cause[,]” we
conclude that there was “sufficient cause” for defendants’ present
motion made after depositions were conducted (Welch Foods v Wilson,
277 AD2d 882, 883; see Taillie v Rochester Gas & Elec. Corp., 68 AD3d
1808, 1809-1810).
We agree with plaintiff that the court erred in granting
defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
With respect to the cause of action for conversion, we agree with
plaintiff that the court erred in determining that the commingling of
the embezzled funds in the employee’s joint checking account precluded
a cause of action for conversion. “Money, if specifically
identifiable, may be the subject of a conversion action” (Peters
Griffin Woodward, Inc. v WCSC, Inc., 88 AD2d 883, 884). Upon our
review of the record, we conclude that here the embezzled funds are
sufficiently identifiable and traceable to sustain a cause of action
for conversion (see Lenczycki v Shearson Lehman Hutton, 238 AD2d 248,
248, lv dismissed in part and denied in part 91 NY2d 918; Republic of
Haiti v Duvalier, 211 AD2d 379, 384-385; Manufacturers Hanover Trust
Co. v Chemical Bank, 160 AD2d 113, 124-125, lv denied 77 NY2d 803; cf.
Heckl v Walsh [appeal No. 2], 122 AD3d 1252, 1254).
We further conclude that there are issues of fact precluding
summary judgment on the conversion cause of action. “Conversion is an
unauthorized assumption and exercise of the right of ownership over
[personal property] belonging to another to the exclusion of the
owner’s rights” (Peters Griffin Woodward, Inc., 88 AD2d at 883; see 2A
NY PJI 3:10-3:11, at 111-132 [2015]). Defendants disavow any
knowledge, however, of the illicit nature of the funds that the
employee used to repay them and thus, they claim that they had no
knowledge that the funds they received from the employee belonged to
plaintiff. We nevertheless conclude that, given the unique facts of
this case, there are issues of fact with respect to defendants’
knowledge of the employee’s embezzlement from plaintiff, despite
defendants’ disavowal. We conclude that the circumstances known to
defendants were so “obviously suspicious that no honest person (not
just a reasonably prudent person) could turn a blind eye thereto,”
thus requiring defendants to investigate (MCC Proceeds v Advest, Inc.,
293 AD2d 331, 334-335, lv denied 98 NY2d 613; see Leve v Itoh & Co.
(Am.), 136 AD2d 477, 478, lv denied 71 NY2d 806; cf. Lenczycki, 238
AD2d at 248; see generally Hartford Ins. Co. v General Acc. Group Ins.
Co., 177 AD2d 1046, 1046-1047).
We further conclude that there are triable issues of fact
whether, even if defendants lacked knowledge that the funds they
received were stolen by the employee, defendants converted plaintiff’s
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funds when they refused to return them upon plaintiff’s demand.
“Where the original possession is lawful, a conversion does not occur
until the defendant refuses to return the property after demand” by
the property’s rightful owner (Johnson v Gumer, 94 AD2d 955, 955). On
the record before us, we conclude that there are triable issues of
fact whether defendants improperly refused to return the funds once
plaintiff informed defendants that the funds had been stolen by the
employee and demanded their return. Defendants asserted a claim of
right defense by claiming that defendant law firm is a “holder in due
course,” i.e., that it accepted the personal checks from the employee
“ ‘for value . . . in good faith . . . without notice . . . of any
defense against or claim to [them] on the part of any other person’ ”
(Depew Dev. v AT & A Trucking Corp., 210 AD2d 974, 975; see UCC 3-
302). We conclude that there are triable issues of fact whether
defendant law firm parted with value in exchange for the checks and
whether defendant law firm accepted the checks in good faith.
Finally, we also agree with plaintiffs that the court erred in
dismissing the cause of action for unjust enrichment on the basis that
it dismissed the cause of action for conversion. Unjust enrichment
“ ‘is an obligation [that] the law creates, in the absence of any
agreement, when and because the acts of the parties or others have
placed in the possession of one [party] money . . . under such
circumstances that in equity and good conscience [the party] ought not
to retain it’ ” (Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co., 160 AD2d at 117,
quoting Miller v Schloss, 218 NY 400, 407). “Unjust enrichment . . .
does not require the performance of any wrongful act by the one[s]
enriched . . . [, and even i]nnocent parties may frequently be
unjustly enriched” (Simonds v Simonds, 45 NY2d 233, 242). Although
the equitable cause of action for unjust enrichment is closely related
to the cause of action for conversion based on wrongful detention of
property after demand for its return by the rightful owner (see Pokoik
v Gittens, 171 AD2d 470, 471), it is nevertheless a separate cause of
action from the cause of action for conversion (see e.g. Citipostal,
Inc. v Unistar Leasing, 283 AD2d 916, 918-919).
Entered: July 10, 2015 Frances E. Cafarell
Clerk of the Court