Plaintiffs seek to recover security deposits pursuant to an oral sublease with defendants as reflected in an unsigned writing. Defendants assert that the unsigned sublease reflects the essential terms of an oral five-year joint venture that the parties had entered into for the rental, renovation and commercial use of the ninth-floor space. The parties are all health professionals whose separate practices were to realize various benefits by being on the same floor. However, defendants further assert, after the renovations were completed and plaintiffs had paid for their share of the space for many months, plaintiffs rented the tenth floor and started to renovate it, anticipatorily breaching the joint venture agreement and compelling defendants to serve a notice of termination on plaintiffs. Defendants argue that production of the new lease and renovation plans is necessary in order to determine when it was negotiated and executed and whether it gave plaintiffs a financial incentive for breaching the joint venture agreement.
As the motion court held, the alleged oral joint venture is unenforceable under the statute of frauds since it was not to be performed within one year (General Obligations Law § 5-701 [a] [1]). Since defendants’ claim of a joint venture is not valid, their demand for discovery in support of that claim is rejected. Plaintiffs’ reliance on the unsigned sublease as the basis for their claim for return of their security deposits is not tantamount to a concession that they had entered into the alleged joint venture with defendants, and does not constitute a waiver of the statute of frauds as against the alleged joint venture. Nor are there any issues of fact as to defendants’ part performance of the alleged joint venture. The parties did not perform any acts typical of a joint venture, and those they did perform, i.e.,