
    [871 NYS2d 798]
    Banco Popular North America, Respondent, v Aharon Lieberman et al., Appellants.
    Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
    November 10, 2008
    
      APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL
    
      Gentile & Dickler, LLP, New York City (Paul T Gentile and Kevin P. Claffey of counsel), for appellants. Rick Steiner Fell & Benowitz LLP, New York City (Raymond W. Lew of counsel), for respondent.
   OPINION OF THE COURT

Memorandum.

Order, dated January 31, 2007, affirmed, with $10 costs.

Plaintiff mortgagee commenced this action seeking the return of $18,680.99 in real estate taxes that it paid under mistake to the City of New York on behalf of defendant mortgagor High Tech Park, Inc. Plaintiff sought recovery of the tax payment based upon unjust enrichment against High Tech, and under a written guarantee against defendants Lieberman and Corn-positron Corporation.

In moving for summary judgment, plaintiff established that the real estate tax payment was inadvertently remitted to the City on behalf of High Tech, one day after plaintiff had assigned the mortgage and released all escrow funds to a new lender. “A person may be unjustly enriched not only where he receives money or property, but also where he otherwise receives a benefit. He receives a benefit where his debt is satisfied or where he is saved expense or loss” (Blue Cross of Cent. NY. v Wheeler, 93 AD2d 995, 996 [1983]). Here, plaintiff demonstrated that High Tech benefitted from plaintiffs mistaken payment of real estate taxes on the mortgaged property (see generally Eightway Corp. v Dime Sav. Bank of Williamsburgh, 94 Misc 2d 274, 280 [1978], affd 99 Misc 2d 989 [1979]). To assert a valid defense to plaintiffs action to recover the mistaken payment, defendant High Tech was required to demonstrate detrimental reliance on the payment (see Banque Worms v BankAmerica Intl., 77 NY2d 362, 366-367 [1991]; Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. v Chemical Bank, 160 AD2d 113, 121-122 [1990], Iv denied 77 NY2d 803 [1991]). High Tech’s submission in opposition demonstrated that it neither relied on plaintiffs payment of the real estate taxes nor suffered any detriment as a result of the payment. Additionally, the absence of any question of fact concerning High Tech’s obligation for the tax payment warranted the grant of summary judgment on the guarantee executed by Lieberman and Corn-positron. Where, as here, a guarantee is unlimited and continuing, it is not automatically terminated by a change in the parties’ relationship nor is it limited to the life of the loans executed contemporaneously therewith (see Chemical Bank v Sepler, 60 NY2d 289, 294 [1983]).

We also sustain the denial of defendants’ motion for leave to amend their answer to assert various legal counterclaims based upon plaintiff’s alleged failure to comply with its “banking” obligations under the mortgage. Even assuming, in defendants’ favor, that the proposed counterclaims were not precluded by the “no-counterclaim” clauses contained in both the mortgage and guaranty (see generally Palm Beach Mtge. Mgt, LLC v Red Tulip, LLC, 18 AD3d 379 [2005]; Banque Nationale de Paris v 1567 Broadway Ownership Assoc., 214 AD2d 359 [1995]), the counterclaims set forth in the proposed answer were “legally insufficient and not properly pleaded with the requisite particularity” (see Bank Leumi Trust Co. of N.Y. v D’Evori Intl., 163 AD2d 26, 28 [1990]). Defendants’ allegations were conclusory, speculative and unsupported by any evidentiary showing establishing the merits of the proposed counterclaims (see Mestel & Co. v Smythe, Masterson & Judd, Manda Weintraub, 181 AD2d 501 [1992]), merely alleging in the broadest of terms that at “various [unspecified] times and intervals” during the parties’ “banking relationship,” plaintiff improperly “removed” funds from High Tech’s accounts, failed to credit unspecified “loan payments” made by High Tech, and imposed “excessive” but unelaborated charges and fees upon the corporate guarantor.

McKeon, PJ.

(dissenting). Alluding to the terms of a mortgage and guarantee entered into among the parties, the motion court awarded summary judgment to plaintiff bank for a mistaken payment of real estate taxes made for the benefit of defendant High Tech and denied defendants’ cross motion seeking, inter alla, to amend their answer to assert various counterclaims. Since it is undisputed that, at the time of the mistaken real estate tax payment, the mortgage and guarantee had already been assigned to another bank, it was, in my view, error for the court below to rely solely on the provisions of those instruments as the legal justification for its decision.

Indeed, a fair reading of the majority opinion suggests that my colleagues see the problem (and likely share my concern). In affirming the grant of summary judgment to plaintiff, nary a reference is made to the mortgage documents, rather plaintiffs claim is characterized as one for unjust enrichment (a term never used by the court below in its decision), an equitable remedy of last resort rooted in concepts of fundamental fairness and justice (see Flag Wharf, Inc. v Merrill Lynch Capital Corp., 40 AD3d 506 [2007]). Facially, the provisions of the mortgage afforded plaintiff various options at law to deal with its mistake; yet by embracing equity as the sole legal solution to plaintiffs dilemma, the majority implicitly acknowledges that, subsequent to the assignment, the parties were no longer in privity and the mortgage could no longer serve as a remedial source to provide plaintiff with a means to rectify its blunder. Hence, deprived of an available remedy at law, plaintiffs only recourse lay in equity.

I agree, parenthetically, that High Tech has been unjustly enriched by the erroneous tax payment. Even High Tech and its guarantors, I suspect, would agree with that. My disagreement stems from the majority’s unwillingness, at the least, to permit defendants to amend their answer, the reasons for its refusal and its belief that the guarantee executed by Lieberman and Compositron provides a legal basis for a grant of summary judgment against those defendants.

In support of its legal posture, the majority first relies on the “no counterclaim clause” contained in the mortgage. However, defendants’ counterclaims, at least to the extent that a set off to plaintiff’s claim is stated, are equitable in nature (see Cammarota v Drake, 285 AD2d 919, 920 [2001]) and are grounded in the same principles of justice and fundamental fairness which allow plaintiff to assert an unjust enrichment claim, notwithstanding an earlier unilateral assignment of the mortgage, the terms of which plaintiff now seeks to embrace in an effort to render defendants legally defenseless. It is a basic tenet of our jurisprudence that “[h]e who seeks equity must do equity” (Holdeen v Rinaldo, 28 AD2d 947, 949 [1967]). Having assigned the mortgage, prior to its mistake, plaintiff cannot now rely, if equity is to be achieved, on the mortgage’s “no counterclaim” provisions while, at the same time, holding dear to the equitable benefits of an unjust enrichment remedy.

The majority also claims that the counterclaims lack legal sufficiency and particularity. Defendants do allege, inter alla, in their first counterclaim, that an escrow account was established from which to pay real estate taxes. Defendants further assert that plaintiff wrongly withdrew funds from the escrow account in an amount far in excess of that necessary to pay the real estate taxes at issue. If established, such conduct may well constitute a breach of plaintiffs fiduciary duties to defendants; at a minimum, it serves as the basis for a setoff to plaintiffs unjust enrichment claim.

In my view, defendants’ counterclaims are sufficient, as a pleading, to apprise plaintiff of the nature of their claims or defenses, a bill of particulars and disclosure being the devices which will, presumably, provide the specificity which the majority claims to be lacking. There is nothing here, at this early stage in the litigation, which justifies abandoning the long-settled rule that “[l]eave to amend pleadings shall be freely given absent prejudice or surprise” (Murray v City of New York, 51 AD3d 502, 503 [2008] [internal quotation marks omitted]).

Finally, the majority characterizes the guarantee executed by Lieberman and Compositron as “unlimited and continuing.” They are half right. While, as the majority correctly points out, the guarantors remain answerable for High Tech’s obligations under the mortgage notwithstanding “[a] change in the parties’ relationship,” including a cessation of their status as mortgagor/ mortgagee, this future responsibility, by the express and unequivocal terms of the guarantee, relates to High Tech’s debt to the bank, not a bookkeeping mistake made by plaintiffs accounting department. Lieberman and Compositron agreed to guarantee “loans made” or credit “to be extended,” not to act as an insurer for those mistakes made by plaintiff, which purportedly unjustly enriched High Tech.

A guarantee, while a contract independent of the underlying obligation it is meant to secure, must still be construed “in the strictest manner” (White Rose Food v Saleh, 99 NY2d 589, 591 [2003]). Clearly, in this case, the purpose of the guarantee was to provide plaintiff with an alternative source to satisfy any financial delinquency by High Tech arising out of its mortgage obligations. Indeed, under the guarantee executed by Lieberman and Compositron, the bank could look directly to the guarantors for payment without the necessity of reducing High Tech’s default to a judgment. It is hard to imagine, however, how the guarantee can be construed to apply to an error by an entity whose actions the guarantors never pledged to secure. Therefore, I believe that the award of summary judgment against Lieberman and Compositron was error.

I thus dissent, and would deny plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and grant defendants’ cross motion, insofar as it sought to amend their answer.

Davis and Heitler, JJ., concur; McKeon, EJ., dissents in a separate memorandum.  