Opinion
April 27, 1999
Appeal from the Supreme Court, New York County (Harold Tompkins, J.).
Appellants' proposed causes of action in action No. 2, which allege, inter alia, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, duress, bad faith and unconscionability in connection with respondents' procuring of a second mortgage from appellants and respondents' purchase of a first mortgage in furtherance of their own interests rather than appellants', were properly rejected as duplicative of claims already pleaded herein, or of claims that were dismissed, or factual allegations that were necessarily rejected, in the first captioned action upon the granting of summary judgment in respondents' favor on their cause of action for foreclosure, as affirmed by this Court ( 238 A.D.2d 206, lv denied 90 N.Y.2d 934). Nor is there merit to any of the causes of action that were dismissed. The first and fifth, which allege that appellants were induced to borrow money from respondents by fraudulent representations concerning expenses necessary to manage the building, and the tenth, which alleges that respondents negligently failed to evict a "hazardous subtenant", are barred by the finding in the foreclosure action that respondents never actually managed the building. The third cause of action, which challenges respondents' second loan to appellants as unconscionable because made while the individual appellant was in the hospital, is insufficient on its face and otherwise unsupported. The fourth, which attacks the same loan as usurious, is without merit, as no showing is made that the interest rate was in excess of 16% (General Obligations Law § 5-501; Banking Law § 14-a), and, in any event, the documentary evidence demonstrates that the loan was in fact made to the mortgagor, the corporate appellant, and not to its principal, the individual appellant (General Obligations Law § 5-521). The eleventh cause of action, which alleges that respondents purchased the first mortgage under a fiduciary duty owing to appellants, is barred by this Court's findings in the foreclosure action that respondents never promised to act on appellants' behalf and that their acquisition of the first mortgage in order to protect their second mortgage did not constitute bad faith. We have considered appellants' other contentions, including that they are aggrieved by aspects of the order on appeal that "may be interpreted to limit" their causes of action that were sustained, and find them to be either without merit or unreviewable.
Concur — Ellerin, P. J., Sullivan, Wallach, Lerner and Buckley, JJ.