Affirmative Defenses are Barred by Guaranty's Express Waiver Provision: J. Remora Maintenance LLC v Efromovich
In a January 4, 2012 decision by Justice Fried, the court granted the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment to enforce a guaranty executed by the defendant in connection with the plaintiff’s sale of its interest in a company to a third party. The court found that because the two express conditions set forth in the guaranty for its enforcement were met, the plaintiff established entitlement to summary judgment as a matter of law. The court then determined that the defendant failed to raise an issue of fact through its affirmative defenses of fraudulent inducement and lack of consideration. Based on the Court of Appeal’s decision in Citibank v Plapinger, the court concluded that an express waiver contained in the guaranty barred the defendant from asserting the substantive defenses. The court rejected the defendant’s argument that the waiver did not apply to the two affirmative defenses at issue because it did not contain the words “absolutely and unconditional”, finding that such language was unnecessary under New York law for a waiver to effectively waive substantive defenses. The court also granted the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the defendant’s fraudulent inducement counterclaim under CPLR § 3016(b) on the grounds that the circumstances surrounding the alleged fraudulent inducement were not alleged in sufficient detail.
J. Remora Maintenance LLC v Efromovich, Sup Ct New York County, January 4, 2012, Fried, J, Index No. 650943/11
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