How Breach of a Non-Compete Can Sustain Both Fraud & Breach of Contract Claims in NY December 29, 2010
In GoSmile, Inc. v. Levine, a decision that was handed down on December 21, New York’s Appellate Division, First Department (which covers New York and Bronx Counties) was confronted with the following question: “whether a plaintiff is permitted to assert claims for both fraud and breach of contract, where the fraud claim is based upon allegations that defendant induced plaintiff to enter into that contract based on misrepresentations of present facts.”
The short answer: yes.
“Isn’t that kind of obvious?’, you ask. No, it isn’t.
Because there are some general rules at play in breach of contract cases in New York that would suggest the opposite conclusion:
(1) You can’t convert a breach of contract claim into a tort, such as fraud (which is an intentional tort); and,
(2) You can’t pursue a breach of contract or fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment claim if you waive those claims as part of a disclaimer or settlement agreement.
So why did the Court go the opposite way in this case? Two reasons:
(1) “In the instant matter, plaintiff’s allegation that defendant knowingly misrepresented that he did not breach the confidentiality and non-compete provisions of the 2003 agreement is not merely an insincere promise of future performance. It was instead, a misrepresentation of then present facts that was collateral to the contract, and thus plaintiff sufficiently alleged a cause of action sounding in fraud“; and,
(2) The general release did not act as a bar to plaintiff’s fraud and breach of contract claims because plaintiff specifically sought defendant’s express warranty that he didn’t breach his non-compete agreement, and the general release stated clearly that it did not extend to claims which “[plaintiff] does not know or suspect to exist in his favor at the time of executing the release.” After reading the court’s rendition of the facts of this case (for more on this, see “When a Fiduciary Breaches a NY Non-Compete Agreement and Lies About It”), however, no one should be surprised at the outcome.
Jonathan Cooper is a New York Business Litigation and New York Commercial Litigation Lawyer with a focus on New York breach of contract and New York business fraud claims before the Nassau, Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx, Westchester and Suffolk County courts of New York State. For more information, feel free to contact his Long Island office at 516-791-5700.
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