State of California Public
Employees' Retirement System,
Appellant,
v.
Shearman & Sterling,
Respondent.
2000 NY Int. 125
Plaintiff California Public Employees' Retirement System (CALPERS) is the largest public pension and health system in the United States. In 1988, CALPERS and Equitable Real Estate Investment Management, Inc. entered a Correspondent Agreement for Commercial Property Loans. Under the Correspondent Agreement, Equitable originates and closes commercial property loans for sale and assignment to CALPERS. Equitable is responsible under the Correspondent Agreement for retaining counsel to provide advice and services in connection with the loans.
In August 1993, CALPERS agreed to purchase a
$23,300,000 long-term commercial loan that Equitable proposed to
make to a New York borrower, Nathan L. Serota. After receiving
Equitable retained defendant Shearman & Sterling as counsel in negotiating and closing the Sersons loan. CALPERS and Equitable had developed standard form loan documents, including a promissory note that contained a prepayment and acceleration penalty, for use in connection with the loan transactions under the Correspondent Agreement. CALPERS alleges that Equitable asked Shearman & Sterling to incorporate the agreed-upon standard form note into the loan documents. At Equitable's request, Shearman & Sterling prepared the documents and sent a draft note to CALPERS and its counsel. In its cover letter to CALPERS' counsel, Shearman & Sterling indicated that the documents enclosed included Equitable's standard loan forms, which had been black- lined to reflect changes required by New York law and those negotiated by Sersons; one of the black-lined provisions was the acceleration clause of the loan. CALPERS made no objection to the loan documents.
At the closing in November 1994, Sersons executed the
note and delivered it to Equitable. A month later, Equitable
assigned the note by an instrument entitled Omnibus Assignment
of Loan Documents. The instrument purported to assign all of
Equitable's right, title and interest in, to and under the
[loan] documents to CALPERS. The assignment was made without
Subsequently, Sersons defaulted and CALPERS accelerated the loan. CALPERS asserts that only then did it discover that the note provided for an acceleration fee of approximately $1.1 million, rather than $9.1 million had the note been drafted in conformity with the standard CALPERS note. In March 1997, Sersons paid CALPERS the $1.1 million.
Before commencing this lawsuit, CALPERS and Equitable
entered into a Settlement Agreement whereby Equitable paid
CALPERS $400,000.[1]
The Settlement Agreement noted the previous
Omnibus Assignment and declared that both Equitable and CALPERS
had intended to include in the assignment all possible claims
relating to the note including without limitation all causes of
action * * * relating to professional malpractice, including
without limitation all causes of action against, and rights to
sue, Shearman & Sterling for negligence and breach of contract.
Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, Equitable further assigned
to CALPERS all of its rights to the extent * * * not previously
assigned, arising from or relating in any manner whatsoever to
the Sersons loan transaction, including without limitation all
CALPERS, as the assignee of Equitable's rights under the loan documents, then commenced this action against Shearman & Sterling, asserting two causes of action for professional negligence and breach of contract. CALPERS also alleged that its relationship with the law firm was so close as to approach that of privity of contract to permit it to raise direct claims of negligence and breach of contract against Shearman & Sterling. Lastly, CALPERS claimed third-party beneficiary status under the Equitable and Shearman & Sterling contract to sustain its direct claims against the law firm.
Shearman & Sterling moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action. Supreme Court granted the motion in part, dismissing only the direct causes of action based on its conclusion that CALPERS had not alleged facts sufficient to show either that CALPERS had a relationship approaching privity with Shearman & Sterling or that CALPERS was the intended third-party beneficiary of Shearman & Sterling's contract with Equitable. The court noted that although the language in the Omnibus Assignment was legally insufficient to effect an assignment of Equitable's claims, the specific language in the subsequent Settlement Agreement did assign Equitable's claims to CALPERS.
The Appellate Division dismissed the complaint in its
As an initial matter, we agree with the courts below
that the allegations in the complaint are insufficient to
establish that CALPERS and Shearman & Sterling had a relationship
so close as to approach that of privity. We have long held that
before a party may recover in tort for pecuniary loss sustained
as a result of another's negligent misrepresentations there must
be a showing that there was either actual privity of contract
between the parties or a relationship so close as to approach
that of privity (Prudential Ins. Co. v Dewey, Ballantine,
Bushby, Palmer & Wood, , 80 NY2d 377, 382 [citing Ossining Union
Free School Dist. v Anderson LaRocca Anderson, , 73 NY2d 417, 424;
Credit Alliance Corp. v Andersen & Co., , 65 NY2d 536]). The
The only direct contact between Shearman & Sterling and CALPERS prior to the closing of the Sersons loan is a letter Shearman & Sterling sent to CALPERS asking for review and approval of the note by CALPERS and its counsel. Moreover, Shearman & Sterling provided CALPERS with a black-lined copy of the standard form note, indicating the changes that it had made so that the note would conform to New York law and the borrower's demands. CALPERS cannot assert that it relied on Shearman & Sterling's letter when it reserved the right of final approval of the loan documents for itself and its counsel, and failed to object. Thus, the complaint and the documentary evidence fail to establish that Shearman & Sterling knew that CALPERS would and did rely on the note it prepared without reviewing it and that CALPERS' reliance was premised on conduct by Shearman & Sterling evincing an understanding that CALPERS would do so.
We also reject CALPERS' argument that it was an
intended third-party beneficiary of Shearman & Sterling's
There certainly was a valid and binding contract
between Equitable and Shearman & Sterling for the law firm's
services in the Sersons loan transaction. However, contrary to
CALPERS' assertion, Equitable did not retain Shearman & Sterling
for CALPERS' benefit. The Correspondent Agreement explicitly
declares that the agents of Equitable act independently and are
not agents for CALPERS. In addition, the agreement acknowledges
that CALPERS' counsel (not Shearman & Sterling) must approve all
closing documents. Although the correspondent program was
designed for the purpose of allowing CALPERS to invest in long-
term commercial real estate loans obtained by Equitable, CALPERS
and Equitable did not share at all times the same interests.
Shearman & Sterling was retained to assist Equitable as its
counsel in meeting the requirements of the Correspondent
Agreement without harming Equitable's interests under New York
Having determined that CALPERS has no direct causes of action against Shearman & Sterling, we turn to its remaining claims as Equitable's assignee. CALPERS contends that the Omnibus Assignment was sufficient to transfer the entirety of Equitable's bundle of rights in the Sersons loan transaction, including the right to assert any claims Equitable had against Shearman & Sterling for legal malpractice. CALPERS maintains that the use of the word all in the Omnibus Agreement evinces an intention by Equitable to transfer all claims, including then- unknown but accrued claims against Shearman & Sterling. CALPERS' reliance on the Omnibus Assignment's use of the word all to include all of Equitable's claims against Shearman & Sterling is misplaced.
The Omnibus Assignment refers only to rights and
interests under the loan documents (including the promissory
note) between Equitable and Sersons and does not refer to the
overall loan transaction (compare with Banque Arabe et
Internationale D'Investissement v Maryland Nat'l Bank, 57 F3d
146, 152 [2d Cir]). The Omnibus Assignment transferred every
right of action Equitable had against Sersons growing out of the
receipt of the notes and the refusal to pay the share thereof
(Allen v Brown, 44 NY 228, 234). The assignment did not include
a cause of action arising outside the loan documents themselves
The claim alleged here -- that Shearman & Sterling
prepared a defective note by materially altering the prepayment
and acceleration provisions of the standard form note and the
terms of the commitment -- does not arise from the note itself or
from the loan documents. Rather, CALPERS' claim against Shearman
& Sterling is premised on the firm's failure to prepare loan
documents for Equitable that complied with the terms of the
Correspondent Agreement. Thus, while all of Equitable's rights
to and under the loan documents were assigned to CALPERS, all
in this case does not include the right to assert Equitable's
claims, whatever they may be, against Shearman & Sterling arising
from the firm's failure to observe the specifications of the
Correspondent Agreement (see, Allen v Brown,
1 CALPERS concedes that Equitable's settlement payment has nothing to do with this litigation. The sum was paid by Equitable in the interest of preserving and advancing its relationship with CALPERS (App's Reply Brf, at 22, n13).