READ, J.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has asked us to resolve two questions regarding General Business Law § 395-a, which (with certain exceptions) forbids the
Plaintiffs Lori Schlessinger and Brenda Pianko purchased furniture from the Fortunoff Department Store. Each of them also bought from Fortunoff, along with the furniture, the "Guardsman Elite 5 Year Furniture Protection Plan" (the Plan). The Plan is a contract in which defendant Valspar Corporation, through its Guardsman business unit, agreed that, if the furniture became stained or damaged during the contract period, it would "perform one or more" of a number of services — ranging from advice on stain removal to replacement of the furniture — or would arrange a store credit or offer a financial settlement. The Plan contains what plaintiffs call the "store closure provision," which stipulates that
General Business Law § 395-a (2) says that, with exceptions not applicable here, "[n]o maintenance agreement covering parts and/or service shall be terminated at the election of the party providing such parts and/or service during the term of the agreement." Plaintiffs claim, and we assume for present purposes (as did the Second Circuit), that the store closure provision violates section 395-a (2).
Fortunoff went into bankruptcy, and the store where plaintiffs bought their furniture closed. Pianko made a claim under the Plan for unspecified damage to her furniture (a table). Based on the store closure provision, Valspar tendered Pianko a full refund of the payment she made for the Plan ($100 in her case). Schlessinger does not allege that her furniture has been stained or damaged, or that she has made any claim under the Plan.
Plaintiffs brought a diversity action against Valspar in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New
Plaintiffs allege that section 395-a renders the store closure provision "ineffective and not a part of the agreement"; consequently, by denying claims based on this provision, Valspar breached its contracts (i.e., the Plan) with plaintiffs. Further, they contend, Valspar engaged in "deceptive practices" as defined by section 349 by selling maintenance agreements containing the store closure provision. Plaintiffs seek a declaration that the store closure provision is not part of the contract; an injunction against its enforcement; an order requiring the reprocessing of all claims denied because of the store closure provision; statutory damages of $50 for each individual who purchased the Plan and has not made a claim worth $50 or more; and attorney's fees, litigation expenses and costs.
The District Court Judge dismissed the complaint (see Schlessinger v Valspar Corp., 817 F.Supp.2d 100 [ED NY 2011]). Relying principally on our decision in Kerusa Co. LLC v W10Z/515 Real Estate Ltd. Partnership (12 N.Y.3d 236 [2009]), he concluded that a breach-of-contract claim may not arise solely as a result of conduct prohibited by General Business Law § 395-a (here, the inclusion of the store closure provision in the Plan); and that a claim under General Business Law § 349 may not be premised solely on violation of General Business Law § 395-a.
Plaintiffs appealed to the Second Circuit, which certified to us the following questions:
We accepted the certified questions (19 N.Y.3d 992 [2012]), which we now answer in the negative.
The first certified question is based on plaintiffs' cause of action for breach of contract, which, as the Second Circuit interpreted it, is asserted only by Pianko. Valspar concededly acted in conformity with its express contractual obligations, carrying out one of the alternatives permitted under the Plan's service procedures — i.e., it tendered Pianko a full refund of the original purchase price. As a result, Pianko can only succeed on her breach-of-contract claim if General Business Law § 395-a renders the store closure provision null and void, which would remove a refund as an option under the Plan and cast Valspar into breach.
Unlike certain other provisions in the General Business Law, there is no express or implied private right of action to enforce section 395-a. Instead, the legislature chose to assign enforcement exclusively to government officials.
In our view, this case is much like Kerusa, which involved a common-law tort claim. In Kerusa, we held that the purchaser of a condominium could not sue the building's sponsor for common-law fraud where the purported fraud was predicated solely on alleged material omissions from the offering plan amendments mandated by the Martin Act (General Business Law art 23-A) and the Attorney General's implementing regulations. As in this case, then, the purported claim would not have existed absent provisions in a statute — in Kerusa, the Martin Act; here, General Business Law § 395-a. We concluded that "to accept Kerusa's pleading as valid would invite a backdoor
The second certified question arises from the second cause of action in plaintiffs' complaint. That cause of action, unlike the first, asserts a private right of action arising from a statute — not, plaintiffs say, from General Business Law § 395-a, but from General Business Law § 349. Section 349 (a) provides that "[d]eceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any business, trade or commerce or in the furnishing of any service in this state are hereby declared unlawful." And section 349 (h) expressly creates a private right of action:
Plaintiffs' theory is, in essence, that Valspar's violation of section 395-a is perforce a violation of section 349 (a) because, by inserting an unlawful provision in the contract, Valspar impliedly represented that this provision was valid and thereby engaged in a deceptive act or practice. We find plaintiffs' reasoning too attenuated to be plausible.
Section 349 does not grant a private remedy for every improper or illegal business practice, but only for conduct that tends to deceive consumers (see Gaidon v Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 94 N.Y.2d 330, 344 [1999] [the statute prohibits acts "likely to mislead a reasonable consumer" (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)]). It cannot fairly be understood to mean that everyone who acts unlawfully, and does not admit the transgression, is being "deceptive." Such an interpretation would stretch the statute beyond its natural bounds to cover virtually all misconduct by businesses that deal with consumers. If the legislature had intended this result, it would not have
Plaintiffs rely on three Appellate Division cases — Llanos v Shell Oil Co. (55 A.D.3d 796 [2d Dept 2008]), Lonner v Simon Prop. Group, Inc. (57 A.D.3d 100 [2d Dept 2008]) and Goldman v Simon Prop. Group, Inc. (58 A.D.3d 208 [2d Dept 2008]) — where the Second Department rejected motions to dismiss section 349 claims by purchasers of prepaid gift cards. The plaintiffs alleged that certain restrictions in the cards had been printed in small type, in violation of General Business Law § 396-i. The distinction between those cases and this one seems clear: Printing contract clauses in small type may tend, in itself, to deceive consumers. Including a termination provision in a maintenance agreement has no such tendency. Thus, assuming Llanos, Lonner and Goldman to be correctly decided, they involved broader deceptive conduct not covered by section 396-i (see Broder v Cablevision Sys. Corp., 418 F.3d 187, 200 [2d Cir 2005] [affirming dismissal of a General Business Law § 349 claim where plaintiff did not "make a free-standing claim of deceptiveness under GBL § 349 that happens to overlap with a possible claim under (another state statute)," but rather alleged that a violation of the other statute was, in itself, a section 349 violation]).
Accordingly, the questions certified should be answered in the negative as stated in this opinion.
SMITH, J. (dissenting in part).
I agree that General Business Law § 395-a does not create a private right of action, and that for that reason we should answer no to the Second Circuit's second question: Plaintiffs may not create a private right of action by repackaging a section 395-a violation as a violation of General Business Law § 349. However, I would answer yes to the first question, asking whether parties may seek to have provisions that violate the statute declared void as against public policy.
By the plain language of section 395-a (2) — "No maintenance agreement covering parts and/or service shall be terminated at the election of the party providing such parts and/or service during the term of the agreement" — certain termination clauses are made illegal. It is a corollary of the statute that such clauses may not be enforced, and that courts may declare them unenforceable. To permit a suit to obtain such a declaration is not to recognize a "private right of action" under the statute. As the Second Circuit explained in the opinion in which it certified its questions to us: "The usual implied private right of
The first cause of action in the present complaint is not a tort claim arising out of a statute, but a contract claim arising out of a written agreement. Part of the relief sought on that claim is a declaration that the contract must be enforced without regard to a provision that the legislature has prohibited. If — as all assume for present purposes — the store closure provision has been prohibited by the legislature, the conclusion that it may not be enforced follows.
The Second Circuit, while recognizing the difference between plaintiffs' contract claim and a "private right of action" as usually understood, questioned whether that distinction would be recognized by the New York courts. In the Second Circuit's view, the Appellate Division's decision in Rhodes v Herz (84 A.D.3d 1 [1st Dept 2011]) put the question in doubt (see Schlessinger, 686 F3d at 87). I would answer that the distinction between a statutory "private right of action" and a contract claim seeking to declare a prohibited clause to be void is indeed recognized by New York law. This does not necessarily mean that Rhodes was incorrectly decided; in that case the plaintiff sought not only a declaration of invalidity, but a refund of all money it had paid under an assertedly illegal contract — thus arguably coming closer than plaintiffs' contract claim in this case does to asserting a claim for damages arising from the statute. However, to the extent that Rhodes may be read to suggest that, where a statute does not create a private right of action, a private party may not sue to have an illegal contract declared invalid, that suggestion is simply incorrect.
The majority here makes no mention of Rhodes but relies, as did the Federal District Court (Schlessinger v Valspar Corp., 817 F.Supp.2d 100, 107-109 [ED NY 2011]), on Kerusa Co. LLC v W10Z/515 Real Estate Ltd. Partnership (12 N.Y.3d 236 [2009]). Kerusa (a case the Second Circuit opinion does not cite) seems to me wholly unlike this case. In Kerusa, we dealt with a complex regulatory scheme designed by the legislature for the protection of purchasers in offerings of cooperative and condominium units. The statute — a section of the Martin Act — required the filing of an offering statement with the Attorney General; prescribed the contents of the offering statement in detail; provided for the Attorney General to review the statement and to require the correction of deficiencies in it; and
It is a major stretch, it seems to me, to attribute a similar preemptive intention to the legislature that passed the simple provisions of General Business Law § 395-a. That statute says that, with certain exceptions, termination of maintenance agreements at the election of the party providing parts or service is forbidden (General Business Law § 395-a [2]). It also says that a violation of its provisions "shall be punishable by a civil penalty of not more than three hundred dollars recoverable in an action by the attorney general" (General Business Law § 395-a [4]). Under the majority's reading of the statute, the Attorney General's suit for a penalty is an exclusive remedy; in other words, merchants are free to violate the statute as long as the Attorney General does not sue. A merchant may terminate an agreement in the teeth of the statutory words "no maintenance agreement ... shall be terminated," leaving the consumer without a remedy. I find it impossible to believe that that is what the legislature intended.
Chief Judge LIPPMAN and Judges GRAFFEO, PIGOTT and RIVERA concur; Judge SMITH dissents in part in an opinion; Judge ABDUS-SALAAM taking no part.
Following certification of questions by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and acceptance of the questions by this Court pursuant to section 500.27 of this Court's Rules of Practice, and after hearing argument by counsel for the parties and consideration of the briefs and the record submitted, certified questions answered in the negative.