155 Misc.2d 192, 598 N.Y.S.2d 660
David E. FORD, Respondent,
v.
Celia HENRY and Ernesto Henry,
Appellants.
Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts.
March 8, 1993.
Before KASSOFF, P.J., and JOY and
SCHOLNICK, JJ.
MEMORANDUM.
Judgment unanimously reversed without
costs, and the complaint is dismissed.
The issue presented on the instant
appeal is whether the plaintiff may recover
part of his investment of $1,500 paid to
*193 defendants as entry fee to join and
participate in an illegal pyramid scheme.
For the reasons set forth herewith, we
hold that the plaintiff has no right of
recovery in a civil suit.
The promotional pyramid scheme in
question falls within the meaning of "chain
distributor scheme" as defined in General
Business Law 359-fff (L.1974, ch. 17,
1, as amended by L.1982, ch. 103, 1).
The statute, which forms part of Article
23-A of the General Business Law,
entitled, "Fraudulent Practices in Respect
to Stocks, Bonds and Other Securities",
commonly known as the "Martin Act",
defines a chain distributor scheme as "a
sales device whereby a person, upon
condition that he make an investment, is
granted a license or right to solicit or
recruit for profit or economic gain one or
more additional persons who are also
granted such license or right upon
condition of making an investment and
may further perpetuate the chain of
persons who are granted such license or
right upon such condition" (General
Business Law 359-fff[2] ), and provides
that a chain distributor scheme constitutes
a "security" within the meaning of Art. 23-A (General Business Law 359-fff[3] ).
The 1982 amendment provides that
"investment" as used in the statute
includes "any other means, medium, form
or channel for the transferring of funds,
whether or not related to the production or
distribution of goods and services"
(General Business Law 359-fff[2] ).
Subdivision (1) of General Business Law
359-fff further provides that it is "illegal
and prohibited for any person ... to
promote, offer or grant participation in a
chain distributor scheme". Violation of the
statute is an unclassified misdemeanor
(General Business Law 359-g[2] ).
The plaintiff, as a knowing and willing
participant in a chain distributor scheme
prohibited by law, was in pari delicto with
the defendants (see, Cochran v. Dellfava,
136 Misc.2d 38, 517 N.Y.S.2d 854), and
may not, under the general principles of
common law, invoke the power of the
court to recover the money he lost (see,
Coyle v. Richetti, 140 Misc.2d 604, 531
N.Y.S.2d 497; Cochran v. Dellfava,
supra; see also, Highsmith v. Smith,
NYLJ, September 18, 1990, at 23, col 3;
Christie v. Charles, NYLJ, June 25, 1990,
at 25, col 6; Thompson v. Lawrence,
NYLJ, June 14, 1989, at 28, col 3). "It is
the settled law of this State (and probably
of every other State) that a party to an
illegal contract cannot ask a court of law
to help him carry out his illegal object ...
For no court should be required to serve
as paymaster of the wages of crime, or
referee between thieves. Therefore, the
law 'will not extend its aid to either of the
parties' or 'listen to their *194 complaints
against each other, but will leave them
where their own acts here placed them' ".
(Stone v. Freeman, 298 N.Y. 268, 271, 82
N.E.2d 571, citing Schermerhorn v.
Talman, 14 N.Y. 93, 141).
The lower court acknowledged that
General Business Law 359-fff did not by
its terms provide the plaintiff with a right of
recovery, but nonetheless determined, by
analogy to General Obligations Law 5-419 and 5-421, which permit parties
recovery **662 of money lost at wagering
games, that the plaintiff was entitled to
reimbursement on public policy grounds.
Following the approach of Solon v. Meuer,
141 Misc.2d 993, 539 N.Y.S.2d 241, the
court reasoned that reimbursement
served the public policy goal of deterring
illegal gambling schemes by removing the
profit motive.
The classification of chain promotional
schemes under Article 23-A of the
General Business Law, however,
indicates that "the Legislature has sought
to isolate pyramid schemes from losses at
games of chance contingent upon the
happening (or not) of some specific event"
(Coyle v. Richetti, supra, 140 Misc.2d at
605, 531 N.Y.S.2d 497; see also,
Highsmith v. Smith, supra ). General
Business Law 359-fff contains no
language abrogating the common law rule
that a party in pari delicto is without
remedy at law or equity. Had the
legislature intended to create a
comparable right of action to recover
money lost at chain distributor schemes,
it would have expressly included it, and its
omission is an indication that the
legislature intended its exclusion
(McKinney's Cons.Laws of N.Y., Book 1,
Statutes 74). The court thus acted in
excess of its authority by expanding the
scope of the statute on public policy
grounds, so as to provide the plaintiff with
a remedy not expressly contained therein.
In so doing, the court improperly
substituted its judgment for that of the
legislature, by "read[ing] into [the] statute
that which the Legislature might have
inserted but did not" (McKinney's
Cons.Laws of N.Y., Book 1, Statutes
73).
We find the public policy rationale
advanced by the court in any event
unpersuasive. The statutory classification
of chain distributor schemes under Article
23-A of the General Business Law is
consistent with the particular feature
characterizing such schemes, i.e., the
undertaking by the participants of
personal promotional efforts to recruit new
members upon which the continued
success of the game ultimately depends,
a factor which sets these significantly
apart from the typical wagering games
and bets falling within the ambit of
General Obligations Law 5-419 and 5-421, as well as the lotteries regulated by
General Obligations Law 5-423.
*195 Further, while the court correctly
observed that the 1974 Memorandum of
the Attorney General (NY Legis Ann,
1974, pp 78-79; see, People v. Life
Science Church, 113 Misc.2d 952, 962,
450 N.Y.S.2d 664) "support[s] the
conclusion that [the statute] created a
protected class of persons who ... cannot
be considered accomplices in such
schemes", this does not in our view
compel the conclusion that a participant is
entitled to recovery of losses in a civil suit,
in the absence of express statutory
language conferring such right of action
(see, McKinney's Cons.Laws of N.Y.,
Book 1, Statutes 301).
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