A New York appeals court has upheld a nearly $800,000 judgment in favor of a real estate broker who alleged unpaid commissions following his departure from Helmsley Spear, LLC, reinforcing the enforceability of contractual commission rights in broker agreements.
In Bloom v Helmsley Spear, LLC, the plaintiffs, led by broker Scott M. Bloom, were awarded $795,480.96 by the Supreme Court, New York County, based on breach of contract claims. Bloom asserted that Helmsley Spear failed to pay him his agreed share of commissions from several transactions, including deals involving 170 Broadway, China Ting, and WeWork.
Helmsley Spear contested the claim, arguing that Bloom had failed to fulfill a condition precedent required by an Independent Agent Agreement (IAA)—specifically, the submission of a pending deals list within five days of his departure. Although the complaint referenced a Terms of Joining Agreement (TOJ), the defendant relied heavily on the IAA in opposing summary judgment and sought to raise related defenses on appeal.
On April 3, the Appellate Division, First Department, unanimously affirmed the lower court’s judgment. The court declined to consider Helmsley Spear’s argument regarding the IAA, stating that it had not been properly preserved for appellate review. It noted that the defendant’s objection to the IAA’s absence from the complaint was raised only in cursory fashion before the motion court, which was insufficient to preserve the issue.
The court further held that Helmsley Spear had waived the defense that Bloom failed to satisfy a condition precedent. Because the firm had not specifically pleaded this affirmative defense in its answer, and because it pertained to the unpleaded IAA rather than the TOJ, the court found that its introduction after the close of discovery would have unfairly prejudiced the plaintiffs. The court emphasized that conditions precedent must be pleaded with particularity under CPLR 3015(a).
Even if the defense had not been waived, the appellate panel concluded that the provision in question—requiring Bloom to supply a list of pending deals within five days of termination—constituted a contractual promise, not a condition precedent that would bar his right to commission payments. The court relied on the full context of the provision, citing precedent that distinguishes contractual obligations from conditions that extinguish payment rights.
The court also upheld the award of prejudgment interest on the unpaid commissions, determining that interest was properly calculated from the dates when Helmsley Spear received payments on the transactions. For the 170 Broadway deal, that date was February 1, 2019, while interest on the China Ting and WeWork commissions accrued from the respective dates the defendant was due to receive payment.
Helmsley Spear’s late request to amend its answer—raised for the first time in a footnote in its reply papers—was also rejected, with the court finding that such an amendment would have resulted in prejudice to the plaintiffs and was properly denied by the motion court.
The case underscores the importance of procedural diligence and contractual clarity in commission-related disputes. For financial and brokerage professionals operating under dual agreements or independent contractor structures, the decision illustrates the potential consequences of failing to raise defenses in a timely and precise manner.
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