UBS AG STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ARGUMENT FAILS IN MOTION TO DISMISS

For nearly five-and-a-half years, various banking and insurance corporations (“movants”) have engaged in extensive discovery to attempt to prove that Michel and Ramy Lakah, acting as an alter ego for bond guarantor Lakah Funding Limited, are bound by arbitration agreements that they had not signed in a personal capacity. When the Lakahs sought to stay the arbitration, the movants filed a motion to dismiss that claim as being untimely filed. The movants allege that the petition was filed more than twenty days after notice was given, failing to comply with section 7503(c) of the N.Y. Code.

The court held that the movants had waived their right to argue that the stay petition was time-barred. The court explained that “[f]or almost five-and-a-half years . . .the movants did not inform this court or their opponents of their belief that the extensive rounds of discovery and related litigation . . . were completely unnecessary because the Lakahs were time-barred from seeking to stay arbitration on any ground.” In their answer, the movants failed to assert their statute of limitations claim as an affirmative defense, therefore waiving that right. Additionally, the court did not allow movants to amend their answer to include this affirmative defense principally because of their own “inordinate delay.” Lakah v. UBS AG, Case No. 07-cv-02799 (USDC S.D.N.Y. May 22, 2013).

This post written by Brian Perryman.

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