Court Reinstates $3M East Harlem Development Debt Lawsuit

An appeals court revived the East Harlem development lawsuit, allowing CSN Realty to pursue a $3M debt from project sponsors.
An appeals court revived the East Harlem development lawsuit, allowing CSN Realty to pursue a $3M debt from project sponsors.
  • A New York appellate court reinstated CSN Realty’s lawsuit seeking to hold two developers personally liable for a $3M judgment tied to a failed East Harlem project.
  • The dispute stems from a collapsed $12M property sale at 2252 Third Avenue, where a planned 20-story mixed-use development never moved forward.
  • The ruling could influence future disputes involving single-purpose entities and efforts to pierce the corporate veil in failed development deals.
Key Takeaways

Commercial real estate litigation is returning to the spotlight after a New York appellate court revived CSN Realty Corp.’s attempt to collect a $3M judgment tied to a failed East Harlem development, per The Real Deal. The decision allows the case against developers Roy Moussaieff and Yousef Althkefati to move into discovery after a lower court dismissed it in 2025.

The dispute dates to 2018, when CSN agreed to sell a commercial property at 2252 Third Avenue for $12M to 2252 Third Avenue LLC, a single-purpose entity formed for the acquisition. The developers planned a 20-story, 53,900 SF mixed-use building with 61 apartments and ground-floor retail between East 122nd and East 123rd streets.

The transaction never closed by its March 1, 2020 deadline. The contract ultimately terminated in 2021, ending the proposed development before construction began.

The Details

According to The Real Deal, CSN secured a $3M judgment against 2252 Third Avenue LLC in August 2023 for accrued penalties and extension fees after the failed closing. The company later sued Moussaieff and Althkefati personally, arguing they used an undercapitalized shell entity to secure the purchase contract without assuming meaningful financial risk.

The appellate court reversed the lower court’s dismissal in May 2026. That decision sends the case into discovery, where CSN will seek evidence supporting its effort to pierce the corporate veil and collect the outstanding judgment directly from the developers.

On June 29, the defendants denied the allegations, argued they were not parties to the purchase agreement, and maintained there is no legal basis to hold them personally responsible.

Corporate Veil Claims Face Fresh Test

Piercing the corporate veil remains one of the highest hurdles in commercial real estate litigation. Courts generally respect the liability protections offered by limited liability companies unless plaintiffs can show the entity itself was used to commit fraud or other wrongdoing.

According to The Real Deal, attorneys representing CSN argued the appellate ruling signals that New York courts may allow these claims to proceed when plaintiffs present sufficiently detailed allegations about misuse of a corporate entity. The decision does not determine liability, but it gives CSN the opportunity to obtain evidence through discovery before the court considers the merits.

Why It Matters

Single-purpose entities are common across commercial real estate because they isolate project-level risk and simplify financing structures. The appellate ruling highlights the limits of those protections when counterparties allege the entity lacked meaningful capitalization or existed primarily to shield individuals from contractual obligations.

Developers, lenders and property owners will likely watch the case closely. Although the court has not ruled on the underlying claims, the decision reinforces that well-supported allegations can survive an early dismissal and advance into the costly discovery phase.

What’s Next

The litigation now moves forward in New York state court. Discovery will give both sides access to financial records, communications and other evidence related to the failed transaction.

The defendants have denied all allegations and continue to argue they bear no personal responsibility for the debt. They have also requested the deposition of CSN principal Freddy Srour later this year. The outcome could further clarify how New York courts evaluate corporate veil claims involving failed development projects and single-purpose entities.

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