1163 Realty Corp. v. United Institutional Servicing Corp.

83 Misc. 2d 19, 371 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2793
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 Misc. 2d 19 (1163 Realty Corp. v. United Institutional Servicing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1163 Realty Corp. v. United Institutional Servicing Corp., 83 Misc. 2d 19, 371 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2793 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

Vito J. Titone, J.

Plaintiff corporation, builder of one-family homes on Staten Island, sues to recover money allegedly retained wrongfully by defendant corporations, who are engaged in the business of mortgage banking, funding, and brokering. The latter companies agreed in the fall of 1965, to arrange mortgage financing and construction loans for plaintiff’s construction of a development consisting of approximately 110 homes. Defendant U.I.&I. Funding Corporation is a successor to defendant United Institutional Servicing Corp. The case was tried without a jury.

The dispute centers on mortgage moneys totaling $122,829.20 withheld by the mortgage companies. $82,535.30 of said sums was held by the defendant companies to guarantee the issuance of certificates of occupancies to the purchasers after the closings, and $40,293.90 (sometimes referred to as warehousing charges) was retained by the same companies, ostensibly to indemnify them for actual or contemplated losses resulting from their assigning mortgages to a savings bank after closings of title at varying discounts. The record indicates that defendants also used part of the $82,535.30, set aside to secure certificates of occupancy, to recoup their losses sustained in the discounting of the mortgages.

The parties concede that defendants paid the plaintiff or its creditors from the $122,829.20, the sum of $66,926.20. It was further stipulated that $5,500 is still held in escrow for three certificates of occupancy not yet obtained by the plaintiff. Thus, the amount in dispute herein is $50,403.

The thrust of plaintiff’s case is that beginning in 1966, and continuing to March, 1968, the defendants continually demanded that "discount” moneys be withheld from mortgage proceeds at time of closings. Plaintiff complains that the threats by defendants not to close unless its losses from discounts required by the assignee banks were assumed by plaintiff, and paid from such discount money, constituted economic duress, and was an improper extraction of plaintiff’s funds. The plaintiff further asserts that the initial agreement between it and defendants in the fall of 1965, did not include the withholding of such moneys for any of defendants, subsequent losses resulting from assignments of the mortgages.

In rebuttal, defendants claim (1) that they as mortgage [21]*21companies arrange financing for building loans for new construction and building mortgages; (2) that they in effect presell the mortgages in their portfolio; (3) that their fee for placing the building mortgage, and closing it, and assigning it to a bank, was 1% of the mortgage, or $200 to $250 for each house; and (4) the original agreement with the plaintiff was that the plaintiff would indemnify them for whatever discount terms the assignee banks required.

The uncontroverted evidence adduced at the trial, reveals that sometime in 1965, the plaintiff corporate officers (McErlean and Lentini) discussed the financing of their proposed Staten Island Development of 110 homes with their counterpart officers of the defendants’ firms (Katz and Levine). It also seems undisputed that the parties agreed at the time that the mortgage company then involved would package the financing for the 110 one-family homes to be constructed by the plaintiff, and that such company would receive a $200 service charge plus a $6 credit charge for each deal. It was further orally agreed that in the event that a certificate of occupancy had not been issued at the time of closing, that a portion of the mortgage moneys would be held in escrow by the mortgage company to ensure the eventual obtaining of such instrument by the.plaintiff.

The testimony of the plaintiffs officers also suggests that they were aware from the outset that the defendant mortgage company with whom the plaintiff was doing business at the time, acted as a conduit between it, as the builder of the homes, and a savings bank, and that the mortgages, although closed in the mortgage company’s name, would eventually be assigned by such company to a savings bank. In the case of plaintiffs new homes, the assignee bank would be either Staten Island Savings Bank or the Williamsburgh Savings Bank. In essence, the dispute centers on whether, as plaintiff claims, mortgage moneys were wrongfully extracted from plaintiff at the closing to cover any losses when the mortgages were subsequently discounted, or whether the parties agreed at the outset in 1965, that the plaintiff would indemnify the mortgage company for such losses.

The crux of testimony adduced from defendants’ witnesses (Katz and Levine) on this question, was that the Staten Island Bank agreed to the assignment of mortgages on plaintiffs homes without a certificate of occupancy being in existence at closing provided such instrument was issued within 30 to 60 [22]*22days thereafter. However, Williamsburgh Savings Bank refused to accept an assignment unless a certificate of occupancy was in existence. According to Levine, at the time his company issued a mortgage commitment in its own name, it had already obtained one from the savings bank to whom it was selling the mortgage. Katz and Levine both testified that plaintiff’s officers, McErlean and Lentini, agreed in 1965 that moneys would be deducted at the closings because possible fluctuation in the interest rate might affect the size of the discount demanded by the assignee savings bank.

Plaintiff’s witnesses, McErlean and Lentini, both testified in essence that in the summer of 1966, after plaintiff had constructed a number of its homes, the mortgage company representative, at the closings on a number of the homes, refused to close on the mortgages financing them unless a portion of the mortgage moneys were withheld by the mortgage company to cover whatever loss it might sustain in assigning the mortgage to one of the savings banks. According to both witnesses, not to acquiesce to such demands of the mortgage company at that time, would have forced plaintiff into bankruptcy since it was heavily indebted to its suppliers and subcontractors for many of its homes, either completed, or in various stages of construction. Plaintiff’s lawyer, Hugo S. Puglia, testified that during such period, he did not receive advance notice before a closing that such a discount would be demanded, but was first faced with such demand at time of closing. Both McErlean and Lentini denied that at the outset, in the fall of 1965, they promised to obtain certificates of occupancy within a specified time, or indemnify the mortgage company for discount losses, since they were then cognizant that it was very difficult to obtain such an instrument in Richmond County.

The court is constrained to find as a matter of fact, that the parties did not initially agree in 1965 that moneys would be withheld from mortgage proceeds to cover defendants’ discount losses; and that the demand by defendants for such withholdings first occurred in 1966, after many of plaintiff’s homes were either ready for occupancy and set down for closings, or were in various stages of construction. Such pressure tactics, in the court’s opinion, constituted economic duress and an improper extraction of plaintiff’s funds.

The record reveals that the mortgage applications submitted by the purchasers, although given to them by the plaintiff’s representative, were issued under the letterhead of defendant [23]*23U.I.&I. Funding Corp. No statement is included in any of them that it would be submitted to a savings bank for approval.

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Related

1163 Realty Corp. v. United Institutional Servicing Corp.
55 A.D.2d 908 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Misc. 2d 19, 371 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1163-realty-corp-v-united-institutional-servicing-corp-nysupct-1975.