Arcadia Realty Foundation, Inc. v. Hoenig

336 S.W.2d 571
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 13, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 336 S.W.2d 571 (Arcadia Realty Foundation, Inc. v. Hoenig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arcadia Realty Foundation, Inc. v. Hoenig, 336 S.W.2d 571 (Ky. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinions

SANDIDGE, Judge.

Appellants, Arcadia Realty Foundation, Inc., Walton Realty Foundation, Inc., and Gileen Realty Foundation, Inc., instituted this action against appellees, members of the Board of Tax Supervisors of Jefferson County for 1956, Tax Commissioner and County Judge of said County, Department of Revenue and Commissioner of Revenue of the Commonwealth, Director of Finance for the City of Louisville, and Superintendent of Public Instruction of said city, for a declaratory adjudication that three housing projects owned by appellants in Louisville were on January 1, 1956, exempt under § 170 of the Constitution of Kentucky from ad valorem taxation. This appeal is from a judgment that such properties were not exempt, and the following facts are presented.

Pursuant to and in conformity with the National Housing Act, 12 U.S.C.A. § 1701 et seq., H. G. Whittenberg, a Louisville contractor, and members of his family organized three private corporations in 1950, under Chapter 271 of Kentucky Revised Statutes, named Arcadia Realty Company, Walton Realty Company and Gileen Realty Company. These corporations were empowered to procure contracts of mortgage insurance under the provisions of said Act, to obtain construction loans from financial institutions by virtue of contracts of mortgage insurance, to apply the proceeds of such loans to constructing and furnishing rental housing projects, and to operate them. The Whittenbergs subscribed for the common stock of the corporations and, pursuant to the requirements of the Act, preferred stock therei.-a was issued to the Federal Housing Commissioner. As a preferred stockholder the Commissioner controlled the rental schedules of the corporations and exercised broad powers which are ordinarily vested in the officers, directors, and stockholders of private corporations. The rental schedules were to be determined by FHA formula designed to secure rentals sufficient to pay mortgage principal and interest; to meet operating expenses, including taxes; and to provide reserves for depreciation and replacement of refrigerators, stoves, water heaters, etc., in the buildings. In short, there was little, if anything, that the corporations could do in connection with the management and operation of the proposed projects without the consent and approval of the Commissioner. Such organizations are commonly known in financial circles as “FHA corporations.”

The Whittenbergs subscribed for common stock of the par value of $52,300 in the corporations, but later by amendment to their Articles they had the par value of such stock reduced from $100 to $10 per share, and actually paid to the corporations a total of $5,230 for such stock.

Certain lots of land upon which the proposed projects were to be constructed were conveyed to the respective corporations by deeds dated June 9, 1950.

On June 20, 1950, the three corporations obtained separate loans which aggregated the sum of $2,419,200 from the First National Bank of Louisville, evidenced by their separate notes bearing interest at 4%, and secured by mortgages on the lots that had been conveyed to them. The Arcadia note, with interest from its date, was payable in monthly installments of $5,749.33; the Walton note, with similar interest, was payable in monthly installments of $2,361.-33; and the Gileen note was payable, with similar interest, in monthly installments of $2,977.33. Payment of such notes was-guaranteed by FHA. In 1951 the bank assigned the notes and mortgages to New England Mutual Life Insurance Company of Boston, Massachusetts.

[574]*574The construction and equipment of the three projects were completed in 1951 and, strange as it may seem, the total cost thereof, including cost of the land involved, was' approximately $190,000 less than the aforesaid aggregate loan obtained therefor. Such excess was not withdrawn as a builder's profit, but was retained and invested by the corporations in securities. The three housing projects were thereafter operated by the corporations under the' management of their agent and employee, Robert Adel-berg. Through the rental income they continued to meet the installment payments due on said loans and to set up the reserves for depreciation, etc., required by FHA. After making such current payments and setting up the reserves, the three corporations on December 29, 1955, had on hand investment securities of the value of approximately $293,000 and a cash balance of approximately $50,000, or a total of about $343,000 in uncommitted liquid assets. The balance then unpaid on the mortgages was approximately $2,258,500.

On December 29, 1955, the Whittenbergs and Georgetown College executed a writing, denominated a contract, which recited that by agreement between the parties the Whittenbergs did thereby “sell and.convey” to Georgetown College all their shares of common stock in Arcadia Realty Company, Walton Realty Company and Gileen Realty Company for $934,722; that $80,000 thereof was to be paid on or before December 31, 1955; and that Georgetown College would execute a note for the remaining $854,722 of the purchase price, payable in the following manner: $232,000 on or before January 31, 1956, and the balance in monthly installments of $6,000 each, commencing on February 1, 1956, with interest thereon at 4½% Per annum from their due date, with the proviso that if ad valorem taxes had to be paid on the housing projects, then the $6,000 payments would be proportionately reduced. It was further provided in -the “contract” that the payment of such purchase price and note was not to be a general obligation of Georgetown College, but was' to be satisfied only out of the income from -the housing propérties of the three corporations, subject to the prior obligations of the corporations on the mortgage notes and to the Federal Housing Commissioner.

The writing provided for Georgetown College filing amended articles of incorporation for each of the corporations, changing their names to Arcadia Reálty Foundation, Inc., Walton Realty Foundation, Inc., and Gileen Realty Foundation, Inc., and Changing their status 'to that of charitable or educational institutions under the provisions of Chapter 273 of Kentucky Revised Statutes, with authority to acquire property and to hold, maintain, improve and operate same “for the sole benefit of Georgetown College.” It also provided that the amended articles would authorize the performance o'f all previously created obligations of the corporations to'the insurance company and Federal Housing Commissioner under the provision of the National Housing Act, and that under such amended articles the Commissioner should possess the same privileges and prerogatives he previously had through Ae ownership of preferred stock. In addition to requiring, such amended articles to preserve the status of FHA, the instrument reserved to the Whittenbergs the control over the income and operations of the corporate properties until the indebtedness to them was paid in full, by providing: (1) that the Whitten-bergs could designate the manager and rental agent of the properties; (2) that all rentals and monies of the corporations were to be kept in a separate account with the Louisville Trust Company; (3) that Georgetown College could not accumulate or expend any of the monies of the corporations for its own purposes or benefit; and (4) that it was the intention of the parties that none of the receipts of the apartment projects should be mingled with other funds of. Georgetown College.

Pursuant' to such arrangement the common stock of the three corporations was transferred to Georgetown College; the [575]

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Related

Meyers v. Arcadia Realty Foundation, Inc.
367 S.W.2d 836 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
336 S.W.2d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arcadia-realty-foundation-inc-v-hoenig-kyctapp-1959.