Chase National Bank v. 10 East Fortieth Street Corp.

238 A.D. 370, 264 N.Y.S. 882, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9507
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 2, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 238 A.D. 370 (Chase National Bank v. 10 East Fortieth Street Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase National Bank v. 10 East Fortieth Street Corp., 238 A.D. 370, 264 N.Y.S. 882, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9507 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

Merrell, J.

The respondents are a minority committee formed on December 31, 1932, and on January 30, 1933, the respondents represented 142 bondholders owning $258,500 in bond certificates out of a total outstanding issue of $5,373,500. A majority committee, known as the Schlosser Committee, was organized on July 19, 1932. On November 30, 1932, the said majority committee announced a plan of reorganization of the defendant corporation, and on January 21, 1933, the said majority committee had on [371]*371deposit in its account $3,771,000 of bond certificates, or seventy per cent of the total bond issue. The majority or Schlosser Committee was formed by the bankers for the 10 East Fortieth Street Corporation who had originally sold the issue. Ten East Fortieth Street Corporation, the mortgagor, defaulted in answering in the action, and states in an affidavit that it has no meritorious defense. It is, therefore, necessary to reorganize the property since concededly there was no market for property of this type, and it would be impossible to obtain competitive bids on a sale under foreclosure. The minority committee, known as the Buckingham Committee, the respondents herein, protested against the Schlosser plan because it was purely a stockholders’ reorganization, benefiting only a stockholding group, although the Schlosser Committee had pledged ' itself to protect the bondholders against the old company, its stockholders or receivers.”

The property at 10 East Fortieth street has always been and still is a very successful development. Even during the receivership its earnings have been over $360,000 a year net or nearly seven per cent upon the entire bond issue. It is alleged that this sound financial condition, however, was wrecked by the stockholders, who, directly before the receivership, deliberately withdrew for the benefit of their affiliated corporations the large sum of $268,657.81 from the earnings of the company and left unpaid, taxes, bond interest and amortization payments. The result of this was to force the acceleration of the maturity of the issue and the receivership. It is entirely plain that the act of the stockholders making this unauthorized withdrawal and causing default in the payment of taxes, bond interest and amortization payments was deliberate and premeditated for the plain purpose of forcing a foreclosure by the trustee of the mortgage securing the bonds. It is alleged that by doing this the stockholders were clearly planning to get the property back under a reorganization plan with the mortgage debt lightened and the diversions which they had made of the rents and income of the property condoned. For the purpose of checking this raid of the stockholders at the expense of the bondholders, and in the interest of the bondholders, application was made to intervene in the foreclosure action.

Concisely stated, the default in the interest, taxes and amortization payments was the direct result of the withdrawal by the stockholders in the year prior to the commencement of the foreclosure action, from the net rents of the property, the sum of $268,657.81, instead of using the said amount withdrawn from the rents in discharging taxes, interest and other payments. Of this amount, $207,600 was withdrawn between February 5 and July [372]*37219, 1932, after notice of default. Under the terms of the trust mortgage, the defendant had no right to withdraw any of the rents after notice of default. Allegedly the diversion of these large sums of money from the rents of the property was for the plain purpose of forcing the trustee to declare the principal of the bonds due and to foreclose the mortgage given to secure the same. The plain plan of the stockholders was to get the property back on reorganization with the mortgage debt lightened. It is claimed that throughout the entire period of default and during the six months of the receivership, the property earned more than its full interest, taxes and payments, as well as liberal operating cost, and that its present net earnings are over $360,000 per year, and the lowest estimate for the future is $275,000 net. From these figures it will appear plainly that the defendant corporation was on a firm financial basis, and even in times of depression was earning far more than enough to pay the interest on the bonds, taxes and amortization payments. Notwithstanding all this, under the reorganization plan attempted by the defendant and its bankers, it was contemplated that the bondholders should cut their principal in half and get only five per cent on the half or two and one-half per cent on the whole, or $134,375 a year, and that they should also get for the- other half, non-cumulative preferred stock which could not possibly pay dividends for ten years, as $100,000 annually and depreciation were to be deducted from the earnings. It is alleged that the proposed plan also gave all the common stock and voting control to the former management, and it was planned that thirteen months’ interest should, be waived, and that the bondholders should waive any claim to the withdrawal of the $268,657.81, and that the new management should be given to the old group of stockholders under a management contract for five years at $15,000 per year net. A. B. Jones, formerly president of the corporation, was made receiver. Jones is also president of an affiliated corporation which owned all the stock of 10 East Fortieth Street Corporation, and is the president of this affiliated corporation which received the $268,657.81. Jones was the president and largest stockholder of the management corporation to which he as receiver tried to give a three per cent management contract for the property with its $660,000 annual gross rents. Jones was also president of the corporation which it was proposed to underwrite the Schlosser reorganization plan and to get the stock of the new corporation. An examination of the figures presented by respondents clearly indicate mismanagement by Jones of the defendant corporation. These figures are summarized in the respondents’ brief at page 5 as follows:

[373]*373“ The trustee has on hand...................... $134,337 50
Earnings July 21 /32 to Dec. 31 /32............. 221,393 75
Estimated earnings to 6 /30 /33................ 258,000 00
Total cash as of July 1, 1933.............. $613,731 25
Deduct: defaulted tax compromise. .. $240,000
May, 1933, taxes.......... 63,180
- 303,180 00
Net cash as of July 1,1933, to be
Rents withdrawn............................ 268,657 81
What Jones cost......................... $579,209 06

_n addition, the proposed plan would cost the bondholders annually for the next ten years a considerable amount each year until the preferred ” stock could pay interest. The trust mortgage provides for the annual interest payments of $322,410. The Schlosser or majority committee plan proposes to pay $134,375, or an annual loss of $188,035, and for ten years at a total loss of $1,880,350. In a circular sent out by the minority committee now seeking to intervene on January 23, 1933, in attacking the plan proposed by the Schlosser Committee, the respondents stated as follows: On January 7, 1933, the Receiver and Trustee had on hand $355,000 cash.

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Bluebook (online)
238 A.D. 370, 264 N.Y.S. 882, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-national-bank-v-10-east-fortieth-street-corp-nyappdiv-1933.