Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Fox Theatres Corp.

91 F.2d 907, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4372
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 1937
DocketNo. 387
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 91 F.2d 907 (Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Fox Theatres Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Fox Theatres Corp., 91 F.2d 907, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4372 (2d Cir. 1937).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

In June, 1932, equity receivers were appointed for Fox Theatres Corporation (hereafter called Fox). In the receivership proceedings Philadelphia Company for Guaranteeing Mortgages (hereafter called Philadelphia Company) filed its claim as a contract creditor. While the claim was pending, receivers were appointed for Philadelphia Company in a proceeding in Pennsylvania, and they were permitted to file amendments to its claim. The last amendment, filed November 19, 1934, stated the claim to be for $389,436.90.- It was allowed in the sum of only $48,134.06, and from this order the receivers of Philadelphia Company have appealed. Mortgage Service Company, appointed in Philadelphia Company’s reorganization proceedings as operating trustee for creditors, intervened below and has also appealed.

The correctness of the order appealed from turns upon the meaning and effect of a written contract made by Fox with Philadelphia Company in October, 1930. This necessitates a statement of the circumstances under which the contract was executed.

Market-Seventeenth Streets Corporation (hereafter called Market), a majority of whose stock was owned by Fox, desired to borrow a large sum of money upon its bond and mortgage. The lender insisted that payment of the mortgage be guaranteed. Philadelphia Company was willing to issue its policy of guaranty, if Fox would give assurance that Market would promptly pay interest and taxes on the mortgage and premiums on Philadelphia Company’s policy. Accordingly, four instruments were executed and delivered, all bearing date October 25, 1930, except the guaranty policy which was dated October 28, 1930: (1) Market obtained a loan of $1,800,000 and gave to the lender its bond, secured by its mortgage upon Pennsylvania real estate,, for a like sum payable five years after date, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum payable semiannually. The bond and mortgage also bound Market to pay taxes and other charges against the mortgaged property and provided that, in the event of a thirty-day default in payment of interest or taxes, the mortgagee might, at its option, declare the principal debt immediately due. (2) Market and Philadelphia Company executed a contract by which the latter agreed to guarantee the bond and mortgage and Market agreed to pay to Philadelphia Company $27,000 forthwith, representing three' years’ premium in advance for its policy, and $9,000 yearly in advance thereafter during the life of the policy. (3) Fox and Philadelphia Company executed a contract by which, in consideration of the issuance of said policy, Fox “does hereby guarantee” unto Philadelphia Company for the term of said bond and mortgage “the payments of” (a) the interest thereon when due; (b) property taxes assessed against the mortgaged premises before the first day of July in each year; (c) corporation taxes assessed against Market within thirty days after they become payable; and (d) premium for guaranty when due under Philadelphia Company’s agreement with Market. This contract contained a provision that, in case Fox should fail to pay or cause to be paid any of the agreed payments, judgment might be confessed “for all sums or charges then due and unpaid” by Fox “under the terms of this Agreement.” (4) Philadelphia Company delivered its policy guaranteeing to the mortgagee payment of interest within five days after it shall become due by the terms of the bond and mortgage, and payment of the principal when collected, but in any event within eighteen months after it shall become due under the bond and mortgage. Philadelphia Company was,made the agent of the mortgagee to collect interest and principal as it. fell due.

Beginning with the installment of interest falling due on October 25, 1932, Market has been continuously in default in respect to interest and taxes. The mortgagee, however, did, not elect to accelerate the maturity of the principal debt, nor take steps to foreclose the bond and mortgage or to hold Philadelphia Company li7 able on its guaranty. On November 19, 1934, when Philadelphia Company’s third amended claim was filed in the District Court, Market’s defaults under the bond and mortgage amounted to $371,436.90; and in addition Market owed Philadelphia Company $18,000 as premium for the fourth [909]*909and fiftli years of the guaranty. None of Market’s defaults had been made good by Fox. The claim against Fox was filed for the sum of the above-stated figures, namely, $389,436.90. But Philadelphia Company had actually paid out only $30,-134.06 on account of Market’s defaults; and the District Court allowed the claim for only the sum paid out by Philadelphia Company plus the $18,000 premium. Disallowance of the balance of the claim is what the appellants complain of. Specifically, the question on appeal is whether a guarantor of a mortgage indebtedness, upon which the mortgagor later defaults, has a right to recover from one who gave a “guaranty” to the guarantor indemnity for money expended or the full amount of the guarantor’s liability. The issue is of special moment in the case at bar because both Fox and Philadelphia Company are insolvent.

The question for decision is the meaning to be ascribed to Fox’s contract with Philadelphia Company. This turns upon the expressed intention of the parties and is to be determined by the words the parties have used, interpreted in the light of the circumstances under which they chose them. The words are “guarantee the payments” by Market at definite dates, of interest, taxes, and premiums. The appellants contend that these words, used in connection with the transactions on foot, were appropriate to impose the liability of a technical guaranty and were intended to require Fox to pay to Philadelphia Company the various sums with respect to which Market defaulted. The appellee, on the other hand, argues with equal zeal that the parties could only have intended that ’ Fox would indemnify Philadelphia Company against actual losses it might sustain because of Market’s defaults. In a three-party transaction when S, a surety, “guarantees” C, the creditor, that P, the principal debtor, will perform his undertaking, the damage which the creditor sustains upon the principal’s default is the value of P’s performance. The assurance by S to C that P would perform is equivalent to promising that, if P does not, S will. Such is the typical guaranty or suretyship situation, imposing upon the guarantor the obligation to perform the act which the principal debtor should have performed, in case he defaults. With respect to premiums, Fox’s promise exactly fits that category, for Market had promised to pay them to Philadelphia Company, Fox had given assurance that performance would be made, and Philadelphia Company’s damages from Fox’s breach of its promise was the amount of the premiums. So the District Court held, and no one has appealed from this part of the order.

With respect to interest and taxes the situation is somewhat different. Market’s obligation to make these payments ran to the mortgagee, not to Philadelphia Company. It is true that the mortgagee had given Philadelphia Company a power of attorney to collect the interest payments, and to conduct actions to enforce Market’s obligations, including the payment of taxes, as stipulated in the bond and mortgage, but this did not place Philadelphia Company in the position of a creditor of Market; it was merely the agent of Market’s creditor. Hence Market’s defaults in paying interest and taxes did not deprive Philadelphia Company of any performance owing from Market to it, and will result in damage to Philadelphia Company only if the latter is compelled to pay the mortgagee.

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Bluebook (online)
91 F.2d 907, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 4372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-title-trust-co-v-fox-theatres-corp-ca2-1937.