DeSimon v. Ogden Associates

88 A.D.2d 472, 454 N.Y.S.2d 721, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17530
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 7, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 88 A.D.2d 472 (DeSimon v. Ogden Associates) 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
DeSimon v. Ogden Associates, 88 A.D.2d 472, 454 N.Y.S.2d 721, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17530 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

O’Connor, J.

The question for decision is whether seller-sponsor financing of the purchase of shares in a co-operative housing corporation by the tenants of the apartment building undergoing conversion is a loan subject to the prohibition and forfeiture provisions of the usury laws. We hold that it is not.

FACTS

Defendant Ogden Associates, a partnership, sponsored a co-operative housing conversion plan under sections 352-e and 352-eee of the General Business Law for a residential property it owned in Bronxville, Westchester County. It had formed a corporation for that purpose in October, 1978, with which it contracted to convey the property; under the [473]*473plan, defendant (hereinafter the sponsor) intended to surrender control of the corporation to shareholding tenants upon sufficient subscription to its offering.

Following settlement negotiations on October 24, 1979 between the sponsor’s counsel and counsel for the tenants’ association, the former drafted a “memorandum agreement,” dated October 29,1979, under which the plan would be amended, inter alia, to require the owner as “seller-sponsor” under the plan partially to finance the subscription price from a fund it would establish in the amount of $85,000. Occupying tenants twice refused bank financing were to be given the right to draw from this fund on a first-come, first-serve basis, and to execute negotiable notes secured by pledges (blank assignments) of their shares and proprietary leases to the sponsor under Uniform Commercial Code security agreements. The memorandum agreement described the financing arrangement as “purchase money loans” and specified that they would bear interest at the same rate and carry “the same administrative and closing charges paid on citibank co-op loans” on the closing date. In return, the tenants waived any objections to the conversion plan and offering then pending before the Department of Law of the State of New York, and agreed to purchase their apartments under the plan upon approval by the department and “to perform or cause to be performed those items contained in this agreement.”

The plan, as thus amended, was accepted for filing by the department on November 27, 1979, and plaintiffs were among the first group of tenants to draw upon the sponsor’s financing fund. With this loan commitment they executed subscription agreements in November, 1979.

Despite the settlement, however, problems arose when the sponsor announced that it was permitting a draw-down by one tenant not represented by counsel for the tenant association, who allegedly was a nonoccupant and a business associate of defendant’s principal. The sponsor also announced what the plaintiffs (hereinafter also the tenants) considered to be an improper offset of certain closing adjustments against a reserve fund established under the memorandum agreement.

[474]*474By letter dated January 4, 1980, counsel for the tenants urged the sponsor’s counsel to arrange for early closings for his clients, and in response the latter fixed the closings for January 17, 1980, enclosed blank copies of the documents to be executed at the closings by the tenants, and reiterated the memorandum agreement’s provision that the interest rate on the loans would be at the same rate charged by Citibank on Citibank co-operative housing loans on that date, plus an origination fee equal to Citibank’s because Citibank “also charges an origination fee”. On the day of the closings the sponsor’s counsel telephoned Citibank’s mortgage department and ascertained that its interest rate for such loans that day was 13.5%, plus a 2% origination fee.

As scheduled, the closings took place on January 17, 1980, in the evening, with each of the plaintiff tenants executing an installment note and a loan security agreement, the latter waiving all of the tenant’s defenses not arising out of the security agreement itself. The next day the tenants commenced this action by service of a summons and verified complaint along with an order to show cause seeking a preliminary injunction enjoining the sponsor from negotiating or transferring the notes. The complaint prayed for a judgment declaring the loans usurious and void and for a direction that the sponsor cancel and surrender to the tenants their notes, share certificates, proprietary leases and Uniform Commercial Code security documents. Neither the complaint nor any other document in the record reflects a desire on the tenants’ part for rescission of their subscriptions.

In the complaint the tenants alleged — on information and belief — that the interest rate and origination fee were each a point higher than Citibank charges, and that the fee was nothing more than disguised interest because the sponsor had not incurred any costs warranting such a fee; accordingly, the effective interest rate was 15% and usurious. The complaint further alleged that the sponsor was a private lender outside the protection of recent Federal usury law moratorium acts and that its “loans” could not avoid characterization as usurious on the ground they were [475]*475purchase-money loans because the seller of plaintiffs’ shares was the corporation, not the sponsor.

In addressing the tenants’ motion for a preliminary injunction, the sponsor’s counsel accused opposing counsel and the tenants of “egregious behavior” and “malevolence” in concocting this scheme to acquire their apartments “for free”, and argued that the equitable doctrine of unclean hands barred any injunctive relief and that the tenants had made no tender of the property thus acquired under the parties’ agreement, which involved purchase-money loans outside the ambit of the usury laws. Special Term (Rubenfeld, J.), by order entered March 11, 1980, denied the motion for failure by the tenants to show usury clearly “upon full consideration of all of the facts”; the court ruled that the notes may be viewed by the court as purchase-money instruments in the sale of property rather than evidence of loans. Furthermore, the court held that in the absence of a clear showing of usury it would not grant equitable relief in the face of a question of the tenants’ good faith in bringing this action the day after executing the notes.

The sponsor served an answer and counterclaim. It denied that the interest and origination fee were usurious and emphasized that the notes were purchase-money instruments. The sponsor took the position that the parties’ agreement intended that the money paid by the tenants at the closings, and in the future on the notes, be paid over to the sponsor by the corporation as the corporation’s consideration under the sponsor’s contract to sell the property to the corporation.1 Alleging fraud and mutual mistake, the sponsor alternatively sought damages for breach of the agreement and dishonor of the notes, rescission of the agreement, or a declaration to the effect that the agreement and documents were void as to the tenants and that [476]*476the shares and proprietary leases now belong to it free and clear of any claims or liens of the plaintiff tenants.

Along with its answer, the sponsor served a notice of motion for summary judgment. The sponsor’s counsel attributed the “structur[ing]” of the memorandum agreement’s amendment to the conversion plan to the tenants’ counsel, who made no changes and raised no objections to his draft of their understanding.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A.D.2d 472, 454 N.Y.S.2d 721, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/desimon-v-ogden-associates-nyappdiv-1982.