Empire Trust Co. v. Park-Lexington Corp.

243 A.D. 315, 276 N.Y.S. 586, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5507
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 243 A.D. 315 (Empire Trust Co. v. Park-Lexington 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
Empire Trust Co. v. Park-Lexington Corp., 243 A.D. 315, 276 N.Y.S. 586, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5507 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The Special Term, pursuant to rule 113 of the Rules of Civil Practice, struck out the answer of the appellant Anahma Realty Corporation, the owner of the second mortgage upon a leasehold; and granted the motion of plaintiff for summary judgment.

The appellant claims a right to priority of hen, superior to the first mortgage, as a result of a ground rent adjustment agreement made between the lessor, the lessee-mortgagor and assented to by plaintiff, first mortgagee, at the request of the lessee and the protective committee of bondholders under plaintiff’s mortgage. The demand for relief is based on the fact that the rental agreement was made in bad faith, without authority and in fraud of defendant’s rights.

The mortgage under foreclosure was given to plaintiff by the defendant Park-Lexington Corporation July 1, 1923, and is upon a leasehold of the premises located between Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh streets and Lexington and Park avenues in the city of New York.

The Park-Lexington Corporation holds its lease by assignment from Merchants and Manufacturers Exchange of New York, lessee of New York State Realty and Terminal Company, which in turn is lessee of the New York Central Railroad Company. The plaintiff’s mortgage, originally for $5,500,000, is now $4,468,500, with interest. Bonds to that amount were issued and are now outstanding. The second mortgage of the Anahma Realty Corporation is for $2,000,000, with interest.

The mortgaged lease, the initial term of which runs to May 15, 1943, provided for a readjustment of ground rent for the period [317]*317after June 1, 1932. A rental agreement dated July 7, 1932, adjusting the ground rental from June 1, 1932, was made between the lessor and lessee and was assented to by plaintiff. The Anahma Realty Corporation’s answer challenged the validity of the rental agreement and asserted its right to priority of hen, ahead of the first mortgage, because the ground rent was readjusted by that agreement instead of by arbitration, which Anahma Realty Corporation contends was an exclusive method of readjustment. That is the sole question here for consideration.

When that question was raised by the answer of the Anahma Realty Corporation, the plaintiff brought in as additional parties defendant the lessor, New York State Realty and Terminal Company, the bondholders protective committee, which holds seventy-two per cent of the outstanding bonds, and such other individual bondholders as are known, in order to obtain a comprehensive and binding adjudication.

All defendants are in default of pleading, except the Anahina Corporation, Karl H. Behr and others constituting the bondholders protective committee, which joins plaintiff in its prayer for relief, and Alex Rose, designated by the court to receive service on behalf of unknown defendants who may be infants or incompetents, whose answer denied that the rental agreement was in violation of the lease or prejudicial to the Anahma Realty Corporation. During the litigation Rose died and Max M. Hirson was substituted in his place.

The lease in question contained provisions for additional ground rental from June 1, 1932, and the lessee gave due notice of dissent therefrom. Instead of arbitrating their differences the lessor and the lessee entered into the rental agreement of July 7, 1932, which fixed the amount of additional ground rental to be paid subsequent to June 1, 1932, far below the amount named in the lessee’s notice. It is said that the agreement took cognizance of the business depression, and provided for a graduated addition of ground rent and for a partial moratorium, with long deferred payments of great advantage to the lessee.

The appellant Anahma Realty Corporation does not oppose the foreclosure — it merely asks priority of hen in the principal amount of its second mortgage of $2,000,000, with interest from August 1, 1931. In substance, Anahma Realty Corporation aheges that its mortgage is in default; that the ground rent for the period of the lease after June 1, 1932, could not be increased except by notice of increase by the lessor, and failure of the lessee to dissent therefrom, or by appraisal and arbitration, in case of dissent by the lessee; that the rental agreement was made without its knowledge or consent; that the value of the land did not justify an increase of ground rent; that the rental agreement and plaintiff’s [318]*318assent thereto have impaired Anahma Realty Corporation’s security by more than $2,000,000 and have prevented it from protecting its second mortgage, and have destroyed its equity, and that it is, therefore, entitled to have its lien subrogated to the first lien.

The appellant argues that the question of good faith in making the arrangement for the additional rent should be litigated and may not be disposed of in the perfunctory manner here followed by the parties to the agreement.

Paragraph fifteenth ” of the lease outlines the method to be used in determining the readjustment of the value of the ground as of June 1, 1932. It provides that the rent be fixed at a sum which should be three per cent of the value of the easterly parcel considered as unimproved; that if the lessor should be of the opinion that the ground rental upon the aforesaid basis should be more than the minimum of $40,000 prescribed by the lease, then the lessor should send notice to the lessee of the sum of the annual ground rental it deemed proper; and if the lessee should within twenty days after such notice notify the lessor that it deemed the sum so named unsatisfactory, then the value of the easterly parcel considered as unimproved should be determined by three arbitrators, who should be sworn to perform their duties with impartiality and fidelity and who should proceed with all reasonable dispatch to appraise the full and fair value of the easterly parcel considered as unimproved; that the value so fixed should be binding and conclusive upon the parties as the true value for the purpose of fixing the annual ground rental.

Pursuant to said provisions contained in the lease, the lessor on December 28, 1931,- served notice upon the lessee that in its opinion the annual ground rental for the easterly parcel should be the sum of $40,000, plus $160,000, making the total of $200,000.

On January 8, 1932, the lessee Park-Lexington Corporation served notice upon lessor that the annual sum above set forth was unsatisfactory to the lessee, and further claimed that no annual sum should be added to the minimum and also demanded that the amount of the annual sum, if any, to be added to the minimum, should be determined as provided by paragraph “ fifteenth ” of the lease.

On May 3, 1932, about four months after the lessee had signified its dissent to any increase in rent, the trustee under the first mortgage brought an action to foreclose the mortgage.

On July 7, 1932, about two months after the lessee had defaulted in answering in the foreclosure action the lessee and lessor, without the knowledge or consent of Anahma Realty Corporation, raised the rental, not by determining the value of the ground considered [319]*319as unimproved by arbitration, as provided in the lease, or by any other method approved of by appellant, but by a modification agreement. The rental was raised thereby from the minimum of $40,000 to the average sum of $109,545.45 per year in unequal annual payments.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Burney v. McLaughlin
63 S.W.3d 223 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2001)
Fleet Bank v. County of Monroe Industrial Development Agency
224 A.D.2d 964 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1996)
Shultis v. Woodstock Land Development Associates
188 A.D.2d 234 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1993)
Shane v. WINTER HILL FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N
492 N.E.2d 92 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1986)
Exchange Place Corp. v. Tarvan Realty, Inc.
44 Misc. 2d 980 (New York Supreme Court, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 A.D. 315, 276 N.Y.S. 586, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-trust-co-v-park-lexington-corp-nyappdiv-1934.