Ernst v. Oberferst

166 F.2d 519, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3053
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 3, 1948
DocketNo. 137, Docket 20837
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 166 F.2d 519 (Ernst v. Oberferst) 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
Ernst v. Oberferst, 166 F.2d 519, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3053 (2d Cir. 1948).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

The main question argued on this appeal appears to us to be one of fact, namely whether the appellee, Samuel Oberferst, was the lessee of the seventh floor of a loft building in Long Island City, New York, and hence the landlord of the bankrupt, Para Ti Corporation, or whether he was simply a lender of money and hence a mortgagee of the premises. The issue was presented by his petition to the bankruptcy court for an order directing the payment to him of the reasonable value of the trustee’s occupancy and for a direction that the landlord apply for permission to adopt or reject the lease from him within a reasonable time. The referee heard the evidence and said in a memorandum, “The evidence seems to establish that the owner refused to accept the Debtor as a prospective tenant but did accept the petitioner Oberferst instead, and that pursuant thereto, the latter received a lease (Exhibit 4) from the owner.” Accordingly the referee made findings and entered an order in favor of Oberferst as landlord requiring the payment by the trustee to him of $750 per month, plus disbursements for light and power, for use and occupation, and setting a time for assumption or rejection by the trustee of the executory contract of lease between the bankrupt and Oberferst. On petition for review the district court affirmed this order in open court, and the trustee appeals.

There was evidence before the referee to show that in May, 1946, the bankrupt sought to lease the seventh floor of the loft building in question from its owner, the International Selectar Corporation. There were preliminary negotiations'which in fact led to the signing of a lease from the owner to Para Ti. The owner, however, insisted upon a three-year lease at a rent of $30,000 for the entire term, payable in advance; and when Para Ti was unable to make the payment, the owner refused to accept it as tenant. Oberferst then agreed to pay the $30,000, provided he became the tenant; and he was accepted as tenant by [521]*521the owner, and a new lease was executed between the owner and him. Para Ti entered into possession of the premises as his subtenant. About six months later, on January 6, 1947, Para Ti filed a petition for an arrangement and was eventually adjudicated bankrupt, and appellant was appointed its trustee in March. The referee’s order was made on June 30, 1947, and the payment it ordered was for the period of occupancy after the filing of the petition. The trustee had offered evidence to show that Para Ti was intended to be the actual tenant of the original owner, and that Oberferst merely loaned money and had no greater rights than that of mortgagee, though taking a lease absolute in form as security. In view of the other evidence, however, the referee was not bound to accept this version, but could properly find, as he did, that Oberferst was the lessee of the original owner and the landlord of the bankrupt. The referee was obviously impressed with the testimony of Selectar’s president, who carried on the negotiations for his company as owner and who testified to his ultimate refusal of Para Ti and acceptance of Oberferst as lessee. This finding, affirmed by the district court, therefore controls to require affirmance of the order in so far as it finds appellee entitled to payment for use and occupation of the premises by the trustee.

The two further defenses of the trustee concern the fixing of the amount of this payment and rest upon the provisions of the recent state statute for the “Stabilization of Commercial Rents,” McK.Unconsol. Laws N.Y. § 8521 et seq., a part of New York’s Emergency Rent Control legislation. Although these defenses were pressed before the referee and in the petition for review, they are not mentioned by either the referee or the court and we are not aided by their views on the .only issues we find troublesome in the case. It would seem that both the referee and the district judge must have gone on the theory, pressed upon us by the appellee on appeal, that these laws do not apply to a determination of rental or return for use of property in the control of the bankruptcy court. But we have definitely held the contrary, first in Cullen v. Bowles, 2 Cir., 148 F.2d 621, dealing with a federal statute, and more lately in Finn v. 415 Fifth Ave. Co., 2 Cir., 153 F.2d 501, certiorari denied Meighan v. Finn, 328 U.S. 839, 66 S.Ct. 1014, 90 L.Ed. 1614, under this state law. We have found no justification for an exception in favor of estates in bankruptcy from the over-all regulation of rentals under emergency conditions, and are surprised at the persistence of the exception with the lower tribunals. Nor can we accept the suggested distinction here that this case calls only for the fixing of the reasonable rental, rather than a more technical rent, to reach a result we have repudiated in substance in those earlier cases. The statute itself, § 2 (j), McK. Unconsol. Laws N.Y. § 8522 (j), defines rent as “The consideration, including any bonus, benefit, or gratuity, charged or received by the landlord, his agents, or other representatives for the use or occupancy of the whole or any part of any commercial space.” The definite statutory purpose is also shown by § 3, McK.Unconsol. Laws N.Y. § 8523, making any rent in excess of the emergency rent presumptively “unjust, unreasonable and oppressive,” and by § 7, McK.Unconsol. Laws- N.Y. § 8527, declaring any rent in excess of the emergency rent or any rent fixed under § 4'to be “uncollectible.” Surely it should not be possible to avoid the drastic restrictions imposed by this legislation by the mere device of failing to state a precise amount of rent. We are clear, therefore, that the amount of the payment to be required of this trustee must accord with the law’s requirements.

Appellee, however, contends further that the result below was a substantial compliance with the rent legislation. He points out that the sum fixed, namely $9,000 a year or $750 a month, plus disbursements for light and power, was in accordance with the only direct evidence of value presented, that of his expert, and that it is substantially less than the $10,000 a year or $833.33% a month required by his lease to the owner, or the $1,200 a month he himself originally claimed from the bankrupt as subtenant. But the expert expressly stated that he had not taken into consideration the emergency or ceiling rent [522]*522of the space; and in the absence of any findings, we have no way of knowing that it satisfied the statutory requirements. Indeed, there are some indications in the record to the contrary. Thus on June 5, 1947, appellee, as landlord, gave the trustee what purported to be notice as required by the statute to the effect that under a lease in effect on March 1, 1943, the rent for the sixth and seventh floors was $8,000 per annum, and hence under the Commercial Rent Law, “the ‘emergency rent’ for the said commercial space is $9,200.00 per an-num, and $4,600.00 per annum for the seventh floor on the basis of said lease.” And since appellee’s expert had testified that the seventh floor was worth about 10 per cent less than the sixth, appellant urges that such rent must be further limited to “the rate of $4,140 per annum or $345 per month.” That appellee may have paid his landlord in excess of the statutory maximum will not justify an overcharge by him.

In any event it is clear that the rental was not fixed in accordance with the statutory methods. Sec.

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Bluebook (online)
166 F.2d 519, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernst-v-oberferst-ca2-1948.