Fifth Avenue & 46th Street Corp. v. Bragalini

4 A.D.2d 387, 165 N.Y.S.2d 312, 1957 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4684
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 24, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 A.D.2d 387 (Fifth Avenue & 46th Street Corp. v. Bragalini) 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
Fifth Avenue & 46th Street Corp. v. Bragalini, 4 A.D.2d 387, 165 N.Y.S.2d 312, 1957 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4684 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Halpern, J.

The question presented is whether the mortgage recording tax payable by the petitioner should be computed upon a base of $3,750,000 or upon a base of $1,000,000.

The question arises out of the following transaction or series of transactions: On July 7, 1953, the petitioner had given a mortgage to the Irving Trust Company upon a leasehold estate owned by it, to secure an indebtedness in the amount of $2,150,000, evidenced by a mortgage note in that amount. On March 18, 1955, the petitioner had borrowed an additional $600,000 from the Irving Trust Company and had given it as security a mortgage upon the leasehold, which was consolidated with the earlier mortgage into a single lien securing payment of the total debt of $2,750,000. A mortgage recording tax was paid at the time of recording each of the mortgages.

On May 2Ó, 1955, the petitioner entered into a so-called purchase agreement” with the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company under the terms of which the insurance company agreed to purchase “ $1,000,000 principal amount ” of bonds to be issued by the petitioner and to be secured by an indenture of mortgage and also agreed to purchase from the Irving Trust Company the old mortgage notes in the amount of $2,750,000. The total amount of the indenture was to be $3,750,000 and it was provided that the insurance company would be entitled to receive in exchange for the mortgage notes, upon their surrender, bonds to be issued under the indenture.

The transaction was closed on May 31, 1955. The indenture of mortgage, under which the Irving Trust Company was the trustee, was executed on that day. The Massachusetts Mutual Insurance Company paid to the Irving Trust Company the sum of $2,750,000 as the purchase price of the two existing mortgage [389]*389notes and the notes were thereupon assigned by Irving Trust to the insurance company. The Irving Trust Company simultaneously assigned to itself, as trustee under the indenture, the existing mortgage in the amount of $2,750,000. The indenture provided that the lien of the existing mortgage was con-finned and consolidated with the lien of the indenture. The indenture further provided that it was to secure both the old mortgage indebtedness and any bonds issued under the indenture.

The insurance company purchased from the petitioner a bond in the principal amount of $1,000,000 under the indenture, giving the petitioner its check in that amount. The insurance company then surrendered the mortgage notes which it had acquired from the Irving Trust Company to the trustee under the indenture in exchange for a new bond issued under the indenture in the same principal amount as the aggregate amount of the old mortgage notes, namely, $2,750,000.

That was the end of the transaction so far as is here material. There was an additional step by which the insurance company surrendered the new bonds in the amounts of $1,000,000 and $2,750,000, respectively, which it had just received, and obtained for them a single bond in the amount of $3,750,000 but it is conceded that this was merely a matter of mechanics which had no effect upon the substance of the transaction.

Upon tendering the indenture of mortgage for recording on June 1,1955, the petitioner offered to pay a tax on $1,000,000, asserting that that was the only amount by which its mortgage liability had been increased. The Register of New York City, however, insisted upon the payment of a mortgage recording tax upon the whole amount of $3,750,000. The additional tax was paid under protest and a proceeding to review the determination by the Register was brought before the State Tax Commission. After a hearing, the commission upheld the Register’s determination and this article 78 proceeding followed.

The commission found, and it is its principal contention in this court, “ That it was at all times intended by the parties that the indebtedness of July 7, 1953 and March 18, 1955 should be cancelled and that a new indebtedness should be substituted ” in the form of a new bond “ secured under a new mortgage We find no basis for this conclusion in the record. To support its finding, the State Tax Commission refers to the “material recitals of the purchase agreement” between the petitioner and the insurance company but the terms of the purchase agreement make it clear that the old indebtedness was [390]*390Hot to be cancelled but was to be acquired by purchase by the insurance company from the Irving Trust Company. The State Tax Commission also refers to the recitals in the indenture as supporting its conclusion but the provisions of the indenture also seem to us to lead to the opposite conclusion. The indenture provides ‘‘ that the execution and delivery hereof shall not in any way extinguish the $2,750,000 indebtedness presently outstanding under and secured by the Existing Mortgage * * * and nothing herein contained shall impair the lien of the Existing Mortgage ”. Furthermore, the indenture provided in section 3.02: ‘‘ Nothing herein contained shall be construed as effecting [sic] any part of the indebtedness evidenced by such first mortgage notes and secured by the Existing Mortgage and no part of such indebtedness shall be disturbed, discharged, cancelled or impaired by the execution of this instrument or the delivery of the Bonds herein described ”.

It is impliedly recognized in the form of the State Tax Commission’s finding that the question of whether the old indebtedness was cancelled and a new one created is a question of the intention of the parties. The quoted provisions of the documents clearly establish that it was the intention of the parties not to cancel the old indebtedness but to continue and confirm it.

The exchange of the old mortgage notes by the holder thereof for bonds in the new form obviously did not work a cancellation of the indebtedness. This was merely an exchange of one form of evidence of the indebtedness for another form. The indebtedness remained the same; only the evidence of it was changed.

The State Tax Commission placed principal reliance upon the case of People ex rel. Jewelers Bldg. Corp. v. State Tax Comm. (214 App. Div. 99, affd. on another point 241 N. Y. 524), in which the imposition of a mortgage recording tax was upheld upon the recording of a consolidation agreement. But that was the result of the peculiar phrasing used in the instrument involved in that case. As the Court of Appeals explained, in distinguishing the Jewelers case in Matter of Park & 46th St. Corp. v. State Tax Comm. (295 N. Y. 173, 179): “ The instrument which was recorded in that case and upon which the recording tax in suit was imposed was so phrased as expressly to extinguish the old debt ”. The transaction in the Jewelers case was similar in objective to the transactions in the Park & 46th St. case and in the present case but the form was different in vital respects “ which had different legal consequences ” (Matter of Park & 46th St. Corp. v. State Tax [391]*391Comm., supra, p. 179). In matters of this kind, the form may be all-important (Matter of Sverdlow v. Bates, 283 App. Div. 487, 491).

The transaction in this case had the net result of producing a single mortgage lien in the total amount of $3,750,000 but this was accomplished by consolidating the lien of the existing mortgage in the amount of $2,750,000 with the new lien in the amount of $1,000,000 for the new loan.

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Bluebook (online)
4 A.D.2d 387, 165 N.Y.S.2d 312, 1957 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-avenue-46th-street-corp-v-bragalini-nyappdiv-1957.