Fusco-Long Wharf v. Snet Real Estate, No. 93-0348751 S (Jan. 12, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 513
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1994
DocketNo. 93-0348751 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 513 (Fusco-Long Wharf v. Snet Real Estate, No. 93-0348751 S (Jan. 12, 1994)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fusco-Long Wharf v. Snet Real Estate, No. 93-0348751 S (Jan. 12, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 513 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION Before the court in this proceeding, in which the plaintiffs seek a temporary injunction, is the issue whether a partner in a partnership formed to develop and operate a real estate project CT Page 514 may pursue its individual advantage under the provisions of the partnership agreement to the disadvantage of the partnership and its partner.

The plaintiffs, Fusco-Long Wharf Associates Limited Partnership and Edmund J. Fusco (collectively, "Fusco") seek a temporary injunction requiring the defendants, SNET Real Estate, Inc., SNET Real Estate Development Corp. ("SNET partners") to renew an existing loan guarantee during the pendency of this action. The complaint alleges that the SNET partners are engaged in an effort to force the Fusco partners out of the partnership by creating an unnecessary call for thereto contribute approximately $4 million of capital in the hope of triggering a dilution of the Fusco partnership interest. The plaintiffs assert that the SNET partners' announced refusal to renew a guarantee of an unsecured note to People's Bank when it comes due at the end of January 1994 is part of a predatory action against the partnership and that the Fusco partners will suffer irreparable injury for which they have no remedy at law unless temporary injunctive relief is ordered requiring the extension of the loan guarantee by the SNET partners.

The real estate project at issue is the Long Wharf Maritime Center in New Haven, which consists of two high rise office towers, a parking garage, a warehouse and restaurant. Divisions of SNET and Fusco Corporation, of which plaintiff Edmund J. Fusco is a principal, are major tenants of the Long Wharf Maritime Center, which is Class A office space and which enjoys a high occupancy rate and above-market rental rates.

The initial partnership agreement was signed in January 1985.1 By the terms of the agreement, Fusco and the SNET partners were equal partners, and Fusco was the managing partner.

During the construction of each of the buildings in the Long Wharf Maritime Center complex, the partnership pursued the agreed course of financing almost all of the cost of the project through loans, with minimal capital contributions by the partners.2

In 1986-7, in addition to various secured loans, the partnership entered into an unsecured commercial loan with People's Bank in the amount of $4 million. The SNET partners guaranteed half the loan and the Fusco partners guaranteed half the loan, that is, the guarantees were proportional, not joint and several. The People's loan was later increased to $7 million, CT Page 515 with no change in the terms of the guarantees, which remained proportional.

In 1990, the partnership sought to increase the loan to $9 million to finance the construction of a cafeteria and day care center for the Long Wharf Maritime Center complex. At that time, People's asked that the partners enter into joint and several guarantees of the $2 million addition to the prior obligation.

During 1990 and 1991 the managing partner sought to refinance the entire debt structure of the complex including the debt to People's, but was unsuccessful because of the general reluctance of lenders to finance office buildings in New England, which had become overbuilt during the 1980's.

When the People's note matured on December 31, 1991, People's was willing to extend the loan. The SNET partners, through Barbara Hampton, took the position that they would not extend the joint and several guarantees of this obligation unless the Fusco partners agreed to changes in the partnership agreement. The amended partnership agreement was signed on January 30, 1992.

The amended agreement, to which the parties are SNET Real Estate, Inc. and SNET Real Estate Development Corporation, (who together have a 50% interest in the partnership known as Long Wharf Development Associates) and Fusco-Long Wharf Associates Limited Partnership and Edmund J. Fusco (who together have a 50% interest in the partnership) continues to provide for financing in preference to capitalization by the partners. Article 3.04(a)(1) provides that "prior to requiring any Additional Capital Contribution by the Partners, the Partnership shall first use its best efforts to secure such needed capital by way of borrowings from banks or others subject to the approval of such borrowings by each partner as required [sic] in Section 5.01(c)(4)." The cited provision states, inter alia, that "[n]o Partner shall be required to provide any guarantee, comfort letter or other credit enhancement in connection with any Partnership loan. . . ."

Section 3.04(c) of the amended partnership agreement further provides that if the partnership encounters the necessity for additional capital contributions and one partner fails to pay its proportional share, the partner that does make payment may, at its option, take one of the following steps: sue the noncontributing partner for its share, treat the unpaid share as CT Page 516 a loan, reduce the percentage of the noncontributing partner's holding in the partnership to correspond to its new proportion of contribution, or treat the failure as a withdrawal from the partnership, with a five-year payout of the interest of the noncontributing partner.

The People's loan was extended first to December 31, 1993 and then to January 31, 1994, with both the Fusco Partners and the SNET partners affirming their joint and several guarantees.

People's is willing to extend the loan, in an amount reduced by payments of principal that the partnership has made in addition to all its interest payments, through 1995, provided the SNET partners continue to guarantee the entire amount. The SNET partners take the position that they will not their extend their obligation on those terms because to do so would put them in the position of bearing more risk than the Fusco partners. They claim that if the project does not generate sufficient revenue to keep current with the debt and other obligations of the partnership, the Fusco partners may not be able to pay their equal share of needed contributions to make up the shortfall, and People's would then look to the SNET partners, who have greater liquid assets, to pay more than half of the obligation. The SNET partners take the position that the partners should pay the obligation to People's at the end of January 1994.

The Fusco partners take the position that the partnership agreement states the goal of financing the property by borrowing, not by infusing the partners' capital into it, and that the SNET partners have a duty pursuant to 3.04(a)(1) to use their "best efforts" to obtain financing by extending the People's loan on the same terms which have been in effect since 1991.

The Fusco partners contend that the SNET partners have a duty to the partnership to achieve extension of the People's loan and that they are breaching their duties to the partnership and their partners by, instead, taking advantage of their superior liquidity to create a situation that will force a dilution of the Fusco partners' interest by creating a need for capital to pay off the obligation to People's rather than extending that debt.

The SNET partners argue that their duties to the partnership and to their partners do not include taking on a greater share of the risk than 50%, and that furnishing a guarantee as to the entire obligation to People's for an additional term would put CT Page 517 them in a position of disproportionate risk in what was to be an equal venture.

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fusco-long-wharf-v-snet-real-estate-no-93-0348751-s-jan-12-1994-connsuperct-1994.