HNC Realty Co. v. Bay View Towers Apartments, Inc.

125 Misc. 2d 1088, 481 N.Y.S.2d 261, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3534
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1984
StatusPublished

This text of 125 Misc. 2d 1088 (HNC Realty Co. v. Bay View Towers Apartments, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HNC Realty Co. v. Bay View Towers Apartments, Inc., 125 Misc. 2d 1088, 481 N.Y.S.2d 261, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3534 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Harold Hyman, J.

In this matter there are two motions before this court for determination, one of which is of first impression.

The primary motion is brought by the Lienor’s Committee “at the foot of the judgment of foreclosure and sale” entered in this action on June 29, 1979, “to vacate and discharge of record a certain deed to real property dated June 21, 1979 made by defendant, Bay View Towers Apartments, Inc., to Wilmington Orlando Sy Corp., which was recorded in the office of the Register of the City of New York, Queens County Division, on June 29, 1979.”

The other motion, which brings to the forefront the matter of first impression, is as to the constitutionality of a [1089]*1089section of the real property transfer tax statutes of the City of New York. This is occasioned by the City of New York seeking an order vacating the stay of an administrative hearing provided for under such statute now before the Commissioner of Finance of the City of New York; and, further, to order the administrative hearing to proceed without the participation of certain named attorneys who appeared on behalf of Wilmington Orlando Sy Corp. but whose appearance the City refuses to recognize, and to dismiss the cross motion of the Lienor’s Lawyers Committee for its failure to serve a complaint in its action brought for a declaratory judgment within 20 days of the entry of the order of the court dated February 4, 1983.

Dealing first with the latter, the City of New York’s motion, it appears to this court that denial must be considered on several grounds which will be separately discussed hereafter.

It is uncontradicted by the papers submitted by the City that at no time has it ever served a copy of the order of February 4, 1983, with notice of entry thereof, upon its adversaries as is procedurally required.

Also, it is the opinion of this court that since the focus of the entire litigation at this point is a certain deed-conveyance of the real property executed to and recorded by Wilmington Orlando Sy Corp., that said grantee corporation is a “necessary party” to any such proceeding and, as such, it is entitled to notice of the present application being made by the City of New York, since said corporation is and would be entitled to counsel of its own choice and, procedurally by failing to make said grantee a party to this motion, the City of New York would deprive said corporation of its constitutional rights and entitlements to due process.

Likewise, the City of New York should be more importantly and cautiously concerned as to whether any hearing regarding the “Transfer Tax” is actually necessary or should even be held, given the facts and figures at its command; particularly so since as to such facts it has been fully informed from the inception, that is, from the very date the conveyance was recorded, and, on which date the real property transfer tax return was filed (June 29,1979). [1090]*1090In addition, some of the most detailed pertinent information was offered to and was supplementally supplied to the City by representatives of the grantee and also by the (Mechanic) Lienor’s Committee.

All of the requisite information upon which the Director of Finance (City) could have based a fair “determination” is likewise fully detailed in the foreclosure proceedings conducted before this court. In said foreclosure actions the City of New York was made a party and had been duly served; had been given due notice of all proceedings; that documentation has at all times been and still is available to it for inspection and examination by the Director (City). Said foreclosures have been in litigation five years and four years respectively. The notices of pendency of actions had been duly filed in the county clerk’s office (Queens County) with regard to said foreclosures, and have been of record since November 15, 1974 and October 17, 1975, respectively, and duly renewed as required by law, prior to the inception of the controversial conveyance and the alleged transaction which the City of New York now seeks to question for real property transfer tax purposes by determining it to be one “in lieu of foreclosure.” As an aside, the City of New York first imposed the issue more than two years and four months after the “deed-conveyance” had been on record and the transfer tax return had been filed, by seeking to tax the transfer (deed), in its mistaken “determination” that such deed was a conveyance “in lieu of foreclosure.” A cursory examination of the comprehensively complete factual documentation available to the City, both in the foreclosure actions and the record in the City Register’s office, completely proves the said “determination” to be without merit not only factually, but “as a matter of law.”

Furthermore, the City had been a necessary party defendant in both foreclosure actions; it therefore received such notice as was required throughout the entire foreclosure proceedings, inclusive of the sale by the referee held on August 1,1979, and the confirmation of the referee’s report thereafter.

What is also of greater factual and legal importance is the fact that Wilmington Orlando Sy Corp. was never [1091]*1091either a party plaintiff or defendant in the foreclosure actions, nor was it a mortgagee, or a lienor of the premises in question, at any time. Therefore, when the questioned conveyance was executed, delivered, and thereafter recorded (on June 29, 1979) (incidentally on the very date the judgment of foreclosure and sale was signed by the court), said conveyance, as a matter of law, could only have been fully subject to the foreclosure proceedings, and the notices of pendency of action with regard thereto. (RPAPL 1331; CPLR 6501; Cayuga Indian Nation v Fox, 544 F Supp 542 [DCNY]; Mechanics Exch. Sav. Bank v Chesterfield, 34 AD2d 111.) It is further noteworthy that the conveyance-deed Wilmington received and recorded also clearly indicates that it was subject to both the mortgage and the mechanics’ liens since neither was to have merged in the fee.

The referee in foreclosure and following the sale, reported that there was a considerable deficiency left on the bond and mortgage, namely $50,240,756.44, without taking into consideration the mechanics’ liens, which also had to be paid by the purchaser at the foreclosure sale as liens with priority to the mortgage (so held by the Appellate Division in HNC Realty Co. v Bay View Towers Apts., 92 Misc 2d 151, mod 64 AD2d 417), and which priority amounted to approximately another $11,000,000 plus accrued interest of about another 30% ($3,300,000), making the lien priority of $14,300,000 due to the mechanics’ lienors.

With knowledge of these facts and figures, therefore, it should have been obvious to the Director of the Department of Finance of the City of New York (Bureau of Tax Collection) that its inordinately belated “determination” (made Jan. 11, 1982, two and one-half years and five months after the foreclosure sale of Aug. 1, 1979) was grossly and excessively incorrect, as well as without factual foundation. What is more, neither the City nor its Director of Finance makes the slightest excuse or explanation for its inordinate delay in making the “determination”; neither denies the obvious failure to examine the documentation at its command, nor that anything was done which would in any respect show diligent investigation in attempting to fairly determine the matter.

[1092]

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Bluebook (online)
125 Misc. 2d 1088, 481 N.Y.S.2d 261, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hnc-realty-co-v-bay-view-towers-apartments-inc-nysupct-1984.