Hopewell Building Co. v. Callan

200 A.D. 588, 193 N.Y.S. 504, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8227
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 A.D. 588 (Hopewell Building Co. v. Callan) 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
Hopewell Building Co. v. Callan, 200 A.D. 588, 193 N.Y.S. 504, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8227 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The plaintiff owned two adjoining tracts of land of different areas on Davidson avenue in the borough of The Bronx; and with funds derived from a building loan mortgage on the respective premises, which matured December 1, 1916, was erecting a five-story apartment house on each of -them. With a view to having the building loan mortgage taken over and extended or paid off, and obtaining for its use in completing the buildings a balance of a few thousand dollars remaining unadvanced thereunder, it negotiated with the respective defendants a loan agreement in writing, bearing date the 8th of December, 1916, for a loan of money to it to be secured by its bond and a first mortgage on one of the parcels of real estate and the apartment house thereon. The apartment houses were nearly completed at that time, and the larger parcel was subject to a building loan mortgage for $60,000, and the other for $40,000. The defendant in the first-entitled action agreed to loan $59,000 on the larger parcel, and the other defendant agreed to loan $39,000 on the smaller parcel. The object of the loans, as plainly shown by the agreement, was to procure an assignment to the respective defendants of the existing building loan mortgages, and to extend them for five years, with a reduction of one per cent in the rate of interest, if that could be consummated, and, if not, to pay off and discharge the mortgages and make new first mortgages for five years bearing one per cent less interest than the building loan mortgages. The entire amount of the building loan mortgages had not been advanced, and this would have left the plaintiff a surplus of a few thousand dollars of the amount loaned to use in completing the buildings. Each loan agreement provided that the loan was to be made on or about January 1, 1917, provided the building should “ be fully completed by that time and certificates from the Building and Tenement House Departments to that effect obtained and exhibited.” After the loan agreements were made and prior to the time the loans were to be made, negotiations for the purchase of the premises by the defendant Edward Callan were opened between the parties. Apparently by mutual acquiescence the time specified for making the loans was allowed to pass. The subsequent negotiations between [590]*590the parties were conducted on the part of the plaintiff by one Norton, its president, and one Kight, its secretary and treasurer, and on the part of the defendants by their attorney Sullivan, who had full authority to represent them, and in part by one of the defendants. On the 24th or 25th of January, 1917, Sullivan was notified that the plaintiff had procured the necessary certificates, which were exhibited to him, and was desirous of closing the loan. According to the testimony of Norton, Sullivan said he was busy then and could not give the matter attention until the next week. Sullivan admitted on the witness stand that he promised to give it attention in a day or two. Norton testified that he next saw Sullivan on the thirtieth of January and again requested that the loan be closed, and that Sullivan replied that he was too busy to take the matter up then, but would endeavor to close it on February first; and that on February first Sullivan again claimed to be too busy, and stated that he and one of the defendants would be up to inspect the building in a day or two; and that they came and made some objection that all of the walls were not papered, and he informed them that the paper was in the building to be selected by the tenants, as customary; and that they also objected that the street was not paved, and he drew their attention to the fact that the loan agreement did not require that. On the twenty-sixth of January the plaintiff received by mail a letter from Sullivan inclosing copies of violations of building regulations and suggesting that they should be given immediate attention if not already removed; but it developed that these were violations discovered by the title company employed by defendants to examine the title, and had been removed before the certificates were issued. Kight testified that on the first of February he asked Sullivan to close the loan immediately, and that Sullivan said he was too busy just then, and drew attention to the facts that some of the paper had not been put on the walls and that the street had not been paved; that he replied, in substance, that these matters could be arranged by leaving a sufficient amount of the money in escrow to cover them; and to that Sullivan assented, and said that he would be up in a few days and they would then fix the time to close the loan; but that Sullivan did not come and they heard nothing further from him. Both Norton and Kight testified that on the sixth they met one of the defendants on the street and suggested to him that Sullivan did not seem anxious to close the loan, and he agreed to meet them in Sullivan’s office in half an hour, and they went there and waited for him quite a while, but he did not appear; and Sullivan then said to them that there was no use in their waiting longer; that on that occasion [591]*591they informed Sullivan that a lien had been filed against the premises that morning, and Sullivan said he would not close the loan unless allowed to withhold $5,000 for paving the street, and this Norton declined on the ground that it was not authorized by the loan agreement. In that Norton was plainly right, and the wholly unauthorized demand made by Sullivan indicates that it was made in bad faith; and this is emphasized by the fact that on the sixteenth of February the plaintiff received from Sullivan a letter to the effect that during the past ten days Kight had failed to keep appointments with him with reference to closing the loans, and that his clients had been ready to close them from the first of January and were still anxious and willing to make the loans provided the plaintiff was ready, able and willing to live up to its part of the agreements, and notifying it that the defendants would be ready at his office at ten-thirty a. m. on the seventeenth of February to make the loans, and, if they were not closed at that time, his clients would not make them. The assertions in that letter are contrary to the facts clearly shown by the evidence. According to the evidence presented by the plaintiff several other mechanics’ liens had been filed against the premises in the meantime; and, although it had successfully negotiated a loan for $20,000 to be secured by a second mortgage on the premises, with the proceeds of which and the surplus of the loans by the defendants it intended to and could have discharged all liens, it was unable to-consummate the matter on such short notice. Kight testified that, at the time so peremptorily fixed by Sullivan for closing, he called on Sullivan and stated to him, in substance, these facts, and asked for an extension of time, and delivered to him a letter from the plaintiff charging the defendants with the delay which resulted in the filing of the liens, and offering to close the loans as of that date as soon as the plaintiff could satisfy the liens, which it expected would be during the coming week, and to pay interest on the loans from that day, provided the defendants were unwilling to take assignments of the building loan mortgages before the discharge of the liens; but that Sullivan and one of the defendants thereupon peremptorily declined to take over the mortgages before the liens were discharged or to give any extension, and terminated the negotiations, and declared the deal off.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A.D. 588, 193 N.Y.S. 504, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopewell-building-co-v-callan-nyappdiv-1922.