In Re 325 East 72nd Street, Inc.

53 F. Supp. 997, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2704
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 8, 1944
Docket82556
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 F. Supp. 997 (In Re 325 East 72nd Street, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re 325 East 72nd Street, Inc., 53 F. Supp. 997, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2704 (S.D.N.Y. 1944).

Opinion

BRIGHT, District Judge.

Joseph B. Miller, an indenture trustee for the benefit of certificate holders under a mortgage secured by the premises at the above address, and acting as such under a declaration of trust dated February 25, 1937, executed pursuant to a final order of the New York Supreme Court dated February 8, 1937, made in proceedings conducted under the Schackno Act, N.Y.Laws 1933, Ch. 745, as amended, McK. Unconsol. Laws, § 4871 et seq., seeks to have vacated an order, made on June 3, 1943, approving the petition of the above debtor filed on May 29, 1943 in proceedings under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 501 et seq., upon the sole ground that the petition was not filed in good faith.

The mortgage trustee, by his answer, alleges that the amount due upon the mortgage held by him is $414,166, denies, among other things, that the land and building of the debtor have a fair value of $455,000, as stated in the petition, and pleads as defenses, that the petition was not filed in good faith because (1) the fair value of the property is substantially less than- the amount due upon his mortgage, there is no equity to be salvaged or reorganized, the debtor had failed to pay the mortgage of $400,000, which became due on March 20, 1933, or any part thereof, or to pay amortization installments of $1,000 each due on the first days of October, 1942, and January, April, and July, 1943, and interest in excess of $14,000; (2) that the debtor had failed at any time to present any proposal for a reorganization of the mortgage; (3) that the need for relief under the provisions of Chapter X was not shown, in that the mortgage trustee is the sole creditor and there are no junior interests; (4) that it is unreasonable to expect that a plan of reorganization can be effected because the income of the property is insufficient to pay current and fixed charges, including interest, that the amount of the mortgage and interest exceeds $414,000, that the fair value of the property is not in excess of $350,000, and no possible plan could be proposed which would provide adequate protection for realization by the certificate holders of the value of their interests; and (5) that the interest of creditors and stockholders would best be subserved .in the Schackno proceeding and the pending proceeding in the New York Supreme Court to foreclose the mortgage which was instituted primarily for the protection of the rights of the certificate holders under the mortgage.

These facts are not disputed. The debtor is the owner and operator of a cooperative apartment house located in New York City at the above address. The building was completed early in 1927 and is a sixteen story modern, garden apartment house, of about two hundred and forty rooms, and fifty-eight apartments, together with six maid rooms and a four room superintendent apartment. Originally, the building was planned as one hundred per cent, cooperative. Under that plan, tenant Owners were required to purchase stock which carried with it the right to a proprietary lease for ninety-nine years, at an annual rental of $1 per share plus such assessments on the stock as might be required to operate and maintain the building; these assessments to include cost of management, taxes, “mortgage interest and amortization”, water rentals, insurance, repairs, etc., “and the proportionate amount necessary to provide an annual reserve fund as a safeguard against any unexpected or extraordinary expense”. Until January, 1943, the Walton Hall Construction Company, which erected the building, owned twenty-one proprietary leases covering twenty-one apartments, but those leases were in that month cancelled because of the failure of the company to pay assessments. At the time the petition here was filed, there were still twenty-three apartments used by proprietary lessees. The principal liability of the debtor is the past-due mortgage of $400,000, and five per cent, interest thereon since April. 1, 1943, less $2,500 paid on account by the debtor.

It is also undisputed that in the prior proceedings under the Schackno Act, the bond and mortgage in question were assigned to the mortgage trustee, and the order approving the plan of reorganization there contained a provision that the state court proceeding should remain open and the court retain jurisdiction until the complete liquidation of the trust estate and the ter *999 initiation of the trust, and that the trustee, or any other party to the proceeding, might apply at the foot of the order for other and further relief as to the court might seem just and proper.

After this proceeding was commenced by the filing of a petition on May 29, 1943, and the signing of the order approving the same on June 3, 1943, the mortgage trustee on June 4, 1943 filed a notice of pendency in the New York Supreme Court in an action brought by him to foreclose the mortgage, and on that day he was appointed receiver of the rents and profits to serve without compensation during the pendency of the action; and after qualifying as such, he visited the mortgaged premises and found that possession thereof had already been taken by the trustee in this proceeding.

The mortgage trustee, after his appointment, made annual inventories and accountings to the state court. It appears from them that the debtor has always been slow in the payment of interest and that the trustee has acquiesced therein, so that the taxes could be promptly paid and all of them had been paid at the time of the commencement of this proceeding. In 1937 the debtor made application for an extension of the mortgage and a reduction of interest and the certificate holders, after a meeting, refused the application. It was shown without dispute that as a condition for the extension and reduction of interest, the mortgage trustee presented to the owner a proposition that he would recommend to the court and to the certificate holders, a reduction of interest from five per cent, to four per cent., and an extension of the mortgage, if they would pay $50,000 on account of principal, and also agree to amortize the balance at two per cent, annually. The owner at that time was in no position to meet that proposition. In 1938 and 1939, the mortgage trustee had audits made of the debtor’s accounts, and commenced proceedings in the state court under Section 1077-c of the Civil Practice Act, to compel the debtor to pay its surplus of income, if any, in amortization of the principal debt. No surplus income of any amount was found. It was contended, however, in those proceedings by the mortgage trustee, that the proprietary leasees were paying less for their apartments than could be obtained on commercial leases, and that those apartments should be valued at the commercial rates, in which event the building would throw off something like a $6,000 surplus per annum, which coujd be applied in reduction of the mortgage debt. That contention was unsuccessful. Matter of Miller v. The 325 East 72nd Street, Inc., 173 Misc. 347, 18 N.Y.S.2d 59. The mortgage trustee in 1941 reported against an appeal from that decision, stating, in substance, that the prospects of reversal were remote, and even if successful, the court would have to fix a fair rental value for the proprietary lessees, from which would be deducted an increased cost of painting, decorating and upkeep of the apartments, not then charged in making up assessments because those lessees were obliged to make their own repairs, etc. He stated that he had been advised by counsel that no action should be taken.

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Bluebook (online)
53 F. Supp. 997, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-325-east-72nd-street-inc-nysd-1944.