In re a Plan for the Readjustment, Modification or Reorganization of the Rights of All the Holders of Mortgage Investments Represented by Series C-2 First Mortgage Participation Certificates Issued & Guaranteed by New York Title & Mortgage Co.

161 Misc. 544, 292 N.Y.S. 776, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1618
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 161 Misc. 544 (In re a Plan for the Readjustment, Modification or Reorganization of the Rights of All the Holders of Mortgage Investments Represented by Series C-2 First Mortgage Participation Certificates Issued & Guaranteed by New York Title & Mortgage Co.) 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
In re a Plan for the Readjustment, Modification or Reorganization of the Rights of All the Holders of Mortgage Investments Represented by Series C-2 First Mortgage Participation Certificates Issued & Guaranteed by New York Title & Mortgage Co., 161 Misc. 544, 292 N.Y.S. 776, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1618 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Frankenthaler, J.

The trustees of series C-2, issued by the New York Title and Mortgage Company, have applied to the court, on notice to all certificate holders, for an order authorizing them [546]*546to complete and operate the building at 150 Central Park South, 'known as Hampshire House, unless a satisfactory offer for the ‘purchase of the property be received on or before the hearing iof the application.

The construction of Hampshire House, as an apartment hotel, was commenced early in 1931. Funds of the C-2 series aggregating $2,201,227.48 had been advanced by the New York Title and Mortgage Company by June, 1931, at which time building operations ceased because of lack of funds. Thereafter the building loan mortgage was foreclosed and title taken in the name of Liberdar Holding Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary ;of the title company. The property was subsequently transferred to the Mortgage Commission Realty Corporation, a subsidiary of ;.the Mortgage Commission, and was in turn conveyed to the C-2 trustees on May 25,1936. Prior to the appointment of the trustees, ¡an additional $252,376.46 of series C-2 funds was expended for taxes, insurance, payrolls and miscellaneous charges. The trustees have spent $22,275 for taxes for the second half of 1936, $3,800.31 for insurance, $2,641.86 for salaries and $2,406.97 for the cost of advertising this application, appraisal fees and miscellaneous ¡expenses — a total of $31,124.14. By October first of this year the total investment of series C-2 in the premises was $2,484,728.08, which represents approximately ten per cent of the principal amount of the entire issue. In addition the title company had previously advanced out of its own funds the sum of $330,800.31, partly for ithe settlement of defenses to the foreclosure action interposed by the owner of the property and by mechanics’ lienors, and partly ■for upkeep and other expenses. The total cost of the unfinished .building to date is, therefore, $2,815,528.39, of which $2,484,728.08 was contributed from funds belonging to series C-2 ($2,453,603.94 prior to the appointment of the trustees and $31,124.14 since).

No construction work of any kind has been performed since .June, 1931, five and a half years ago. The structure has thirty-six stories, inclusive of a penthouse, and is of fireproof steel. The ¡building has been roofed over, but the tower has never been inclosed. ¡All the pointing up work is still to be done. Radiators have been ‘installed up to the thirty-fourth floor. The third to the twenty-fourth floors are in white plaster; the thirty-first to the thirty-fifth floors are in wire laths; no painting or flooring work has been done in any part of the premises; the floor of the main entrance hall is entirely unfinished with the steel exposed. There is no independent heating system, but the present steam lines have been so constructed that connection can be made with the pipes of the New York Steam Corporation. According to the architect [547]*547who drew the plans, the structure was about eighty-three per cent completed when further work was abandoned, but, because of subsequent depreciation and deterioration, is only approximately three-fourths complete at the present time.

Immediately upon their appointment in April, 1936, the trustees devoted themselves assiduously to the task of solving the difficult problem presented as to what to do about Hampshire House. In its incomplete state the property constituted, as it still does, a substantial drain upon the income received from other properties and mortgages belonging to series C-2. Real estate taxes, insurance, wages of custodians and other charges aggregate more than $50,000 per annum. What is more serious, the structure is rapidly depreciating in value by reason of its substantial deterioration in its unfinished, vacant and unheated state. It is safe to say that the property is costing the C-2 certificate holders well over $100,000 per year, directly and indirectly, without yielding any return whatsoever. Appreciating .the necessity for a speedy solution of the matter, the trustees made a thorough inspection of the building and studied the entire situation with the assistance of the architect who prepared the original plans and other competent building and real estate men. They announced through the daily press that they were prepared to consider offers to purchase the property. They held approximately 150 conferences with interested brokers, clients of the latter, and among themselves in regard to tentative proposals for purchase or lease. The question of the approximate cost of completing the structure and the relative advantages of operating it as a hotel, an apartment hotel, or an apartment house, were discussed with leading people in the real estate field. As a result of their exhaustive investigation the trustees have been enabled to arrive at well-informed conclusions as to the most desirable use of the completed building, as to the approximate cost of completion, as to its value when completed, and as to its present value.

All this time the trustees were, however, making every effort to obtain offers to purchase the property in its unfinished state. They felt that completion should not be resorted to “ until it appears that the property cannot be sold at a reasonable price.” They “ have been, and still are, reluctent to undertake completion of Hampshire House themselves if a sale at a fair figure can be effected.” Up to the time of the making of the present application they have received numerous offers. Many of them, however, contemplated subordination of the certificate holders' interest in the property to a large mortgage for the cost of completing and furnishing the building, and were, therefore, rejected as unfair to the certificate holders. Others, ranging from $1,000,000 to $1,200,000 in [548]*548cash, were also received, but attempts to obtain a cash deposit to support and substantiate the offers were unsuccessful. Another offer of $1,500,000, one-half in cash and one-half to be secured by a ten-year mortgage subordinate to a building loan mortgage of not more than $1,500,000, was likewise given serious consideration by the trustees, but no cash deposit to back up the offer could be obtained.

As the result of their comprehensive and intensive study of the problem, the trustees have reached the conclusion that a cash sale of the property would be the most desirable disposition of it, provided that a reasonable price can be obtained.” This does not mean, however, that the trustees are insisting upon all cash offers. As previously stated, they gave serious consideration to an offer of $1,500,000, one-half in cash and the other half secured by a second mortgage, but no cash deposit was forthcoming. If the sale is to be entirely for cash, the trustees feel that a price less than $1,000,000 would constitute an unwarranted and unnecessary sacrifice of the certificate holders’ investment. Having received no firm offer of a satisfactory amount, either all cash or only partly in cash, the trustees have asked the court for authority to complete and operate the structure unless * * * a firm offer approved by. the Court and satisfactory to said Trustees for the purchase of the premises is received by said Trustees or submitted to the Court accompanied by cash or certified check in a sum representing 10% of such offer.”

Hearings have been held upon notice to all C-2 certificate holders and every opportunity has been given to the certificate holders to express their respective views as to what should be done with Hampshire House.

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Bluebook (online)
161 Misc. 544, 292 N.Y.S. 776, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-a-plan-for-the-readjustment-modification-or-reorganization-of-the-nysupct-1936.