In re Adelphi College

48 F. Supp. 621, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2934
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 26, 1943
DocketNo. 33814
StatusPublished

This text of 48 F. Supp. 621 (In re Adelphi College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Adelphi College, 48 F. Supp. 621, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2934 (E.D.N.Y. 1943).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

A perplexing problem has been presented to the Mortgage Trustee named in the Indenture hereinafter referred to, and the instructions of the Court were sought in a petition filed June 26, 1942, which has been amplified by supplemental and amendatory affidavits filed November 18, 1942, and January 15, 1943, respectively; these latter were required so that all relevant and attendant circumstances might be embodied in one record to facilitate review of the order to be entered hereunder.

. The matter requiring decision is this:

The proper distribution to be made by the said Trustee of the dividend paid by the Superintendent of Insurance of this state in connection with the liquidation of the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company, as to mortgage certificates guaranteed by that company representing participation in a first mortgage of the debtor, and which certificates were purchased by the Trustee for a so-called sinking fund, subsequent to the filing in the said liquidation proceedings of a proof of claim on June 11, 1938; on behalf of all then certificate holders, but which liquidating dividend was not paid until over four years thereafter, namely, during December of 1942.

The change in ownership of the certificates is what gives rise to the problem.

The mortgage, of which petitioner has become Trustee, was made by the debtor to Title Guarantee and Trust Company in the sum of One Million Dollars and participation certificates therein to the full amount were sold to the public by the mortgagee, and payment thereof as to principal and interest was guaranteed by said Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company.

Default in the payment of the mortgage caused foreclosure proceedings to be instituted, and then the debtor came into this court for reorganization under the then Section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207, and in consequence the foreclosure proceedings were restrained by order of this court. Thereafter and as provided in the plan of reorganization, the mortgage was transferred to Garden City Bank and Trust Company, as Mortgage Trustee, pursuant to an Indenture bearing date of May 25, 1938, which was modified by a Supplemental and Amendatory Indenture dated February 6, 1940.

It is not to be supposed that the foregoing were accomplished without the cooperation of the certificate holders, who were represented by a committee named in an order dated March 15, 1938.

The claim which was filed on June 11, 1938, in the liquidation proceeding, was on behalf of all certificate holders, as has been stated, and was based upon the guaranty of the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company; the said dividend paid in December of 1942 is at the rate of 6%, but whether it is final is not made to appear. Presumably it is to be regarded as a payment on account of the guarantor’s indebtedness at the time of its insolvency, which comprised both principal and interest, but no one has suggested that it should be regarded as other than a sum received on account of principal due upon the mortgage indebtedness.

If the guarantor making such a payment had continued to be solvent, it would be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee-certificate holders to the extent of such payment; the fortuitous event of insolvency merely renders the subrogation nugatory, but the fact remains that the mortgagee-certificate holders have received 6% on account of the mortgage indebtedness, and the mortgagor is relieved to that extent of its principal obligation.

The parties to this application are the Trustee, the debtor, anil the certificate holders, committee.

Distribution of the said liquidating dividend, so far as it pertains to the certificates which have been purchased by the Mortgage Trustee for the so-called sinking fund, can be made as follows:

(a) To the sinking fund, on the theory that such liquidating dividend pertained to the certificates purchased for that fund although the latter were cancelled as soon as they were purchased. This is the contention made by the debtor.

(b) To the remaining certificate holders. This is the contention of the certificate holders committee.

■(c) To the certificate holders who were such when the Mortgage Trustee filed the claim on June 11, 1938, but who have since sold their certificates to the Mortgage Trustee as purchaser for the account of the [623]*623sinking fund. No one advances that contention, and unfortunately none of the prior certificate holders is represented by counsel on this motion, and it may be plausibly argued that their rights, if any, cannot be effectually disposed of unless by some procedural device they are made parties to this motion. That would be difficult but perhaps not impossible of accomplishment, but is thought not to be legally requisite, for the reason that, since the Mortgage Trustee acted for those certificate holders in filing the proof of claim, the filing by it of the petition of June 26, 1942, may be regarded as a continuing part of its representation of them, since the petition contains the following statement on their behalf:

“No certificate holders who have sold their certificates in sinking fund operations, have, so far as petitioner is aware, expressly reserved and withheld by the instrument assigning and transferring such certificate, any interest in or right to share in any payment realized on a claim against the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company, for unpaid interest and principal. Petitioner respectfully requests instructions as to whether such holders who have so transferred their certificates should be entitled to share in any distribution of the claim allowance.”

It now becomes necessary to relate the underlying elements of the present controversy :

The Indenture under which the Mortgage Trustee was appointed to act, under the circumstances above referred to, makes clear that the debtor conveyed to the Mortgage Trustee the property subject to the first mortgage; and so as to enhance the security, it also executed a chattel mortgage to the Mortgage Trustee of personalty not covered by the original mortgage; and also conveyed other and additional properties which were thus subjected, for the first time, to the lien of the mortgage. The certificate holders were thus encouraged to consent to a reduction in the interest rate payable upon the mortgage, and it was found necessary through the instrumentality of the Amendatory Indenture to further reduce that item.

The Trust Estate is defined in the Indenture in Article I, paragraph (c), in which the following clause appears: “together with all claims or choses in action which the certificate holders as a class have or may have against any person, firm or corporation, with respect to any of. the property included in the Trust Estate of whatsoever nature (this clause will be commented upon later), and all assets of whatever nature and wheresoever situate, received by the Mortgage Trustee as to which the Mortgage Trustee is or shall become entitled pursuant to the provisions of said order of March 15, 1938, or of this Indenture”.

The properties, not comprehended in either the original mortgage or the chattel mortgage, which were conveyed to the Mortgage Trustee, are described in Article III, and consist mainly of collateral which had been pledged in connection with collateral notes; as to those the Indenture contemplated the liquidation of said collateral and.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re 24-52 44th Street, Long Island City
176 Misc. 249 (New York Supreme Court, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 F. Supp. 621, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adelphi-college-nyed-1943.