In Re Allen Carpet Shops, Inc.

25 B.R. 595, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5268
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 16, 1982
Docket1-19-40542
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 B.R. 595 (In Re Allen Carpet Shops, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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 Allen Carpet Shops, Inc., 25 B.R. 595, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5268 (N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

DECISION

C. ALBERT PARENTE, Bankruptcy Judge.

Allen Carpet Shops, Inc., the above-captioned debtor-in-possession, has moved for approval of a proposed sub-sublease of premises located at 36-60 Main Street, Flushing, New York. Playground Kiddie Shop, Inc. (hereinafter “Landlord”), the corporation from whom the debtor subleases the premises, opposes debtor’s application on grounds hereinafter exposited.

FACTUAL CONTEXT

On February 19, 1981, Allen Carpet Shops, Inc. (hereinafter “Allen” or “debt- or”) and one of its two wholly owned subsidiaries, Allen Carpet Clearance Center, North Bergen, Inc. (hereinafter “Bergen”) filed separate petitions for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In accordance with sections 1107 and 1108 of Title 11 of the United States Code, Allen and Bergen automatically continued as debtors-in-possession in the management and operation of their respective businesses and properties. The Chapter 11 proceedings of Allen and Bergen have been consolidated for administrative purposes only.

Prior to the filing of their respective Chapter 11 petitions, the debtors operated approximately fifty retail carpet stores throughout the northeastern part of the United States. As a result of a decreased volume of orders and insufficient working capital to fund operations, Allen Eventually closed all of its retail carpet stores.

The debtor has assumed a number of its unexpired leases with the stated objective of assigning or subleasing the same at a profit. Allen expects to remain in business after confirmation of its plan as a real estate company, generating income from subleases entered into with the approval of this court for those of its leases which it has not assigned. For this purpose, the debtor has retained Robert Crimmins, a real estate consultant, to market the leases to its closed stores.

In the present proceeding, Allen seeks to enter into a sub-sublease with D & E Enterprises of 14th Street, Inc. (hereinafter “D & E”) for the premises located at 36-60 Main Street, Flushing, New York. The skeletal history of Allen’s sublease is as follows:

A. “Lease” — On July 19, 1977, Joseph Shamosh and Saul Tawil, owners of the realty in question and sole shareholders, officers and directors of Playground Kiddie Shop, Inc. (hereinafter “Playground”) leased the premises to Playground.

B. “Sublease” — By sublease dated August 18, 1977, Playground sublet the premises to Allen for the period covering August 23, 1977 through August 22, 1982, with a five year renewal option. On June 25,1981, with the landlord’s consent, this court issued an order permitting the debtor to assume the sublease pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365 upon the timely cure of all then-existing defaults. Thereafter, the debtor perfected the assumption by effecting the necessary cure of defaults, and duly exercised its five year renewal option, thereby extending the term of the sublease to August 22, 1987.

*597 C. “Sub-sublease” — The proposed sub-subletting of the premises by Allen to D & E Enterprises of 14th Street, Inc., is the subject of the instant proceeding. By application dated September 9, 1982, Allen moved the court for an order fixing notice of a hearing on objections, if any, to the proposed sub-sublease. On September 13, 1982, the court issued an order fixing the last date to file objections as September 28, 1982. With debtor’s consent, Landlord was permitted to and did file an affidavit in opposition on September 29, 1982.

The landlord’s affidavit propounds four objections to the proposed sub-sublease: (1) The sub-sublease would violate the “use and occupancy” provisions of the August 18, 1977, sublease; (2) The premises are “inappropriate as a location for the retail sale of furniture, home furnishings, and related products”; (3) The debtor and/or its proposed sub-subtenant “have committed waste in the Premises, by having demolished or removed substantial structural portions of the building, without the prior consent of the Landlord”; and (4) “The proposed Sub-Sublease fails to provide adequate protection of the interest of the Landlord in the Premises.”

On October 14, 1982, an evidentiary hearing was held on the objections. The following six witnesses testified at the hearing: (1) Robert Crimmins, debtor’s real estate consultant; (2) Arthur Allen, Vice-President of Allen Carpet Shops, Inc.; (3) Ralph Price, real estate broker with Urban Living Real Estate, the brokerage firm that produced the proposed sub-subtenant; (4) Abraham Ashkenazie, President of D & E Enterprises of 14th Street, Inc.; (5) William J. Hannigan, landlord’s expert engineer; and (6) Joseph Shamosh, owner by tenancy-in-common of the subject premises, and a principal of Playground, the landlord herein.

I. BENEFIT TO THE ESTATE

The debtor has filed with the court a proposed plan of reorganization dated March 24, 1982, by the terms of which the debtor will pay a dividend of 2% to the holders of allowed general unsecured claims after the holders of priority claims have been paid in full. The court is informed that the plan will shortly be amended to increase the dividend to holders of unsecured claims to 3%.

The proposed plan is to be funded primarily by the net gain (“rent differential”) Allen derives from its sublease portfolio. The debtor’s portfolio, if the proposed sub-sublease is included, will consist of ten subleases. The debtor’s Vice-President, Arthur Allen, testified at the hearing that the debt- or’s projections indicate that the proposed sub-sublease, if approved by the court, would comprise approximately 8% of the debtor’s entire lease portfolio. (Transcript at 41, as amended.) The aggregate rent differential between the proposed sub-sublease and the debtor’s sublease with Playground is approximately $100,000. (Testimony of Crimmins, at 21-22.)

While the proposed sub-subtenant, D & E, is presently a mere shell corporation devoid of assets, its owners are prepared to infuse substantial capital into the company. (Testimony of Ashkenazie, at 63-64.) The proprietor of D & E, Abraham Ashkenazie, owns a related corporation known as D & E Enterprises, Inc. (hereinafter “Enterprises”), which operates three profitable retail furniture stores in New York. (Testimony of Ashkenazie, at 61-64.)

Since the proposed sub-sublease would generate substantial net income, the court finds that it is not only in the best interests of the debtor’s estate to enter into the proposed sub-sublease, but it is a vital source of funding for the debtor’s plan of reorganization.

II. LANDLORD’S OBJECTIONS

A. Would D & E’s Business Violate Use Clause of Sublease?

The sublease between Playground and the debtor contains the following use clause:

The premises are to be used for any lawful purpose, other than the sale of children’s apparel, clothing, toys, juvenile furniture or shoes.

*598 It is not disputed that the proposed sub-subtenant (D & E) would use the premises for the retail sale of furniture.

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25 B.R. 595, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-allen-carpet-shops-inc-nyeb-1982.