In Re American Appliance

272 B.R. 587, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 72, 39 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 2, 2002 WL 130897
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 25, 2002
Docket19-12070
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 272 B.R. 587 (In Re American Appliance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re American Appliance, 272 B.R. 587, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 72, 39 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 2, 2002 WL 130897 (N.J. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION ON OPPORTUNITY OF FIRST REPUBLIC BANK TO CREDIT BID

JUDITH H. WIZMUR, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter comes on to be heard on the debtor’s motion to approve the sale and assignment of the debtor’s leasehold interest in 5510 Concord Pike, Wilmington, Delaware (the “Premises”). The issues presented are whether First Republic Bank, the proposed assignee, (the “Bank”) may credit bid its claim against the debtor’s estate toward the purchase of debtor’s leasehold interest under 11 U.S.C. § 363(k), and whether post-petition payments made by the Bank may qualify as a break-up fee and/or an administrative claim.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On or about March 18, 1993, American Appliance, the debtor 1 herein, (the “Lessee”) and Neiluv Corporation, (the “Lessor”), entered into a Ground Lease, whereby Neiluv conveyed a leasehold interest to American Appliance in certain ground located at 5510 Concord Pike, Wilmington, Delaware for a term of twenty years. Under the Ground Lease, American Appliance was to demolish the existing structure and construct a retail appliance store (“Improvements”) at its own expense on the Premises. In pertinent part, the Ground Lease provides that “the Improvements hereafter constructed or placed upon the Premises by Lessee ... are not the subject of this Lease, and during the term of this Lease, Lessor shall not acquire pursuant to this Lease, any right, title or interest therein or thereto.... Any Improvements located or constructed on or placed upon the Premises shall, subject to the provisions of Articles 17 [Default Provisions and Remedies] and 27 [Surrender] hereof, be and remain the sole property of the Lessee.” ¶ 1.4 of the Ground Lease.

Under the Ground Lease, the opportunity of American Appliance to encumber its leasehold interest is limited by Paragraph 20 of the Ground Lease as follows:

20.1 Lessee shall not mortgage, assign, pledge or otherwise encumber its interest hereunder (except as provided in Article 6 for a Subordinated Mortgage) without the express written consent of Lessor, and any such mortgage, assignment, pledge or other encumbrance made without the consent of Lessor shall be void and of no effect
20.4 Any purported or attempted mortgage, sublease or assignment of this Lease, or of any interest herein or interest arising hereunder made or attempted to be made other than in accordance with or without full compliance with the provisions of Article 6 and this Article shall be void.

The exception to the requirement that any encumbrance imposed by the Lessee on its leasehold interest requires the express written consent of the Lessor is found in paragraph 6 of the Ground Lease, *591 which requires the Lessor to consent to a mortgage on its reversionary fee simple interest, up to the value of the Improvements, as follows:

6.1 Lessor shall join in the execution of an (sic) “Subordinated Mortgage” (as defined in Section 6.2) within twenty (20) days after Lessee submits a copy of the Subordinated Mortgage to Lessor and requests that Lessor join in its execution. After the execution of an (sic) Subordinated Mortgage by Lessor, the Subordinated Mortgage shall be an accommodation mortgage of Lessor’s reversion of fee simple interest in the Premises only, and Lessee shall be entitled to all of the proceeds of any loans secured by the Subordinated Mortgage, and Lessor shall direct any lender making an (sic) Subordinated Mortgage loan to pay the loan proceeds directly to Lessee.
6.2 A mortgage shall be a “Subordinated Mortgage” only if the following conditions are satisfied:
1. The mortgage is made for the purpose of construction of the Improvements or the permanent financing of the Improvements.
(4) The principal amount of the Subordinated Mortgage shall not exceed the aggregate value of the Lessee’s intended site development and construction costs for the Improvements.

In the event of default under the lease, “any first mortgagee of an (sic) Subordinated Mortgage of Lessee’s interest” under the Ground Lease, designated as a “Beneficiary”, receives notice of such default and has the opportunity to cure the default. ¶ 16.1 of the Ground Lease.

With respect to a party designated as a Beneficiary under the Ground Lease

“[i]f this Lease shall be terminated for any reason by Lessor, or in.the event of the rejection or disaffirmance of this Lease pursuant to any bankruptcy law or 'other law affecting creditors’ rights, Lessor will enter into a new lease of the Premises created by this Lease with the Beneficiary, or any party designated by the Beneficiary, not less than ten (10) nor more than thirty (30) days after the request of the Beneficiary, for the remainder of the term of this Lease, effective as of the date of such termination, rejection or disaffirmance, upon all of the terms and provisions contained in this Lease.... ”

¶ 16.4 of the Ground Lease.

By way of summary, the Ground Lease provisions specify that the Improvements on the Premises belong to the Lessee. With the exception of a Subordinated Mortgage upon the Lessor’s reversionary fee simple interest in the Premises, which cannot exceed the value of the construction costs for the Improvements on the property, the Lessee may not encumber its leasehold interest without the express written consent of the Lessor, absent which any such encumbrance is void. The mortgagee of any Subordinated Mortgage placed upon the fee simple interest of the Lessor has the opportunity to enter into a new lease of the Premises with the Lessor in the event of the Lessee’s default.

Following the execution of the Ground Lease, American Appliance financed the improvements on the Premises, in the amount of $862,600, through Beneficial National Bank in 1994. Leasehold mortgage and security agreements were entered into against the debtor’s leasehold interest in the premises in favor of Beneficial National Bank, with the express written consent *592 by the Lessor. 2

On or about July 10, 2000, William C. Rowland, Jr., principal of the debtors, (“Rowland”) borrowed the sum of $7,300,000 from the Bank. The debtor executed a Guarantee Agreement for the loan on the same date. As security for the loan, in addition to mortgages on two other properties, an Open End Leasehold Mortgage and Security Agreement (“Original Mortgage”) was executed by the debtor in favor of the Bank on the 5510 Concord Pike property. The Original Mortgage specified that the collateral given by the debtor included the debtor’s leasehold interest in the Ground Lease, and all Improvements on the Premises. The loan was used, inter alia, to refinance the Beneficial Loan, which was satisfied, and was intended to serve as permanent financing for various American Appliance stores, including the store located on the Premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 B.R. 587, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 72, 39 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 2, 2002 WL 130897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-american-appliance-njb-2002.