In Re Carmania Corp. NV

156 B.R. 119, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1541, 1993 WL 255888
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 8, 1993
Docket18-23463
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 156 B.R. 119 (In Re Carmania Corp. NV) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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 Carmania Corp. NV, 156 B.R. 119, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1541, 1993 WL 255888 (N.Y. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DETERMINATION OF VALUE OF 15 WEST 47TH STREET

CORNELIUS BLACKSHEAR, Bankruptcy Judge.

The future course of these proceedings hinges on the value of 15 West 47th Street, Debtor’s primary asset. Value is at issue in Bank’s pending motions for relief from the automatic stay, for dismissal of the Chapter 11 case, and for appointment of a trustee. If Debtor survives Bank’s motions, the valuation question will be a central issue in consideration of its proposed Plan. Accordingly, during the course of the trial on Bank’s motions, we advised the parties that we would bifurcate hearing of the various motions and determine initially only the value of the building. The value we arrive at in this Memorandum of Decision will be used in our subsequent determination of the issues remaining in connection with Bank’s motions, and, if Debtor’s reorganization survives, in proceedings on the proposed Plan. Bank and Debtor have each submitted appraisals into evidence and have rigorously cross-examined each others’ appraisers. Not surprisingly, the appraisal each offers serves its own purposes, and the two diverge widely in their conclusions as to value. Bank contends for a value of $24.3 million, relying on the $26.7 million value arrived at in its appraisal and the $24.3 million its appraiser ultimately testified to after being forced by the facts to revise his opinion. Debtor’s *121 appraisal and its appraiser stand fast for a value of not more than $15 million. We find that the market value of 15 West 47th Street is $15 million.

The parties have devoted considerable effort to disputing which appraisal method is appropriate. While both agree that the income approach to valuation is to be preferred in these circumstances over the market and cost approaches, they disagree as to how to apply the income approach. Bank contends for the “discounted cash flow” method, described in its appraisal as follows:

The cash flow is projected for 11 fiscal years. The first 10 years of cash flow are discounted. The eleventh year is capitalized to estimate the reversionary value and then it, too, is discounted. The sum of the discounted values is the market value.

Bank’s Exh. 62, 66. Debtor argues that we should rely instead on “direct capitalization,” a method by which “a stabilized.net income is divided by an appropriate rate to arrive at an indicated value.” Debtor’s Exh. FF, 69.

We are persuaded that not much of consequence hinges on which of the two methods is chosen. Each method is intended to arrive at the same result—the market value of the subject property. 1 The two methods are merely alternative structures within which to quantify problematic guesses about the future. Far more important in determining value than which of the two methods is used, is the quality and reasonableness of the financial assumptions which are plugged into either. That point is illustrated here by the fact that each of the parties has offered evidence to show that when assumptions it deems correct are plugged into the method used by the other the value resulting is consistent with the value determined by its own preferred method.

Accordingly, we have focused on the reasonableness of the assumptions on which each side relies. From that focus, a consistent pattern emerged. During the course of the trial on this matter, which generated a transcript totaling almost 2,000 pages, we had repeated opportunities on numerous discrete issues, to observe the credibility and methodology of the opposing appraisers, as the parties fought over almost every assumption that either made. We reject the testimony of the Bank’s appraiser in its entirety. We do not believe that he believes much of what he testified to. The objective evidence, much of which he provided, contradicted and undermined his assumptions, many of which were so “implausible on [their] face that a reasonable factfinder would not credit” them. Anderson v. City of Bessemer, 470 U.S. 564, 575, 105 S.Ct. 1504, 1512, 84 L.Ed.2d 518, 529 (1985). We find the testimony of Debtor’s appraiser to be credible. His testimony was fair and reasonable, and his assumptions were consistent with the objective evidence available. Accordingly, we find the market value of 15 West 47th *122 Street to be $15 million as of the valuation date.

In the discussion which follows, we will sample some of the discrete issues which arose during the course of this trial to explain why we have chosen to disregard the evidence of Bank’s appraiser and credit the evidence provided by Debtor’s appraiser. The record is filled with numerous other examples which could have been sampled instead. A major area of controversy between Bank and Debtor centers on the appropriate level of operating expenses. Debtor’s appraiser assumed that annual operating expenses would total $3,455,000. Debtor’s Exh. FF, 68. That assumption, divided by the building’s net rentable area of 116,556 feet, Id., at 7, yields total expenses of $29.64 per square foot. 2 “Very” critical to Bank’s appraiser’s valuation is his assumption that annual operating expenses could be trimmed by more than $500,000 annually. Tr., 836. This assumption contributed several million dollars to his estimate of value. Id. His methodology, however, is so flawed as to suggest that his primary concern is not to discover the market value of the building but to defend the value required by his client’s interests. Examples abound. He testified that his analysis of other properties was one of the most important bases for his conclusion that expenses could be lowered, Id., specifically citing information about other properties found on page 62 of his report. Tr., 836-37. That information consists of a table, labeled “Other comparable property expenses,” that appears in context to summarize the range and averages for specific expense categories experienced by other properties. Bank’s Exh. 62, 62. Counsel for Debtor noted that the numbers in the table on page 62 were in fact- inconsistent with the information attributed to specific comparables in other sections of the report, whereupon the following rather remarkable exchange took place among counsel and this Court:

DEBTOR’S COUNSEL: Your Honor, ... I think they are phantom numbers, and the witness should be precluded from relying upon them in his testimony here.
BANK’S COUNSEL: I will accept that.
THE COURT: You accept that?
BANK’S COUNSEL: Yes.
DEBTOR’S COUNSEL: Your Honor, so the record is clear, is the bottom chart on Page 62 stricken from the record?
BANK’S COUNSEL: I accept that.
THE COURT: It is stricken.

Tr., 838-39.

With respect to the specific expense information gathered about specific buildings used as comparables, Bank’s appraiser conceded, and we find, that:

—Debtor’s building is a premium high-end building at the upper end of the buildings serving the diamond and jewelry district.

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Bluebook (online)
156 B.R. 119, 1993 Bankr. LEXIS 1541, 1993 WL 255888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-carmania-corp-nv-nysb-1993.