In re Civic Center Realty Co.

26 F.2d 825, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1273
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 2, 1928
DocketNo. 5223
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 825 (In re Civic Center Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Civic Center Realty Co., 26 F.2d 825, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1273 (D. Md. 1928).

Opinion

COLEMAN, District Judge.

There are involved in this ease two questions: (1) 'Whether a second mortgagee should be permitted to foreclose in the state court, pursuant to the terms of its mortgage, which is in default, or whether the bankruptcy court should assume jurisdiction of the property, for ultimate sale by the trustees in bankruptcy;' and (2) whether a lessee under an executory lease of office space in the building so mortgaged may have the lease and its obligations thereunder canceled by reason of the lessor’s bankruptcy.

On February. 24, 1928, the Civic Center Realty Company, a Maryland corporation, owner of the Court Square Building in Baltimore (virtually its sole asset), consented to adjudication as an involuntary bankrupt. At this time the premises were subject to a first mortgage of $700,000, held by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York; a second mortgage of $338,000, held by the Hugo Hoffman Corporation of New York; secured claims amounting to $69,519.67, including taxes; and $46,755.02 unsecured claims — a grand total of $1,154,274.69. The second mortgage being in. default, a petition was filed on March 1, 1928, by the Hugo Hoffman Corporation, alleging that the value of the lot and building was insufficient to pay both mortgages, and asking leave to foreclose. The trustees in bankruptcy have answered, with various allegations and affidavits as to the value of the premises in resisting the foreclosure.

It further appears that on February 7, 1928, the Civic Center Realty Company entered into a lease with the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York for a period of five years, at an annual rental of $11,000, for the seventeenth and part of the eighteenth floor of the building, by the terms of which the lessor was required to effect certain alterations in the specified office space at a cost of some $5,000, and to assume the unfinished portion of the lessee’s existing lease with the Union Trust Company. The new lease was not to he effective till April 1st, or as soon thereafter as the alterations could be completed. On February 24th, as above mentioned, and before any steps had been taken under the lease by either party, the bankruptcy occurred. A petition was thereupon filed by the lessee, asking to be released from its obligations to the bankrupt by reason of the changed situation. Upon the answer to this petition by the trustees, setting forth their prospects of due accomplishment of the conditions provided for in the lease, arises the second question to be decided.

Taking up the first question, since no action was begun for foreclosure in the state court previous to bankruptcy, the federal jurisdiction is plenary, and it is for the bankruptcy court to decide whether it should renounce or assert its jurisdiction. In re Hurlock (D. C.) 23 F.(2d) 500; Matter of United Realty & Home Builders Corporation, No. 4984, Bankruptcy, this court (unreported) ; Union Electric Co. v. Hubbard (C. C. A.) 242 F. 248. A bankruptcy court is not required to administer property burdened with liens, and should only do so when this is for the interest of the general estate. See In re North Star Ice & Coal Co. (D. C.) 252 F. 301, 304, and eases therein cited. Therefore a sale should not be ordered under the Bankruptcy Act, where the probable selling price would not be sufficient to satisfy the liens, because the court will not assume jurisdiction over what it can never administer. On the other hand, if there is reasonable justification for the opinion that there will be an equity which will add to the assets of the estate, the court may, and should, order such sale free of liens. See In re National Grain Corporation (C. C. A.) 9 F.(2d) 802.

[827]*827The above being the correct rule of law, it becomes necessary to determine just what the evidence in the present ease discloses with respect to the value of the property, in relation to the aggregate of the liens. The total amount of the two mortgages is, as already stated, $1,038,000. On the first mortgage there is interest due of $28,163. The interest on the second mortgage is $7,000; there are state and city taxes in the same amount, and expenses incidental to sale, aggregating $6,640. This latter figure may be assumed from the testimony to be approximately the same, whether we speak of foreclosure proceedings in the state court or sale under order of this court. The total, therefore, of all liens, is $1,086,803. In this figure is included approximately $80,000 alleged by the trustees to represent usurious payments, raising a collateral question which will be hereafter discussed.

Elaborate testimony was introduced respecting the value of the land and the building, both on behalf of the second mortgagee and the trustees. Summarized, the former’s valuation is $175,000 for the land and $725,-000 for the building, or a total of $900,000. If, therefore, the property brought no more than this latter figure, the total amount of the liens would exceed it by1 $186,803.

The appraisers appointed by the court to value the property have presented the following figures, which represent the average of their individual valuations: $296,000 for the land, and $959,586 for the building, or a total of $1,255,586, which represents, therefore, an excess of $168,783 over and above the total amount of the liens; that is to say, an excess not greatly different in amount from the deficit resulting from the figures adopted by the second mortgagee.

The building, which was completed a year ago, cost $919,968.03, or approximately 60 cents per cubic foot. The second mortgagee, in placing a present valuation of $725,000 upon it, has apparently assumed that it could be built for about 50 cents per cubic foot, whereas the appraisers for the trustees have adopted a figure of 60 cents. We are not now concerned with replacement value, although it may be noted parenthetically that such evidence as there is in the case bearing upon the present cost of sueh a structure would seem to indicate an increase, rather than a decrease. The present assessment for tax purposes, state and city, on the land and improvements combined, is $827,300. The method adopted in reaching this figure is not clear from the evidence.

Obviously the variations in the valuation figures presented by the opposing sides are so great that either the figures must be capable of some correction, or they reflect what is usual in eases of this kind, namely, that one man’s opinion is bound to vary greatly from that of another in arriving at a conclusion as to what real estate and improvements are worth, when there are a great many factors to be taken into account in making the appraisal, and especially when there have been no recent sales of similar property to minimize the element of speculation. The court believes, however, that the trustees’ figures are properly capable of a reduction of $61,-000 in the value of the land, because there is no evidence which tends reasonably to support the contention that the land would bring, under any form of sale, at the present time, mueh more than $200,000.

Its actual purchase price is shrouded in some doubt because, when acquired in 1925, there was no, or virtually no, money consideration ; the property being traded for other property the exact then value of which is not entirely clear on the record.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 825, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-civic-center-realty-co-mdd-1928.