In Re Connecticut Co.

95 F.2d 311, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 4115
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1938
Docket180
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 F.2d 311 (In Re Connecticut Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Connecticut Co., 95 F.2d 311, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 4115 (2d Cir. 1938).

Opinions

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

December 19, 1906, the Connecticut Railway & Lighting Company leased to the predecessor of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company all its trolley properties in Connecticut for 999 years. February 28, 1910, the New Haven sublet these properties to the debt- or, reserving to the parties thereto the right of rescission without this claimant’s consent. October 23, 1935, the New Haven petitioned the court below for reorganization under Bankr.Act § 77, as amended by Act Aug. 27, 1935, 11 U.S. C.A. § 205 and note, and on October 31, 1935, the Connecticut Company’s petition for reorganization under section 77B, as amended by Act Aug. 29, 1935, 11 U.S.C. A. § 207 and note, was filed and approved. Trustees were appointed for the property of the New Haven but the Connecticut Company was permitted to remain in possession. This debtor was ordered to “reject, disaffirm, rescind or otherwise terminate” the said sublease and various other executory contracts relating to the claimant’s trolley properties. On December 14, 1935, the court authorized the New Haven and its trustees to enter into a written agreement with this debtor terminating the sublease of the trolley properties, and such a contract was executed December 16, 1935. A report was filed on December 18, 1935, by the debtor with the court stating that the sublease had been terminated. The New Haven and its trustees filed a like report, on that day, stating that they had rejected the 1906 lease and various other executory contracts relating to the property covered thereby. November 16, 1936, the claimant repossessed the trolley properties pursuant to orders of the court below entered on the claimant’s petition in each reorganization proceeding.

This claimant filed against each debtor substantially similar proofs of claim under the 1906 lease and the related agreements. [314]*314The debtors in their respective proceedings filed substantially similar answers and counterclaims to claimant’s proof of claims. After hearings, orders were entered from which this appeal is taken. The items for damages on account of rejection of the main lease and an alleged contract to become a tenant were disallowed. The claimant appeals. Rentals accrued up to the filing of the petition, and taxes accrued up to-the rejection of the lease were allowed as unsecured claims for $304,472.13 and $27,858.75, respectively. The debtor appeals, and claimant appeals from the disallowance of its claim for additional taxes. Claims for alleged deficiencies in the property repossessed by claimant were disallowed except for an item of $173,-537.35; both the claimant and the debtor appeal from this ruling. The debtor was ordered to turn over to the claimant certain bus routes with busses to operate them. The debtor appeals. The court allowed $151,243.73 as administration expenses for the use of the property, and the debtor appeals.

The 1906 lease of the trolley properties permitted the lessee, if it did not wish to operate any or all.of the properties, to delegate that right to another by either an assignment or sublease. It required the assignee to file with the claimant an express acceptance of the lessee’s obligations, and thereupon it would become entitled to all of the lessee’s benefits but subject to all the lessee’s obligations connected with the property. A sublease did not require such acceptance. The New Haven, on February 28, 1910, sublet this claimant’s trolley franchises and properties to the debtor. The sublease of the claimant’s property was expressly subject to termination by- the written agreement of the parties to it, and knowledge or consent of the claimant was not required. Since this was a sublease, no acceptance was filed with- the claimant by the debtor. The New Haven covenanted with the debtor to pay to claimant the rent reserved in the head lease and to pay the indebtedness secured by any lien on the property sublet and save the sublessee harmless from loss arising out of the default in such payment. The debtor agreed to pay rent to the New Haven, not to claimant or its bondholders or sinking fund, as provided in the main lease. The debtor continued in possession of claimant’s trolley properties until the latter repossessed them on. November 16, 1936, during these reorganization proceedings.

Claimant acquired no right by the sublease, which it could enforce to hold the debtor for rent. Claimant’s contention is that it became a creditor beneficiary of the debtor’s promise to pay rent. The contract expressly required payment by the debtor to the New Haven and by the New Haven to the claimant and its bondholders and sinking fund. Consequently, the claimant was but an incidental beneficiary of the promise in the sublease to pay rent, and an incidental beneficiary acquired by virtue, of the promise no right against the promisor or promisee. American Law Institute, Restatement of Contracts, § 147.

In these proceedings under section 77B, 'the claimant’s right as a creditor beneficiary depends on general equitable principles. In re Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp., 2 Cir., 91 F.2d 1004. On July 6, 1926, claimant, New Haven, and 1¡he debtor executed an agreement under which new rights are claimed against the debtor. It was provided that the original lessor agrees that “on the contingency of the termination of the Original Lease before expiration of its term for any cause other than a default by The Connecticut Company, it will treat said The Connecticut Company * * * as entitled to the continuance of the leasehold privileges in said demised electric railway properties conveyed to it” by the sublease of 1910. But it was provided that the rental agreed to be paid by the debtor in the sublease continue to be paid when due to the New Haven. The intent was recited to be to prevent the debtor from suffering a forfeiture in the event of the termination of the head lease. The court below properly found this to mean to give to the debt- or the option, providing the rental continued to be paid, to remain as tenant after a termination of the head lease, but fails to disclose any obligation on the part of the debtor to become a tenant. The option , was that the tenancy should continue by the claimant becoming a party to the sublease, but it was subject to rescission by the sole action of the New Haven and the debtor. And the court found that there was nothing in the 1926 agreement or any other part of the record to impair or abrogate this right of rescission. Consequently, when the sublease was first rescinded and the head lease [315]*315subsequently terminated, there was nothing left as to the sublease out of which the rights and obligations of a tenancy could arise. The debtor’s option to continue as a tenant was Conditioned on the contingency “for any cause other than a default by The Connecticut Company,” which meant for any cause other than a default participated in by the debtor. The New Haven was always in a position to perform the lessee’s obligations, and a termination could therefore occur only if the New Haven was in default. Conceivably, the lease might be terminated for the New Haven’s default even though the debtor had fulfilled all its obligations to the New Haven. It could not be terminated for failure of the debtor unless the New Haven itself committed some default. The debtor committed a default in its obligations to pay rent to the New Haven. It has paid no rent to any one since the initiation of its reorganization proceedings, and its failure, coupled with that of the New Haven to pay rent under the head lease, constituted the default which resulted in the termination of that lease.

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In Re Connecticut Co.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 F.2d 311, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 4115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-connecticut-co-ca2-1938.