In Re Lower Broadway Properties, Inc.

58 F. Supp. 615, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2584
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 12, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 F. Supp. 615 (In Re Lower Broadway Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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 Lower Broadway Properties, Inc., 58 F. Supp. 615, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2584 (S.D.N.Y. 1945).

Opinion

RIFKIND, District Judge.

These proceedings for reorganization under Chapter X of the Chandler Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 501 et seq., were instituted by voluntary petition on November 24, 1942. The present application is made by the trustee for the approval of a plan of reorganization proposed by him and approved by the Bondholders’ Committee (the word “bonds” will be used to identify the mortgage certificates and the word “bondholders” for the holders of the mortgage certificates).

The debtor’s chief asset, and the only one which need concern us, consists of the land at Nos. 44-50 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, and the office building thereon erected, known as the 50 Broadway Building. The ground area of the land is 13,643 square feet. The cubic content of the building is 3,852,400 feet, divided into thirty six stories and two penthouses. The rentable space consists of 254,467 square feet.

The building was opened on May 1, 1927 and until the institution of these proceedings was operated by the debtor. Both its gross rental income and its net income (before mortgage interest, depreciation, income taxes, amortization of bond discount and expense) have fluctuated widely. For each of the two years ending February, 1931, and February, 1932, its gross rental income exceeded $1,000,000. In each of four years its net income exceeded $500,-000, reaching a peak of $677,000 in 1931. During the nine year period 1936 to 1944, the debtor’s largest gross rental income was in 1937, when it amounted to $523,221.76 and the smallest was in 1943, when it fell to $330,645.77. The peak and trough of net income also occurred in the same years, respectively, and amounted to $204,736.63 in 1937 and $31,177.93 in 1943. Today the building is occupied to 99.5% of its capacity, the United States Army being in possession of about one-half the rented space under a lease subject to cancellation upon thirty days’ notice. The estimated net rental income for the year ending April 30, 1945 is $178,593. Average net rental income throughout the entire history of the building averages approximately $209,000 a year,

The debtor’s capitalization consists of:

first mortgage certificates, principal amount, $3,692,000;
debentures, principal amount, 44,000;
$7. cumulative preferred stock, shares — 9,570
common stock shares — 3,000.

In addition, there is accrued and deferred interest on the first mortgage certificates which on November 24, 1942, amounted to $1,138,880.84. Miscellaneous claims do not exceed $15,090.95.

The cost of the land to the debtor was $2,550,000 and the cost of the building was $3,239,630, making a total of $5,789,630. The life of the building is about thirty years and with good maintenance and occasional remodelling, possibly fifty years. The land and building are assessed by the City of New York for real estate tax purposes at $4,000,000. Mr. Russell Cruikshank, the appraiser who testified on behalf of the trustee, valued the building, as of September 25, 1944, at $2,400,000, of which he assigned $900,000 to the land. He estimated the net rental income from the building for the next two or three years at $145,740. The expert who testified on behalf of the Bondholders’ Committee, Mr. Vought, valued the land and building at $3,000,000 and estimated its net rental income at $199,000 per annum. I accept Mr. Cruikshank’s appraisal both as to value and income.

The unmortgaged assets are estimated at $89,872.82.

The plan proposes that the principal of the present first mortgage be cut in half, from $3,692,000 to $1,846,000; that sinking fund and interest obligations be payable only if and to the extent that income is available therefor; that the first 25',% of the available net income (as defined in *617 the plan) be applied to sinking fund purposes and that interest up to 61% be paid out of the remainder; that the balance of available net income be applied, first, to the payment of interest so as to bring the interest rate up to 6% per annum from the date of the consummation of the plan to the interest date and, secondly, to any proper corporate purpose; that the presently outstanding preferred and common stock be cancelled; that holders of mortgage certificates receive for each $1,000 principal amount an income certificate of $500 principal amount and voting trust certificates for ten shares of new common stock; that debenture holders receive for each $1,000 principal amount voting trust certificates for two shares of new common stock (requiring a total of 88 shares out of a total of 37,008 shares) and that holders of miscellaneous allowed claims be paid their distributive shares in cash; that a voting trust is to be established, the voting trustees to be named by the court and the trust to endure for five years, and be renewable for an additional five years upon the approval of 51'% of the voting trust certificates and terminable at any time by the vote of the holders of two thirds of the voting trust certificates; that management is to be confided in a board of directors initially selected by the court after receiving recommendations from the interested parties.

There is no question that the debtor is insolvent and that nothing is available for the holders of preferred and common stock. That proposition has not been challenged by anyone and none of the objections made to the plan is addressed to the provision thereof which allocates nothing to the holders of such preferred and common stock.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has not filed a written report. However, upon the hearing the Commission expressed, by its counsel, the recommendation that the plan be disapproved. The objections asserted by the Commission form a convenient arrangement for the discussion of all the objections and they will be treated in order.

1. The Commission declares that the amount of the debt, namely, $1,846,000, proposed under the plan, is excessive and that it ought not to exceed $900,000, carrying an interest rate of 5'%, „ cumulative, payable out of income. This objection is founded upon the view which the Commission takes of the prospective earnings of the building and of its value. Its estimate of the value has not been given to the court. Its estimate of earnings is $90,000 per annum, based roughly upon the three year average immediately preceding reorganization. This estimate of earnings was given to the court by the Commission’s counsel and no opportunity has been afforded to the parties to cross-examine and determine the accuracy of the basis upon which the forecast is based. History may prove the Commission right. If so, it is not because its employees have any greater acquaintance with the unpredicable future than others trained in the business of valuing real estate. If we regard the past as the mirror of the future, all we can say is that the range of possibilities for this building is such as to lend support to the most optimistic as well as to the most pessimistic of prophets. The building has enjoyed a rental income as high as $1,037,913 a year, and as low as $330,645; a net income as high as $677,853 and as low as $31,177. Currently, its gross rental income is $464,880 and its net rental income $178,593. Unquestionably the current rise is attributable to the war; but whether cessation of war will bring a decline or an increase is a question which defies the ability of the forecasters.

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58 F. Supp. 615, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lower-broadway-properties-inc-nysd-1945.