In Re Spg Of Schenectady, Inc.

833 F.2d 413, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15105
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1987
Docket493
StatusPublished

This text of 833 F.2d 413 (In Re Spg Of Schenectady, Inc.) 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 Spg Of Schenectady, Inc., 833 F.2d 413, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15105 (2d Cir. 1987).

Opinion

833 F.2d 413

In re SPG OF SCHENECTADY, INC., Debtor.
William M. McCARTHY, Trustee of the Bankrupt Estate of SPG
of Schenectady, Inc., Plaintiff,
v.
Edward W. COLLINS and Pamela Murray, as Trustees for the
benefit of the stockholders of Col-Mur Enterprises Inc.,
formerly the Crossroads Restaurant Ltd., Key Bank, N.A.,
National Casualty Co. (by its officers or agent authorized
by appointment or law to receive process) and United
National Insurance Company, (by its officers or agent
authorized by appointment or law to receive process), Defendants,
J.T.I. Restaurants, Ltd., now known as Iaia's Crossroads
Restaurant, Ltd., Defendant-Appellant,
National Casualty Co. (by its officers or agent authorized
by appointment or law to receive process),
Defendant-Appellee.

No. 493, Docket 86-5056.

United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.

Argued Dec. 8, 1986.
Decided Nov. 13, 1987.

Nicholas J. Criscione, Albany, N.Y., for defendant-appellant Iaia's Crossroads Restaurant, Ltd.

Peter A. Pastore, Albany, N.Y., (McNamee, Lochner, Titus & Williams, David J. Wukitsch, of counsel), for defendant-appellee Nat. Cas. Co.

Before OAKES, CARDAMONE and WINTER, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

The subject of this appeal is a restaurant business encumbered originally by a single mortgage to a bank. The owner sold the business and took back a mortgage. Shortly thereafter, the purchaser in turn sold the property and also took back a mortgage as part of the purchase price. The third owner then had a restaurant saddled with three mortgages. While such "borrowing" may not have dulled the third owner's "edge of husbandry," it did result in a cash crunch that unsurprisingly rendered the owner unable either to service the mortgages or to pay the fire insurance premiums on the property. After the owner went bankrupt, a fire destroyed the restaurant, bringing about a forced sale of the property, and precipitating the instant litigation contesting the distribution of the proceeds of the sale.

BACKGROUND

This is an appeal from a July 18, 1986 order of the District Court for the Northern District of New York (McCurn, J.) that affirmed a decision of the bankruptcy court, --- B.R. ----, which had ruled on the disputed claims to the proceeds. The restaurant property had been owned until March 1980 by Col-Mur Enterprises, Inc. (Col-Mur), subject to a first mortgage held by Key Bank. Col-Mur then sold the property to a company now known as Iaia's Crossroads Restaurant, Ltd. (Iaia), the appellant. Iaia took the property subject to the bank's mortgage and gave back a second mortgage to Col-Mur. Under the terms of the second mortgage Iaia promised to keep the property insured against fire for Col-Mur's benefit, and to deliver the insurance policies to and reimburse Col-Mur for the cost of any premiums.

Three years later Iaia sold the property to S.P.G. of Schenectady, Inc. (S.P.G.). S.P.G., in turn, assumed the bank's first and Col-Mur's second mortgages, and gave Iaia a third mortgage for $278,000. In accordance with these mortgages, S.P.G. obtained fire insurance naming Col-Mur and Iaia as the insureds. When S.P.G. ran into financial difficulties, it filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on October 4, 1984, which was later converted into a Chapter 7 proceeding. S.P.G. thereafter defaulted on its mortgage payments and allowed the fire insurance policy that protected Col-Mur's and Iaia's interests to lapse on November 11, 1984.

Observing the heavy economic seas that S.P.G. had encountered--and its implications for their interests--Iaia and Col-Mur obtained separate fire insurance policies. Appellant Iaia obtained a $300,000 policy with the United National Insurance Company (United National). Col-Mur's $250,000 policy was written by the appellee, National Casualty Company (National) and designated as the named insureds the "Trustees for the Benefit of the Former Stockholders of Col-Mur Enterprises, Inc." (hereafter simply called "Col-Mur"). Col-Mur's policy contained a subrogation clause permitting National to be subrogated to Col-Mur's rights, as mortgagee, against S.P.G. As discussed below, whether Col-Mur obtained the insurance for its own, i.e., "single" benefit, or for S.P.G.'s and Iaia's benefit, i.e., "dual" benefit, as well, is the issue we must decide.

Fire destroyed the restaurant on December 26, 1984 and five days later, Col-Mur instituted foreclosure proceedings and later obtained default judgment of foreclosure. With S.P.G.'s equity of redemption gone, the trustee in bankruptcy proposed to sell the property. To accomplish this, he brought an action against, inter alia, Col-Mur, Iaia, National, and United National to compel the two insurance companies to pay their respective policies. The trustee concluded that the insurance payments would reduce the mortgage debts owed by S.P.G. to Col-Mur and Iaia and thus decrease their shares of the sale proceeds. National paid Col-Mur $250,000 and United National paid Iaia $167,000 on their respective policies. The sale of the property produced $325,000. The order of priority for participation in the proceeds was as follows: costs of the sale, Key Bank's first mortgage of approximately $15,000, and the balance due Col-Mur under its mortgage after subtracting the insurance proceeds. The remainder, approximately $200,000, is the subject of this litigation.

In its answer to the trustee's complaint, National asserted that it was subrogated to Col-Mur's lien status and was therefore entitled to the lion's share of the proceeds from the sale of the property. Iaia cross-claimed against National and argued that Sec. 254(4) of New York's Real Property Law required that National's payment to Col-Mur be deducted from the mortgage principal owed by S.P.G. to Col-Mur for which Iaia was secondarily liable. This appeal arose in the bankruptcy court when National moved successfully to dismiss Iaia's cross-claim.

In a Decision and Order dated January 8, 1986, the Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of New York (Mahoney, J.) found that Col-Mur had obtained the National policy for its own exclusive benefit. The bankruptcy court also held that Sec. 254(4) did not require reduction of the mortgage debt by the amount of the insurance proceeds paid pursuant to National's policy. The district court concluded upon Iaia's appeal that the bankruptcy judge had correctly found Col-Mur's policy to be a single interest policy. It ruled that Real Property Law Sec. 254(4) did not apply and, even if it did apply, Sec. 254(4) did not negate the operation of the subrogation clause in Col-Mur's policy with National. Finally, the district court rejected Iaia's argument that a subrogation clause like the one contained in Col-Mur's policy becomes operative only when there is proof of fraud or of an underlying tort claim, and that it is otherwise inoperative. We now reverse.1

DISCUSSION

Iaia advances several theories as to why it is entitled to the proceeds. First, it claims that Col-Mur's policy with National was for S.P.G.'s and Iaia's benefit as well as Col-Mur's and therefore, under Sec. 254(4), National is not entitled to subrogation until their interests are fully recovered.

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McCarthy v. Collins (In re SPG of Schenectady, Inc.)
833 F.2d 413 (Second Circuit, 1987)

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833 F.2d 413, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-spg-of-schenectady-inc-ca2-1987.