In Re the Rehabilitation of Lawyers Mortgage Co.

14 N.E.2d 55, 277 N.Y. 244, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 977
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 N.E.2d 55 (In Re the Rehabilitation of Lawyers Mortgage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Rehabilitation of Lawyers Mortgage Co., 14 N.E.2d 55, 277 N.Y. 244, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 977 (N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The appellant, as trustee of three estates, is the holder of certificates of participation in a mortgage on real property in the borough of Brooklyn. The mortgage was guaranteed by Lawyers Mortgage Company and the certificates were issued by it. The amount due on the mortgage is $115,000. Certificates in the amount of $92,265 are outstanding in the hands of the public, and the three estates represented by the appellant, as trustee, hold certificates in the amount of $70,000, constituting more than seventy-five per cent of all the outstanding certificates. As such trustée, the appellant promulgated and consented to a plan of reorganization of the rights of all the holders of the mortgage investment. A hearing was held upon that plan in the Supreme Court. The court modified the plan, approved it as amended, and declared it binding upon the holders of all the certificates. The appellant did not consent to the plan as modified. On the contrary, he attempted to withdraw his consent when the plan which he had promulgated was modified. Upon this appeal the question presented is whether a plan to which the holders of more than sixty-six and two-thirds per centum in principal amount of a mortgage investment have consented and which has been thereafter modified and approved as amended by the court may be declared binding upon all the holders of the certificates, though the holders who consented to the original plan are opposed to the plan as amended.

*247 The plan as promulgated by the appellant provided that “ all rights and powers of a single absolute owner of the bond and mortgage and property seeming this issue are to be vested in one trustee.” It further provided that: “ One Trustee shall be elected by the certificate holders. No provision is made for the nomination and election of a trustee beyond the statement in this paragraph contained for the reason that this plan is being presented by the holders of over seventy (70%) per cent of the cértificates outstanding and entitled to vote.” The court amended the plan by striking out this provision and in its place making provision for the appointment of a trustee by the court.

To meet an extraordinary situation which constituted an imminent danger to the public welfare, the Legislature, in chapter 745 of the Laws of 1933, popularly known as the Schackno Act, provided an extraordinary remedy. It authorized the adoption of plans for the “ reorganization ” of the rights of holders of certificates of participation in a mortgage investment without the unanimous consent of the holders, even though such rights were created by a contract protected by the Constitution against impairment by a State, but at the same time it inserted in the statute provisions calculated to safeguard the rights of all holders of certificates against substantial injury which might be caused by the adoption of an unfair plan without unanimous consent.

These provisions are contained in sections 6 and 8 of the statute. The Superintendent of Insurance must mail a copy of the plan to every holder of a mortgage certificate and a copy or summary of the plan to each other person or corporation known to the Superintendent to have an interest which may be affected by the proposed plan or agreement. The court must hear the parties interested, and the Superintendent must mail notice of such hearing. “ The court shall thereupon approve, modify or disapprove such plan or agreement. No such *248 plan or agreement shall become operative unless and until it shall have been approved, in its original or in a modified form by such court, and unless and until the holders of two-thirds in principal amount of such mortgage investments * * * shall have consented to such plan or agreement.” (§ 6, subd. 2.)

The statute further provides: § 8. Jurisdiction of supreme court. The supreme court of the county in which any such guaranty corporation has its principal office is hereby vested with jurisdiction and authority to determine the fairness of any plan or agreement whiph may be promulgated hereunder with respect to any mortgage investments sold or guaranteed by such guaranty corporation and to approve, modify or disapprove the same. Such court shall make an order approving, modifying or disapproving such plan or agreement. In the event that the court shall have approved or modified such plan or agreement; and if at the time of the entry of such order the court shall have been satisfied that sixty-six and two-thirds per centum of the holders in principal amount of such mortgage investment or their duly authorized agent have approved such plan or agreement, such order shall recite such fact, and shall thereupon be binding upon all the holders of such mortgage investments and the guaranty corporation which shall have sold or guaranteed them and all of the parties interested therein. If at the time of making such order such percentage of the holders of such mortgage investment shall not have approved the same, such order shall provide that upon satisfactory proof of the fact that sixty-six and two-thirds per centum of the holders in principal amount of such mortgage investments shall have approved the same, a further order may be entered ex parte approving such plan or agreement, which further order shall be binding upon all the holders of such mortgage investments and upon the guaranty corporation which shall have sold or guaranteed the same and upon all other parties interested therein.”

*249 In sustaining the validity of the statute in spite of the fact that, both in purpose and in effect, it altered in some degree the contractual rights of holders of certificates, we said: The fairness of these provisions is evident. They do not give to a majority in interest, however large, the power to coerce another holder to accede to any plan of reorganization by the majority. They do not give the court power to coerce a single bolder to accede to any plan of which the court approves. They do give the court authority, after a hearing, to approve a reorganization plan which is consented to by two-thirds in amount of those interested and to declare such plan effective.” (Matter of People [Title & Mortgage Guarantee Co.], 264 N. Y. 69, at p. 93.)

The statute creating the Mortgage Commission (Laws of 1935, ch. 19) supplements and in some respects modifies the provisions of the Schackno Act, but it leaves in full force the requirement that no plan becomes operative “ unless and until it shall have been approved, in its original or in a modified form by such court, and unless and until the holders of two-thirds in principal amount of such mortgage investments * * * shall have consented to such plan or agreement.” A provision in a plan for the appointment or nomination of a trustee is an integral part of the plan. It may, indeed, as in this case, be the most important provision of a plan. There may be difference of opinion as to whether the rights of the holders of a minority interest would be better safeguarded by a trustee nominated by the holder or holders of a majority interest than by a trustee selected by the court. A provision that a trustee should be appointed by a person or group owning a majority interest might, in some cases, be unfair to those owning a minority interest, and after hearing the interested parties the court might in such cases refuse to approve the plan without modification.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E.2d 55, 277 N.Y. 244, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-rehabilitation-of-lawyers-mortgage-co-ny-1938.