Jay F. Zook, Inc. v. Brownstein

237 F. Supp. 800, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7805
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 8, 1965
DocketCiv. A. No. C 62-728
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 237 F. Supp. 800 (Jay F. Zook, Inc. v. Brownstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jay F. Zook, Inc. v. Brownstein, 237 F. Supp. 800, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7805 (N.D. Ohio 1965).

Opinion

BATTISTI, District Judge.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment whereby J. F. Zook, Inc., Plaintiff-Mortgagee (sometimes hereinafter referred to as Zook), seeks an order declaring a certain loan insurance commitment issued by the Federal Housing Administration (hereinafter referred to as FHA) to be in full force and effect. The Defendant, Commissioner of the FHA (hereinafter referred to as the Government), urges that said commitment should be declared null and void on the ground that Zook made certain false certifications or material misrepresentations within the meaning of 12 U.S.C.A. § 1709(e).

On May 12, 1959, Zook, as a proposed mortgagee, filed an application with the FHA for insurance on a mortgage loan to be obtained for the construction of a [802]*802multi-family housing project under Section 207 of the National Housing Act (Stipulation of Facts, Pax-agraph 1). The px*oject, now completed, is located in Youngstown, Ohio, and is known as Kennedy Park. The mortgagor is Kennedy Park, Inc.

Although Kennedy Park was not yet incorpox’ated at the time of the filing of the application for insurance, Zook had already disclosed the financial resources of the proposed mortgagor (Kennedy Park, Inc.), together with an estimate of its financial requirements. (See Court’s Exhibit A and Tr. at pp. 57 & 58.) Some time in the late summer or early fall of 1959 (see Tr. p. 55), Kennedy Park was duly incorporated.

After the application for insurance was filed, the FHA made a study of the proposed project and concluded that it would be economically feasible (Tr. 278-281). Thereafter, on June 11, 1959, the FHA, by its authorized agent, William H. Hackman, Director, Cleveland Office, issued a commitment to insure the px-oposed mortgage loan.

The FHA commitment (Court’s Exhibit B) included, inter alia, the following provisions:

“This administration, having considered your application and exhibits submitted therewith for the insurance of a mortgage upon the above projects, finds said project to be eligible for insurance under the provisions of Section 207 of the National Housing Act, and Administrative Rules and Regulations thereunder now in effect. Subject to such Rules and Regulations and to the following conditions, the Commissioner will endorse as insux-ed (but only to the extent of advances approved by the Commissioner) an original cx’edit instrument, secured by a first mox’tgage upon the land and property included in the project, as hereinafter identified, in an amount not to exceed $1,576,100.00:
* * * * *

“3. There shall be delivered, at closing, in form satisfactory to the Commissioner:

* * * * -*
“H. Your certificate, as mortgagee, on FHA Form No. 2434, containing the information required by said certificate and itemizing the chax*ges made by you in connection with the mortgage transaction (Rules, Section 232.2) and evidencing the collection by you or your nominee from the mortgagor of the following sums to be applied to the following items (Rules, Section 232.19) :
“1. Deposit to meet cost of equipping and renting project subsequent to completion and to be applied to taxes, mortgage insurance premiums, and hazard insurance pi’emiums accruing subsequent to. closing, and not included in the proceeds of the mortgage, $31,-522.00.
“2. Funds (if any) requix'ed over and above mortgage proceeds, for completion of the project, $451,012.80.
“The said sum represents the difference between the Commissioner’s estimate of the total cash required for carrying charges, financing and for construction of the project, including Builder’s and/or Sponsor’s Profit and Risk and Architect’s fees, and the maximum amount of the mortgage agreed to be insured, as aforesaid. The said fund may be reduced by so much of said fees, up to a maximum of $151,299.00, as the closing documents show are not to be paid for in cash.
“3. Escrow Deposit (if any) to cover off-site utilities and streets, $63,538.00.”

On October 19, 1959, Zook and Kennedy Park, Inc., entered into a building loan agreement whereby Zook agreed to loan the sum of $1,576,100.00 to Kennedy Park, Inc.

[803]*803The initial closing for the Kennedy Park project was held on November 13, 1959. On that date, Zook, as required by paragraph H of the Commitment, presented a completed Form No. 2434 to FHA. While Form 2434 was officially submitted on November 13, 1959, it is evident from the testimony of Mr. Hack-man that the FHA had received the information contained therein several days prior to November 13. Form 2434 (Court’s Exhibit 0), as prepared by Zook, reads in part as follows:

“We hand you herewith a check for Seven Thousand Eight Hundred Eighty and 50/100 Dollars covering the first mortgage insurance premium, together with the other items called for in your Commitment dated June 11, 1959, and in any extensions or amendments thereof, and we certify that all the conditions thereof have been fulfilled to date:
•Jfr * # * *
“8. The mortgagor has deposited with us or in a depository satisfactory to us and subject to our control, the following sums required by your Commitment: (Cheek applicable paragraphs.)
“X Funds required, if any, over the proceeds of the mortgage, to complete the project, which funds will be used before any mortgage money is advanced, in the amount of $ NONE.
“In lieu of cash, the mortgagor will supply services, or cause the same to be supplied, within the limitations permitted by your Commitment.
“Escrow deposit guaranteeing the completion of off-site utilities and streets in the amount of $-.”
■**•**•*

To understand the above-quoted portions of Form 2434, it is necessary to review certain events which transpired prior to the initial closing. In May of 1959, the FHA, after analyzing the proposed project, estimated that the construction contract for Kennedy Park would require the expenditure of $1,770,-433.00 (Exhibit H). After this estimation had been made, and before the initial closing, Kennedy Park, Inc., entered into a lump sum construction contract in the amount of $1,350,255.00 (Exhibit D), which was substantially lower than FHA’s estimate (namely, $420,178.00). According to the testimony of Mr. Hackman, this was an extremely unusual circumstance:

“Now I can think of no occasion where we had a contract that was to any great extent lower than our estimate of cost. We have a great deal of experience in cost estimation, and virtually any case that we had insured heretofore and from this date forward was there a contract that was for amount less than what our estimate had been.” (Tr. 245-246.)

As a result of the unusually low contract price, the total cash required for the construction contract, the architect’s fees, and the various sums known as “carrying charges” was $407,371.00 less than the amount originally estimated by the FHA (See Exhibit H).

The FHA originally estimated that the total cash required for the construction contract, the architect’s fees, and the carrying charges would exceed the amount of the mortgage proceeds by $327,506.80.

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Bluebook (online)
237 F. Supp. 800, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jay-f-zook-inc-v-brownstein-ohnd-1965.