Kennedy Inn Associates v. Perab Realty Corp. (In Re Kennedy Inn Associates)

221 B.R. 704, 40 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 323, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 705, 1998 WL 318234
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 12, 1998
Docket18-13849
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 221 B.R. 704 (Kennedy Inn Associates v. Perab Realty Corp. (In Re Kennedy Inn Associates)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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
Kennedy Inn Associates v. Perab Realty Corp. (In Re Kennedy Inn Associates), 221 B.R. 704, 40 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 323, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 705, 1998 WL 318234 (N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

TINA L. BROZMAN, Chief Judge.

At issue is whether the reorganized debt- or, Kennedy Inn Associates, or instead Perab Realty Co. (“Perab”) is entitled to possession of certain restaurant facilities located in a former transient hotel operated by the debt- or. Although the debtor operated not only the hotel but the restaurant as well, Perab claims that the debtor did so in violation of Perab’s interest. Both parties seek summary judgment.

I.

The underlying documents have been stipulated to be authentic and admissible. Except where noted the facts are undisputed. Fourteen years ago, New Riviera Motel Company leased the Kennedy Inn Hotel and restaurant facilities to Rockaway of New York (“Rockaway”) pursuant to a “ground lease” which was recorded in Queens County. Rockaway later subleased the bar, restaurant, coffee shop and banquet rooms (collectively, the “Restaurant”) to Kahrahb Restaurants, Inc. (“Kahrahb”) for twenty years. Rockaway subsequently assigned its interest in the ground lease to the debtor pursuant to a lease modification agreement and an assignment and assumption agreement, both of which were recorded in Queens County.

The following year, Kahrahb assigned its sublease of the Restaurant to Perab. Perab. at just about the same time, sub-subleased the Restaurant to the debtor for a five-year term expiring in 1996. Neither the assignment from Kahrahb to Perab nor the sub-sublease from Perab to the debtor was recorded. The sub-sublease granted the debt- or an option to purchase Perab’s interest in the sublease for the sum of $600,000.

When the debtor attempted to exercise the option to purchase Perab’s interest, it rejected the debtor’s attempt, delivering a three day notice of termination of the sub-sublease. This led to litigation which culminated in the drafting of a settlement agreement between the parties pursuant to which they agreed (i) that the debtor had exercised the purchase option validly and that a closing should occur *707 immediately at an enhanced purchase price of $660,000, of which $20,000 was to be paid at closing (in addition to other closing costs); (ii) the debtor would enter into a consulting agreement with Developers Advisory Corp. (“Developers”), an entity which is 100% controlled by the principal of Perab; (iii) the parties would discontinue the state court litigation: and (iv) they would exchange general releases which expressly excluded the debt- or’s obligations under a note and security agreement and Perab’s covenants and warranties in the assignment of sublease to the debtor.

The settlement agreement further provided for the execution of a note from the debtor to Perab together with a security agreement. The security agreement required three documents to be pledged as collateral to secure the balance of the purchase price and held in escrow: (i) the sublease from Rockaway to Kahrahb, (ii) an assignment of the sublease by Perab and assumption of that sublease by the debtor to be executed at the closing, and (iii) a collateral lease assignment in blank signed by the debtor (collectively, items numbered i, ii, and iii are designated the “Collateral Documents”). The law firm of Dahan & Nowiek, acting as escrow agent, would hold the Collateral Documents and, in the event of default, was to deliver the Collateral Documents to Perab so that Perab could conduct a public auction sale. The proceeds of such a sale were to be disbursed to satisfy the sale expenses and the debt to Perab, with any remaining balance being turned over to the debtor. In the “Remedies on Default” section of the security agreement, the parties agreed to limit Perab’s remedy to the sale of collateral and expressly deleted any right by Perab to repossess or retain the collateral. Security Agreement, dated July 18, 1996, Section 2F (“Upon any default of the Debtor, ... the Secured Party shall have all the rights, remedies and privileges with respect to sale of the collateral____”). At the closing, the debtor also executed and delivered a UCC-1 financing statement that Perab’s counsel requested and prepared. It is undisputed that neither the security agreement nor the financing statement was recorded. Perab executed New York State and City transfer tax returns and delivered them to the debtor, which returns indicated that Per-ab was the grantor with respect to a conveyance to the debtor of a leasehold interest. The transfer taxes of approximately $20,000 were paid out of the closing proceeds.

This is not suggest that all went smoothly at the closing. A wire transfer of the initial $200,000 payment required from the debtor could not be confirmed. To avoid delaying or rescheduling the closing, Perab’s counsel drafted an escrow agreement which he and Dahan & Nowiek, the escrow agent, signed providing that:

The undersigned [Perab’s counsel] will hold three checks totaling $200,000 until notified by Dahan & Nowiek that wired funds have been received in NYC. Dahan & Nowiek will hold all papers in escrow until checks are released by Dahan & Nowiek.

The funds to cover the checks arrived in the account later that day.

The facts just recited are undisputed. The parties diverge, however, about what transpired at the closing. The debtor contends that Perab delivered the Collateral Documents to the debtor thereby conveying Per-ab’s interest in the sublease to the debtor. In return, as required by the security agreement, the debtor says, it pledged the Collateral Documents as collateral and delivered them into escrow. In support of its interpretation, the debtor submits an affidavit of M. Marc Dahan, the assistant general secretary of the debtor’s general partner, Kennedy Management Corp., and a partner in Dahan & Nowiek, whose firm was the debtor’s pre-petition counsel as well as the escrow agent for the transaction. Perab, on the other hand, denies that it delivered the Collateral Documents to the debtor, contending instead that it intended to deliver the Collateral Documents directly into escrow without conveying any interest to the debtor. Perab further intended, it claims, to convey its interest in the sublease only upon full payment of the note by the debtor. This alternative version of Perab’s intent comes from the affidavit of Aaron Gelbwaks, Perab’s counsel, not from Perab itself.

*708 Dahan & Nowick ceased rendering services to the debtor shortly after the closing. In January 1997, the debtor filed a chapter 11 petition, represented by new counsel. Although M. Marc Dahan continued as assistant general secretary to the debtor’s general partner, his law firm did not render services to the debtor postpetition. Indeed, several months after the bankruptcy proceedings were commenced, Dahan & Nowick received a waiver from the debtor authorizing the firm to represent a party interested in purchasing the ground lease for the debtor’s premises. At the same time. Dahan resigned as assistant general secretary. Da-han & Nowick continues to hold the Collateral Documents in escrow.

The chapter 11 proceedings, which were filed to assist the debtor to change from a transient hotel to a full-service franchise hotel, moved swiftly.

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Bluebook (online)
221 B.R. 704, 40 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 323, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 705, 1998 WL 318234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-inn-associates-v-perab-realty-corp-in-re-kennedy-inn-associates-nysb-1998.