Lehrberg v. Felopulos

248 N.E.2d 648, 356 Mass. 148, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 679
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 5, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 248 N.E.2d 648 (Lehrberg v. Felopulos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lehrberg v. Felopulos, 248 N.E.2d 648, 356 Mass. 148, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 679 (Mass. 1969).

Opinion

Whittemore, J.

A majority of the limited partners in Ridgeville Associates (Ridgeville) brought this class suit to determine the validity of a second mortgage of partnership real estate given on September 30, 1964, by the defendant general partners, Murray R. Fine, J. Peter Felopulos, and Richard W. Lubart, to the defendant Maurice Gordon and to determine the liability of the general partners to the plaintiffs or the partnership as a result of the execution of the mortgage. All the parties other than Fine 1 have appealed from the final decree in the Superior Court that ruled the mortgage null and void, settled accounts between the parties and fixed and ordered paid the legal fees of the plaintiffs’ attorneys. The decree also ordered a receivership of the mortgaged properties as the sole assets of the partnership, the sale of the properties and the distribution of the proceeds.

The judge made a report of material facts. The evidence is not reported.

The assets of the partnership were five apartment houses located in Cambridge and Somerville. The properties were subject to first mortgages totaling about $600,000. Fine had owned these properties in 1962. He conceived of forming the partnership, and the plan for sale of the properties to it for $300,000. He induced Lubart and Felopulos to become general partners with him. The $300,000 capital was to be raised by selling $285,000 in limited partnership shares and by Fine’s contributing on behalf of himself and the other general partners “$15,000 worth of equity in the properties.” Lubart raised approximately $120,000 by selling limited shares with a face value of $126,500. The titles to the properties were transferred by Fine to the partnership in September, 1962. Fine received unsubscribed limited partner- *150 sMp shares with a face value of $158,500. According to the final decree the then outstanding limited partnership shares represented an initial investment of $185,500. The number of shares outstanding is not stated.

The partnership agreement recited that upon taking title to the properties, the partnership would enter into a net lease with Fine leasing to him the properties for a term of twenty-one years “at an annual fixed net rental of $30,000 and such additional rental as is necessary to pay the interest and amortization under the aforesaid mortgages . . . . ”

The lease to Fine was given as the agreement required. Under it he was to pay all expenses including taxes, repairs, capital improvements and interest on and amortization of the first mortgages. Fine and Lubart (but not the limited partners) knew that the lease was not a profitable one to Fine and that the performance of the lease would depend on Fine’s “personal affluence.”

Early in 1964 Fine proposed to Lubart that Ridgeville sell the properties back to him. Although Lubart did not at first agree, by June or July he became convinced that “there was a real danger that Fine would not be able to meet the monthly lease payments and that it would be in the best interest of the limited partners if the properties were to be sold, the proceeds used to pay back the limited partners, and the partnership dissolved.”

Fine prepared a brochure offering the properties for not less than $301,000 and stating that he was making a “tip over” bid of $300,000. The sale was advertised. No bid other than Fine’s was received and that bid was accepted.

Shortly before August 31, 1964, Fine applied to Gordon for a mortgage loan in order to go through with the purchase of the properties. Gordon examined the brochure and the properties and agreed to give Fine a loan of $260,000 for a period of three years at six per cent a year interest. This was subject to a finance charge such that the principal of the note was to be $311,000.

Gordon’s attorneys refused to accept the title from Fine inasmuch as he was a general partner who would have *151 bought all the partnership assets without disclosure to the limited partners. Although the general partners had the power of sale the partnership agreement stated the intention of the general partners not to exercise the power without the consent of sixty-five per cent of the limited partners. The attorneys felt that in any event consent of all limited partners might be required. See G. L. c. 109, § 9 (1) (b).

The attorneys said that they would approve the mortgage if it was given by Ridgeville before any deed from Ridgeville to Fine was recorded. This proposed arrangement was acceptable to Fine. “It was understood by all present that the proposed loan to Ridgeville and the mortgage . . . [[were] all part of a transaction involving the subsequent sale of the properties by Ridgeville to Fine.” Gordon was told of the change and that the deed to Fine would be recorded after the mortgage.

From August 31, 1964, Gordon’s attorneys were aware that Fine was a general partner of Ridgeville and that the loan was to permit him to purchase substantially all of Ridgeville’s assets. One of Gordon’s attorneys was present when the bids were opened and was aware of the results.

Gordon and his attorneys knew of the terms of the lease from Ridgeville to Fine. On September 29, 1964, Fine told Felopuios and Lubart of the proposal that the general partners give the note and mortgage. Lubart objected. A meeting was called by Fine at Gordon’s office on September 30, 1964, at which Fine told the other two that the purpose of the meeting was to consummate the entire transaction. Lubart objected that the general partners should not be liable on the note as it was in substance a loan to Fine. To meet the objection Gordon gave Lubart and Felopuios a written agreement that they would not be personally liable on the mortgage note. Fine assigned to Ridgeville his loan agreement with Gordon. The general partners signed a termination of Fine’s lease as required by the loan agreement. Gordon, his attorneys, and the general partners knew that this “released Fine from a substantial financial obligation . . . that the partnership was being *152 deprived of a valuable asset.” The general partners executed a mortgage note for $311,000 and a mortgage securing the note. Fine and his wife indorsed the note.

The title examination by Gordon’s attorneys had shown encumbrances on the properties as follows:

At the September 30 meeting the general partners, “at the direction and insistence” of Gordon’s attorneys, indorsed a series of checks drawn by Gordon and payable to Ridgeville. These totaled $21,333.13 (compare total above of $21,333.3$) and were used to pay off the municipal liens and the first mortgage arrears. A check for $650 to pay the .attorneys for their services was also indorsed by the several partners.

. Gordon’s attorneys and the general partners knew that the instruments and the checks executed on September 30 were “part of a transaction for the sale of the properties by Ridgeville to Fine, and that the proceeds of the mortgage represented part of the purchase price.”

On October 1, 1964, Gordon’s attorneys recorded the termination of the lease and the mortgage. They had, in the meantime, learned of other record encumbrances, that is:

Attachment of real estate under action

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386 N.E.2d 783 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 N.E.2d 648, 356 Mass. 148, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehrberg-v-felopulos-mass-1969.