Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Citation Mortgage, Ltd. (In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership)

204 B.R. 336, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1719, 1996 WL 764176
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedDecember 30, 1996
Docket19-50217
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 204 B.R. 336 (Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Citation Mortgage, Ltd. (In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Citation Mortgage, Ltd. (In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership), 204 B.R. 336, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1719, 1996 WL 764176 (Conn. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON OBJECTIONS TO CLAIMS

ROBERT L. KRECHEVSKY, Bankruptcy Judge.

ISSUE

Ormond Beach Associates Limited Partnership, the plaintiff, and debtor in possession in this Chapter 11 ease (“Ormond Beach”), objects, by way of an adversary proceeding it filed on November 7, 1994, to two claims filed in its estate by the defendants Citation Mortgage Corp., Citation Mortgage, Ltd. and Citation-Ormond In The Pines, Ltd. (together, “Citation”). Citation seeks (1) $2,016,472.12 for Ormond Beach’s alleged misuse of rental income subject to mortgage and assignment of rents liens, and (2) $13,236,213.14 based upon Ormond Beach’s asserted liability for a mortgage deficiency judgment. The hearing on the objections consumed four trial days after which the parties submitted extensive legal memo-randa.

BACKGROUND

On August 11, 1983, RC of A Retirement Living Ltd., Series III (“RC of A”), a Florida limited partnership, signed a $12,000,000 promissory note, Exh. AD, secured by a recorded construction mortgage deed on property located in Volusia County, Florida (“the 1983 mortgage”) Exh. AE, a recorded collateral assignment of leases and rents, Exh. AF, and a perfected security agreement covering personal property including “all rents and payments in lieu of rents”, Exh. AJ, in favor of Freedom Savings and Loan Association (“Freedom”). RC of A thereafter operated a licensed retirement center on the property (“Retirement Center”). Southmark Corporation (“Southmark”), a publicly-owned Georgia corporation, and then a major syndicator in the nursing home, retirement home and health-care industry of limited partnerships as real estate investment vehicles, guaranteed the Freedom loan in May 1985. Exh. AY. The general partner of RC of A was Retirement Corporation of America Proper *339 ties, Inc., a Florida corporation whose officers were Southmark principals.

RC of A, on or about September 30, 1986, conveyed the Retirement Center to Ormond Beach, a Delaware limited partnership. Exh. 7. On the same date, Ormond Beach purchased from a different seller, RC of A Healthcare, Ltd., Series I, an adjacent parcel on which that seller operated a licensed nursing center (the “Nursing Center”). Id. Southmark had organized Ormond Beach with Equity Associates Ltd. (“Equity”), a Texas limited partnership, as Ormond Beach’s general partner, and had marketed Ormond Beach’s limited partnership interests through a nationwide network of dealers/brokers. See Ormond Beach Associates Limited Partnership Private Placement Memorandum, Exh. 1. Southmark Investment Group, Inc. became the general partner of Equity on June 22, 1989. Exh. AV. Southmark did not hold an ownership interest either in Ormond Beach or in Equity. The management of the Retirement Center and the Nursing Center, both prior to and after the sale (until July 1990), was in the hands of Retirement Corporation of America, Inc. a Southmark subsidiary. Exh. 1.

As part consideration for both purchases, Ormond Beach, on September 30, 1986, executed a $17,985,000 promissory note in favor of the two sellers, Exh. BN, secured by a wrap-around mortgage on both parcels (“the 1986 mortgage”). Exh. BO. The mortgagees in the 1986 mortgage agreed to pay all installments of principal and interest on existing prior mortgages encumbering the two parcels. The parties did not record the deeds of conveyance to Ormond Beach, the wrap-around mortgage or any other documents indicating a transfer had occurred.

At some point prior to July 14, 1989, Southmark became the assignee of the 1986 mortgage, and upon Freedom’s insolvency, the Resolution Trust Corporation (“the RTC”) became Freedom’s receiver. On July 14, 1989, Southmark filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in Atlanta, Georgia, and its bankruptcy estate was subsequently transferred to a Dallas, Texas bankruptcy court. Neither Ormond Beach nor any of the other limited partnerships syndicated by Southmark were debtors in the Southmark bankruptcy proceeding. Thompson & Knight, a Dallas, Texas law firm, represented Southmark and Levin, Roth & Kasner, a Houston, Texas law firm represented many of the limited partnerships originally syndicated by Southmark, including Ormond Beach, in their claims against Southmark. Ormond Beach claimed to be a creditor of Southmark and filed two unsecured proofs of claim totaling $3,089,952. Exhs. 6JfA, B.

Immediately following Southmark’s bankruptcy filing, Southmark stopped making payments on the 1983 mortgage to the RTC, and Ormond Beach stopped making its payments due Southmark under the 1986 mortgage. On November 17, 1989, the RTC, as Freedom’s receiver, filed a “Motion For Relief From Automatic Stay, Request For Adequate Protection and Sequestration and An Accounting of Rents And Proceeds” (“Re-liei/Stay Motion”) against Southmark in its bankruptcy case concerning the 1983 mortgage. Exh. 9. Ormond Beach was neither a party to nor served with this motion directly or through its attorneys.

The ReliefrStay Motion recited that Freedom made a mortgage loan in the original principal amount of $12,000,000 to RC of A secured by the Retirement Center and the rents, proceeds and profits thereof; that the loan was in default and the RTC was Freedom’s receiver; that Southmark was a guarantor of the loan; that the RTC wished to enforce its contractual rights with respect to its collateral; that the rent collection at the Retirement Center is “performed by South-mark controlled subsidiaries, but which companies are not debtors before this Court”; that “[pjursuant to Section 363(c)(4) of the Bankruptcy Code, Southmark is required to segregate and account for any cash in its possession, custody or control ... [and] RTC ... does not consent to Southmark’s or its related corporations’ use of such cash collateral”; that “RTC hereby demands that the rents and proceeds received or to be received from the sale or use of any properties securing the RTC/Freedom Claims be paid directly to RTC.... ” Id. In its prayer for relief, the RTC requested (1) an order modifying *340 the automatic stay so that the RTC may foreclose; (2) in the alternative, that the court require Southmark to provide adequate protection; (3) that the court issue an order preventing Southmark from using rents and requiring delivery to RTC of rents received by Southmark; (4) that the court order an accounting of cash received and “that South-mark and its designated entities be required to sequester such cash ... which has been or might be received by Southmark’s estate.” Id.

The Texas bankruptcy court, on February 16, 1990, entered an agreed order jointly submitted by the Southmark and RTC attorneys on the ReliefrStay Motion. Exh. 10. This order provided that Southmark, by January 29, 1990, shall establish an escrow account for all net operating income it received from the Retirement Center for the period starting July 14, 1989 “provided, however,

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Related

Schupper v. People
157 P.3d 516 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2007)
Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. v. Citation Mortg., Ltd.
835 So. 2d 292 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2002)
In Re: Ormond Beach Associates Limited Partnership
184 F.3d 143 (Second Circuit, 1999)
In Re Ormond Beach Associates Ltd. Partnership
212 B.R. 31 (D. Connecticut, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
204 B.R. 336, 1996 Bankr. LEXIS 1719, 1996 WL 764176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ormond-beach-associates-ltd-partnership-v-citation-mortgage-ltd-in-re-ctb-1996.