Penn Gardens Section Two v. Melnick

259 A.2d 520, 256 Md. 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1970
Docket[No. 18, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 259 A.2d 520 (Penn Gardens Section Two v. Melnick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn Gardens Section Two v. Melnick, 259 A.2d 520, 256 Md. 72 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

Singlet, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case presents a novel question: can the transferee of property from a lessor-mortgagor which had assigned its lease as additional security for the performance of the covenants of a mortgage on the leased property recover damages from lessees of the property on the theory that their failure to perform the lease covenants occasioned a foreclosure of the mortgage and the loss of the transferee’s reversionary interest in the property? Since we propose, under the facts before us, to answer this question in the negative, we do not reach a second question relating to the measure of damages.

The facts can be more readily understood if the several parties in interest are identified :

The Penn Gardens Apartments or the Apartments: A portion of an apartment project located in Prince George’s County, Maryland, containing 323 units.

The Penn Gardens Partnership or the Partnership: Penn Gardens Section Two, a limited partnership, the *74 plaintiff below and appellant here, and owner of the Penn Gardens Apartments.

The Melnick Group: Daniel Melnick, Melvin A. Robinson, Nick Basiliko and Jerry Wolman, together with their wives, who were the defendants below and are the appellees here, the lessees of the Apartments.

T.I.A.A.: Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association, holder of the first mortgage 1 on the Apartments.

A.I.C.: A.I.C. Financial Corporation, holder of the second mortgage 2 of $500,000 on the Apartments.

The Penn Gardens Corporation or the Corporation: Penn Section Two, Inc., a Maryland corporation, which as Penn Gardens Partnership’s immediate predecessor in title, mortgaged the Apartments to A.I.C., leased the Apartments to the Melnick Group, and assigned the lease to A.I.C.

In May, 1964, the Melnick Group, the owners of the Penn Gardens Apartments, sold the Apartments to the Penn Gardens Corporation for $650,000, subject to an existing first mortgage held by T.I.A.A. on which there was an unpaid balance of $2,474,500. In order to finance the portion of the purchase price payable in cash, the Corporation borrowed $500,000 from A.I.C., and secured this loan by giving a second mortgage on the Apartments. The mortgage, by its terms, matured at the end of three years, on 11 May 1967. No payments in reduction of principal were required prior to maturity, but interest was to be at the rate of 10% per annum, payable in monthly instalments.

The Corporation then leased the Apartments to the Melnick Group for a term of 10 years, under a net lease, which called for an annual rent of $78,000, together with additional rent of $16,550 per month, the latter being equivalent to the amount of the monthly payments on the T.I.A.A. mortgage and of the payment of all property *75 expenses by the lessees. The Melnick Group also had the right under the lease to repurchase the property at any time after the first year, subject, however, to the T.I.A.A. mortgage, at prices ranging from $840,000 in the second year to $1,040,000 in the tenth year. The lease was immediately assigned by the Corporation to A.I.C. as additional security for its mortgage. The Corporation then transferred whatever interest it had in the Apartments to the Penn Gardens Partnership.

The record makes it clear that from and after the date of the closing, A.I.C. collected the monthly payments of rent and additional rent from the Melnick Group; made the payments of principal and interest on the T.I.A.A. mortgage; deducted the interest on the A.I.C. mortgage, and remitted the balance to the Partnership.

This typical sale and lease-back arrangement appears to have been in some difficulty from about August of 1965 because of delayed payments, indifferent management and lack of maintenance of the Apartments. By early 1967, T.I.A.A. was threatening foreclosure. The A.I.C. mortgage came due on 11 May 1967, and was not paid, although the Partnership had been notified that it would not be renewed. The Melnick Group made the last rent payment in July of 1967; in October of 1967, T.I.A.A., to which rents payable by occupants of the Apartments had been previously assigned, had a receiver appointed to collect those rents. In November or December of 1967 A.I.C. instituted foreclosure proceedings, and purchased the Apartments at the foreclosure sale on 8 January 1968.

On 7 December 1967, when A.I.C.’s foreclosure action was either pending or threatened, the Penn Gardens Partnership sued the Melnick Group in Prince George’s County for arrearages of rent, for additional rent, and for damages occasioned by the Melnick Group’s failure to observe the covenants of the lease, including damage to the Partnership’s equity in the Apartments. 3 Four days *76 later, the Melnick Group entered into an agreement with the Partnership and A.I.C. which permitted reentry by the Partnership as “landlords” and A.I.C. as assignee of the lease from the Penn Gardens Corporation, but reserved whatever rights the Partnership and A.I.C. might have against the Melnick Group.

The Group filed a general issue plea, and specially pleaded as a defense that the Partnership’s claims “are subject to disposition in one or more other pending actions.” This referred to several suits which A.I.C. had brought against the same defendants on virtually the same cause of action in the U. S. District Court for Middle District of Florida. The first of these was filed on the same day the Partnership sued in Prince George’s County, and by the time the Partnership’s suit came on for trial, A.I.C. had settled for $132,000 its claim against the Melnick Group for breach of the covenants of the lease and had given them a release.

The case now comes to us on appeal from an order entered below, dismissing the Partnership’s suit. The thrust of the Partnership’s argument is that even after the assignment of the lease to A.I.C., the Partnership, which had succeeded to the Corporation’s rights as the owner of a reversionary interest following a lease for a term of years, could maintain an action for injury to that interest, although the lease had been assigned by the Corporation to A.I.C., and never by the Corporation to the Partnership. The court below concluded that when the Penn Gardens Corporation assigned to A.I.C. the lease with the Melnick Group, all of the lessor’s rights under the lease had been transferred to A.I.C. and “there was nothing left for the [Partnership] to sue upon.”

The Partnership argues that the assignment of the lease was only an assignment of the rent and of the covenants relating to their collection. As a consequence, it maintains that the existence of the assignment did not *77 deprive the Partnership of its right to recover for damage to the reversion occasioned by the failure of the Mel-nick Group to observe the lease covenants. It was this breach, the Partnership says, which ultimately resulted in the loss of the reversion through foreclosure.

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Bluebook (online)
259 A.2d 520, 256 Md. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-gardens-section-two-v-melnick-md-1970.