Public Serv. Co. of Colo. v. Chase Manhattan Bank

577 F. Supp. 92, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11018
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 8, 1983
Docket78 Civ. 4697 (JEL)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 577 F. Supp. 92 (Public Serv. Co. of Colo. v. Chase Manhattan Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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
Public Serv. Co. of Colo. v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 577 F. Supp. 92, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11018 (S.D.N.Y. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

LUMBARD, Circuit Judge: *

Plaintiff, the Public Service Company of Colorado (PSCC), brought this diversity action against The Chase Manhattan Bank in 1978. PSCC charges that Chase breached its fiduciary obligations as trustee for PSCC’s pension fund — that Chase negligently monitored a mortgage investment it had made on behalf of PSCC’ and sixteen other pension funds. Consequently, Chase was unable to bring an overall and know *95 ledgeable judgment to the decision whether and how to sell the loan at a time when Chase knew or should have known the loan had become an imprudent trust investment. The investment eventually declined to a fraction of its original worth. Plaintiff claims damages in excess of $300,000.

This Court conducted a seven-day bench trial ending on December 1, 1982. For the reasons stated below, the Court finds Chase liable for PSCC’s loss.

Chase failed to respond in any way to early indications that the condition of the mortgaged property was deteriorating. In general, it inspected the property much too infrequently and collected superficial reports from such inspections as it conducted. From the late sixties on, the property, a large apartment complex, suffered poor maintenance. Conditions deteriorated steadily, culminating in near total uninhabitability by the time of trial. By no later than late 1973, Chase could no longer count on the continued viability of the complex under its then current debt structure, and the unsuitability of the mortgage as a trust investment should have been apparent. However, Chase failed to recognize the situation because of its negligence in monitoring the loan. Consequently, between 1973 and 1975, Chase failed to take reasonable steps to sell the loan at a price reflecting the deteriorated condition of the underlying security. Had Chase taken reasonable steps, it would have sold the loan by mid-1975 at a twenty percent discount. Accordingly, Chase is surcharged in the amount for which the loan could have been sold, plus interest, with appropriate set-offs for subsequent payments of principal and interest.

I. FACTS

PSCC appointed Chase trustee of its pension fund by a July 1, 1952 agreement, which gave Chase sole power to make investments for the fund. PSCC retained no right to control the making, retention or disposal of trust investments. On January 29, 1964, Chase made the $4.7 million Glassmanor loan as trustee for 17 pension funds and gave PSCC a %7ths share, or $300,000. The loan was approved by Chase’s Real Estate and Mortgage Loan Committee and the Pension Trust Investment Committee, 1 composed of individuals experienced in trust management. The mortgage was payable over 15 years, with a maturity balance of $2.5 million, commonly called a “balloon balance.” It was secured by the Glassmanor apartments, a then thirteen year old complex consisting of approximately thirty buildings and 771 apartment units, conveniently located near downtown Washington, D.C., in Prince Georges County, Maryland. At the time the loan was made, an independent appraiser found the apartments in generally good condition and valued them at $6.8 million, providing a 69% loan to value ratio. Income was more than adequate to pay debt service.

Both the Real Estate Department and the Trust Committee were responsible for managing the Glassmanor investment. Under Chase’s policies, the Real Estate Department was responsible for inspecting the complex every eighteen months and for reappraising it every three years. In accordance with the regulations of the Comptroller of Currency, Chase also required the Trust Committee to review the mortgage yearly or within fourteen months of the last review. 2 Although review sessions *96 were attended by a member of the Real Estate Department, the Trust Committee relied almost entirely on the information contained in the “mortgage review sheets” prepared by the Real Estate Department. The committee did not review the underlying inspection and reappraisal reports on which the review sheets were based.

Between 1967 and 1970 Chase received indications that the property was being poorly maintained, was subject to vandalism and was in need of remodeling. In January, 1967, Harold Nyhus, who had appraised the property for Chase in 1963, reported that he had learned during an October 1966 fire inspection that Glassmanor suffered over one hundred vacancies. Nyhus visited the apartments again in January, 1967, and found that there were 120 empty apartments, for a vacancy rate of 15.5%. He reported that the manager claimed to have advised the owner that increased vacancy might be avoided by remodeling the units in one building where the majority of the vacancies occurred.

By letter dated January 16, 1967, the owner requested a two month moratorium to finance a $50,000 pilot remodeling project in one of the buildings with the poorest occupancy. The owner noted that remodeling was necessary to make the somewhat obsolete apartments competitive with new apartments in the area. In addition to increasing occupancy, remodeling would permit rent increases which would provide a gain in income of $7,500 per year for each remodeled building. If the project were successful, the owner proposed to convert approximately “20 of the ... buildings in the same manner.” Total cost of remodeling twenty buildings would have been about $1 million.

By letter dated January 24,1967, Chase’s Second Vice President, Norman Caridi, informed the owner that Chase was aware of the conditions the owner had reported. Caridi wrote, however, that after reviewing the request personally and discussing it with various members of the committee, “we cannot see how it would be possible for us to provide the necessary equity money required for the rehabilitation of the pilot building, for to do so would presume that similar requests would be made with respect to the other apartments.” Chase inspectors noted some progress in 1968 and 1969; however, it appears that three-fourths of the apartments were never remodeled. In 1969 when the property was sold to the Wisconsin Real Estate Investment Trust (WREIT), the new owner proposed to spend $1 million upgrading the complex. It does not appear that any significant upgrading ever occurred. 3

In addition to receiving indications in the late sixties that the property was in need of modernization, Chase was alerted to a vandalism problem. In 1969, after viewing repairs to a fire damaged storage bin, an inspector recommended that Chase ask the owner to install adequate lighting in the area. The owner informed Chase that this would not be possible because the property was plagued by an “overbearing amount of vandalism.” The owner noted that at one time it had installed better lighting, “only to have it broken, torn out and generally dismantled the following morning.” Chase failed to respond. It made no effort to determine whether the owner was taking care of the problem. 4

Chase was also alerted to the fact that the complex was not being properly maintained. Chase’s 1968 inspection report noted that several public halls had been paint

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Bluebook (online)
577 F. Supp. 92, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-serv-co-of-colo-v-chase-manhattan-bank-nysd-1983.