Realty International Associates, Inc. v. Capital Fund Securities, Ltd.

626 F. App'x 753
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 2015
Docket14-2189
StatusUnpublished

This text of 626 F. App'x 753 (Realty International Associates, Inc. v. Capital Fund Securities, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Realty International Associates, Inc. v. Capital Fund Securities, Ltd., 626 F. App'x 753 (10th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

PAUL J. KELLY, JR., Circuit Judge.

Realty Investment Associates, Inc. (Realty) brought this action alleging that Cap *755 ital Fund Securities, Limited (CFS) breached a participation agreement relating to wraparound notes on several apartment projects in New Mexico. Realty claimed CFS failed to fulfill a contractual obligation to approve excess refinancing of the projects’ primary mortgages, which would have generated funds for distribution to note participants, including Realty. The district court granted summary judgment for CFS, holding that it had not breached the agreement. Realty now appeals.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2003, CFS, Realty, and others executed a participation agreement to resolve a dispute over ownership of the wraparound notes, which have unrecorded liens secondary to primary mortgages on a number of apartment projects. The agreement recognizes CFS as the holder of the notes, but grants participation rights to Realty. These rights involve a share in the proceeds from refinancing, sale, or cash flow of the projects in proportion to Realty’s ownership interest in the notes. The agreement contemplated immediate refinancing of the existing primary mortgages on the projects, which was accomplished in 2004 with half of the refinancing proceeds in excess of the existing mortgage balances distributed to the note participants. The new mortgages were set to mature in 2011. “Estoppel letters,” drafted by the partnership that owned the projects and signed by all note participants, stated that on or before 2011 the participants would either modify the terms of the new mortgages to extend their maturity dates or pay them off through refinancing. If the note participants failed to act, the partnership was to do so in their stead. 1 All note participants retained final signatory approval with respect to negotiations over mortgage refinancing.

When the maturity dates for some of the mortgages became imminent, Realty and CFS disagreed on what course to take. Realty wanted to refinance for amounts substantially exceeding the mortgage balances in order to obtain a share of the excess proceeds. CFS wanted simply to extend the maturity date for the existing balances at lower interest rates, and sent a letter to the mortgage lender, copying the partnership owning the projects, expressing that position. Ultimately, the mortgages were refinanced by the partnership without excess proceeds for distribution to the note participants.

Realty filed suit claiming that CFS’ refusal to refinance for amounts in excess of current balances (amounts acceptable to the mortgage lender) breached the participation agreement and caused Realty to lose out on its share of the forgone excess proceeds. 2 Realty alleged that the purpose of the participation agreement was to generate proceeds through excess mortgage refinancing; that the agreement prohibited any note participant from rejecting such refinancing except on the ground that *756 it entailed objectionable loan-to-value ratios; and that no objection to the relevant loan-to-value ratios had been made by CFS or any other note participant. CFS moved for summary judgment on the basis that it had no duty under the agreement to accept the excess refinancing sought by Realty. The district court agreed with CFS and entered judgment in its favor.

II. PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT

The relevant provisions of the participation agreement can be grouped into four categories. The first consists of provisions characterizing the parties’ legal interests in the notes, which specify that CFS is the holder of the notes and the other parties, including Realty, have an interest in the notes entitling them to participation in revenue derived therefrom. ApltApp. at 22 (Recital A), 24 (para. 2).

The second category consists of provisions generally indicating that mortgage refinancing is to be done for the benefit of both CFS and participants such as Realty:

Para. 4(d): “[Refinancing of the existing mortgages shall be undertaken for the benefit of the holder of the Notes and to the extent permitted by the lender, the new loans shall be made for, on behalf of, or in the name of the holder of the Notes.”
Recital D: “[The parties] desire to have the mortgage loans on the apartment projects refinanced for the benefit of the Wrap Loan Lenders (as defined below [to include all participants in the agreement]).”

Id. at 22, 25; see also id. at 24 (Recital L).

The third category consists of provisions specifying how the parties share in revenue dei-ived from the notes, including excess proceeds from refinancing of the primary mortgages. These establish that the parties share in proportion to their interests in the notes. See id. at 24 (Recital K and para. 2), 26 (para. 8).

The fourth category relates to the parties’ rights with respect to negotiation of mortgage refinancing. It consists of a broad provision granting the parties a right of final approval over refinancing negotiations and a specific provision dealing with agreement on particular loan-to-value ratios:

Para. 5: This paragraph designates a representative for negotiating “for the purpose of having the first mortgages on the [projects] refinanced,” but provides that “all distribution participants have final signatory approval of such negotiations.”
Para. 4(b): “The existing mortgages shall be replaced with new mortgages at a loan to value, as mutually agreed by the participants, as the value is determined by a current appraisal.”

Id. at 25-26.

Finally, what the agreement does not say is also significant. There are no provisions stating that (1) its purpose is to obtain excess refinancing whenever possible to maximize revenue from this source; or that (2) notwithstanding the right of final approval in paragraph 5 and the requirement of mutual agreement as to loan to value in paragraph 4(b), parties must consent to excess refinancing whenever it is available unless a specific objection is raised on loan-to-value grounds.

III. ANALYSIS

The district court’s decision does not address, or barely touches on, several contentions pressed by each side on appeal. This is clearly a consequence of the gradually developing nature of the positions taken by both parties. CFS argues that we should not consider points now argued by Realty that were not included in its re *757 sponse to CFS’ motion for summary judgment. But some of these points address arguments CFS itself failed to include in that motion. Given these circumstances, and the fact that our review is de novo, see In re Universal Serv. Fund Tel. Billing Practice Litig., 619 F.3d 1188

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Bluebook (online)
626 F. App'x 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/realty-international-associates-inc-v-capital-fund-securities-ltd-ca10-2015.