Schachter ex rel. Estate Lefrak v. Lefrak (In re Lefrak)

215 B.R. 930, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 248, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1340
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 21, 1998
DocketBankruptcy No. 96 B 43478(SMB); Adversary No. 96/9393A
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 B.R. 930 (Schachter ex rel. Estate Lefrak v. Lefrak (In re Lefrak)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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
Schachter ex rel. Estate Lefrak v. Lefrak (In re Lefrak), 215 B.R. 930, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 248, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1340 (N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

POST-TRIAL MEMORANDUM DECISION

STUART M. BERNSTEIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The chapter 7 trustee commenced this adversary proceeding to recover title to the shares and proprietary lease pertaining to a cooperative apartment. The debtor originally acquired the shares and lease in his own name. He contends that he transferred a 50% interest to his wife in 1984 (the “1984 Transfer”), and the remaining 50% interest in 1994 (the “1994 Transfer”). The trustee contends that the purported transfers were never completed, but if they were, they are avoidable.

At the conclusion of the September 9,1997 trial, I ruled that the 1994 Transfer was ineffective, and the debtor’s wife had failed to prove a basis for imposing a constructive trust in her favor. (See Trial Transcript (“Tr ”) 105-06.) I now conclude that the 1984 Transfer was also ineffective. Accordingly, the debtor owned the entire interest in the cooperative apartment on the petition date, and the trustee may sell this interest pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 363.

BACKGROUND

The defendants, Joseph S. Lefrak (“Joseph”), an attorney, and Susan Lefrak (“Susan”) married in September 1952, (Tr. 27), and moved into apartment 14D at 983 Park Avenue (“Apartment”) in Manhattan in 1976. (Id. at 28.) In 1982, the budding converted to cooperative ownership, and the defendant 983 Tenants Corp. (the “Corporation”) became the owner. Joseph “bought” the Apartment. He received a certificate evidencing his ownership of 919 shares in the Corporation (Plaintiffs Exhibit (“PX”) C), and entered into a proprietary lease with the Corporation to occupy the Apartment.1 Joseph financed his purchase, in part, with a loan from Dime Savings Bank (“Dime”), pledging his shares and proprietary lease as security for repayment. (Tr. 30.) Thereafter, Dime retained possession of the share certificate. There is no evidence that Susan was liable for repayment of the Dime loan, and as discussed below, there is evidence that she was not.

The 1984 Transfer

In 1984, Joseph decided to give Susan a 50% ownership interest in the Apartment. This involved transferring his 100% interest to himself and Susan as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. Paragraph 16(a)2 of [933]*933the proprietary lease establishes certain formalities as a condition to transfer of the shares and lease. In some cases, it also requires the Corporation’s consent. The assignor must deliver an executed assignment to the Corporation, (¶ 16(a)(i)), the assignee must deliver an executed agreement to the Corporation under which she agrees to assume and be bound by the terms and covenants of the proprietary lease (ie., an acceptance and assumption agreement), (¶ 16(a)(ii)), and the assignor’s shares must be “transferred to the assignee, with proper transfer taxes paid, and stamps affixed.” (¶ 16(a)(iii)). If the transfer.is not between spouses, the parties must also obtain the consent of the Corporation. (¶ 16(a)(v)).

Joseph failed to comply with the terms of the proprietary lease; he confused the separate. requirements of formality and consent. Sometime in 1984, Joseph contacted Dime— who held the share certificate — to obtain its consent to the transfer of the shares. Dime advised Joseph to obtain the consent of the Corporation. On September 17, 1984, Joseph wrote to the president of the Corporation, requesting its consent to the transfer of his shares to himself and Susan jointly. (Defendants Lefraks’ Exhibit (“DX”) 1.) By letter dated October 3, 1984, the Corporation gave its consent, noting, however, that “[pjursuant to Paragraph 16a(v) of the Proprietary Lease it would seem that this consent is superfluous.” (DX 2.) To this point Joseph had not executed an assignment of the lease, and Joseph and Susan had not executed an acceptance and assumption agreement.

Armed with the October 3, 1984 letter, Joseph wrote to Dime requesting Dime’s consent to the transfer of share' ownership to himself and Susan jointly, with right of sur-vivorship. (DX 4.) He enclosed the October 3 letter in addition to the results of a judgment and lien search on Susan and a check covering Dime’s processing fees. Dime wrote back that it was in receipt of the “necessary documentation in order to change title,” and was forwarding the documents to its attorneys, Jackson & Nash. (DX 5.) On December 18, 1984, an associate in Joseph’s law firm wrote to Jackson & Nash. She asked Dime’s counsel (1) to forward any documentation that had to he executed to effectuate the transfer and (2) to call to schedule a closing, if one was necessary. (DX 5.)

Inexplicably, the matter lay dormant for the next three years. There is no evidence that Joseph again communicated with Dime or the Corporation until September 2, 1987. On that day, Joseph wrote to Ms. Meryl Sacks at M.J. Raynes, Inc., evidently the Corporation’s managing agent. (PX D.) He acknowledged that he was the sole owner of the shares, and requested a transfer of the shares from himself to himself and Susan, as joint tenants.

In September 1987, Joseph also wrote to Dime, again requesting permission to add Susan’s name to the share certificate. On September 17, 1987, Dime wrote back, inter alia, “requesting various documents necessary in order to add his wife’s name on the co-op loan.” (DX 7)(Emphasis .added.)3 Dime’s request indicates that Susan was not liable for repayment of the loan. Further, Dime understandably would not consent to. the transfer of its collateral unless Susan became hable for the debt secured by the collateral.

On or about November 10, 1987, and for the first time, Joseph executed an assignment, and both he and Susan executed an acceptance and assumption agreement. An associate with Joseph’s law firm transmitted these and other documents to Dime, (DX 6), [934]*934but the evidence does not establish that anyone ever transferred the assignment or the acceptance and assumption agreement to the Corporation.4 The November 10 letter does not reflect that it transmitted documentation making Susan “liable on the co-op loan,” although a letter from the same associate written on January 11, 1988, states that it did. (DX 7.)

By this time, a new problem arose. Dime apparently misplaced Joseph’s loan file which contained both the stock certificate and the proprietary lease. On January 11, 1988, Joseph’s associate again wrote to Dime, recounting the recent unsuccessful efforts to transfer the shares and the problem of the lost shares and lease. (DX 7.) According to this letter, a Dime officer had advised Joseph’s associate five days earlier that if she could not locate the missing certificate and lease by the end of that day, she would prepare affidavits of lost certificate and lost proprietary lease, “so that we could proceed to obtain new documents to close this transaction.” The letter ended with the request that Dime prepare the affidavits and send them to its counsel so that the parties could schedule a closing and “finalize this transaction.”

The record does not reflect any subsequent communication or activity between Joseph and Dime. The parties never closed their transaction, and Dime never transferred or consented to the transfer of an interest in the shares to Susan.

The 1994 Transfer

In October 1992, the Lefraks separated, Joseph moved out and Susan continued to reside in the Apartment without him. (Tr.

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Related

Towbin v. Towbin
117 A.D.3d 607 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2014)
Carnivale v. Carnivale
25 Misc. 3d 878 (New York Supreme Court, 2009)
Schachter v. Lefrak (In Re Lefrak)
223 B.R. 431 (S.D. New York, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
215 B.R. 930, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 248, 31 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 1340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schachter-ex-rel-estate-lefrak-v-lefrak-in-re-lefrak-nysb-1998.