Shelton Holding Corp. v. 150 East Forty-Eighth Street Corp.

191 N.E. 8, 264 N.Y. 339, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1438
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 191 N.E. 8 (Shelton Holding Corp. v. 150 East Forty-Eighth Street Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelton Holding Corp. v. 150 East Forty-Eighth Street Corp., 191 N.E. 8, 264 N.Y. 339, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1438 (N.Y. 1934).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

In June, 1930, the plaintiff executed and delivered to the defendant 150 East Forty-eighth Street Corporation a lease of a parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon to be erected as provided in the lease, for a term of twenty-one years with an option on thejpart of the lessee to renew for two additional twenty-one-year terms. The lease provided that the lessee should erect upon the land a sixteen-story apartment hotel. “ The building shall be constructed in accordance with the plans prepared by Sugarman and Berger and duly filed with and approved by the Building Department, with such amplification, changes and additions as may be required by Chapter 61A of the Consolidated Laws of New York, as amended, or as may be approved from time to time by the lessor, and shall be of good material and modern construction * * * and shall be equal in construction and in grade of materials and equipment to the San Carlos, situated at 150 East 50th Street, New York City.”

Prior to the execution of the lease the plaintiff had filed plans in the Building Department for the erection of an apartment hotel on its land. These plans, as filed and approved, made no provision for kitchenettes in connection with the hotel apartments, but in the plans for each apartment there was space reserved for closets. We are told that at the time the plans were filed, kitchenettes ” could not have been included lawfully. The ban was removed by new legislation. The parties always contemplated that kitchenettes should be installed *343 when the bar was removed, and, before the construction of the apartment hotel was begun, amended plans were prepared by the architects, Sugarman and Berger, at the request of the lessee. They were approved by the plaintiff lessor and filed in the Building Department. These plans provided for kitchenettes in the spaces marked on the original plans as closets in one hundred and eighty-two apartments. Specifications for the kitchenette equipment were also prepared and approved.

The lease further provided that it should “at all times be subordinate to a mortgage or mortgages upon the demised premises now in existence or hereafter to be placed thereon, the aggregate amount of which shall not exceed the principal sum of $1,125,000. The lessee for itself, its successors and assigns, further covenants and agrees, subject to the foregoing limitations, to execute, acknowledge and deliver in proper and satisfactory form any and all instruments, papers or documents which may be prepared or necessary in the future to render this lease subject and subordinate to any such mortgage or mortgages,” and further that “ the lessee may, solely at its own expense, borrow upon the security of the land hereby leased and the said building, a sum not exceeding $1,125,000.”

It is quite evident that the purpose of these clauses was to provide the lessee with the funds required for the erection of the apartment hotel. At that time the property was subject to a first mortgage of $290,000 and a second mortgage of $60,000. The first mortgage was held by the Continental Mortgage Guaranty Company, and it was thereafter consolidated with a building loan mortgage for $610,000, thus making a single first mortgage for $900,000. The plaintiff joined in the execution of the new mortgage, but “ solely for the purpose of mortgaging the fee of the premises above described,” and it was expressly agreed “ that no obligation shall be attached to such Shelton Holding Corporation for payment of the *344 above-mentioned indebtedness or any part thereof.” That mortgage is by its terms a lien on “ all fixtures and articles of personal property, now or hereafter attached to, or used in connection with, the premises, all of which are covered by this mortgage.” Subsequently a second mortgage was placed upon the property, with the plaintiff’s co-operation.

The lessee having arranged for mortgages sufficient in amount to pay the contemplated cost of the erection of the apartment hotel, made a contract with the defendant Lane Ogle, Inc., for the construction of the building in accordance with the amended plans and specifications for the sum of $650,000. Included in the contract was, of course, the installation of kitchenette equipment. It was conceded at the trial that Mr. Lane Ogle is the principal, if not the entire stockholder, of both Lane Ogle, Inc., and 150 East 48th Street Corporation,” the lessee, and he was president of both. He had a right to do business in corporate form. He might, if he chose, organize and direct two or more corporations as business instrumentalities. ■ These corporations then must be regarded as separate legal entities, but the fact that a single mind and a single will direct the activities of these separate entities carries with it the consequences which naturally flow therefrom. The same knowledge and the same intent must be ascribed to all.

The construction proceeded until the spring of 1931. Advances were made by the mortgagee in accordance with the building loan agreements. The kitchenette equipment was installed in the building in accordance with the amended plans and specifications, and was paid for by the lessee or the contractor, its alter ego, and apparently the money to make such payments was obtained from the mortgagee, under the building loan mortgage. Then financial complications arose, and the lessee abandoned the premises, and later a warrant was issued in dispossess proceedings. On May 28, 1931, the *345 lessee gave to Lane Ogle, Inc., a chattel mortgage covering the kitchenette equipment to secure notes executed simultaneously therewith, for the sum of $66,000. Thereafter interests in the mortgage were assigned to some creditors of the lessee, or its alter ego, the contractor, as security for pre-existing indebtedness.

In order to forestall attempt to remove the kitchenette equipment, the plaintiff has brought this action asking that the chattel mortgage and the assignments thereof be canceled of record, and that enforcement of the chattel mortgage be enjoined. After trial the justice at Special Term rendered a decision dismissing the complaint on the merits. He found that “ at no time did the said chattels covered by the chattel mortgage upon their installation, or in any other manner, become an integral part of the realty.” Undoubtedly the evidence shows that the kitchenette equipment can be readily removed from the premises without any structural changes or in any way damaging the real estate, though such removal would leave the building incomplete, and the decision contains a conclusion of law that “ the lease did not provide that the said kitchenette equipment was to become realty or to become the property of the plaintiff.”

It is said that after installation the kitchenette fixtures as matter of law remained personal property even though affixed to the realty and intended for use in connection with the realty. Perhaps that conclusion is supported by the authority of our decision in Madfes v. Beverly Development Corp. (251 N. Y. 12); though the appellant points out some considerations which might justify a distinction. It is unnecessary now to consider that question.

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.E. 8, 264 N.Y. 339, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-holding-corp-v-150-east-forty-eighth-street-corp-ny-1934.