Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. v. 31 West 72nd St. Corp.

183 Misc. 1039, 54 N.Y.S.2d 802, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1506
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1944
StatusPublished

This text of 183 Misc. 1039 (Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. v. 31 West 72nd St. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. v. 31 West 72nd St. Corp., 183 Misc. 1039, 54 N.Y.S.2d 802, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1506 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Botein, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff to foreclose the consolidated mortgage which it holds as trustee, covering the hotel premises at 27-31 West 72nd Street, city of Hew York. . Upon motion of the trustee, and pursuant to provisions of sections 119 to 123 of the Real Property Law (Burchill Act), a referee was appointed to take testimony and report as to the fairness, equitableness and feasibility of a plan of reorganization proposed by the trustee, or of ,anv alternative plan which might be proposed by any 'party in interest.

Three plans have been submitted to the referee for his consideration. Plan (A), which is submitted by the trustee, embodies the conventional provisions, whereunder it is proposed that a new corporation controlled by certificate holders be formed to take title to and manage the mortgaged property. Plan (B) provides for the acquisition of title, for a specified [1041]*1041consideration, by a corporation to be controlled by a group identified with the equity owners of the hotel. Plan (C) provides that the mortgaged property be sold “ at the best price obtainable ”, with approval of the court, but that in the event a sale shall not be consummated, the court is to appoint one or more trustees to operate the mortgaged premises for the sole benefit of certificate holders under a declaration of trust similar in form to those heretofore used in Sehackno Act (L. 1933, ch. 745, as amd.) and Mortgage Commission Act (L. 1935, ch. 19) reorganizations.

Plan (C), which is submitted and supported only by the holder of one small bond, sounds a lone but encouraging note of realistic thinking in trust mortgage reorganizations. This plan accepts the Burchill Act mandate to liquidate and grapples with the challenge presented, when, as in this case, the prognosis for a moribund property in the hands of bondholders is not encouraging. It recommends surgery through sale as the most desirable procedure. The referee has rejected plan (B), inasmuch as it does not permit of competitive bidding to test the market.

The referee has skillfully woven major aspects of plans (A) and (C) with certain progressive features which he sponsors, into a proposed plan which blazes new trails in reorganization techniques. The plan really divides into two alternative parts. The first part provides that prior to foreclosure of the mortgaged property, efforts be made to sell on the open market, subject to the approval of the court, upon terms and in a manner hereinafter discussed. The second, or alternative part of- the plan provides that in the event a sale be not consummated, then the plaintiff as trustee, shall acquire the property at foreclosure sale for transfer to a so-called 100% certificate holders ’ co rp o ration.

I shall first discuss at some length the provisions of the plan relating to the proposed sale of the property, since it represents the first studied procedure to submit such an alternative to certificate holders as part of the plan in a Burchill Act proceeding. There has been submitted to bondholders in another and prior reorganization one proposal to sell, but that stemmed from the exigencies of the moment rather than, as here, from a comprehensive procedure evolved by the referee and a group of bondholders, designed to elicit the best price in the open, competitive market, while ringing the process with certain safeguards for certificate holders.

[1042]*1042I greatly favor the exertion of all reasonable efforts to sell the property at this time at a fair and equitable price. Where the mortgaged property has been acquired on behalf of bondholders, a sale as expeditiously as possible at a fair market price generally affords the greatest measure of protection to those bondholders who most need protection. Such supervision as I have been able to exercise over trustees or directors and officers of bondholders’ corporations, persuades me that many of them are men who accept their designations and execute their duties with a high consciousness of the responsibilities involved. But even the most high-minded, most resourceful and most experienced fiduciary representation is, at best, part time application to duties by men whose principal income and interests lie elsewhere, and who cannot therefore cope on terms of complete equality with the intensity of application of men who devote full time, energies and thought to the ownership and management of competing properties.

I have found that in only one class of properties administered on behalf of bondholders is the management comparable to that of privately owned properties. This is in reorganized properties where an individual or a group have purchased a so-called position, that is, acquired so substantial a portion of the stock and bonds outstanding as to enable them to vote in their own designees as officers and directors. These groups sometimes succor bondholders by magnificent rehabilitation of the properties, but sometimes they pursue a policy of depressing the market prices of bonds until they have acquired all or most of the outstanding bonds between the pincers of a sinking fund operation and purchases on the open market at distress prices. In these cases the properties are well operated, as the management is considered a full-time job by men who have every reason to believe they will become equity owners of the properties. Obviously, this type of operation may inherently be more dangerous to small bondholders than the representative operation previously mentioned.

It is because of this limited outlook that I have encouraged all efforts to test the market for the sale of mortgaged properties, even at the risk of missing the uppermost peak in the future price range.

The referee considered and rejected a proposal that the property be auctioned off at the foreclosure sale after provision would first have been made for an all-cash upset price. He has stated the following in this regard, and I fully approve and adopt hia reasoning: “ I do not recommend that the property [1043]*1043be disposed of at a fixed price at a foreclosure sale. In a foreclosure sale the Court retains no substantial control or supervision after establishing an upset price. The circumstances here warrant closer scrutiny and supervision by the Court to safeguard the interests of the certificate holders. The Court should possess the faculty to accept, reject or modify offers of cash and terms. This flexibility is so far superior to the single act of setting a cash upset price that I feel that the use of a foreclosure sale and upset price is not advisable. Furthermore, the use of a foreclosure sale and distribution immediately thereafter makes no provisions for securing full consideration or acceptance of that sale by the certificate holders.”

The referee recommends specifically that the property be sold at or above a minimum price for all cash or on terms pursuant to a plan which must first be presented to and approved by the certificate holders. It is proposed that a plan authorizing the court to order the sale of the mortgaged property at a minimum price of $720,000, if all cash, or at a minimum price of $765,000, if on terms, (in which latter contingency a minimum cash down payment equal to 25% of the purchase price shall be required, the balance by way of a ten-year purchase-money bond and mortgage), be submitted to the certificate holders for approval, as part of the plan of reorganization in the manner required by the Burchill Act. All of the certificate holders’ representatives who appeared before the referee approved the minimum prices as recommended.

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Related

Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. v. 1231 Park Avenue Holding Co.
56 N.E.2d 118 (New York Court of Appeals, 1944)
Sterling National Bank & Trust Co. v. 1231 Park Ave. Holding Co.
266 A.D. 522 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
183 Misc. 1039, 54 N.Y.S.2d 802, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-national-bank-trust-co-v-31-west-72nd-st-corp-nysupct-1944.