United Orient Bank v. Green

215 B.R. 916, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20599, 1997 WL 790475
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 23, 1997
Docket96 CIV. 3115 LAK, 93 B 46174 PBA
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 215 B.R. 916 (United Orient Bank v. Green) 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
United Orient Bank v. Green, 215 B.R. 916, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20599, 1997 WL 790475 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

The plaintiffs in this ease held security interests in the stock certificates and appurtenant proprietary leases for two units in an industrial cooperative building on the west side of Manhattan. Following defaults by the unit holders on obligations owed to both the plaintiff and entities controlled, by the defendant, the defendant, now in bankruptcy, purported to cancel the shares and terminate the leases and then resold the units for very substantial sums without applying the proceeds to payment of the debtors’ indebtedness to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs seek to have claims allowed against the bankrupt estate in the full amounts of the debts secured by the units. They seek also a determination that their claims against the debtor are not dischargeable.

*919 Facts

Procedural Posture

Arthur Green, the defendant, at all relevant times was (a) the president and a director of the cooperative corporation known as 450 West 31st Street Owners Corporation (“Owners”); (b) a general partner of the cooperative sponsor, 31st Street Realty Associates (the “Sponsor”) and sole shareholder-of Hudson Loft Investors Corp. (“Hudson Loft”), the other partner; and (c) the sole shareholder, president and treasurer of CCR Loft Corp. (“CCR”). 1 At the time of the events in question, Sponsor owned a twelve story industrial building located at 450 West 31st Street.

Plaintiffs United Orient Bank (“UOB”) and Mee Yin, Ltd. (“Mee Yin”), as will appear in greater detail below, held security interests in the stock and proprietary leases for two of the units in the building. In 1984, the owners of the units defaulted on their obligations to plaintiffs and to the entities controlled by Green. UOB secured judgments against each of the owners. Plaintiffs contend that Green and the entities he controlled purported to sell the units in derogation of their security interests and converted the proceeds to their own use. They commenced a state court action against him in 1986.

Green filed for bankruptcy protection on December 9, 1993. 2 Although the Court has no information as to what had transpired in the state court litigation in the intervening seven years, that action was scheduled as one of Green’s liabilities and, of course, stayed by the bankruptcy filing. On April 1, 1994, plaintiffs filed an adversary proceeding in the Bankruptcy Court in which it objected to the discharge of Green’s alleged debts to them. Green in turn filed a third-party complaint in the adversary proceeding against Bachner, Tally, Polevoy & Mischer, L.L.P. (“BTPM”), the attorneys who .advised him on the transactions at issue. He contends that any liability that he may have to plaintiffs arising out of the transfer of the cooperative shares and leases would be the result of his reliance on the advice of BTPM.

BTPM answered the third-party complaint and demanded a jury trial. On September 20, 1996, this Court withdrew the reference with respect to the adversary proceeding. 3 The plaintiffs and the defendant subsequently stipulated that all issues concerning the al-lowability and amount of plaintiffs’ claims were joined with the determination of the dischargeability thereof. 4 The Court then severed the third-party complaint and proceeded to trial on the complaint in the adversary proceeding and plaintiffs’ claims against Green. This is the Court’s decision following that trial. 5 .

The Building and the Westway Project

Before proceeding to the details of the transactions at issue, it is important to note the relationship between the building and the ill-fated Westway project, a proposal to fill a portion of the Hudson River along the west shore of lower Manhattan and build a new highway to replace the then aged and decrepit West Side Highway. The project gen *920 erated controversy and litigation 6 in direct proportion to its enormous scope and cost and ultimately died. ■

The building at issue here appeared to be in the path of the Westway projeet> Sponsor’s offering plan, dated June 23, 1980, warned prospective investors that the building would be condemned if Westway were approved and the building proved to be within the path shown in the final plans. 7 The market for units in the building was affected adversely for a significant part of the interval until the project finally was abandoned on September 20,1985. 8

The Events at Issue

The Initial Sales of the Units

The units at issue here were sold to Andrew Woo and a company he controlled, Desire Sales, Inc. (“Desire”) in 1981 and 1982. Unit 3

On April 1, 1981, Desire purchased the stock certificate and appurtenant proprietary lease for Unit 3 in the building for $250,000. It made a down payment of $25,000 and gave promissory notes to Sponsor in the amounts of $25,000, which was due July 1, 1981, and $200,000, which was payable in installments culminating on April 1,1988, for the balance. The notes each were secured by a hen on the stock and lease which was subordinate only to the hen of Owners for any unpaid maintenance. 9

At the time of the sale of Unit 3 to Desire, Sponsor and Owners entered into a so-called Recognition Agreement, in the form of a letter from Sponsor to Owners, by which Owners afforded substantial assurances to Sponsor, as the holder of security interests in the stock and lease associated with Unit 3, that it would not take action that would prejudice Sponsor’s security. 10 The Recognition Agreement provided in pertinent part as follows:

«2 H* H* sH
(c) You will notify us of any notice of • intention to terminate the Lease, and
“(1) If the Lessee’s default can be cured by the payment of money, you will notify us promptly of any default involving an amount equal to or exceeding three months maintenance payments and will take no action to terminate the Lease or cancel the shares if the default be cured either by us for the account of the Lessee or by the Lessee within 15 days after such notice of default or intention to terminate;
* * *
(e) You shall recognize our right as lien- or against the Unit pursuant to the Security, and, if the Lease be terminated and or shares canceled, against the net proceeds of any sale or subletting of the Unit after reimbursement to you of all sums due you under the Lease.
Kg * * *

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Bluebook (online)
215 B.R. 916, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20599, 1997 WL 790475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-orient-bank-v-green-nysd-1997.