Urban Commons 2 West LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 16, 2023
Docket22-11509
StatusUnknown

This text of Urban Commons 2 West LLC (Urban Commons 2 West LLC) 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
Urban Commons 2 West LLC, (N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ----------------------------------------------------------x FOR PUBLICATION In re: Chapter 11 URBAN COMMONS 2 WEST LLC, ET AL.,1 Case Nos. 22-11509 (PB) Debtors. (Jointly administered) ----------------------------------------------------------x

MODIFIED BENCH DECISION GRANTING DEBTORS’ MOTION FOR APPROVAL OF DIP FINANCING

A P P E A R A N C E S : DAVIDOFF HUTCHER CITRON, LLP Attorneys for the Debtor 605 Third Avenue New York, NY 10158 By: Jonathan S. Pasternak Robert Leslie Rattet

SILVERMAN ACAMPORA LLP Attorneys for Creditors Committee 100 Jericho Quadrangle, Suite 300 Jericho, NY 11753 By: Ronald J. Friedman Haley Trust

PRYOR CASHMAN LLP Attorneys for Highgate Hotels, LP 7 Times Square, 40th Floor New York, NY 10036 By: Itai Y. Raz Sameer M. Alifarag

1 The Debtors in these Chapter 11 Cases and the last four digits of the Debtors’ taxpayer identification numbers are as follows: Urban Commons 2 West II LLC (7987), Urban Commons 2 West III LLC (3270), Urban Commons 2 West IV LLC (8418), and Urban Commons 2 West Operating Tenant LLC (0849), with a shared mailing address of 3334 East Coast Highway, No. 350, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. KLESTADT WINTERS JURELLER SOUTHARD STEVENS, LLP Attorneys for The Residential Board of Managers of the Millennium Point Condominium 200 West 41st Street, 17th Floor New York, NY 10036 By: Tracy L. Klestadt Kathleen M. Aiello

HILLER, P.C. Attorneys for The Residential Board of Managers of the Millennium Point Condominium 641 Lexington Avenue, 29th Floor New York, NY 10022 By: Michael Hiller Scott Woller

FRIED, FRANK, HARRIS, SHRIVER JACOBSON LLP Attorneys for Battery Park City Authority 1 New York Plaza New York, NY 10004 By: Janice MacAvoy Jennifer L. Rodburg

HERRICK, FEINSTEIN LLP Attorneys for BPC Lender, LLC 2 Park Avenue New York, NY 10016 By: Steven B. Smith Avery S. Mehlman Silvia A. Stockman

COHEN, WEISS AND SIMON, LLP Attorneys for New York Hotel Trades Council & Hotel Association of New York City, Inc. Employee Benefits Funds 900 Third Avenue, 21st Floor New York, NY 10022 By: Richard M. Seltzer

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Attorneys for the U.S. Trustee Alexander Hamilton Custom House One Bowling Green, Room 534 New York, NY 10014 By: Tara Tiantian PHILIP BENTLEY UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

Introduction Before the Court is the Debtors’ motion (the “DIP Motion” or “Motion”) for a final order approving post-petition financing and granting related relief, including adequate protection to BPC Lender, LLC (the “Lender”), the Debtors’ senior secured pre-petition lender and an affiliate of the DIP lender. The Debtors have consensually resolved all objections to the Motion except the limited objection filed by their former property manager, Highgate Hotels, L.P. (“Highgate”).2 Highgate objects to only one aspect of the Motion: a provision of the DIP Order authorizing and directing the Debtors’ former counsel to turn over approximately $5.6 million in insurance proceeds (the “Insurance Proceeds”), which counsel has been holding in a trust account since it received these monies from the Debtors’ insurer last summer. The DIP Order requires these funds to be released to the Lender and applied to its pre-petition debt, as a form of adequate protection for the priming of that debt by the liens granted to the DIP lender.

Highgate contends that turnover of the Insurance Proceeds violates the terms of a purported escrow agreement, dated August 16, 2022 (the “Agreement” or “Procuration Agreement”), which provides that no funds will be disbursed from the attorney trust account without the consent of all signatories, including Highgate. The Debtors’ only right to or interest in these funds, Highgate claims, is their contingent right to receive the funds if and when Highgate consents. Highgate has

2 On January 13, 2023, the Court read into the record its bench ruling granting the Motion, and on January 16, 2023, the Court entered a final order (the “DIP Order” or “Order”) granting the Motion. This decision memorializes, and to a limited degree clarifies and expands upon, that bench ruling. neither consented nor given any indication of the circumstances in which it might be willing to do so.

The Court finds that Highgate’s objection lacks merit for two independent reasons. First, it is a basic contract law principle that, when an agreement omits a term essential to a determination of the parties’ rights and duties, the court will supply a term that is reasonable in the circumstances. Here, given the Agreement’s failure to provide any conditions for release of the deposited funds other than the consent of all parties, and given the absence of any evidence that the parties intended otherwise, it is appropriate to add an implied term permitting the Court to determine the parties’ respective rights to the funds and to direct that the funds be disbursed accordingly.

Second, even if the Court were constrained to construe the Agreement literally so as to bar release of the funds absent the parties’ unanimous consent, turnover of the funds would still be appropriate. In that event, the Agreement would fail to satisfy the requirements for the creation of an escrow agreement under New York law — in particular, the requirement that the agreement specify the conditions under which the escrowed assets will be released. The Agreement’s provision that the funds may be released if all parties agree does not satisfy this requirement, either as a matter of common sense or under the limited case law that has addressed this issue.

For both of these reasons, the Court holds that the Insurance Proceeds should be disbursed from the attorney trust account in accordance with the parties’ underlying rights to these funds. Highgate does not dispute that the funds, which are proceeds of the Debtors’ insurance policies, belong to the Debtors and are subject to the Lender’s perfected senior lien. The funds therefore are property of the estate, and Highgate has no basis to challenge either turnover of these funds or their use to partially satisfy the Lender’s pre-petition debt. With Highgate’s objection disposed of, approval of the DIP Motion requires little discussion. The Debtors have presented uncontroverted evidence that the DIP loan is necessary and in their estates’ best interests, and that the loan’s specific terms are fair and reasonable. The loan and the related grant of adequate protection to the Lender satisfy the requirements of Bankruptcy Code § 364(c) and (d) and should be approved.

Factual Background3 The Debtors own a hotel located at 2 West Street in Manhattan (the “Hotel”), at the southern end of Battery Park City. The Hotel is part of a mixed-use condominium building, constructed in the early 2000s, which also includes a separate residential condominium portion. Until March 2018, the Hotel was operated by Ritz Carlton under the Ritz Carlton brand. At that time, the Debtors’ predecessors hired Highgate to replace Ritz Carlton as the hotel operator and changed the Hotel’s brand to “The Leading Hotels of the World” under the name “The Wagner at Battery Park.”

In September 2018, the Debtors purchased the Hotel for the approximate purchase price of $147 million, of which $96 million was financed through a purchase money mortgage issued by the Lender, an affiliate of the seller. (That loan matured in 2020, and the amount owed under the loan has since grown to approximately $114 million, plus fees and costs.) The Debtors hired Highgate to continue to serve as the Hotel’s property manager, pursuant to a operating agreement with the Debtors.

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Bluebook (online)
Urban Commons 2 West LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urban-commons-2-west-llc-nysb-2023.