Vector Realty Group, Inc. v. 711 Fourteenth Street, Inc.

711 A.2d 1265, 1998 WL 269329
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1998
Docket97-CV-303
StatusPublished

This text of 711 A.2d 1265 (Vector Realty Group, Inc. v. 711 Fourteenth Street, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vector Realty Group, Inc. v. 711 Fourteenth Street, Inc., 711 A.2d 1265, 1998 WL 269329 (D.C. 1998).

Opinion

BELSON, Senior Judge:

This is an appeal from the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motions for writ of attachment, preliminary injunction, judgment of condemnation and default judgment. Appellant argues that a secured bank mortgagee cannot hold assigned rents in excess of principal and interest payments and other specified expenses in a reserve account without first satisfying a judgment creditor of the mortgagor. We affirm.

I.

Vector Realty Group, Inc. (“Vector”) procured the District of Columbia as a tenant for the building owned by 711 Fourteenth Street, Inc. (“711”) 1 pursuant to a brokerage agreement providing for a brokerage commission to be paid to Vector by 711. 711 failed to pay the commission, and on October 30, 1995, Vector won a judgment against 711 in the amount of $239,739.11 plus pre- and post-judgment interest. 2 Vector is attempting to collect on that judgment.

Signet Bank, as a mortgagee of 711, intervened in this action on March 3, 1996, to protect its interest. Signet holds notes secured by first and second deeds of trust on 711’s interest in the property in the amounts of $17,750,000.00 and $4,144,791.00 respectively that preceded the brokerage agreement between Vector and 711. The deeds of trust were accompanied by assignments of leases that assigned to Signet:

All right, title, interest and estate of Assignor, as landlord or lessor, in, to and under all of the lease and/or sublease agreements, licenses and other agreements for the occupancy of all or any portion of the hereinafter described prop *1267 erty ... whether such lease and/or sublease agreements, licenses and occupancy agreements now exist or are hereafter entered into by Assignor, together with all extensions, renewals and/or modifications of, or substitutions for, such lease and/or sublease agreements, licenses and other occupancy agreements....

The assignments of leases also provided with respect to default by 711 that:

A written demand by Assignee to any lessee for the payment of rent, rentals, fees, profits, payments and other sums of money that become due under the Leases, after the occurrence of any ... default, breach or misrepresentation by Assignor claimed by Assignee, shall be sufficient to require such lessee to make all future payments of such rents, rentals, fees, payments and other sums of money directly to Assignee without the necessity for further notes to such lessee or consent by Assignor.

The trial court found that these and other provisions created a system whereby, upon default by 711 and written demand by Signet, rents on the property were automatically assigned to Signet and were to be paid into a lockbox collected by Signet.

The loans went into default in 1991 and the assignment of rents went into effect at that time. After six master modification and extension agreements, the current loan documents allow Signet to apply the collected rents to the principal and interest due on the mortgage, to the expenses of maintaining the property, and to other purposes including, in its sole discretion, the maintenance of a reserve account. The documents further authorize Signet, again in its sole and absolute discretion, to determine the purpose for any such reserve fund and the amount to be deposited in it. At the time this action commenced, Signet held a reserve account with funds in excess of $1,400,000.00.

Vector argues that Signet cannot hold excess rents in the reserve account, which Vector refers to as an escrow account, without first satisfying claims of legitimate judgment creditors. Signet responds by arguing that it has a perfected security interest in the rents owed and collected on the property that is superior to any claims of a judgment creditor.

II.

We first consider whether Signet has a perfected security interest in the owed and collected rents. The answer hinges on whether the two “Assignment of Leases” documents created an actual assignment of rents that would require only a demand for direct rent payment to perfect, or whether the documents simply created a security interest in the rents that would require possession of the property to perfect. In making this determination, “The language of the Deed of Trust and the Assignment of Leases controls the outcome.” In re 5028 Wisconsin Ave. Assoc. Ltd., 167 B.R. 699, 701 (Bankr.D.D.C.1994).

In Democratic Cent. Comm. v. Washington M.A.T.C., 305 U.S.App. D.C. 397, 21 F.3d 1145 (1994), the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit observed, in support of one of its holdings, that “There is no precedent in the District of Columbia that supports the proposition, barring an absolute assignment of rents to be effective immediately upon default, that a mortgagee solely upon default in payment of the indebtedness may be immediately vested with possession of the property (or its rents) upon mere demand.” Id., 305 U.S.App.D.C. at 402, 21 F.3d at 1150 (emphasis in original). This can be read to mean that if there is an automatic assignment of rents immediately upon default, a mortgagee, based solely on that default, can be vested with the rents from the property.

Such a reading is supported by In re 5028 Wisconsin Ave. Assoc. Ltd., supra, where the bankruptcy court dealt with an assignment of leases that provided that, upon default by the debtor, the debtor “does further specifically authorize and instruct each and every present and future lessee of the whole or any part of the Premises to pay all unpaid rents agreed upon in each tenancy to Bank upon receipt of demand from Bank to so pay the same.” Id., 167 B.R. at 701. The court held that language to be sufficient to create a perfected security interest in the assignment of rents upon the making of such a demand. *1268 The court also determined that there was “no meaningful difference between an escrow or ‘lockbox’ arrangement ... that starts immediately, and one that starts upon the mortgagee’s demand after default.” Id., 167 B.R. at 704. 3

5028 Wisconsin Ave., supra, distinguished In re 1301 Connecticut Ave. Assoc., 117 B.R. 2 (Bankr.D.D.C.1990), ajfd, 126 B.R. 1 (D.D.C.1991), in which the court reached a seemingly contrary result, holding that, “Where the parties create a security assignment, ... the clear rule of law in the District of Columbia is that the assignment becomes effective only upon the lender’s direct or indirect possession of the underlying mortgaged property.” Id., 126 B.R. at 3. The 5028 Wisconsin Ave. court noted that in 1301 Connecticut Ave., “the mortgagee apparently never made a demand on the tenants that they pay rents to the mortgagee.” 167 B.R. at 703. Significantly, as the 1301 Connecticut Avenue

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711 A.2d 1265, 1998 WL 269329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vector-realty-group-inc-v-711-fourteenth-street-inc-dc-1998.