173 Misc. 347 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1940
This is an application by the holder of a $400,000 first mortgage, which matured on March 20, 1933, to obtain the surplus income of the premises securing the mortgage for the six months’ period from January 1, 1939, to June 30, 1939, pursuant to section 1077-c of the Civil Practice Act.
The property consists of a so-called co-operative apartment building containing fifty-seven apartments and 238 rooms. It is owned by the respondent, 325 East 72nd Street, Inc., a corporation which sold its stock to various individuals and gave them ninety-nine-
In pressing this application the petitioner contends that, based on the rents paid by the sublessees of these thirty-two apartments, each of the fifty-seven apartments in the building has a monthly rental value per room of four dollars and fifty-four cents more than that fixed by the assessment levied against the proprietary lessee of such apartment, and that, as so calculated, all of the fifty-seven apartments have an aggregate rental value, for the six months’ period, of $8,483.12 in excess of the assessments levied on and paid by the proprietary lessees under the terms of their agreements. This excess rental value, says the petitioner, represents the surplus income which is applicable to the reduction of the principal of the past due mortgage. While the rental value as thus calculated is disputed, a finding thereon is, in the view of the application taken by the court, entirely unnecessary to the decision.
Although the statute (§ 1077-c) in terms authorizes a direction of payment if it shall appear that the mortgaged property “ shall have produced a surplus,” the language has been held broad enough to require the owner to render an account of the use being made of the premises and of the fair and reasonable rental value of that part thereof which is occupied by such owner in his business. (Matter of Mortgage Commission v. Muller Paper Goods Co., 256 App. Div. 301; affd., sub nom. Matter of Manufacturers Trust Co. v. Muller Paper Goods Co., Inc., 281 N. Y. 780.) In seeking relief here, the petitioner is relying largely upon that case.
That case is distinguishable from the case presented here on the facts. In that case the mortgaged property consisted of a six-story concrete factory and loft building. Two of the six floors were occupied by a tenant paying a substantial rent. The remaining floors were occupied by the owner in connection with its business of manu
In the instant case the premises involved are not occupied by the owner but by third parties who have contractual relations with the owner. These parties are not occupying the premises rent free but pay sums which, at the date of their leases, were undeniably fair and reasonable and which, even now, are ample to cover all operating and maintenance charges. In such a situation, the creation of a surplus by the artifice suggested by the petitioner would “ give to the mortgagee a security beyond the stipulations of the mortgage and deprives the occupants of their enjoyment of rights secured bv contract.” (Prudence Co., Inc., v. 160 West 73d Street Corp., 260 N. Y. 205, 212.)
The corporate owner here was organized as a vehicle for the establishment of a community of homes rather than for the purpose of pecuniary profit to the stockholders. The primary interest of every stockholder was in the long-term proprietary lease. The stock was incidental to that purpose and afforded the practical means of combining an ownership interest with a method for sharing assessments for operation and maintenance proportionately. (Penthouse Properties, Inc., v. 1158 Fifth Ave., Inc., 258 App. Div. 685.) The certificate of incorporation of the respondent, the prospectus under which the stock was offered, the stock subscription agreement, the payments made thereunder and the proprietary lease itself, must all be read together to determine the relationship between the corporate
One of these rights is the right of the proprietary lessee to occupy the apartment leased to him upon the payment of a sum equal to his pro rata cost of operation and maintenance of the building. That right is as conclusive against the mortgagee as it is against the owner. (Prudence Co., Inc., v. 160 West 73rd Street Corp., supra; Markantonis v. Madlan Realty Corp., 262 N. Y. 354, 356; Bank of Manhattan Trust Co. v. 2166 Broadway Corp., 237 App. Div. 734, 737.) The statute does not indicate a legislative intent to impair such a right and should not in any event be strained to produce such an unreasonable result.
The motion is accordingly denied.