164 Misc. 640 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1937
At his death deceased had a controlling interest in a corporation which in turn owned all of the capital stock of a' realty company which had the legal title to a parcel of property, improved by an apartment house. In August, 1932, the property' in question was subject to three mortgages. The last in point of hen was owned by the claimant here. Deceased had entered into an agreement sometime in 1931 wherein among other things he agreed, in the event of foreclosure of prior mortgages, to pay to the claimant here any deficiency in the collection of its mortgages up to but not exceeding the sum of $25,000. In August, .1932, an opportunity presented itself for purchase and satisfaction of the second mortgage at a substantial discount. That purchase was made through contributions from the resources of deceased and of i claimant. The advances by claimant for this purchase have been! refunded to it. The eventual result of the transactions then contemplated was that the second mortgage was wholly eliminated,; the third mortgage (now becoming a second) was reduced as to principal sum, this mortgagee made various stipulations respecting the due date of the principal and respecting the payment of interest thereon and deceased obtained an acknowledgment that his 1931 i guaranty had been fully satisfied except that the clause concerning! his deficiency liability would continue to bind him subject to a credit against his $25,000 liability of any payments which he made, under the new arrangement.
The immediate question concerns itself with the meaning of the following clause in the so-called “ guaranty agreement ” signed by deceased.
“ 1. The guarantor agrees that in the event that the gross income of the 145 East 74th Street Corporation are insufficient to meet the carrying charges of said premises, including the interest on the first mortgage, taxes and water rates, and general operating expenses, that he will advance for such purposes a sum or sums aggregating not in excess of $25,000 to meet such expenses.
“ In the event that said Guarantor advances to said 145 East 74th Street Corporation said sum of $25,000 or any part thereof on account of the said deficit or deficits, then in such event any sum so advanced shall be deemed a payment in reduction of the obligation contained in the collateral bond of the Guarantor held by the Mortgagee bearing date the 23rd day of April, 1931.
“ The parties agree that the $25,000 original obligation of the Guarantor on said collateral bond has been satisfied and the only
“' And do further agree and covenant that if a proceeding in foreclosure be brought upon either of the prior mortgages, now liens upon said premises, which mortgages are set forth in said modification agreement, and if said proceeding be carried to a conclusion, and the premises be sold thereunder, a further payment of $25,000 to said Irving I. Lewine, Inc., its successors or assigns, upon the entry of a final judgment of foreclosure and sale.’ ”
In the recitals which precede the guaranty just quoted there is a statement of money needs which includes the need for funds to pay “ on account of the principal indebtedness due under the first mortgage.” In the accompanying instrument executed by the third mortgagee with the corporation holding the record title there is provision for the disposal of the gross income from the property wherein the order of payment is provided and priority fixed (a) for housekeeping expenses, (b) payment of interest on the first mortgage, (c) payment of principal installments on the first mortgage, (d) payment of taxes and water charges, (e) payments, if earned, on account of interest and principal on the third mortgage (which became the second mortgage in the transaction), and, finally, payment of any surplus to the owner of the fee. In the separate agreement which expressly modified the mortgage terms so far as the claimant mortgagee was concerned similar provision for use of the gross income was made.
The first question presented is whether or not the guaranty quoted above covers any required payment on account of the principal of the first mortgage. At the time the agreements were executed in August, 1932, no moratorium statute was in existence. At that date any mortgagee having the right to a payment on account of principal might foreclose for non-payment of such installment. Since the purpose to be served by the whole body of agreements was the avoidance of foreclosure and the carrying of the property in an effort to salvage the equity it must be held that one of the items necessarily within the contemplation of the parties was the possible demand of the first mortgagee for payment in reduction of the principal of that mortgage. The only sources of funds for the payment of all the charges which the agreements referred to were, first, the gross rents of the property itself, and second, the resources of deceased to the extent of his pledge of them. The text of the guaranty speaks of “ the carrying charges ” and of “ general operating expenses.” In effect the argument of the estate is that the words “ carrying charges ” are limited in ^meaning by the text following such words which specifically speak
The point is of importance because the estate representatives argue that in each twelve-month period since the guaranty was signed the property has either produced a surplus or has run at only a slight operating deficit if the payment of capital charges, so .called, are eliminated. The estate representatives include in this category of capital charges all payments in reduction of the principal of the first mortgage, all rehabilitation work in the apartment building, all new equipment supplied for the convenience of tenants and generally all charges which would be catalogued as principal expenditures on an accounting basis where differentiation between principal and income items would be important. This contention of the estate representatives departs from the meaning of the instruments as intended and declared by the parties. They were dealing with an apartment house which had to be kept in order, in which proper facilities had to be installed in order to keep or to obtain tenants and in the operation of which expenditures had to be made out of the gross intake whether or not in the income tax return of the owning corporation such expenditures fell within the class of capital disbursements or income charges.
The nature of the objectives sought by the parties to these instruments controls the interpretation of the particular instrument here in issue because if the objectives were to be attained the payments required had to be made as need arose. In the practical operation of the agreement it was not feasible to wait until some future date for a statement of operations. The agreements envisaged the need for money whenever a tax bill was due or a mortgage principal installment had to be met or a mortgage interest date arrived. The parties no doubt supposed that the housekeeping charges, so called, would be paid from current rents and that the emergency demanding contribution by deceased would arise only when a large sum was needed. Having that view of the agreement it follows that the argument of the administrators based
Having that concept of the effect of the agreement it is necessary to consider the form in which the issue is here presented. The account m Schedule I refers to the guaranty of the deceased and “ decedent’s contingent liability under ” it. In the petition the claimant is referred to as “ a creditor under a guaranty.” Except for this reference to the claimant in Schedule I of the account it is not elsewhere listed in the account except as a creditor holding a promissory note. The claimant filed objections m which it describes itself “as a contmgent creditor of the above entitled estate.” Its objections say nothing about its claim under the guaranty but raise issues respectmg other claims allowed and payments made by the admimstrators. They also assert the non-inclusion of assets of deceased. The admimstrators moved to dismiss the objections on the ground that the claimant was not a creditor of the estate and that even if it should be catalogued as a contingent claimant the court should not authorize a reserve for the claim. It was upon the issue of status thus formulated that the question was first presented to the court. The minutes (pp. 138 to 149, inclusive, and particularly pp. 147 and 148) show that the counsel for the estate and the claimant disagreed — the one assertmg that the claimant had no status as creditor, the other that the claimant had a present claim for $9,720 and accrued interest. Though the parties stül insisted on their respective viewpoints throughout a portion of the hearing, a ruling on a question of evidence (pp. 170 to 171 of the minutes) seems to have elicited an agreement by both sides that the pomt at issue was whether or not there was presently due to Lewme Holdmg Corporation the sum of $9,720 representing the second half of taxes of 1933 on the premises to which the various agreements referred. This tax liability was discharged before the case was submitted to the court but it was stipulated that tEs was at the cost of leavmg unpaid other and equivalent items. The question of liabEty, therefore, remains the same.
Accordingly the court on the present record must dismiss the claim for $9,720 and interest, reserving, however, to Lewine Holding Corporation the right to make such other claim against deceased’s estate as it may be advised.