680 NYS2d 420 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1998
OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendants Aetna Life Insurance Company and State Street Bank and Trust Company move for an order, pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (7), dismissing the amended complaint against Aetna and State Street Bank for failure to state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted.
It is hereby ordered that defendants’ motion for the dismissal of the amended complaint against them is granted. Further, plaintiff’s cross motion for discovery is denied, plaintiff having failed to establish that “facts essential to justify opposition may exist but cannot then be stated”. (CPLR 3211 [d].)
A review of plaintiffs amended complaint reveals that, in accepting all of plaintiff’s allegations as true, it fails to state a cause of action. Plaintiff, an admittedly sophisticated party, entered into a $112,000,000 commercial loan agreement with defendant Aetna Life Insurance Company. The loan agreement, entitled “Consolidation and Extension Agreement 1987”, was dated September 17, 1987 and was subsequently assigned by defendant Aetna Life Insurance Company to defendant State Street Bank and Trust Company. The agreement contains a clause which requires plaintiff to pay, if it should choose to prepay the loan, a prepayment premium. It is undisputed that plaintiff was aware of such prepayment premium and, as evidenced by the handwritten amendments to such clause, negotiated the terms of such prepayment premium clause. Plaintiff now wishes to have the benefit of such clause by being allowed to prepay the $112,000,000 commercial mortgage loan, but without the detriment of paying the prepayment premium set forth in the very same clause. Plaintiff essentially argues that the portion of the prepayment clause which requires it to pay a prepayment premium, though negotiated by plaintiff and its counsel and agreed to by plaintiff, is void and unenforceable. However, prepayment premiums in nonresidential commercial mortgages are both valid and enforceable. “Prepayment can impose daunting economic sacrifices upon a mortgagee, not the least of which include the loss of the bargained-for rate of return, an increased tax burden, unanticipated costs occasioned by the need to reinvest the principal, and for those creditors anxious to ensure regular