29 W. 25th Street Parking Corp. v. Penn Post Parking, Inc.

Silverman, J.

(dissenting). I would reverse the judgment appealed from, insofar as it directs defendant landlord to consent to the assignment of the lease here involved, and would declare in favor of the landlord that the landlord need not consent to such assignment.

Plaintiff W. 25th Street Parking Corp. (hereinafter Old Tenant Corp.) was the tenant of a parking lot under a lease with landlord defendant Penn Post Parking, Inc. (hereinafter landlord). The lease expired on March 31,1980. The landlord refused to renew the lease and negotiated and signed a new 10-year lease with another corporation, 29 W. 25th Street Parking Corp. (hereinafter New Tenant Corp.). The lease with New Tenant Corp. contained a provision postponing its commencement date until the landlord could obtain possession.

*613Old Tenant Corp. refused to vacate the premises at the expiration of its lease. The landlord brought a summary holdover proceeding, which resulted in a stipulation in the form of an extension that Old Tenant Corp. would vacate the premises at the end of the year. Thereafter, Old Tenant Corp. brought the stock of New Tenant Corp. for $100,000. New Tenant Corp. thus became a wholly owned subsidiary of Old Tenant Corp. So far as appears, there was no prior connection between Old Tenant Corp. and New Tenant Corp. New Tenant Corp. was apparently a shell corporation, which according to the warranties in the contract of sale had conducted no business transaction other than entry into the lease. Shortly thereafter, Old Tenant Corp. caused New Tenant Corp. to be dissolved, arranged for an assignment of the lease from New Tenant Corp. to Old Tenant Corp. and requested the landlord to consent to the assignment. The landlord refused to consent.

The lease with New Tenant Corp. provided that the tenant could assign the lease upon notification to the landlord and written approval by the landlord “which written approval shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed.”

In my view the refusal of the landlord to consent to the assignment to Old Tenant Corp. was not unreasonable. To begin with, it appears without contradiction, from the testimony of Old Tenant Corp.’s principal, that although Old Tenant Corp.’s lease required rent to be paid on the first of every month, Old Tenant Corp. always “sent out our checks on the 10th” despite the complaints and statements of landlord’s principal that she wanted rent on the first. “[0]ur [Old Tenant Corp.] bookkeeping practices was to send all the checks out on the 10th.” Furthermore, Old Tenant Corp. had refused to vacate the premises at the expiration of Old Tenant Corp.’s lease so that landlord had to bring a holdover eviction proceeding. In the circumstances, it was not unreasonable (within the meaning of the lease provision against unreasonably withholding consent) for the landlord to refuse to consent to the assignment to Old Tenant Corp., with whom it had this unsatisfactory lease-related experience.

If, therefore, this had been a situation in which Old Tenant Corp. had simply purchased the lease from New Tenant Corp. for $100,000 and requested the landlord’s consent to the assignment, the landlord would have been within its legal right to refuse its consent. But that is precisely the effect of what happened here. New Tenant Corp. was, as I have said, a shell corporation with no assets except the lease. Obviously all that Old Tenant Corp. sought and obtained for $100,000 was the lease. Done directly, this would have been a transaction to which landlord could withhold its consent.

*614The argument on behalf of plaintiffs tenants is that the mechanics by which the transaction was done, i.e., splitting it into two parts, overcame this difficulty. That argument is that landlord could not have prevented New Tenant Corp. from buying the stock of Old Tenant Corp., and thus the economic situation would have been the same as if there had been a direct assignment, and, therefore, after that it was unreasonable to refuse to consent to the formal assignment.

The argument is a little too facile. It overlooks the complete inconsistency of the premises relied on to sustain each part of the transaction. The purchase of New Tenant Corp.’s stock by Old Tenant Corp. is said to be immune from attack for the reason that it does not matter that the parties in interest have changed so that Old Tenant Corp. is now the sole stockholder of New Tenant Corp., and the principal of Old Tenant Corp. is the principal of New Tenant Corp.; all that matters is that the corporate identity of the tenant has not changed; the' same corporate entity — New Tenant Corp. — is still the tenant. The request for assignment is sought to be sustained on the premise that it does not matter that Old Tenant Corp. — the assignee tenant — is a different corporate entity from New Tenant Corp.; all that matters is that now (after the purchase of New Tenant Corp.’s stock) the parties in interest and the principals of the two tenant corporations are the same.

Plaintiffs should not be allowed to disregard substance for form to sustain the first half of the transaction and then to switch to disregarding form for substance to sustain the second half of the transaction — all to the end of doing indirectly that which could not be done directly.