IP of A W. 86th St.t 1, LLC v. Morgan Stanley Mortg. Capital Holdings, LLC, No. 11-2891 (7th Cir. 2012)
Annotate this CaseInvestors joined together to buy property. To finance the purchase, they formed a distinct limited liability company, IPA, to negotiate and execute a loan on their behalf with Morgan Stanley. Okun was manager of IPA, which was not allowed to hold an ownership interest in any of the investors. Morgan Stanley sold the loan to an Okun-controlled entity, Lender, LLC, and agreed to offset the purchase price by the amount of funds available in escrow, reserve, and impound accounts, in which it held a security interest and which were, under the terms of the loan, required to reimburse investors for maintenance, taxes, and other property-related expenses. Lender LLC never reestablished the accounts, depriving the Investors of $1,361,184.63. Abandoning their suit against Lender, LLC, the investors claimed that Morgan Stanley breached their loan agreement and committed conversion. The district court granted summary judgment for Morgan Stanley. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. Morgan Stanley was not barred by the Note, the Mortgage, or the RSA from assigning its interest in the escrow accounts to Okun or structuring a sale of the loan as it wished; it committed neither breach of contract nor conversion.
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