Item
1.01
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Entry
into a Material Definitive Agreement.
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Sale
of Mobile Homes
In
December 2020, Manufactured Housing Properties Inc. (the “Company”) sold 305 park owned homes in four communities,
ARC, Countryside, Crestview and Maple Hills, to Gvest Finance LLC (“Gvest Finance”), a company owned and controlled
by the Company’s parent company, Gvest Real Estate Capital LLC, an entity whose sole owner is Raymond M. Gee, the Company’s
chairman and chief executive officer, and to its wholly owned subsidiary Gvest Homes 1 LLC (“Gvest Homes”), for a
total of $4,648,967, pursuant to separate bills of sale and general assignments (the “Bills of Sale”).
Property
Management Agreement
On
December 17, 2020, Mobile Home Rentals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company (the “Property Manager”), executed
a property management agreement with Gvest Finance and Gvest Homes (the “Management Agreement”), pursuant to which
the Property Manager was appointed as the agent for Gvest Finance and Gvest Homes to manage all mobiles homes owned by them. The
management services include: collecting all rents as they become due and giving receipts therefore and rendering to the Company
a monthly accounting of rents collected and expenses and debt service paid out; making or causing to be made all decorating, maintenance,
alterations and repairs to the mobile homes and hiring and supervising all employees and other individuals and entities to accomplish
the duties set forth in the Management Agreement; advertising the mobile homes and displaying signs on the mobile homes; renting
and leasing the mobile homes; signing, renewing and canceling rental agreements and leases for the mobile homes or any part thereof;
initiating legal actions to recover unpaid rent and for loss of or damage to any part of the mobile homes and/or furnishings thereof;
and if appropriate, in the discretion of the Property Manager, to compromise, settle and release said legal proceedings or lawsuits.
Initiating lawsuits also includes the right to hire an attorney to bring said legal actions.
As
compensation for its services, the Property Manager shall be entitled to a fee that is equal to (a) six percent (6%) of the gross
revenues that the Property Manager collects from the mobile homes each month, plus additional amounts equal to its documented
expenses incurred each month, which fee is payable by the Company monthly within ten days of receipt of an invoice from the Property
Manager for such fee and (b) an amount equal to ninety five percent (95%) of the net income from the mobile homes after expenses
(including the fees and expense reimbursement of the Property Manager referred to in clause (a)) payable quarterly if and to the
extent that there is net income from the mobile homes. The remaining five percent of net income shall be retained by the
Company.
Subject
to the indemnification provisions of the Management Agreement, the Property Manager is also responsible to satisfy any economic
losses resulting from the operation of the mobile homes to the extent that such economic losses exceed the revenues resulting
from the operation of the mobile homes.
Primarily
due to the Company’s common ownership by Mr. Gee, its power to direct the activities of Gvest Finance and Gvest Homes that
most significantly impact their economic performance, and the fact that the Company has the obligation to absorb losses or the
right to receive benefits from these entities that could potentially be significant to these entities, Gvest Finance and Gvest
Homes are considered to be variable interest entities (“VIEs”) in accordance applicable United States generally accepted
accounting principles. A company with interests in a VIE must consolidate the entity if the company is deemed to be the primary
beneficiary of the VIE; that is, if it has both (1) the power to direct the economically significant activities of the entity
and (2) the obligation to absorb losses of, or the right to receive benefits from, the entity that could potentially be significant
to the VIE. Accordingly, the financial statements of Gvest Finance and Gvest Homes will be consolidated with the Company and therefore
the sale of the mobile homes does not constitute a disposition of assets.
Loan
Agreement
On
December 24, 2020, Gvest Homes entered into a loan agreement with Camargo Investments III, LLC (“Camargo”), which
was supplemented on December 31, 2020 (as supplemented, the “Loan Agreement”), pursuant to which Camargo agreed to
provide a loan to Gvest Homes in the initial amount of $1,568,000 and agreed to provide additional loans up to a total of $20,000,000,
provided that only up to $8,500,000 shall be available for used homes (as defined in the Loan Agreement). In connection with the
Loan Agreement, Gvest Homes issued to Camargo a promissory note in the principal amount of $20,000,000 (the “Camargo Note”).
The
loans mature on the tenth (10th) anniversary of the date of such loan and bear interest at 8.375% per annum; provided
that upon an event of default, the interest rate will increase by 5%. Gvest Homes is obligated to pay a funding fee equal to 1%
of the amount of each advance which funding fee shall be deducted from the then available commitment amount.
Gvest
Homes may, at its option and upon thirty (30) days prior written notice to Camargo, prepay the loans in full by paying to Camargo
an amount equal to (i) the then outstanding principal balance of the loans, plus (ii) all accrued and unpaid interest on the loan,
plus (iii) the applicable deboarding fee (as defined in the Loan Agreement) per home being released, plus (iv) the make-whole
premium (as defined in the Loan Agreement), together with all of Camargo’s actual, out-of-pocket costs and expenses permitted
under the Loan Agreement. The Loan Agreement also requires mandatory prepayments following a causality or condemnation. The Loan
Agreement includes customary financial and other covenants and events of default for loan of this type. The loans are secured
by all of the assets of Gvest Homes, pursuant to a security agreement (the “Security Agreement”), including the mobile
homes that it owns.
Amended
and Restated Promissory Notes
On
December 17, 2020, Countryside MHP LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company (“Countryside”), entered into an
amended and restated promissory note (the “Countryside Note”) with J & A Real Estate, LLC in the principal amount
of $1,700,000. The Countryside Note matures on March 20, 2050 and bears interest at 5.5% per annum; provided that upon an event
of default, the interest rate will increase to an amount equal to 5.5% plus the U.S. Prime Rate measured and reported by The Wall
Street Journal. Countryside may prepay the Countryside Note, in whole or in part, at any time without penalty; provided that in
the event of any prepayment prior to the fifth (5th) anniversary of the Countryside Note, Countryside must pay a prepayment
fee equal to the product of 4% multiplied by the principal amount being paid. The Countryside Note contains customary events of
default and is secured by a mortgage on the property owned by Countryside.
On
December 17, 2020, Countryside also entered into an amended and restated promissory note (the “Second Countryside Note”)
with the same lender in the principal amount of $1,300,000. The Second Countryside Note has the same interest rate, maturity date
and prepayment provisions as the Countryside Note described above. The Second Countryside Note also contains customary events
of default and is unsecured.
The
foregoing summary of the terms and conditions of the Bills of Sale, the Management Agreement, the Loan Agreement, the Camargo
Note, the Security Agreement, the Countryside Note and the Second Countryside Note does not purport to be complete and is qualified
in its entirety by reference to the full text of the agreements attached hereto as Exhibits 10.1 to 10.12, which are incorporated
herein by reference.