so then can this happen? Ax Prod sells sound stage to consortium for half a million, consortium declares bankruptcy before paying off, AP has first dibs on liquidation of consortium, sound stage is valued 100k in bankruptcy, AP gets sound stage back and gets 400k writeoff?
Well, AP doesn't own the real property; it's leased. What the consortium is trying to do (and the landlord can say no, because s/he owns the land and the building and can decide on who to lease to, provided it's not for a discriminatory reason. Hence the landlord can refuse to lease/sublease to someone without a verifiable credit rating, or who is outside of the country unless some wicked bond is put up, etc.) is pay cash to take over the leasehold. AP gets liquidity. But does he get anything else?
- If the leasehold is shorter or the monthly payments are higher, then AP loses out. I think he's too shrewd to agree to either, even though it's nice (and valuable) to have liquidity.
- If the leasehold is longer or monthly payments are decreased, then AP gets a win and the consortium loses out. Don't forget, AP needs space for all his Propworx stuff. This is beyond filming or the semantic shenanigans of soundstage versus studio versus warehouse. No matter what, the props need a home and I believe there are more than someone could store in a standard one or two bedroom or some townhouse in Florida.
- If the leasehold is for the same amount of time or payments don't change or both, then AP still gets a benefit in that his cash is no longer tied up in a long-term leasehold. He is free to either stay (a good idea if the leasehold is cheaper, of course).
- Or the consortium kicks Axa or they leave anyway. Because they need a place, it may be positive (cheaper rate) or negative (uncertainty) for them to do this. For the consortium, either it's a bad deal (they have to find a new sublessee) or it's a great one (they have a new sublessee lined up; presumably, this would be someone making a film). If the latter happens, then the Valencia property does the thing AP and RMB had been trying to do all along - it becomes a place to lease out to small indie filmmakers and make a buck.