1029 Sixth, LLC v. Riniv Corp.

9 A.D.3d 142, 777 N.Y.S.2d 122, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7222
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 25, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 9 A.D.3d 142 (1029 Sixth, LLC v. Riniv Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1029 Sixth, LLC v. Riniv Corp., 9 A.D.3d 142, 777 N.Y.S.2d 122, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7222 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Saxe, J.

In these four companion commercial holdover proceedings, each of which was settled by so-ordered stipulation, the landlord appeals from the orders of Appellate Term which reversed the Civil Court and required the landlord to make payments to respondent tenants pursuant to their stipulations. We agree with the Civil Court’s view, and conclude that Appellate Term was wrong in excusing the tenants’ failure to comply with the terms of the stipulation and requiring the landlord to comply with the stipulation despite the tenants’ default.

Factual Background

On October 15, 1999, the previous landlord served the respondent commercial tenants with notices of termination, advising that it had conveyed its interest in the building to 1029 Sixth, LLC, which intended to develop the building, and was [144]*144therefore exercising its option under lease rider paragraph 9 to terminate the lease as of January 31, 2000. That provision stated that should the landlord intend “to develop, sell or net lease the building of which the demised premises forms a part, then in such event Landlord may, at its option, terminate this lease at any time upon ninety (90) days prior written notice to the Tenant.”

The tenants remained in possession past the termination date, and failed to pay rent and/or use and occupancy thereafter, and the landlord brought the underlying holdover proceedings in March 2000. In response, the tenants interposed technical defenses, although they have never challenged the landlord’s right to terminate the lease under this provision, or the landlord’s good faith intent to do so.

After more than six months, on October 5, 2000, the holdover proceedings were settled by so-ordered stipulations dated October 5, 2000. These stipulations gave the landlord that which it was entitled to under the lease: possession of the premises, albeit not until December 31, 2000. Indeed, the tenants acknowledged in the stipulations that the termination notices were valid and had properly terminated the leases as of January 31, 2000; the tenants also consented to possessory judgments to the landlord to be stayed until December 31, 2000. In exchange, the tenants obtained the right to receive substantial cash payments of between $25,000 and $55,000, including a lump sum, a partial rent waiver and a partial return of the security deposit. However, these payments were made “subject to . . . compliance with the terms and conditions herein . . . [and] on condition that [the tenant] vacates . . . by no later than the Vacate Date.”

The stipulation included the provision that “Time shall be of the essence with respect to all of Respondent’s obligations under this Stipulation including, without limitation, Respondent’s obligation to vacate the Premises pursuant to the terms hereof.”

Further, it provided that

“In the event Respondent (a) fails to timely vacate the Premises in accordance with the provisions of this Stipulation or otherwise, or (b) obtains a stay of vacating on or before the Vacate Date from any court for any reason whatsoever, then, in addition to any other remedies to which Petitioner is or may [145]*145be entitled, (i) Petitioner shall have no obligation to pay, and Respondent shall be deemed to forfeit all right to receive the Payment and the Deposit. . .

In addition, each respondent tenant specifically waived its “right to appeal, challenge, vacate or dispute the Possessory Judgment entered . . . pursuant to this Stipulation” and agreed that it would not take any appeal nor make any application or motion of any kind whatsoever directed to the stipulation or any of its terms.

Also, importantly, the stipulation contained the following “de minimis” clause:

“The acceptance by Petitioner of partial performance of any of the terms and conditions of this Stipulation shall not constitute an agreement, express or otherwise, to modify, change or alter the Stipulation or constitute a waiver by or estoppel against Petitioner to insist upon full and complete performance of the terms of the Stipulation as written. By illustration and not by way of limitation, no partial payment no matter how substantial, nor any delay in vacating the Premises, shall be deemed to be substantial compliance, i.e. no shortage of payment or delay in vacating the Premises shall be considered to be de minimis.” (Emphasis added.)

The foregoing terms of the stipulation made crystal clear the consequences of a delay in vacating the premises: time was of the essence, no delay would be considered de minimis, and a failure to vacate exactly as the stipulation required would result in the complete elimination of the landlord’s obligation to make the cash payment provided for by the stipulation.

Yet, on the agreed-upon vacate date to effect surrender of the premises in exchange for the payment, the landlord found that the four store premises had not been left “broom clean” as required by the leases. Instead, garbage bags, refuse and shelving had not been removed. Indeed, the submissions of the respondent tenants on this motion indicate that to complete the cleanup of that which was left behind, the landlord would need to rent a dumpster and obtain the services of two laborers for approximately five or six hours.

The following day the landlord formally notified the tenants that it would not make the payments provided for by the stipulation because the premises had not been delivered “broom clean” on the vacate date.

[146]*146The tenants moved to compel payment by the landlord pursuant to the stipulations, contending that the failure to remove the garbage was de minimis, making it inequitable to permit the withholding of the payment.

The Civil Court denied the tenants’ applications. It concluded that the tenants had unquestionably breached the “[t]ime shall be of the essence” clause of the stipulation and the “broom clean” provision of the lease, and that their claim that the breaches were de minimis was expressly barred by the stipulation.

Appellate Term reversed and granted the applications to enforce the stipulations, holding, based upon its own review of the record, that there was no delay in the tenants’ vacating, and the landlord had made no independent showing of the condition of the premises, but had merely adopted the tenants’ reference to “garbage bags/refuse” and treated it as a concession that the stipulation had been violated. Appellate Term stated that it was refusing to effect a forfeiture of the right to payment based upon a trivial or technical breach, which could have been remedied for a nominal sum, and in light of the impending demolition of the building.

Discussion

Appellate Term improperly relieved these commercial tenants of the effect of their negotiated stipulations, which clearly required strict compliance as a condition for their receiving payment.

The terms of the stipulation are clear and the parties were entitled to chart their own course by entering into it (see e.g. Mill Rock Plaza Assoc. v Lively, 224 AD2d 301 [1996]). Stipulations have long been a favored means of resolving disputes absent an affront to public policy (see Matter of Stravinsky, 4 AD3d 75, 80 [2003]). The stipulation under consideration here is a lengthy and detailed document, resulting from extensive negotiation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 A.D.3d 142, 777 N.Y.S.2d 122, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1029-sixth-llc-v-riniv-corp-nyappdiv-2004.