2-12 Sutter LLC v. Crawford

6 Misc. 3d 858
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedDecember 1, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Misc. 3d 858 (2-12 Sutter LLC v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
2-12 Sutter LLC v. Crawford, 6 Misc. 3d 858 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Gary F. Marton, J.

After considering the testimony and the other evidence at the trial of this holdover proceeding, the court has granted petitioner a judgment of possession. The warrant may issue forthwith, but the same shall be without prejudice to any application for relief pursuant to RPAPL 753.

On October 1, 2003 petitioner served a predicate notice of termination that fixed October 31, 2003 as the date on which respondents’ month-to-month tenancy would end. On November 26, 2003 petitioner served and filed the petition and notice of petition herein. On December 1, 2003 respondents, acting pro se, entered into a stipulation of settlement which was “so ordered” by the court. They agreed, among other things, to vacate the premises by April 30, 2004 and to pay $700 per month as use and occupancy in the interim. A judgment of possession was entered and a warrant issued.

Thereafter, respondents retained counsel and moved to vacate the stipulation and for other relief. By a decision and order dated May 25, 2004 the court vacated the stipulation, judgment, and warrant. This proceeding was then transferred to the instant part for trial.

The court finds that petitioner owns the building in which the premises is located, that the premises is one apartment in a [860]*860building with two residential apartments over a store, that petitioner is the landlord and respondents were the tenants of the premises, that a predicate notice, petition, and notice of petition were duly served, and that petitioner otherwise proved a prima facie case.

In their answer, respondents raised two affirmative defenses.1 One is that the termination notice was a nullity because respondents are not month-to-month tenants but instead are rent stabilized inasmuch as the premises is located in a horizontal multiple dwelling with six or more residential units. The other defense is that petitioner vitiated the termination notice by retaining respondents’ payment on November 5, 2003 of rent for November 2003, i.e., rent for the period after October 31, 2003, when respondents’ tenancy ended pursuant to the notice, and before November 26, 2004, when petitioner commenced this proceeding.

Horizontal Multiple Dwelling

The building in which the premises is located is one of five adjacent buildings. Their street addresses are 2-4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 Sutter Avenue.2 The buildings face north onto Sutter Avenue, but 12 Sutter Avenue, which is the easternmost and is at the corner of Sutter and Ralph Avenue, also bears the street address 714 Ralph Avenue and has its entrance on that thoroughfare. The westernmost building, which includes the premises, has its entrance on Sutter Avenue but is at the corner of Sutter and East 98th Street. In the aggregate, the five buildings have seven residential apartments.

“In determining the existence of a regulated horizontal multiple dwelling the crucial factor . . . is . . . whether there [861]*861are sufficient indicia of common facilities, common ownership, management and operation to warrant treating the housing as an integrated unit and multiple dwelling subject to regulation.” (Matter of Salvati v Eimicke, 72 NY2d 784, 792 [1988] [citations omitted].)

The buildings sit on a real estate parcel that is identified as a single block and lot (block 3530, lot 8) on the tax map of the City of New York. Respondents proved that the five buildings share a boiler which is located in the building that also borders on Ralph Avenue. Respondents also showed that the City of New York’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) issued a “Summary Violation Report” (SVR) for real estate identified as 69 East 98th Street in Brooklyn, tax map block 3530, lot 8, and that the report states that there are seven “Units” there.

The court assigns little probative weight to the SVR because HPD issued it for the stated purpose of showing whether there were violations of the housing code (HPD found none); HPD did not issue it for the purpose of showing the number of residential units at the property. Also, the report does not show the date of the inspection upon which it was presumably based.

Petitioner made a countervailing showing (a) that the buildings have separate entrances, separate basements, separate electric service and meters, separate gas service and meters, separate connections to the City of New York’s sewer main in Sutter Avenue, and separate roof parapets; (b) that there is not a common attic or interior hallway from which one might pass from any building to any other building; (c) that the certificate of occupancy describes 2-4 Sutter Avenue as a two-story building with a cellar, three commercial units on the ground floor, and two residential units on the second; and (d) that the adjacent building — 6 Sutter Avenue — has its own certificate of occupancy.

The court holds that taking all of the evidence into consideration, respondents did not prove their defense that the premises is located in a horizontal multiple dwelling. (Cf., Salvati v Eimicke, supra; Yahudaii v Lawson, 2 Misc 3d 5 [App Term, 2d Dept 2003] [where the court held that the tenant’s showing of common ownership of two buildings, combined tax assessment, [862]*862common water meter,3 common front steps and facade, and common roof was insufficient to prove a horizontal multiple dwelling where the landlord showed that the buildings had different street addresses, certificates of occupancy, multiple dwelling registrations numbers, shared only a common wall, and did not have any passageway connecting one to the other].)

Vitiation of the Termination Notice

A tenant served with a predicate termination notice may defend on the ground that the landlord vitiated the notice by accepting rent for the posttermination period. (205 E. 8th St. Assoc, v Cassidy, 192 AD2d 479 [1st Dept 1993], revg on op of McCooe, J., NYLJ, Sept. 27, 1991, at 21, col 4 [App Term, 1st Dept].) At bottom, this defense is one of waiver (Goldman v Beer aft, NYLJ, July 13, 2001, at 18, col 2 [App Term, 1st Dept]).

To make out this defense, respondents had to prove a “voluntary abandonment. . . of a known right” (Jefpaul Garage Corp. v Presbyterian Hosp., 61 NY2d 442, 446 [1984]). That is, respondents had to establish that petitioner chose to abandon its right to terminate respondents’ tenancy and to enforce that termination. Such a waiver “is essentially a matter of intent, which ‘must be unmistakably manifested, and is not to be inferred from a doubtful or equivocal act’ (Ess & Vee Acoustical & Lathing Contr. v Prato Verde, 268 AD2d 332, quoting Orange Steel Erecters v Newburgh Steel-Products, 225 AD2d 1010, 1012)” Beer aft, supra at 18, col 2).

Respondents did not offer any evidence directly probative of such an intent. Respondents did not testify that any agent of petitioner’s told respondents that petitioner wanted them to continue their tenancy. There was no showing of a tender of a lease renewal or other document that evinced a desire on petitioner’s part to continue,, reinstate, or revive respondents’ tenancy.4

Respondents contend that the court ought to infer such an intent from petitioner’s retention of respondents’ payment, sent [863]*863by certified mail on November 5, 2003, of $700 as rent for November 2003.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Misc. 3d 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/2-12-sutter-llc-v-crawford-nycivct-2004.