326-330 East 35th Street Assoc. v. Sofizade

191 Misc. 2d 329, 741 N.Y.S.2d 380, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 253
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedApril 4, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 191 Misc. 2d 329 (326-330 East 35th Street Assoc. v. Sofizade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
326-330 East 35th Street Assoc. v. Sofizade, 191 Misc. 2d 329, 741 N.Y.S.2d 380, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 253 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Per Curiam.

Order entered June 29, 2001 reversed, with $10 costs, tenant’s motion denied, holdover petition reinstated, landlord’s cross motion for summary judgment on the petition is granted, and the matter remanded to Civil Court for further proceedings consistent with this decision.

The holdover summary proceeding stems from allegations that the stabilized tenant breached a substantial leasehold obligation by “consistently, chronically, and unjustifiably” failing to tender the preferential rent agreed upon by the parties when due, requiring the landlord to commence 12 nonpayment proceedings during the period between December 1997 and September 2000. We reject tenant’s assertion, advanced as the sole basis for his motion for summary judgment dismissing the petition, that the landlord’s election to forego serving a prepetition notice to cure is fatal to its possessory claim.

As this court recently stated in analogous circumstances, a landlord need not serve a notice to cure as a predicate to commencement of a holdover proceeding based upon chronic nonpayment of rent, because “the cumulative pattern of tenant [’s] course of conduct” is incapable of any meaningful cure (Adam’s Tower Ltd. Partnership v Richter, 186 Misc 2d 620, 622; see also, 3363 Sedgwick v Medina, 187 Misc 2d 421 [App Term, 1st Dept]). Our decision in Adam’s Tower to dispense with the empty formalism of a cure notice in this type of eviction proceeding is, as tenant now acknowledges in his appellate brief, consistent with a “long line of cases” reaching the same result (see, e.g., 974 Realty Corp. v Ledford, 9 Misc 2d 240; Ocean Farragut Assoc. v Sawyer, 119 Misc 2d 712; see also, National Shoes v Annex Camera & Elecs., 114 Misc 2d 751 [Saxe, J.]).

[331]*331Tenant has offered no sound basis for us to depart from our recent four-square holding in Adam’s Tower. Granted, a holdover proceeding based upon an alleged substantial lease violation generally will lie only after the tenant has failed to comply with a 10-day notice to cure (see, Rent Stabilization Code [9 NYCRR] § 2524.3 [a] [Code]). Strict adherence to the literal terms of the Code notice requirement is unwarranted in a chronic late payment holdover proceeding, however, since the past, persistent rent defaults which form the basis of the landlord’s claim cannot be remedied by a tenant’s “furnishing of assurances of future performance” (National Shoes v Annex Camera & Elecs., supra, 114 Misc 2d at 752) or, for that matter, by a tenant’s actual tender of any rent payment that may accrue during the 10-day, prepetition cure period specified by the Code.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Misc. 2d 329, 741 N.Y.S.2d 380, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/326-330-east-35th-street-assoc-v-sofizade-nyappterm-2002.