41-47 Nick LLC v. Odumosu

2024 NY Slip Op 24167
CourtCivil Court Of The City Of New York, New York County
DecidedJune 11, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 24167 (41-47 Nick LLC v. Odumosu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court Of The City Of New York, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
41-47 Nick LLC v. Odumosu, 2024 NY Slip Op 24167 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

41-47 Nick LLC v Odumosu (2024 NY Slip Op 24167) [*1]
41-47 Nick LLC v Odumosu
2024 NY Slip Op 24167
Decided on June 11, 2024
Civil Court Of The City Of New York, New York County
Bacdayan, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on June 11, 2024
Civil Court of the City of New York, New York County


41-47 Nick LLC, Petitioner,

against

Peter Odumosu, Respondent.




Index No. 320222-22

Todd Rothenberg, Esq., for the petitioner

Manhattan Legal Services (Kirsten Zambrano, Law Graduate, supervised by Erica Braudy, Esq. pursuant to 9 NYCRR § 524.3), for the respondent
Karen May Bacdayan, J.

Recitation, as required by CPLR 2219 (a) of the papers considered in review of this motion by NYSCEF Doc Nos: 27-39.


PROCEDURAL POSTURE AND BACKGROUND

This is a nonpayment proceeding commenced on December 29, 2022. (NYSCEF Doc No. 1, petition.) It is not disputed that Peter Odumosu ("respondent") is a senior citizen who has resided in the apartment since May 1997. The apartment is registered as rent stabilized, and from the petition it appears that the rent charged is $1,845.11. (Id. ¶¶ 6-7.) Respondent filed an answer to the proceeding without counsel on March 2, 2023. (NYSCEF Doc No. 4.) On May 11, 2023, respondent appeared by an attorney through the Universal Access to Counsel program ("UAC"); an amended answer (as permitted pursuant to the court's May 11, 2023 order) was filed on June 9, 2023. (NYSCEF Doc No. 7, amended answer.) The amended answer asserted numerous defenses including fraudulent overcharge. The answer also included the following counterclaims: treble damages due to a fraudulent overcharge; an order requiring petitioner to offer respondent a valid rent stabilized lease at the correct legal rent; damages for breach of the warranty of habitability; an order to correct; and attorney's fees.

Previously, respondent moved for leave to conduct discovery pursuant to CPLR 408, reaching back as far as 1993, regarding his first defense and counterclaim related to an alleged fraudulent overcharge.[FN1] Respondent argued that he had interposed a colorable claim of a [*2]fraudulent overcharge by demonstrating indicia of same, and, thus, respondent should be permitted to discover and inspect documents ranging from 1993 to present "based upon many fraud factors and irregularities captured in the [DHCR] rent history . . . ." (NYSCEF Doc No. 10, respondent's attorney's affirmation ¶ 11.) Respondent's attorney argued that respondent had met all of the factors generally considered by the court when determining motions for discovery including "a meritorious fraudulent overcharge claim" and that he has "[a] need for [the requested] documents since they are crucial to his case, and the documents cannot be easily obtained elsewhere." (Id. ¶¶ 32, 48.)

Citing to Burrows v 75-25 153rd St., LLC, 215 AD3d 105 (1st Dept 2023), petitioner argued that respondent had failed to sufficiently plead the common law elements of fraud as required by Regina Metro. Co., LLC v New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 35 NY3d 332 (2020).[FN2] The Burrows court dismissed a fraudulent overcharge claim as the tenants had failed to allege "a fraudulent scheme to deregulate" stemming from an "unlawfully inflated 'legal regulated rent' . . . so as to avoid the bar of the four-year lookback rule and to allow recalculation of the legal rent on the base date [] utilizing the default formula referenced in Regina, as a basis for overcharge damages." (Burrows, 215 AD3d at 109.) After New York courts almost universally agreed that common law fraud must be properly pleaded, Burrows held that the element of justifiable reliance could not be established "as a matter of law" if public records, specifically the DHCR rent registration history, could be examined to reveal a representation of fact upon which a tenant claiming a fraudulent scheme to deregulate could not have justifiably relied. (Id.) Burrows went so far as to apply this standard to current and predecessor tenants. After Burrows — disregarding the fact that DHCR rent registration histories are not available to tenants until after they sign the lease — claims of fraud were eliminated at the pleading stage because "disclosure in the publicly available rental histories of the discrepant figures for legal regulated rent and preferential rent negates any inference of fraud as a matter of law (emphasis added)."[FN3] (Burrows at 113.) Burrows transformed the subjective element of justifiable reliance, not susceptible to dismissal before trial,[FN4] into an objective, bright-line rule [*3]applied in this context to proceedings involving parties of unequal sophistication and bargaining power.

With reservations, the court followed the holding in Burrows, as respondent had acknowledged that his "fraudulent overcharge allegation is based upon many fraud factors and irregularities captured in the [DHCR] rent history and in other publicly available records for the subject apartment." (41-47 Nick LLC v Odumosu, 81 Misc 3d 772, 776 [Civ Ct, New York County 2023].) Applying Burrows, petitioner argued that respondent could not establish justifiable reliance as a matter of law. Upon reargument, the court held that it had not overlooked any relevant facts or law proffered with the original motion. (NYSCEF Doc No. 25, decision and order dated November 15, 2023.)

Pursuant to CPLR 2221,[FN5] respondent has moved to renew the court's prior decisions which followed the holding in Burrows, and adhered to its determination upon reargument.[FN6] The motion to renew is based on the same answer, a third affidavit, and the passage of "new legislation . . . which [respondent argues] modifies the fraud exception under pre-Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act ("HSTPA") law, L 2023, ch 760, Amended L 2024, ch 95, and explicitly state[s] that fraud should not be considered under the Burrows 'common law' fraud definition, but instead the courts must consider the 'totality of the circumstances' to determine whether fraud was present in an overcharge." (NYSCEF Doc No. 27, respondent's attorney's affirmation ¶ 27.)


APPLICABLE LAW AND ARGUMENTS

Applicable Law

Burrows was issued on April 13, 2023. It is reasonably certain that the legislature acted swiftly in direct response to Burrows, "to retroactively redefine 'fraud' in the context of pre-HSTPA claims . . . ."[FN7] On June 20, 2023, just two months after Burrows was handed down, the Senate passed a bill which had previously been passed by the Assembly. On December 23, 2023, Governor Hochul signed into law Chapter 760 of the Laws of New York of 2023, which took effect immediately, and which stated that:

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2024 NY Slip Op 24167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/41-47-nick-llc-v-odumosu-nycivctny-2024.