418 W. 130 St. LLC v. Espinal

2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U)
CourtCivil Court Of The City Of New York, New York County
DecidedMay 8, 2024
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U) (418 W. 130 St. LLC v. Espinal) 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
418 W. 130 St. LLC v. Espinal, 2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

418 W. 130 St. LLC v Espinal (2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U)) [*1]
418 W. 130 St. LLC v Espinal
2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U)
Decided on May 8, 2024
Civil Court Of The City Of New York, New York County
Stoller, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on May 8, 2024
Civil Court of the City of New York, New York County


418 West 130 Street LLC, Petitioner,

against

Junior Espinal and ANTHONY LAZARO, Respondents.




Index No. 74194/2018

For Petitioner: Todd Rothenberg

For Respondent Espinal: Ari Mor

For Respondent Lazaro: Anthony Lazaro, pro se Jack Stoller, J.

418 West 130 Street LLC, the petitioner in this proceeding ("Petitioner"), commenced this holdover proceeding against Junior Espinal ("Respondent") a respondent in this proceeding, a respondent in this proceeding, and Anthony Lazaro ("Co-Respondent") another respondent in this proceeding (collectively, "Respondents"), seeking possession of 418 West 130th Street, Apt. 52, New York, New York ("the subject premises") on an allegation of termination of a license given by Celso Lazaro ("the Prior Tenant") and Elizabeth Wagner ("the Prior Co-Tenant") (collectively, "the Prior Tenants"). Respondents interposed an answer with defenses of, inter alia, succession. The Court held a trial of this matter.

The trial record

Petitioner proved that it is the proper party to commence this proceeding; that Petitioner had a landlord/tenant relationship with the Prior Tenants; that the Prior Tenants are no longer in possession of the subject premises; that Respondents remain in possession after the vacatur of the Prior Tenants; and that Petitioner cause a predicate notice to be served on Respondents.

Petitioner submitted into evidence a series of leases. Both the Prior Tenants and Petitioner are listed as parties to the leases, although the only signatory for the tenants on all leases commencing on or after April of 2009 is the Prior Co-Tenant, not the Prior Tenant. The most recent of these leases is a two-year lease commencing on April 1, 2017 between Petitioner and the named Prior Tenants, but only signed by the Prior Co-Tenant.

At Petitioner's request, the Court took judicial notice there was a prior holdover proceeding that Petitioner commenced against the Prior Tenant with the index number L/T 66552/2018 ("the Prior Holdover Proceeding") filed on July 9, 2018. The Court appointed a guardian ad litem for the Prior Tenant in the Prior Holdover Proceeding. Petitioner discontinued [*2]the Prior Holdover Proceeding as of August 15, 2019.

Manny Stein ("the Managing Agent") testified that he learned that the Prior Tenants were not living in the subject premises in the Prior Holdover Proceeding.

The Managing Agent testified on cross-examination that he does not know Respondents; that he does not have an ownership stake in Petitioner; that the super of the building in which the subject premises is located ("the Building") is named Marc Contreras; that Joseph Minaya ("the Super") lives at a different address but works at the Building; that he knows that the Prior Holdover Proceeding was a nuisance holdover proceeding alleging noise; that he named the Prior Tenants as respondents in the Prior Holdover Proceeding because they were the tenants of record; that there were no other tenants of the subject premises; that the Prior Tenants have been living in the subject premises since about 2000; that the Prior Tenants had children; that he does not recall the disposition of the Prior Holdover Proceeding; that the Prior Tenants did not surrender possession of the subject premises; that he did not name the Prior Tenants as parties to this proceeding because he understood that the Prior Tenants were not living there based on what he heard in the Prior Holdover Proceeding; that the Prior Tenant died; that he has been in the subject premises; that he was last in the subject premises pre-Covid, maybe to check on repairs; and that he does not remember if he met the Prior Tenant.

The Court took judicial notice of the digital recording of a Court appearance on the Prior Proceeding on August 23, 2018. In open Court that day, Respondent stated that the Prior Tenants did not live in the subject premises and that he did not know if Petitioner knew that the Prior Tenants were no longer there.

The parties stipulated that Respondent is the son of the Prior Co-Tenant, that Co-Respondent is the son of the Prior Tenant and the Prior Co-Tenant, and that Petitioner accepted an Emergency Rent Assistance Payment on Respondent's behalf in June of 2022, which was during the pendency of this proceeding.

Respondent submitted into evidence his W-2 forms for 2007, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018, his tax returns for 2015, 2017, and 2018, his driver's license issued on March 11, 2017, and his school records from 2002 through 2005, all of which list the subject premises as his address. Respondent submitted into evidence an Order of Custody and Visitation dated June 2, 2008 from a Family Court proceeding with the index number V-04670-08 (Fam. Ct. NY Co. 2008), which stated that the Prior Co-Tenant has custody of Co-Respondent.

Respondent submitted into evidence the death certificate the Prior Tenant, which shows that the Prior Tenant died on August 6, 2019, that subject premises was his address, that the informant was Co-Respondent, that Co-Respondent's address was the subject premises, and that Co-Respondent is the Prior Tenant's son.

Co-Respondent submitted into evidence his school records from 2010 through 2014, cable bills in Co-Respondent's name from 2018, and Co-Respondent's bank statements from 2018, all of which show the subject premises as Co-Respondent's address. Co-Respondent submitted into evidence a letter dated February 1, 2019 showing that Co-Respondent requested paid family leave for care for a family member. The letter shows the subject premises as Co-Respondent's address.

Respondent testified that the Prior Tenant was his stepfather; that he was born in the Dominican Republic; that he moved to the U.S. in 1994; that they moved to Harlem, on 135th Street and Broadway, for a year or two; that they then moved to the subject premises; that he lived with his aunt; that they were living with the Super; that he moved into the subject premises [*3]in 2000; that he has not lived with anyone else; that he lived with the Prior Tenant and the Prior Co-Tenant and his sister; that the Super was in a community with his family; that the Super was a big part of them growing up; that they had a barbecue in the basement; that they celebrated New Year's together; that the Super watched him grow up; that he and the Super have had meals in each other's apartments; that the relationship with the Super started when he moved into a different apartment in the Building in 1997; that no one else lived with him in the subject premises; that he went to three schools in the area, P.S.

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Related

418 W. 130 St. LLC v. Espinal
2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U) (NYC Civil Court, New York, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 50540(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/418-w-130-st-llc-v-espinal-nycivctny-2024.