712 Realty, LLC v. Poliard
This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 24016 (712 Realty, LLC v. Poliard) 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.
Opinion
| 712 Realty, LLC v Poliard |
| 2024 NY Slip Op 24016 |
| Decided on January 12, 2024 |
| Appellate Term, Second Department |
| 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 Miscellaneous Reports. |
Decided on January 12, 2024
PRESENT: : WAVNY TOUSSAINT, P.J., CHEREÉ A. BUGGS, MARINA CORA MUNDY, JJ
2019-1087 K C
against
Mireille Poliard, Appellant.
Mireille Poliard, appellant pro se. Rosenblum & Bianco, LLP, for respondent (no brief filed).
Appeal from a decision of the Civil Court of the City of New York, Kings County (Michael L. Weisberg, J.), dated June 5, 2019, deemed from two final judgments of that court entered June 10, 2019 (see CPLR 5512 [a]). The final judgments, upon the decision, after a nonjury trial, awarded landlord possession and the sum of $1,388.76, respectively, in a nonpayment summary proceeding.
ORDERED that the final judgments are affirmed, without costs.
In this nonpayment proceeding based upon alleged arrears of $2,834.01, representing monthly rent of $1,388.76 for November and December of 2018 and partial rent of $56.49 for October of 2018, tenant filed an answer in which she asserted a breach of the warranty of habitability. At a nonjury trial, the petition was amended to include rent due through March of 2019, and landlord's witness testified that landlord had received a payment from tenant in March of 2019, that all payments are applied to the oldest outstanding balance, and that tenant still owed $1,388.76. After trial, the Civil Court awarded landlord possession and a monetary award of $1,388.76 without any abatement in favor of tenant based on her breach of the warranty of habitability defense. On appeal, tenant argues that she has paid all of her rent and, in any event, [*2]that landlord failed to repair a mold condition in her apartment.
Landlord submitted sufficient evidence to establish that tenant owed one month's rent of $1,388.76 in March of 2019, after the amendment of the petition. While tenant makes a general claim that she made all rent payments, she does not dispute that landlord's records accurately credit her with all the rent payments she had made. Indeed, tenant submitted with her appellate brief a rent ledger from landlord with her handwritten comments on it, which ledger clearly demonstrates that no rent payment was made in November of 2017. At trial, tenant acknowledged that landlord had alleged that no payment was made for November 2017. She then testified that, in September or October of 2017, she gave landlord a bank check for $1,900 and a money order for $843.22 in the same envelope and that these payments were for September and October of 2017. Earlier she had testified that she sometimes paid her rent in advance. The rent ledger she submitted with her brief shows a payment of $1,900 on September 29, 2017 and a payment of $843.22 on October 3, 2017, which two payments tenant circled together and noted "Sep & October—two months rent in one envelop[e]." The ledger shows a balance of $2,834.01 prior to the $1,900 payment, a charge of $1,371.61 for October rent on October 1, 2017, and a balance of $1,462.40 after the $843.22 payment. The ledger shows additional payments of $371.61 and $1,000, both on October 30, 2017, which tenant circled together and wrote "November" and "I paid in advance for November." However, after those payments were credited, the ledger shows a balance of $90.79 and a charge of $1,371.61 on November 1, 2017 for November 2017 rent, leaving a balance of $1,462.40 at the end of November. The ledger further shows that tenant then made monthly rent payments but remained approximately one month behind in her rent until November 2018 when she missed another rent payment, leaving a balance of $2,834.01 at of the end of November 2018. (During this time, monthly rent increased to $1,388.76.)
This proceeding was commenced in December of 2018, after December rent was charged to tenant's account and a payment of $1,388.76 was credited. The petition was based upon arrears of $2,834.01, representing two months' rent and additional arrears of $56.49. (The petition also alleged that tenant owed $250 in legal fees.) It is undisputed that tenant obtained a one-shot deal for that amount, and a rent ledger in the court file shows that $2,834.01 was paid to landlord on tenant's behalf in January of 2019. That check covered the arrears, but no payment was made for January rent. Monthly payments of $1,388.76 were made in February and March, leaving tenant one month behind when the petition was amended at trial to include March 2019 rent, thereby justifying the Civil Court's finding that tenant was in arrears in her rent payments by the sum of $1,388.76.
The Civil Court further found that tenant's testimony was insufficient to prove a mold condition during the period covered by this nonpayment proceeding, the only period which this court can review. The Civil Court's finding that no abatement was warranted for tenant's breach of the warranty of habitability claim is supported by a fair interpretation of the evidence, and, thus, its determinations should not be disturbed.
Accordingly, the final judgments are affirmed.
BUGGS and MUNDY, JJ., concur.
Toussaint, P.J., dissents and votes to reverse the final judgments and dismiss the petition in the following memorandum.
In my opinion, a review of the record fails to support the findings that landlord demonstrated, prima facie, that there were rent arrears of $1,388.76 or that tenant did not establish a breach of the warranty of habitability based upon a mold condition in the subject apartment.
In this nonpayment proceeding brought by landlord, 712 Realty, LLC, against self-represented tenant Mireille Poliard, a nonjury trial was held on March 15 and May 8, 2019. The petition alleged tenant's failure to pay monthly rent of $1,388.76 for November and December of 2018, and partial rent of $56.49 for October of 2018. The petition was amended by stipulation dated January 7, 2019 to include rent owed through January of 2019 and, at trial on March 15, 2019, to include rent owed through March of 2019. Tenant contended that no rent was due and further asserted a defense based on a breach of the warranty of habitability as an offset to any arrears which might be established by the landlord. After trial, the court, in separate judgments, awarded landlord possession and the sum of $1,388.76, without any abatement. Tenant appeals, submitting various exhibits, some of which, it appears, were not before the Civil Court. The landlord submitted no respondent's brief.
In reviewing a determination made after a nonjury trial, the power of this court is as broad as that of the trial court, and this court may render the judgment it finds warranted by the facts, with deference given to a trial court's credibility determinations (see Northern Westchester Professional Park Assoc. v Town of Bedford, 60 NY2d 492, 499 [1983]; Hamilton v Blackwood, 85 AD3d 1116 [2011]).
At trial, landlord's managing agent testified that, notwithstanding receipt of a rent payment in the month of March of 2019, tenant still owed $1,388.76.
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2024 NY Slip Op 24016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/712-realty-llc-v-poliard-nyappterm-2024.