985 Amsterdam Avenue Housing Development Fund Corp. v. Beddoe

42 Misc. 3d 631, 976 N.Y.S.2d 756
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 2013
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Misc. 3d 631 (985 Amsterdam Avenue Housing Development Fund Corp. v. Beddoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
985 Amsterdam Avenue Housing Development Fund Corp. v. Beddoe, 42 Misc. 3d 631, 976 N.Y.S.2d 756 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lucy Billings, J.

Petitioner seeks to vacate three default judgments issued by respondent New York City Environmental Control Board (ECB), imposing fines for three New York City Department of Buildings violations issued to petitioner (NY City Charter § 1049-a [d] [1] [d]), and to reverse respondents’ denial of petitioner’s request to vacate the default judgments. Petitioner claims respondents’ service of their notices of violation and hearing, of the default judgments, and of their determination denying petitioner’s request to vacate the default judgments was deficient and that the fines imposed were arbitrary. After oral argument, based on respondents’ administrative record and regulations and on New York City Charter § 1049-a (d), the court grants the petition and remands the proceeding to respondents for a new hearing for the reasons explained below. (CPLR 7803 [3], [4].)

I. The Undisputed Administrative Proceedings

The Department of Buildings (DOB) issued the violations on July 28, 2011, against petitioner’s residential cooperative building. Violation No. 34923721R was for a lack of fire stopping in the boiler room wall, to be corrected by installing the fire stopping. Violation No. 34923722Z was for prohibited locks on bedroom doors in two apartments, to be corrected by removing the prohibited locks. Violation No. 34923723K was for a lack of smoke detectors in specified apartments and hallways, to be corrected by installing the smoke detectors. The notices of each of the violations informed petitioner of a hearing on the violation scheduled for September 15, 2011.

Petitioner mailed certificates of correction for the three violations to DOB on September 8, 2011. Since petitioner did not [633]*633dispute the violations when they were issued and subsequently submitted the certificates of correction, petitioner assumed it was unnecessary to appear at the hearing to resolve the violations.

DOB disapproved petitioner’s certificates of correction, however, because they lacked a sworn explanation of how the violations were corrected. By the time petitioner received the disapprovals, it already had failed to appear at the hearing on September 15, 2011, but it resubmitted certificates of correction on October 5, 2011, which DOB approved on October 18 and 21, 2011.

Petitioner never received any notices that it had defaulted regarding the violations, either that it had defaulted in appearing for the hearing on the violations scheduled for September 15, 2011, or that a default judgment had been issued. After petitioner received bills in November 2011 for the fines imposed for the violations, $5,000 for No. 34923721R, $2,500 for No. 34923722Z, and $8,000 for No. 34923723K, petitioner, through its managing agent, submitted a request to respondents on November 30, 2011, to vacate the default judgments and reschedule the hearing.

ECB denied this request because: “You did not include information or documents you were asked to provide or the documents you provided did not prove your claim.” (Verified petition, exhibit G; verified answer, exhibit E.) ECB’s form “Request for a New Hearing After a Failure to Appear,” which petitioner submitted, states: “REASON FOR WHICH A NEW HEARING SHOULD BE GRANTED: YOU MUST CHECK ONE OF THE REASONS LISTED BELOW. ... IF NO REASON IS CHECKED, YOUR REQUEST WILL BE DENIED.” (Verified petition, exhibit F at 2; verified answer, exhibit D at 2.) Petitioner failed to indicate one of the reasons listed.

The only reason listed that conceivably may have applied to petitioner’s circumstances, however, was: “It is more than 45 days from the missed hearing date, but it is less than 30 days from the mailing date of the default order.” (Verified petition, exhibit F at 2; verified answer, exhibit D at 2.) Respondents’ administrative record includes an affidavit that a default order related to each violation was mailed to petitioner on September 20, 2011, as part of a bulk mailing of default orders to many destinations automatically generated through respondents’ database. Petitioner, however, attests that it never received any such order. Tellingly consistent with petitioner’s nonreceipt, no [634]*634copy of a default order or judgment that was mailed is included in respondents’ administrative record or anywhere else in the record. Because petitioner did not know when any default order was mailed, this listed reason would not be understood to apply to petitioner’s circumstances.

Another reason listed on ECB’s form “Request for a New Hearing After a Failure to Appear” was that petitioner “did not receive the ticket (notice of violation) because the issuing agency did not serve the ticket correctly.” (Verified petition, exhibit F at 2; verified answer, exhibit D at 2.) Although petitioner claims that DOB’s service of the notice of violation and hearing (NOV) for No. 34923723K, regarding a lack of smoke detectors, was deficient, petitioner did receive the NOV so this listed reason would not be understood to apply to petitioner’s circumstances either.

Petitioner did not, however, receive ECB’s denials of petitioner’s request for a new hearing on the violations, because ECB addressed its three denials, one for each violation, to petitioner in the care of its managing agent at 799 Broadway, New York, NY 10003. Petitioner’s address was 985 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10025. Its managing agent’s address was 80 East 11th Street, New York, NY 10003.

Since neither petitioner nor its managing agent received any response to petitioner’s request for a new hearing, the managing agent submitted another request on March 5, 2012. This request fully explained why petitioner failed to appear at the originally scheduled hearing, why the agent failed to include one of the listed reasons in the first request for a new hearing, and that petitioner previously had corrected the violations. Respondents never responded to this request in writing.

II. Applicable Procedural Requirements

A. Respondents’ Regulations

Respondents’ regulations do not prohibit petitioner’s second request for a new hearing after its first request was denied. The regulations only prohibit repeated requests after a request has been granted, the hearing has been rescheduled, and the requesting party has defaulted again in appearing at the rescheduled hearing. (48 RCNY 3-82 [e].) Respondents provide no reason for ECB’s failure to grant or at least to determine petitioner’s second request submitted March 5, 2012.

48 RCNY 3-82 (b) requires ECB to grant requests for new hearings received within 45 days after the missed hearing un[635]*635less ECB finds the request in bad faith. When a request for a new hearing is made more than 45 days after the missed hearing, 48 RCNY 3-82 (c) narrowly limits the circumstances in which ECB may grant the request. These regulatory provisions differ from the reasons listed on ECB’s form request for a new hearing. 48 RCNY 3-82 (c) (1) (A) requires a showing that the notices of violations, as opposed to the notices of the orders adjudicating the violations, were not served on petitioner by personal service according to CPLR 311 (a) (1) or other applicable law. This regulation does not require a showing that petitioner did not receive the NOVs.

The regulations are silent regarding respondents’ deficient service of notice of the orders adjudicating the violations.

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Related

Wilner v. Beddoe
102 A.D.3d 582 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2013)
Gutierrez v. Rhea
105 A.D.3d 481 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Misc. 3d 631, 976 N.Y.S.2d 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/985-amsterdam-avenue-housing-development-fund-corp-v-beddoe-nysupct-2013.