Altamirano v. 343 E. 8th St. Assocs.
This text of 2003 NY Slip Op 51718(U) (Altamirano v. 343 E. 8th St. Assocs.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Altamirano v 343 E. 8th St. Assoc. |
| 2003 NY Slip Op 51718(U) |
| Decided on September 26, 2003 |
| Supreme Court, New York County |
| 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| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
Bijoux Altamirano, Plaintiff,
against 343 East 8th Street Associates LLC Fotah Realty Corp.; Jesse A. Evans, Inc. and Jesse A. Evans, individually, and in his capacity as a principal of Jesse A. Evans, Inc., Defendants. |
Index No. 110988
WALTER B. TOLUB, J.
In this negligence action Defendants 343 East 8th Street Associates LLC and Fotah Realty Corporation move for summary judgment pursuant to CPLR § 3212(a). Defendants claim they are entitled to summary judgment because: 1) they owed no duty of care to Plaintiff, (2) they did not have actual or constructive notice of an alleged dangerous condition, (3) as they had no authority to control Plaintiff's assailant, who was her invited guest, their acts or omissions were not the proximate cause of Plaintiff's injuries, (4) the acts of Plaintiff's invited guest severed the chain of causation required for a finding of negligence, (5) they complied with the New York Administrative Code Requirements regarding security, and (6) the provisions of section 50(a)(1) of the New York Multiple Dwelling Law do not apply to the building in question.
For the reasons stated herein, the court denies defendants' motion for summary judgment.
In March, 2001 Plaintiff Bijoux Altamirano (hereinafter "plaintiff") rented Apartment B (hereinafter "Apartment B") at 343 East 8th Street (hereinafter "the building"), New York, NY. 343 East 8th Street Associates LLP (hereinafter "343 Associates"), of which Jane Holzer is the sole shareholder, owns the building. Fotah Realty Corporation (hereinafter "Fotah Realty"), of which Jane Holzer is the sole shareholder and officer, maintains the building. Fotah Realty employs Anthony Pagan, who is the manager and superintendent of the 343 East 8th Street property. Jesse Evans is the real estate broker who assisted plaintiff in renting her apartment; he is not party to this motion.
The building at 343 East 8th Street contains eight residential apartments and two commercial store fronts. Apartment B is a small studio apartment, approximately eighteen by thirteen feet, located on the ground floor; it has its own, private entrance that opens directly onto the street. This entrance is completely separate from the building's main entrance which provides access for all of the other apartments.
In November, 1999, Apartment B was converted from a storage to residential space. Anthony Pagan oversaw the renovation of the apartment, which included the installation of iron security gates over each of the apartment's windows and around its door in November, 1999.
It is this original iron security gate surrounding Apartment B's door that is at issue in this case. This original gate, which was in place at the time plaintiff rented Apartment B but which has [*2]since been replaced, had a round lock that was keyed on both sides. Although the door leading directly into the apartment was self-locking, the gate was not. The gate could not be opened from the outside, nor the inside, without using a key. The gate would not close unless it had been locked, either from the outside or the inside (Altamirano's Affidavit, p. 141).
Accordingly, in order to enter Apartment B, the tenant had to first unlock the exterior security gate, enter through it, and then re-lock it. The tenant then had to unlock the apartment's door before entering the apartment. In order to leave Apartment B, the tenant had to first exit through the door and lock it, then unlock the exterior security gate, exit through it, and re-lock it before proceeding onward.
This gate was purchased by Anthony Pagan and he was responsible for its installation (Pagan's Affidavit, p. 22-23). Neither he, nor anyone else, obtained any permits for the renovation work performed at Apartment B; no governmental agency inspected the apartment before it was rented (Id., p. 14).
In March 2001 defendant Jesse Evans, a real estate broker, showed plaintiff Apartment B (Altamirano's Affidavit, p. 13); plaintiff moved in shortly thereafter.
On or about March 23, 2001 plaintiff met Sean Washington (hereinafter "Washington"), an old friend, on the street in the East Village (Altamirano's Affidavit, p. 126). Plaintiff had known Washington for four years (Id., p. 108). She told Washington where she lived (Id., p. 125) and invited him to "stop by," which he did later that day (Id., p. 114). He stayed for approximately one hour and then left (Id., p. 127).
After being repeatedly called by Washington (Id., p. 135), plaintiff agreed he could visit again. On March 24, 2001, plaintiff let Washington into her apartment and closed and locked the exterior security gate from the inside (Id., p. 142). After half an hour (Id., p. 142), plaintiff and Washington left the apartment to go food shopping. They returned to the apartment and plaintiff ate what she had purchased (Id., p. 150). Thereafter, when plaintiff asked Washington to leave, he took her by the throat with a razor, told her to remove her pants, and assaulted and raped her (Defendants' Exhibit F). Washington then slit plaintiff's throat and left. Plaintiff is suing defendants for damages arising out of the medical and emotional injuries she sustained as a result of the attack.
Plaintiff contends that the defendant's negligent installation of the key-turn gate was a substantial factor in proximately causing her injuries because she was prevented from escaping her apartment during the rape and assault. Plaintiff claims that although she wanted to escape she did not try to because her attempt would have been futile given that the outside security gate was locked and the key required to open it was in her pants, out of her reach during the attack (Complaint, p. 5).
Plaintiff further contends that defendants' installation of a key-turn gate is compelling evidence of negligence because it violated New York Multiple Dwelling Law § 50-a(1) and New York Administrative Code § 27-371(j)(2)(b) (Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law, p. 8).New York Multiple Dwelling Law § 50-a(1) specifies (in pertinent part) that,
"[e]very entrance from the street, passageway, court, yard, cellar, or similar entrance to a class A multiple dwelling erected or converted after January first, nineteen hundred sixty-eight, except an entrance leading to the main entrance hall or lobby which main entrance hall or lobby is equipped with one or more automatic self-locking doors, shall be equipped with automatic self- closing and [*3]self-locking doors and such doors shall be locked at all times except when an attendant shall actually be on duty."
New York Administrative Code § 27-371(j)(2)(b) specifies that, "[d]oors to dwelling units shall be equipped with a heavy duty latch set and a heavy duty dead bolt operable by a key from the outside and a thumb-turn from the inside."
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